LONE FISHERMAN
Driving around Saranac Lake in the shadow
of Whiteface Mountain a hard Spring rain
suddenly descends. I stop the car to watch
a lone figure standing in a rowboat in solitary
stillness, a scene framed in an ancient
Chinese scroll, a living Haiku poem.
In my mind’s eye he’s fishing with a bamboo pole,
hoping his catch will please his waiting young wife
who is stoking a fire to prepare the fish when he returns.
Focusing on the scene at hand I notice the fisherman
is impervious to the pelting downpour of rain.
He must be wearing the latest Orvis’ stay-dry duds.
Twitching the rod with a flick of the wrist he casts,
arcing the line back and forth over his head
with the artistry of a cowboy lassoing a run-away steer.
He aims for the edge of iridescent orange-yellow water lilies.
Without a splash, he tempts the trout with a fly attached
with a gossamer-thin tippet.
In a silver shower the fish strikes, shaking its head trying
to get off the hook. He tires it out as it surges and runs,
leaping, almost walking across the water on its tail.
Holding the fish for a moment, he gauges the length,
viewing the trout’s meaty flanks, outrageous spots of black
and orange and horizontal streaks of silver and red.
Rowing back to shore he’s pleased the fish was caught with
a new translucent lure with holographic foil that dazzles
the fish allowing him to release it so it can spawn again.