by d.n. wright
1. Autumn foliage not yet escaped splits in circles as water after the lure is received. near perfect the toque sits on the head of a Canadian painter. birchpanel waits blank in a box of brushes thick with paint and scents sweet from dripping pine. fast approaching pinksalmon sky spills in a pond distorted by the Scottish grin, crow's feet and low fog of an old morning. a fishbelly silverstreaked on the surface flutters a disturbance. 2. The paddle glides eloquent when guided by reflection; fishing tackle hangs, sliced river behind the line skillfully caressed by wake from his canoe; Tom Thomson... balanced canoe sharp at dusktime... silent slips through the water. 3. Drifting southward to the distant sound of ducks; the fisherman casts his fly, a homemade lure, before a sparkle of blue slips beneath water: My opinions are limited to my opinions on fishing: it is not enough to cast your line, one must always develop the lure; the attraction that commits one to death. 4. A hawk disturbs the uneven ripples of Canoe Lake as they bend trees into hooks; a swift dive to the surface claws out pullup snare... ascent. the rings transpose, collapsing a quickly matured evergreen sawed only yesterday; its stump left to bake. 5. Brushes cleaned on the rock just out of eyeshot; the smell of rested oils stills a breeze sneaking in offshore. beyond the old bridge loggers skip stones waiting for the fall run to spear wood as flesh through Tea Lake dam. sunset brilliant, a rustorange descent, where his red blankets hang over fishing line unused. 6. Moon high the aurora borealis dances all darkness complete, save for the shadow of an artist furiously sketching, paintboard up. a tiny whitecap distrusts the flicker of his fire and catches the peppered glow of a wolf's green eyes; undisturbed the watcher and gentle goes the water.
Source: Headlight Anthology, no. 2, 1999, pp. 28–31.