1) The narrator and his father, both strong dark-skinned men, sit facing the August sun much like mountains facing a landscape.
2) Though they wear Western clothes, there are differences between the father and son that can be discovered upon closer inspection, particularly in their eyes and faces.
3) In the evening, the father and son squat on rocks fishing as the light fades, acknowledging the lake below as wildlife comes to drink.
1) The narrator and his father, both strong dark-skinned men, sit facing the August sun much like mountains facing a landscape.
2) Though they wear Western clothes, there are differences between the father and son that can be discovered upon closer inspection, particularly in their eyes and faces.
3) In the evening, the father and son squat on rocks fishing as the light fades, acknowledging the lake below as wildlife comes to drink.
1) The narrator and his father, both strong dark-skinned men, sit facing the August sun much like mountains facing a landscape.
2) Though they wear Western clothes, there are differences between the father and son that can be discovered upon closer inspection, particularly in their eyes and faces.
3) In the evening, the father and son squat on rocks fishing as the light fades, acknowledging the lake below as wildlife comes to drink.
though perhaps you might not notice, finding two figures flat against the landscape like the shadowed backs of mountains. Which would not be far from wrong, for though we both have on Western clothes and he is seated on a yellow spool of emptied and forgotten telephone cable and I recline on a green aluminum lounge, we are both facing into the August sun as august as Hiroshima and the autumn. There are differences, however, if you care to discover, coming close, respectfully. You must discover the landscape as you go. Come. It is in the eyes, the face, the way we would greet you stumbling as you arrive. He is much the smooth, grass-brown slopes reaching knee-high around you as you walk; I am the cracks of cliffs and gullies, pieces of secret deep in the back of the eye. But he is still my father, and I his son. After a while, there is time to go fishing, both of us squatting on rocks in the dusk, leaving peaks and tree line responsible for light. There is a lake below, which both of us acknowledge, by facing, forward, like the sun. Ripples of fish, moon, luminous insects. Frogs, owls, crickets at their sound. Deer, raccoon, badger come down to drink.
At the water's edge, the children are fishing,
casting shadows from the enormous shoreline. Everything functions in the function of summer. And gradually, and not by chance, the action stops, the children hush back among rocks and also watch, with nothing to capture but dusk. There are four of us, together among others. And I am not at all certain what all this means, if it means anything, but feel with all my being that I must write this down, if I write anything. My father, his son, his grandsons, strong, serene. Night, night, night, before the following morning.