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Damselfly, Trout, Heron


ISSUE:  Autumn 1976
for Jim Seay

The damselfly folds its wings
over its body when at rest.

Captured, it should not be killed
in cyanide, but allowed to die

slowly: then the colors,
especially the reds and blues,

will last. In the hand
it crushes easily into a rosy

slime. Its powers of flight
are weak. The trout

feeds on the living damselfly.
The trout leaps from the water,

and if there is sun you see
the briefest shiver of gold,

and then the river again.
When the trout dies

it turns its white belly
to the mirror of the sky.

The heron fishes for the trout
in the gravelly shallows on the far

side of the stream, The heron
is the exact blue of the shadows

the sun makes of trees on water.
When you hold the heron most clearly

in your eye, you are least certain
it is there. When the blue heron dies

it lies beyond reach
on the far side of the river.

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