On a particularly precarious section of the dam,
seven alpine ibexes balance—
four hooves stacked on a single stone—
scaling the crags that jut from cement,
hundreds of feet above a manmade valley,
licking for salt and minerals.
Most of the year, male ibexes prefer lowlands,
the security of the even and level.
The females tend towards higher terrains.
In winter, gripped by a peculiar ecstasy
that glides in on cold winds,
the males scale hill and mountain.
But sometimes, the trip up gets mixed up—
they climb levees instead of cliff-faces,
they discover great basins of placid water
where they should have found promontories
fat with gorgeous lady ibexes in heat.
Maybe when they arrive,
the male ibexes feel as peaceful as the water
in the deep reservoir the dam holds
high in the mountains,
but I can't help feeling resentment on their behalf.
All that time out on a ledge.
All those times I scaled the wrong dangerous wall
to places with names like Great Paradise,
sniffing at some promise,
some companionship.
How like a goat I felt
on the treacherous trip back down
to whatever hole I was living in.
-
Issue 66
-
Editor's Note
-
POETRY
- Lindsey Bellosa
- Chase Samuel Berggrun
- Mark Jay Brewin Jr
- Stephen W Carter
- Stephen Cramer
- Elizabeth B. Crowell
- G.S. Crown
- Jacob Cumiskey
- William Grenfell Davies Jr.
- Robert Haight
- Zebulon Huset
- Betsy Johnson-Miller
- Lillian Kwok
- Devon Moore
- Mary France Morris
- Dan Murphy
- Kathryn Nelson
- James B. Nicola
- Thomas Osatchoff
- Supritha Rajan
- J.C. Reilly
- B.T. Shaw
- Eva Skrande
- Catherine Stearns
- Don Thompson
- Ross White
-
FICTION