William Davenant’s Fishing Giant

September 1, 2013

392px-William_Davenant

“The Giant’s Fishing”

by Sir William Davenant

This day, a day as fair as heart could wish,

This giant stood on shore of sea to fish.

For angling rod he took a sturdy oak,

For line a cable that in storm ne’er broke;

His hook was such as heads the end of pole,

To pluck down house ere fire consumes it whole.

This hook was baited with a dragon’s tail;

And there on rock he stood to bob for whale,

Which straight he caught and nimbly home did pack

With ten cart load of dinner on his back.

William Davenant or D’Avenant (1606-1668) was a contemporary of Izaak Walton’s and lived through the same tumultuous times surrounding the Civil War(s) in England. Davenant, a monarchist and Anglican, who later converted to Roman Catholicism, did not negotiate the social upheavals quite as smoothly as Walton did. He was imprisoned several times, yet he eventually overcame each political difficulty. In fact, he served as a politician himself on several occasions.

The poem above, certainly not Davenant’s most profound work, is part of his masque, Britannia Triumphans. While the poem is lighthearted, Britannia was a serious piece of writing, produced in serious times. It was the first masque to be performed at the Palace of Whitehall, on 17 January 1638, after a two-year suspension of masqueing. King Charles I enacted this suspension primarily because the Banqueting House at the Palace was dirty from consistent use. He may have decided to have masqueing resume, however, for political reasons. The image driven masques were a way of controlling the perception of the monarchy held by those elite persons invited to attend (and perhaps of reinforcing Charles illusions, as well). Notably, the great architect Inigo Jones, who also collaborated (and feuded) with playwright and poet Ben Jonson, designed the scenery and costumes for Britannia. As it happens, he designed the banqueting hall for Charles’ father, James I, as well.

Incidentally, Charles I was executed by the Rump Parliament, in front of the Banqueting House, in 1649. Davenant was imprisoned the following year, and remained in the Tower of London until the Civil War(s) concluded (though he was imprisoned again, later).

Abel Reels – Limited Edition Grateful Dead ® Reel

August 17, 2013

Abel Reels is now releasing a limited number of reels featuring a licensed image of the Grateful Dead’s “Steal Your Face” logo.  I am not generally a great admirer of Abel’s painted finishes, but this one is a beauty.  It does not seem to be available on every series of reels offered by Abel. Those on which it is available are beyond my current means, especially when you add the $300.00 premium for the logo.  All the same, the art is something to admire.  You can take a look at the following link:

Abel Reels – Limited Edition Grateful Dead ® Reel.

The only Abel reel in my possession actually belongs to my daughter.  A good friend gave it to me to pass on to her, when she is old enough to use it (thank you, John Henry).  I see that Abel now offers commemorative “Newborn Baby Reels.” Perhaps if we have another child I can find someone to give me another Abel.  Kidding, of course …. sort of.

Waiting, not impatiently.

August 16, 2013

Waiting

 

At our family cabin, I spend a lot of time looking out at the lake in the evenings, waiting to spot rising cutthroat trout. In the dog days of summer, the wait can be long. There have been, and still are, times when the wait is difficult, due to my eagerness to fish. However, watching the activity on and around the lake with my daughter, her hand in mine, makes for a very different experience. The wait almost disappears altogether, and the time becomes one of appreciation for what already is.

I’m proud to have a three-year-old daughter who knows such things as the difference between a grizzly bear and a black bear. A daughter who knows the difference between a rod and a pole.  A daughter who knows what patience is and how one can best pass the time, when waiting at such places as our cabin.  I have taught her some of these things.  But she has taught me others.

The things you find, when you’re not even looking ….

August 9, 2013

My wife and I have been exploring Washington State University and the surrounding communities this past week. We have been considering relocating and taking jobs at WSU.  Of course, I sought out some fly fishers to get as much information as possible about local fishing (the answer, in short: lots of steel head).

One of the fly fishers with whom I spoke mentioned that the WSU library had one of the largest collections of angling literature in the world. Since I had never heard this before, I was a bit skeptical. So, after a meeting today, I swung by the Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections Department in library.

Sure enough, WSU received 15,000 volumes over the past two years, donated by Joan and Vernon Gallup (no doubt, many of you already knew this). These, as yet, mostly uncatalogued texts will be added to the existing collections of angling and other outdoor literature. I direct you to a news release published by the International League of Antiquarian Booksellers, since ILAB is such a strong source of information on these matters: “Largest Rare Book Collection ever Donated to Washington State University.” While the Gallups are described in this and other news releases as Spokane residents, my understanding is that the collection may have been housed at their home in Bigfork, Montana.

