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 Natasha Trethewey                       for my father  as it was that morning: drizzle needling  settling around us—everything damp and heavy in our hip waders, we stalked you upstream a few yards, and out  the river seeped in over your boots,  All day I kept turning to watch you, how  then cast your invisible line, slicing the sky  you tried—again and again—to find skimming the river’s surface. Perhaps  two small trout we could not keep. I thought about the past—working  in my hands, each one slipping away that I tried to take it all in, record it  when the time came. Your daughter,  if I tell you I learned to be? You kept casting empty, it was tangled with mine. Some nights, that carried us out and watch the bank receding— 
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