The first of two poems set beneath an unrelenting sun, where strength meets something that will not move.
…
Here, in this place, the sun watches
all —
The dry earth, a hard bed, and the trees
that cast no shade, and do not wish to.
None of that matters, for
I am strong, and my task is
clear.
The stone squats on hard earth.
I set my shoulders to the stone, and push.
It will not shift.
I push again.
It will not shift.
…
Once, when I
walked, the earth would
list, and storms
make way for
my coming.
I set my shoulders to the stone, and push.
It will not shift.
I push again.
It will not shift.
…
The hot air shimmers—in the
sky, an eagle, rising to
the other place,
up there—
back then.
The sun is small and hard, and
obliterates all shadow—
all the shades are
fled, but me.
…
I set my shoulders to the stone, and push.
It will not shift.
I push again.
…
…
The sun is small and hard.
…
…
This poem pairs with The Hill, another recursive piece, and is part of an ongoing field
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