Fly fishing may be a very pleasant amusement ; but angling or float fishing, I can only compare to a stick and a string, with a worm at one end, and a, fool at the other. Sketches, by a Traveller - Seite 1von Silas Pinckney Holbrook - 1830 - 315 SeitenVollansicht - Über dieses Buch
| Sir Thomas Frankland - 1801 - 52 Seiten
...Canter. B 3 withstanding that some of his wag friends may define Angling to be a stick and a string, with a Worm at one end, and a Fool at the other, and that he may find Diachylon an expensive article on having rode a mile or two extraordinary. I knew... | |
| 1819 - 352 Seiten
...angling. Being asked by a little girl what a fish-rod was, he replied, " It means, my dear, a long stick with a worm at one end, and a fool at the other." A new way of paying a Debt. — A prisoner in the Fleet Prison, London, lately sent to his creditor... | |
| Peter Armstrong Whittle - 1821 - 1042 Seiten
...make them comfortable and happy whilst there. Notwithstanding Swifts' remark of a 'stick and a string, with a worm at one end, and a fool at the other.' Lord Byron has likewise anathematized angling as 'a solitary vice;' but we may say of Mr. Lodge, that... | |
| 1821 - 970 Seiten
...been tempted to consider the definition of one of their number given by Swift, a stick and a string, with a worm at one end and a fool at the other, though somewhat severe, but half a libel. In the case before us the diversion had, however, its incidental... | |
| 1822 - 386 Seiten
...sensibility and friendship, honourable to them both. A wit defined angling to be a stick and a string, with a worm at one end and a fool at the other ; and if, in our notice of this amusing volume, we may seem to have approached the opposite extreme,... | |
| Henry Southern, Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas - 1822 - 426 Seiten
...sensibility and friendship, honourable to them both. A wit denned angling to be a stick and a string, with a worm at one end and a fool at the other ; and if, in our notice of this amusing volume, we may seem to have approached the opposite extreme,... | |
| Peter Hawker - 1826 - 512 Seiten
...very pleasant amusement; but angling, or float-fishing, I can only compare to a stick and a string, with a worm at one end, and a, fool at the other." If, however, the poor angler should feel sore at the wit, he might, in his turn (if scavenger enough... | |
| Richard Dagley - 1828 - 562 Seiten
...thought fit to define In sportive derision, each ANGLING brother, As " a stick and a string (id estt rod and line) With a worm at one end and a. fool at the other;" * Dean Swift. Yet, believe me, no fool is the man who in quiet Can sit down contented amid the world's... | |
| Silas Pinckney Holbrook - 1830 - 324 Seiten
...shark. This is forced under some of the muscles in the back of him who has lost, and would retrieve, his caste; and he is whirled round in a circle till his...their customs is, to throw the dead into the river, arid the bodies are eaten by fishes and carrion crows. Life is som'etimes left when the body is committed... | |
| Egerton Smith - 1831 - 656 Seiten
...a noble diversion, although that old cynic, Johnson, has defined the fishing-rod to be " a long rod with a worm at one end and a fool at the other." There is no sport which more completely illustrates the grand law of nature than this ; we find the... | |
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