Mount Mitchell

 

The July towns, the crowds, the sweat

dwindle to bluegreen pools of haze

islanded with hills.

                                     Here on the lashed summit

we are scoured clean as this bleached tableau

of ghostly snags, as the limestone

boulders we teeter on in ceaseless gusts

while birds, their taut songs quick and few,

dart in sun whose copper glare

is day of an alien world.

 

We cling together here

because we must—our summery cottons

do not turn back the chill.

We must shelter in each other’s warmth,

huddle, cheek pressed to cheek,

to gaze into tumbling shreds of storm

as into wild creation.

 

Somewhere in haze beneath us

waits the hot room, the close moist life

where we recoil

and leisurely reclaim the heat

which disunites us, islands our

content in that sultry country

we know best.

 

But now, in this flayed light

where the blue roars and cold clings

harshly to our face and hands

that world is below:

it is a light that reconciles

and the black, pouring road to separations

downward.

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