Down from the icy Sawtooth crags and through the winter-laden landscape, the wind eventually dips to the canyon and creek we loved so well as children. Continuing on, it threads through the hollows above the creek, sculpted even today by stooped cottonwood trees.
Twisting above granite outcroppings and lava boulders, the wind courses through the giant arteries of this canyon, passing among quaking aspen, river willow, and gnarled cottonwood, shorn rudely by now of every dryly-veined leaf.
At ancient volcanic escarpments the wind bears south, scraping hard along canyon walls. Upward it moves, out of the canyon, slowing and sallying about the hillocks, the gullies, the poplars until it finally comes to stir ever more gently, warmer even, my dear brother, around your gray marbled headstone.
Primeval of days, this very same wind blows for eternity upon eternity, polishing and purifying even the roughest of the earth's elements and impediments. This said, at this hill's crest where you rest, there is no need of further refinement. Feel how the northern wind quiets for you, as if it knows over whose stone it passes.