Prøve GULL - Gratis

HT SHERINGHAM: 'The angler might travel very much farther and fare very much worse'

The Field

|

July 2023

Tracing the footsteps of fishing writer and Field angling editor HT Sheringham, whose works capture the moments of sunshine and shadow in a fisherman's life

- HT Sheringham

HT SHERINGHAM: 'The angler might travel very much farther and fare very much worse'

I TRAVELLED much farther than planned and fared worse than I hoped. The romantic notion to trace the footsteps of angler and writer HT Sheringham, taken more than a century before along the Thames at Isleworth, came to me several years ago. My original idea, set aside along with so many other things, was to take the train to Richmond as he'd done, cross the former deer park and walk down the east bank towards the old ferry, perhaps through the trees that sheltered the lovers he observed as he strolled homeward in the peace that follows a happy fishing trip. On a recent visit to Kew Gardens, I looked upstream from the boundary viewpoint to the shingle banks where Sheringham fished for dace, and there made up my mind to go on the pilgrimage, with a fly-rod, to see whether dace are still to be caught on black gnats from this reach of the tidal Thames.

My first reading of Sheringham came from the compilation with a foreword by Tom Fort, in which he declared him to be the finest of all the fishing authors. At the time I was not so sure: Ransome had an equal claim, I felt, certainly on the grounds of prose style. Yet now I've read much of Sheringham's best work, I am inclined to agree. A good writer is an artist, and the object of art is to capture the essence of life; through his recognition of the darker as well as the celebratory moments of a fisherman, Sheringham raised his writing well above the normal fare. Among writers whose main oeuvre was fishing, I can think of no other who achieved this. Nor has anyone matched his lugubrious wit.

The Field

Denne historien er fra July 2023-utgaven av The Field.

Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.

Allerede abonnent?

FLERE HISTORIER FRA The Field

The Field

The Field

Disrupting the disrupters

Auction houses are increasingly embracing online platforms, offering keen bargain hunters a more affordable - or even free - way to scratch their itch, says Roger Field

time to read

5 mins

August 2025

The Field

The Field

One good deed...

British soldiers make Everest history while raising more than £92,000

time to read

1 min

August 2025

The Field

The Field

City-sized areas of moorland disappearing, new report finds

An area of heather moorland the size of Birmingham is being lost every year, a study undertaken by The Heather Trust has revealed.

time to read

1 min

August 2025

The Field

The Field

The art of grouse

While depictions of Lagopus scotica remained relatively elusive into the early years of the 19th century, this most sporting of gamebirds soon hit its artistic apogee, inspiring generations of painters, sculptors and craftsmen

time to read

7 mins

August 2025

The Field

The Field

Cross-sector collaboration

Sustainable solutions for land use require a joined-up approach.

time to read

2 mins

August 2025

The Field

The Field

All the fun, none of the hassle

For those with land but limited time and capital, allowing someone else to run a shoot there in return for a host’s day’ is becoming increasingly common

time to read

6 mins

August 2025

The Field

The Field

A yacht for the ages

From undertaking humanitarian missions to hosting Royal honeymoons, the revered Britannia has a history that continues to captivate millions

time to read

7 mins

August 2025

The Field

The Field

When a Macnab becomes a Macnot

An attempt at the feat of a sporting lifetime is filled with highs and lows. However, whether congratulations or commiserations are in order at day's end, the journey is truly unforgettable

time to read

9 mins

August 2025

The Field

The Field

The Twelfth, travel and tweeds

While a 1,000-mile drive to the moors calls for reliability over tradition, where your threads are concerned the older and hairier the better, say Neil and Serena Cross

time to read

3 mins

August 2025

The Field

The Field

There's no silver bullet for grouse

More and better research is crucial if we are to clearly understand the many and interlinked factors limiting red grouse recovery on our moors, says the GWCT's Dr Nick Hesford

time to read

3 mins

August 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size