| Today's Words |
Poet as Fisherman James A. Emanuel |
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I fish for words to say what I fish for, half-catch sometimes. I have caught little pan fish flashing sunlight (yellow perch, crappies, blue-gills), lighthearted reeled them in, filed them on stringers on the shore. A nice mess, we called them, and ate with our fingers, laughing. Once, dreaming of fish in far-off waters, I hooked a two-foot carp in Michigan, on nylon line so fine a fellow-fisher shook his head: "He'll break it, sure; he'll roll on it and get away." A quarter-hour it took to bring him in; back-and-forth toward my net, syllable by syllable I let him have his way till he lay flopping on the grass - beside no other, himself enough in size: he fed the three of us (each differently) new strategies of hook, leader, line, and rod. Working well, I am a deep-water man, a "Daredevil" silver wobbler my lure for lake trout in midsummer. Oh, I have tried the moon, thermometers - the bait and time and place all by the rule - fishing for the masterpiece, the imperial muskellunge in Minnesota, the peerless pike in Canada. I have propped a well-thumbed book against the butt of my favourite rod and fished from my heart. Yet, for my labours, all I have to show are tactics, lore - so little I know of that pea-sized brain I am casting for, to think it could swim with the phantom-words that lure me to this shore. |
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