If from me, when all is done, there are any
words left over,
let them be these:
let them be these:
Hurrying down Boulder Canyon early one
sullen spring morning, just rounding a bend, I saw him, down in the creek, a
fisherman working his flies in silhouette over the silvered water. I saw him
only for an instant, a spectral image in black, cut into the creek beyond him.
He looked out of another time and place, but I knew him, remembered him.
I wanted to give him a Boulder name, that
of some old habitué of Boulder Creek. He might have been E.B. Edwards, Charlie
Sundquist, or Nick Schons. Maybe he was One-Armed Billie Marquette, Bill Smith,
Al Olson, or Lasses Ralston. In any case, this was the original, the model, the
archetype that can flash on consciousness and remind us of sources, beginnings,
and raise floods of sensation and memory.
By naming him, I thought I might perhaps
anchor myself more securely into the legend of this landscape, my native
watershed, the water out of which my mother made me.
Forms and images like this, I know, are as
old as time and have this powerful way of taking on a local habitation and a
name. But, at this instant, no single name seemed right. The image remained,
simply, The Fisherman.
That instant of vision on the creek, sent
shivers through me that were slow to subside. Seeing a ghost, I thought, must
be like this.
The Irish poet W. B. Yeats saw him, too, in
the mountains of Connemara. His “presence” invaded Yeats’s imagination and
poems, there to become a dominant symbol of rigor, integrity, passion, and
sturdy manhood. A symbol of what might be, amid all the spiritual squalor,
intellectual sloth, hate, and ugliness that the poet found in the Irish life of
his time. This solitary angler became the symbol of what was, perhaps, Yeats's
best hope for his native land.
In 1919, this spectral angler appeared in
the poem, “The Fisherman”:
... I can see him still,
The freckled man who goes
To a grey place on a hill
In grey Connemara clothes
At dawn to cast his flies,
Climbing up to a place
Where stone is dark under froth,
And the down-turn of his wrist
When the flies drop in the stream
A man who does not exist,
A man who is but a dream;
And [I] cried, “Before I am old
I shall have written him one
Poem maybe as cold
And passionate as the dawn.
“The Fisherman”, a dark and melancholy
silhouette, whether on a Connemara mountainside or in Boulder Canyon, now
bursting into life like the dawn….
As I write these words, the very wonder of
words themselves, of language, of the propensity and need for words to make the
poem, floods over me. It is a gift to my
understanding that fishing and language are somehow inextricably bonded, that
the act of fishing is fulfilled, perhaps even begun, in the act of language!
Yes, that’s it! The essential Fish, this
Fish that every fish expresses, is
drawn up first in a net of words: into The Poem.
Regardless of how devastating the confused
events of our lives become, whether in Connemara or Colorado, there’s promise
of another way: that ancient, ever-youthful, angler stands there still in the
cold grey dawn, casting his flies from the past into the future to a prey that
is not a prey at all, but the end of a quest for a renewed life of the spirit.
~~~
5 comments:
Beautfiul and thought provoking Gordon.
Love the imagery,,,, Thanks Mr. G!!!
An exceptional contribution from an exceptional and elegant man. What a gift. Thank you Gordon, for everything through all of these years.
Oh Gordon, thank you for this post. I have been going through some of my dad's writings the last few days since I talked with you and will share them in a private email (even though I know you've read them all in the distant past). Until then, know I send my love and admiration. Yes, you are indeed an exceptional and elegant man and a gift to us all.
Gordon, I'm going to miss you very, very much. Thank you for all of your support and championing of all I do.
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