I was stunned by some of the titles found in WSU’s storage stacks. The number of editions of the The Compleat Angler alone is absolutely staggering. When I woke up this morning I had no idea I would be perusing two first editions (1653) of Izaak Walton’s masterpiece by the end of the day.

Two first editions of The Compleat Angler, on the far left (one rebound and the other in a black clamshell box)

Two first editions of The Compleat Angler, on the far left (one rebound and the other in a black clam-shell box).

Freedom and Wildness

August 8, 2013
My "home water," flowing from the Scapegoat Wilderness in Montana.

My “home water,” flowing from the Scapegoat Wilderness in Montana.

“The Peace of Wild Things.”

When despair for the world grows in me
and I wake in the night at the least sound
in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be,
I go and lie down where the wood drake
rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.
I come into the peace of wild things
who do not tax their lives with forethought
of grief. I come into the presence of still water.
And I feel above me the day-blind stars
waiting with their light. For a time
I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.

Wendell Berry, from Collected Poems, 1957-1982.

A wild, native denizen of my "home water."

A wild, native denizen of my “home water.”

Roland Barthes, Plastic, and Wheatley Fly Boxes

July 22, 2013
A Wheatley fly box, a Thebault silk fly line, a classic Sigg bottle, and a Pendleton blanket. None of them are plastic. All of them will serve their purpose for a century or more.

A Wheatley fly box, a Thebault silk fly line, a classic Sigg bottle, and a Pendleton blanket. None of them are plastic. All of them will serve their purpose for a century or more.

The influential French thinker Roland Barthes examined what he considered as the ideologies connected to numerous materials in his 1957 text, Mythologies.  The text, translated to English in 1972, served as an important stepping stone in the development of what we now know as postmodern philosophy, which emerged in the 1970’s.   Among other things, Postmodernism contested the “Western” cultural narrative of scientific “progress,” which, among many other things, suggests that humans might move away from a reliance upon natural materials, as they achieve greater ability to manipulate more artifactual materials. Postmodernism has lost much of its influence, in part because it became an odd sort of narrative of progress itself. And the narrative of scientific progress still dominates much of the world. In regards to how this latter persistent narrative still shapes our view of material, just think about the excitement displayed over the development of 3D printing.

In one of the essays included in Mythologies, Barthes wrote critically about the highly artifactual material–what he called an “imitation material”–plastic:

In the hierarchy of the major poetic substances, it figures as a disgraced material, lost between the effusiveness of rubber and the flat hardness of metal; it embodies none of the genuine produce of the mineral world: foam, fibres, strata.  It is a ‘shaped’ substance: whatever its final state, plastic keeps a flocculent appearance, something opaque, creamy, curdled, something powerless ever to achieve the triumphant smoothness of Nature.  But what best reveals it for what it is is the sound it gives, at once hollow and flat; its noise is its undoing, as are its colours, for it seems capable of retaining only the most chemical-looking ones.

I am not a postmodernist.  I am not a post-anything.  But, like Barthes and later philosophers, I am concerned about the dominant narrative of “progress.”  And, simply put, I’m not a fan of plastic.  I should note for flyfishing readers that I am also not one of those elitists who maligns graphite rods by mislabeling them as “plastic.” Clearly, graphite rods do not fit into Barthes’ descriptions of plastic.  I like graphite, glass, and bamboo rods, so long as all of them are things have been crafted or worked with care, rather than simply molded or “shaped.”

Why am I then rambling on about such things, you may ask.  It is because I was recently thinking about how much I enjoy things that are crafted to last–to take hard knocks but to still function for many, many years. Plastic lasts, of course.  But it also breaks, deteriorates, and otherwise ages in ways that make it no longer useful.  What prompted me to think about all of this was my putting some flies into a Wheatley fly box.  These boxes have been made for well over a hundred years, and many of the earliest examples are still perfectly functional.  Dented and scuffed, yes.  But irreparably broken? No.

Part of the narrative of progress seems to involve a movement toward greater convenience and disposability. For many of the same reasons that Roland Barthes criticized the world around him, I reject that narrative.

 

Stuck in the Stacks

July 18, 2013

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All of us love to read.  Unfortunately, someone has to write the books, articles, and essays that entertain or challenge us.  These last couple of weeks I have been stuck in a university library, working on a chapter for an academic book.  I’m starting to get a little restless, and my mind keeps wandering to the mountains. But the deadline for the chapter is looming and the streams are swollen with rain water right now.  So, after this brief break, I go back to writing.  I will try to limit the wanderings of my mind by reminding myself I will be home in Montana next week and this chapter will be done soon.

