Panther lies next to Wharncliffe
and Wharncliffe next to Devon
and Devon next to Delorme.
In each a single fisherman casts
in the slow, black water of the Big Sandy.
Catfish1 is the whisker lurking2
behind the bobbing cork3.
He lives, it seems, in dense4 night
from day to day until the fisherman
from Wharncliffe pulls him out
to be fried in tin-roof, tarpaper shacks5
from there to Matewan.
Politicians call this valley
a depressed6 area.
But, under the sun, my heart
will not have it so.
Straight up from the brackish7 water,
up the mountainside, green pointed8 trees
as close as bird's wings
grow fierce and clean,
and then for miles beside the tracks
the river moves faster over the rocks
and the water isn't black at all
only the silt9 underneath10.
The water over the rocks
is running clear and cold and pure.