AT THE GREAT DIVIDE

Fifty summers now, wanting fifty more,

half a century of life in his recorded history,

he rides alone with a half cup of warm beer

in the middle of July on a gondola

looking down over a dusty ski run,

no longer able to brag he has no fear of dying,

still aching for more thrill than earth can yield,

still quick to mock the lucky and the smug

daring to prove them wrong

Within his panoramic view the whole world

spreads between bald peaks:

a land barren of Indian tribes and buffalo,

flocks of birds once in the millions,

remnants of Spanish invaders, ruts of wagon trains;

before him horizons filling with strange forms

that soon will make his ideas obsolete and forgotten

Now that each day will be a found arrowhead,

a doubloon shining behind a stone,

deadly spiders and snakes hidden in the sage,

he stands outstretching his arms into wings

and watches his shadow swoop in silhouette

across the Continental Divide