Robert and Penel: Antoine de Saint Exupery, Wildness, and Discovery

July 2, 2013

Years ago, my wife gave me a copy of Antoine de Saint Exupery’s The Little Prince, a book of which I was already a great fan.  Saint Exupery, of course, was a renowned French aviator and author.  He disappeared on July 31, 1944, while flying a reconnaissance mission for the Allies during the Second World War. He published The Little Prince, originally in French, just the year before.

Saint ExuperyAs far as I know, this artist and adventurer, pictured left, was not an angler.  It was a fisherman, however, who found a bracelet of his and, later, the wreckage of his plane, near Marseille in the late 1990’s.  According to a 2008 New York Times article by John Tagliabue, researcher Lino van Gartzen eventually located the aging, former German pilot who may have shot down Saint Exupery’s plane (“Clues  to the mystery of a writer pilot who disappeared”).  For years, this former pilot had supposedly been greatly troubled by the knowledge that he may have caused Saint Exupery’s disappearance.  He was a devoted reader of Saint Exupery’s writings before the war started. This, he claimed, was why he kept his wartime downing of a plane resembling Saint Exupery’s — near the time and location that the French pilot was believed to have disappeared — secret until van Gartzen found him. (There is some doubt that Saint Exupery was actually shot down, and it is possible that the German pilot shot down  different Allied aviator).  

The finding of Saint Exupery’s plane, the location of the man who may have downed that plane, and that man’s own realization that he may have been the cause of Saint Exupery’s disappearance all represent curious discoveries.  When I opened the copy of The Little Prince given to me by my wife, I made another discovery. Inside the cover was the following inscription, dated 7/5/87:

For Robert,

who understands that ‘what is essential is invisible to the eye’…you have tamed me, and I will cry, but it has been worth it–‘Because of the color of the wheat-fields’…

Once in a while, not too often, but now and then, dream of me, curling yourself in a knot around your pillow, or if it should be, around whoever you may be with, and, as you stand on the edge of waking and sleep, pretend that it is

-Penel, who loved you best—

The person who wrote this inscription for Robert, who was clearly a former lover, alludes to several passages in the The Little Prince. In particular, she refers to a passage that occurs when “the little prince” (Saint Exupery’s capitalization), who is an interplanetary traveler recently arrived upon earth, encounters a fox.  The fox warns the boy that he is not tame. The boy then questions the fox:

“What does that mean–‘tame’?”

“You do not live here,” said the fox. “What is it that you are looking for?”

“I am looking for men, said the little prince. “What does that mean–‘tame’?”

“Men,” said the fox. “They have guns, and they hunt. It is very disturbing. They also raise chickens. These are their only interests. Are you looking for chickens’?”

“No,” said the little prince. “I am looking for friends. What does that mean–‘tame’?”

“It is an act too often neglected,” said the fox. “It means to establish ties.”

“‘To establish ties’?”

“Just that,” said the fox. “To me, you are still nothing more than a little boy who is just like a hundred thousand other little boys. And I have no need of you. And you, on your part, have no need of me. To you, I am nothing more than a fox like a hundred thousand other foxes. But if you tame me, then we shall need each other. To me, you will be unique in all the world. To you, I shall be unique in all the world…”

Needless to say, the boy “tames” the fox and they grow to love each other very much.

In my view, an implication of the passage I have quoted is that life is characterized by wildness. For this reason, it is also characterized by constant discovery–the more unusual discoveries that one can find in such places as books–and, of course, the discovery of love. As evidence of the latter I think of the discovery and eventual loss of love between Robert and Penel and the “little prince” and the “fox.”  I think too of the discovery of love between my wife and I, which I already know is much more enduring. A common fact associated with all these discoveries, as different as they are, is that they keep the world an interesting place and make our lives within this world worth living.

Quality and Artistry

June 30, 2013

As I have noted before, I am a fan of Tim Pantzlaff’s Spey Company fly reels because of their classic styling, bullet-proof construction, and affordability. In the past months, Tim has added features to his reels such as telephone latches — most famously associated with the second generation of Hardy “Uniqua” reels, knurled palming rims, handle material resembling ivory, and more. Currently, you can see some of these features on his 4 inch “Circle Spey” reel.

Tim makes every reel himself.  While obviously a fine craftsman, his artistry also extends to music.  Tim recently created a video of his reels in production and in action, for which he also made an acoustic guitar soundtrack:

I really like my “Single Spey” reel, to which I had Tim add a new ivory-like handle.  As a possible change in location may mean that I’ll be using a two-handed rod regularly, I see one of his larger spey reels in my future too.  And if I stay where I am, I may make use of his ability to create salt-water safe reels.

Mind you, I gain nothing by drawing your attention to these reels.  I simply like to see hard-working people, who make fine art and/or other high quality products at affordable prices, succeed. As the world is increasingly occupied with plastic, disposable, soul-less materials, I feel more strongly about this every day.  That said, if you are in the market for a reel, be sure to look at the Spey Company.

