Cut Throat (accessible version)
Seth Brady Tucker
BPR 48 | 2021
the lumped mud 
 sticked homes of beavers 
 silk
 bodies 
 pressed 
 warm on packed clay
 nose to nose or
 leather tails to feet; colonial family
 cozy as sunned loam;
 a trout
 slick in passing, your lure & bobble tossed
 fat & loud from the steeped 
 bank 
 you know 
 that all
 of this means 
 death 
 eventually 
 just 
 six fingers old
 but death
 is already a fifth cousin 
 & the Regan kid has gone missing & 
 those two Shoshone sisters
 from the Arapahoe Rez
 dead, & the hook & the line tighten
 pluck 
 is the sound of life
 ripped from the water
 & how these weapons come attached
 to your hand
 as if grown there
 overnight; 
 you have seen this look
 recognition pale
 in their eyes
 fish-deep 
 & even 
 when the flies buzz 
 (flies on the eye-blood) 
 & black to the hide 
 even the crumbling bank entropic
 under your feet; 
 you 
 have 
 been 
 given 
 all 
 the 
 tools 
 necessary
 for
 man: 
 an ugly bag of tricks 
 a filleting knife 
 heavy pliers
 a rock. A fist.
 A line of dull eyes 
 glistens in your canvas bag;
 when the trout strikes
 your father’s hand 
 is there to ensure
 you bring 
 the beast 
 all 
 the way 
 to the shore.



