Salt Crusted on Automotive Glass
Between me and the decadent majesty of the salmon-red cliffs of eastern Utah, a ghost landscape stands sentinel. A poem.
This poem was originally published in Sunstone, February 1994.
Between me, safe in my seat on this bus, and the decadent majesty of the salmon-red cliffs of eastern Utah, a ghost landscape stands sentinel, as if etched into the glass by a cadre of capering goblins. The residue of a hasty window washing— loops and whorls of dirt left untouched, uncleansed, unrepentant, at the bottom of the glass on each fluid upstroke— it sparkles, gritty and salt-sharp in the oblique sunlight, like a series of pearly solar flares, or a graph of the desert’s pulsebeat, or spectral negatives of a washed-out sandstone arch, photographed in stages over eons of time— snapshots from a child-god’s flip-book— frothing, leaping, peaking, then falling back into the ground like fountains of earth, a time-lapse planetary signature that will melt and return to dust with the next unlikely rain. ∅
Bill- Thanks for sharing this. I particularly love this part: "snapshots from a child-god’s flip-book." Something about it just strikes true. Hope you're well this week. Cheers, -Thalia