Plain Fishing
by
“Well, sir,” said old Peter, as he came out on the porch with his pipe, “so you came here to go fishin’?”
Peter Gruse was the owner of the farm-house where I had arrived that day, just before supper-time. He was a short, strong-built old man, with a pair of pretty daughters, and little gold rings in his ears. Two things distinguished him from the farmers in the country round about: one was the rings in his ears, and the other was the large and comfortable house in which he kept his pretty daughters. The other farmers in that region had fine large barns for their cattle and horses, but very poor houses for their daughters. Old Peter’s ear-rings were indirectly connected with his house. He had not always lived among those mountains. He had been on the sea, where his ears were decorated, and he had travelled a good deal on land, where he had ornamented his mind with many ideas which were not in general use in the part of his State in which he was born. His house stood a little back from the high road, and if a traveller wished to be entertained, Peter was generally willing to take him in, provided he had left his wife and family at home. The old man himself had no objection to wives and children, but his two pretty daughters had.
These young women had waited on their father and myself at supper-time, one continually bringing hot griddle cakes, and the other giving me every opportunity to test the relative merits of the seven different kinds of preserved fruit which, in little glass plates, covered the otherwise unoccupied spaces on the tablecloth. The latter, when she found that there was no further possible way of serving us, presumed to sit down at the corner of the table and begin her supper. But in spite of this apparent humility, which was only a custom of the country, there was that in the general air of the pretty daughters which left no doubt in the mind of the intelligent observer that they stood at the wheel in that house. There was a son of fourteen, who sat at table with us, but he did not appear to count as a member of the family.
“Yes,” I answered, “I understood that there was good fishing hereabout, and, at any rate, I should like to spend a few days among these hills and mountains.”
“Well,” said Peter, “there’s trout in some of our streams, though not as many as there used to be, and there’s hills a plenty, and mountains too, if you choose to walk fur enough. They’re a good deal furder off than they look. What did you bring with you to fish with?”
“Nothing at all,” I answered. “I was told in the town that you were a great fisherman, and that you could let me have all the tackle I would need.”
“Upon my word,” said old Peter, resting his pipe-hand on his knee and looking steadfastly at me, “you’re the queerest fisherman I’ve see’d yet. Nigh every year, some two or three of ’em stop here in the fishin’ season, and there was never a man who didn’t bring his jinted pole, and his reels, and his lines, and his hooks, and his dry-goods flies, and his whiskey-flask with a long strap to it. Now, if you want all these things, I haven’t got ’em.”
“Whatever you use yourself will suit me,” I answered.
“All right, then,” said he. “I’ll do the best I can for you in the mornin’. But it’s plain enough to me that you’re not a game fisherman, or you wouldn’t come here without your tools.”
To this remark I made answer to the effect that, though I was very fond of fishing, my pleasure in it did not depend upon the possession of all the appliances of professional sport.