| The Fisher | |
| 661 | Out on Ventura’s wooden pier, |
| The fisher cast his line. | |
| The bait of squid, both pale and clear | |
| Reflected sun’s first shine. | |
| 665 | Some silent groups of grizzled men |
| In old and tattered hoods | |
| Had rods stacked neatly in their rows | |
| To catch more if they could. | |
| So nothing was unusual | |
| 670 | For fisher on that day. |
| He fit right in, just indistinct, | |
| A smelly, coffeed stray. | |
| But maybe that squid had a fate | |
| Submersed beneath the sea, | |
| 675 | For as it hit the water’s foam |
| Out jumped an enemy! | |
| It rose! Its body, twelve feet long, | |
| So huge, it seemed so near. | |
| Its dorsal fin arced through the air | |
| 680 | Then crash! It disappeared. |
| “Did you see that?!” The fisher screamed, | |
| And broke the silent pact. | |
| And though the group looked down on noise | |
| A couple came to chat. | |
| 685 | The fisher said just what he’d seen. |
| His line was taut as hell. | |
| And though the others had their doubts, | |
| They stayed and were compelled. | |
| The fisher fought as the crowd grew, | |
| 690 | For tourists heard and came. |
| A throng of forty intrigued fans | |
| Propelled the stray to fame. | |
| An hour passed, the burden grew. | |
| The fisher dripped with sweat. | |
| 695 | He doffed his jacket, then his shirt. |
| His arms were gleaming wet. | |
| And then they saw the trophy fish, | |
| A great white shark in flesh. | |
| It surfaced with its giant nose | |
| 700 | And puffed its fishy breast. |
| The shark resisted with great force. | |
| The fisher strained and moaned. | |
| All other fishers cut their lines; | |
| The pier was his alone. | |
| 705 | At first it led him ‘round the pier, |
| But soon, and as it fought, | |
| It zig-zagged ‘tween the pylon trunks | |
| And tangled up a knot. | |
| The monster was so very stout, | |
| 710 | And now the line was caught. |
| An hours-long grand spectacle | |
| Had finally been lost. | |
| The fisher cut his storied line. | |
| The shark then swam away. | |
| 715 | The crowd stood staring at the fish |
| Escaping from the fray. | |
| Some fishing stories don’t seem real, | |
| For men embellish tales. | |
| But that day there were witnesses | |
| 720 | Who saw him catch a whale. |

Photo by Randy from Newbury Park, California, USA – The Early Man Catches the FishUploaded by PDTillman, CC BY 2.0, Link
