no more. a bit of forked pickerel's tongue, by passing through the hook until it will hang lightly from the bend. Play it among the rapid currents around the points of the island, with thirty to forty yards of silk line out from a twelve-foot stiff rod, and you will say that your trout fishing will hardly excel it. You are no doubt aware that in August the bass are close to shore on rocky bottom, but such advice to you is "like coal to Newcastle." I give it as new to myself last summer. There is also a good trouting ground at the head of Salmon River, Richfield, Oswego County, about thirty miles from Rome, on the road to Ogdensburg. If the stream be well up, it is worth a visit. My pen has run on in this quiet midnight until it threatens to make you weary, so thanking you, only add, as I heard an old preacher once bring up an incorrigibly old sermon of his by saying, finally and to conclude, I will say Very sincerely yours, CHAS. LANMAN, Esq., New York. GEO. W. BETHUNE. SAPTOGUS. O FOR the rush of our darling stream, For the morning beam and the evening gleam For our dove-like tent, with white wings bent Where we make our bed of hemlock spread, O for the free and sinless wild, In the silence sweet, may hear the beat O for the laugh of the merry loon, For the chant of the fearless thrushes, For the roar of flood, and the echoing wood, Of the twilight breeze through the trembling trees, O for a breath of the fresh, pure air, It gives to the happy feeder; For the social smoke and the hurtless joke, O for the cast, with shrilly whisht, The ready twist of the thrilling wrist- The gallant play of the silvery prey, O that the willow's leaf were free, And the dogwood were in flower, When the heart-bound three once more might be Within thy forest bower; We three, who know where'er we go |