The dead predawn has snuffed out all life,
all sound,
the centurial dirt road torn into the
desert below is littered with a thousand
hoofprints, trampled and endless and eroded,
a shrine to an age and an instinct
from which we're far removed--which we
ourselves removed and polished and placed shardlike
in houses and museums, books and display cases.
Memories so sharp and honed they draw blood.
Slept with the tips of Cassiopeia's W facing left;
woke and she was right. Slept and
watched the world rotate round on the north star
like spinning a plastic globe;
woke and watched the liquid midnight velvet drain
the sky, disappearing stars hidden only by glare,
Capella the last to exit.
The desert slowly steadily stirs,
no memory, just now,
just a robe of filtered sunlight capping
eastward hills and highlighting butte and rock
and military runway.
The wooden walls of the restored station creak and shake in
the heat of the morning sun. The real ruins tell
their own story with crumbling stone and foundation--
tell of death in place of birth, abandonment and
decay, a man left a widower in a harsh world
when life was more fragile, more visceral--
the liminal space between the dead and living thin
and vulnerable.
We put our hands into the old old dirt,
finger the coarse bits of gravel weathering
from the slight hillside.
Our pores are pockets for the windblown dust,
red and pale and dun, flown in from the brine
left by ancient Lake Bonneville--its salt,
the earth's salt, mixing with our salted skins,
marking us, painting us all as one, a
living mineral touched by and breathing each
element. Mutual symbiotes, products of one another.
We have always been dependent
on these stars, this dirt, these trampled roads.
The orange lights of Dugway may shine at midnight,
the desert may erupt and the earth tremble as the
army tests ballistics during midday,
but nothing has changed.
We are still here, still the same;
like cells crawling a continuous membrane
we are minute and indistinct
yet one and the same.
The sunlight breaks the hills and heats stone and sand
and throws our shadows long like darts cast
across the plane of the world, and our cracked
lips curve and turn upward and bare teeth
and tongue, eyes slit and creased
and noses upturned we breathe and taste the salt,
taste it with every wild heaving breath.
--- ---
sunrise awakening
that road
life among death
--- ---
This was all inspired by or about Simpson Springs, an old Pony Express station out in the west Utah desert where Jarom and I camped last September on our way to the geode beds. There's just something about the desert . . . Written between 20090326 and 20090404.
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9 comments:
You are amazing!! So glad you are mine!! xoxoxoo
ummmmmm...gorgeous. my favorite ever? you should publish a volume of poetry. not kidding. i am there in the desert and thank you.
You know that is where I work. I climbed Indian mountain right next to simpson springs this last week with a couple troubled kids. I love it out there. The stars are amazing every night!!!
Awesome poetry by the way.
thanks for the words, Jed. you're quite lucky to be out there so often! such an amazing place, such worthy contemplation and exploration.
by the way--thanks heather, your feedback/criticism means a lot to me!
The 'woke stanza' is beautiful. I felt like you were singing to me when I read that part. Muy bien Matias.
michael -- thanks for those words. you know how I feel about you (aka I'll sing to you anytime).
i am rereading this and it is almost making me cry. i still think you should make a book. who wouldn't be moved by your words. being moved is a vital part of life and thank you.
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