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Thursday, August 23, 2012

ROAD KILL (POEM)


                                    Road Kill
                                                                                                                             
If there is a perfect month,
October’s the one:

driving north on Highway 82 from Joseph
colors cascade from the asphalt westward -
orange and red undulation of leaves on the brush
in the roadside ditch,
cottonwoods just beyond, a row of
sturdy whispering sentinels, leaves deciding
between green and gold.

Behind them a mown field of straw
         the color of straw.

Beyond that field, the violent thrust of Mount Joseph’s
big shoulders, his coat of dark blue-green fir and spruce
punctuated, all the way to the snowy ridge,
by lemon-yellow spires
         of tamarack.

Autumn air coming in the pickup window
is a continuous kiss.

Just north of McLaran Lane, a skunk has been killed
along the center line.

It is a beautiful skunk, a large one, still intact
except for the crushed head. Its two broad stripes
glisten white against the glistening obsidian
of the rest of the body.

I drive this road every day, so witness, over the following week,
the incremental crushing
         and reddening
         and flattening
         and, finally, the reduction to a stain on the highway
of what was lately a breathing, waddling
life.

Is there a crime
named for this – this hurrying past a life
recently ended  – some juridical or
linguistic cousin of negligent homicide?

For the next five days, I anticipate
approaching the spot, holding my breath, then
inhale, as long and as deeply as I can, the cloud of
pungent skunk molecules, that I may carry forward, beyond
that skunk’s death, some part of its sweet waddling life
with mine.



                                                               Dean Metcalf
                                                               ©November 2, 2007 

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