Maclean and Bachelard: Words, Water, and Life

June 9, 2013

Eventually, all things merge into one, and a river runs through it. The river was cut by the world’s great flood and runs over rocks from the basement of time. On some of the rocks are timeless raindrops. Under the rocks are the words, and some of the words are theirs.

Norman Maclean, A River runs Through It and Other Stories, 104.[1]

Liquidity is a principle of language; language must be filled with water.

Gaston Bachelard, Water and Dreams, 192.[2]

maclean

Norman Maclean

Those who have read Norman Maclean’s A River runs Through It know that the passage quoted above alludes to conversations between Maclean and his minister father about the very basis of reality. As Christians, they refer to the Book of Genesis, from the Hebrew Bible or Christian Old Testament, which explains that in the beginning of time there was only “spirit” and “water.”[3] They also refer to John 1:1, from the Christian New Testament. This verse reads, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” Thus, Maclean and his father seem to be engaging in the same debate in which so many “Western” philosophers of language have also engaged: is there a physical reality beyond the words that allow us to discuss existence, or is language completely metonymic—is the world made real through language?

I don’t have an answer to such questions, though I do know that most mainstream Europeans and North Americans overlook the immense power and importance of language. Norman Maclean, as evidenced in his famous story, does not. He suggests at the end of A River, in the passage quoted above, that there is a mutually dependent relationship between language and reality: the words are under the rocks, and yet some of the words belong to the rocks.

What is just as important, though, is Maclean’s emphasis upon water. All things “merge” in the running waters of “the river.” Water is thus a metaphor, in Maclean’s mind, for the connections that are made possible in the physical world through the use of words—through language.

A River runs Though It is, of course, something more than mere words. It is both poetry and narrative. Both of these types of language are ideally full of movement. They work against reification. A story moves from beginning to end, and poetry pushes against the rules of language that so often deplete it of vitality. Water, too, is full of movement.

This evening I was pulling some books by Mircea Eliade off a shelf, as I thought about my recent fly fishing trip to Romania. I noticed, one shelf up, a series of books by the influential French philosopher Gaston Bachelard. In these books, Bachelard reflects upon the relationship between language, imagination, and the physical elements. Not being particularly moved by Eliade tonight, I decided to browse through Bachelard’s book on water, which I have not read for many years. I came across the second quote provided in the epigraph to this post.

Bachelard

Gaston Bachelard

In addition to the quote above, Bachelard writes, “Liquidity is, in my opinion, the very desire of language. Language needs to flow.”[4] For Bachelard, poetry – ideal, creative poetry – is the language that best embodies liquidity. He seems to acknowledge that narrative can do so as well.

I think, then, that Bachelard and Maclean share the view that language and reality are mutually dependent. However, the language that gives life to our world is the language of movement. It is narrative and poetry.

Toward the end of Maclean’s book, he describes another conversation with his father. This one has to do with the tragic death of Maclean’s brother Paul:

Once, for instance, my father asked me a series of questions that suddenly made me wonder whether I understood even my father whom I felt closer to than any other man I have ever known. “You like to tell true stories, don’t you?” he asked, and I answered, “Yes, I like to tell stories that are true.”

Then he asked, “After you have finished your true stories sometime, why don’t you make up a story and the people to go with it?

“Only then will you understand what happened and why.”[5]

Of course, A River is the story that Norman eventually “makes up,” in order to understand the death of his brother. While the book is very nearly autobiographical, Maclean does change certain elements of the actual story his family lived. Perhaps doing so allowed Maclean to give new vitality to his brother.

Now, all of the preceding might be taken as mere ramblings, on my part, about some favorite books and topics. Largely, that’s exactly to what all those words amount. But let me make a final points. Reading authors like Bachelard and Maclean, as different as they are, and looking towards teaching found in texts like the bible and even more commonly in the oral traditions of indigenous peoples, reminds us that language is powerful and important. When used to its full potential, it shapes our worlds, at the very least. So take language seriously. Your life depends upon it.

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[1] Norman Maclean, A River runs Through It and Other Stories, Twenty-fifth Anniversary Edition (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001).

[2] Gaston Bachelard, Water and Dreams: An Essay on the Imagination of Matter, trans. Joanne Stroud (Dallas, The Pegasus Foundation, 1983. Originally published in 1942 as L’Eau e le rêves, essai sur l’imagination de la matiére.

[3] I am using the RSV, simply because it is handy. Maclean, however, tells us that his father was reading the bible in Greek.

[4] Bachelard, 187.

[5] Maclean, 104.