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THE

FLY-FISHER'S ENTOMOLOGY

WITH COLOURED REPRESENTATIONS OF
THE NATURAL AND ARTIFICIAL INSECT, AND A FEW
OBSERVATIONS AND INSTRUCTIONS ON

TROUT AND GRAYLING FISHING

BY ALFRED RONALDS

With Twenty Coloured Plates

NINTH EDITION

....

'Devouring Ephemerals! Can you not suffer the poor insects to sport out their day?
They must be insipid eating-but here are some savoury exceedingly. they carry
sauce piquante in their tails. Do try the taste of this Bobber-but any of the three you
please-There! Hold fast, Kirby-for that's a Whopper'--Christopher North

LONDON

LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.

GL

BY

990403A

37 X 6 3 4

PREFACE.

IN the Midland Counties, and especially in Derbyshire, the "Fly-Fisher's Entomology" has long been considered an authority; and as the Derbyshire waters have of late years risen in the esteem of the fly-fishers, a new and more complete Edition of the work has been rendered indispensable. In these counties, the streams, though preserved, are thrown open by the liberality of the proprietors; and here the angler, availing himself of the facilities of the rail, may be found enjoying his holiday at many a pleasant country inn, in the county of the Dove, the Wye, and the Derwent. The Blithe, a sweet trout-stream in Staffordshire, close to Cresswell Station, was the scene of

Ronalds' early experience; on the little bridge, close to the present Station, stood his observatory (p. 5); and though his residence, at a later period in Wales, extended his knowledge of the art, and enabled him to adapt his instructions to the different waters in which he fished, yet the Midland streams are still the proper home of his observations that Dove, where Cotton erst hung up the thick-bodied fly of more southern counties, “in his window, to laugh at."

The Author of the present work trusts that it may be considered and judged of as the labour, or rather the amusement, of an amateur, whose chief object has been to facilitate, to the tyro in the art, the making and choice of artificial flies, on a plan of elucidation derived from personal experi

ence.

Having himself sorely felt the inadequacy of mere verbal instructions to enable him to imitate the natural fly correctly, or even approximately, and the little utility of graphical illustrations unaccompanied by the principal requisite-colour, he has been induced to paint both the natural and

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