Canticle for Native Brook Trout
Canticle for Native Brook Trout Todd Davis Now we are all sitting here strangely On top of the sunlight. —JAMES WRIGHT Fishing the narrow stream of light, we follow a seam between hemlock and sweating rhododendron, tulip poplar and white oak that grow more than a hundred feet tall. The small fish that have been here for thousands of years lay in on flat rock that lines the streambed, or hide beneath the shelves where water pours over fallen trees. They are nearly invisible, backs colored like the stone in the pool where they were born and where they will die after giving birth to their own. The drift of our flies tempts them, and through the glass surface we see their jaws part, predatory surge ending with a struggle to be freed from the end of our lines. Their lives depend upon the coldness of water, upon our desire to touch their bodies, to marvel at the skin along their spines: the tan worm-shaped ovals, the smallest red circles, the splash of yellow and orange that washes around their bellies as we release them and they swim from our grasp back into a sliver of sunlight. |