Circles of rope, white, grey and bilious, squeeze around Wetterhorn Mountain’s chest, leaving only its angled forehead in sight. Like the tail of St. George’s fiery dragon, the clouds sink into stone, ******* down their grip until nothing is left breathing, until nothing is left. Stone emits a feeble cry of fear and trembling. The dragon’s tail squeezes tighter, intent on suffocation -- severe oxygen deprivation above timberline.
Rain is the Sancho Panza to the mountain’s Quixote; the circles of Dante’s Hell mirror the clouds’ constant clinging below the pointed, harpoon peak. You can climb this mountain as in Purgatory, but its path is polished to a slippery ***** from the clouds’ constant rains: such a dubious, deadly affair. Only St. Georges persevere here; only the holy ones manage not to stumble on the bulky, slick rocks.
Rain is not a baptism, but an ablution. Rain threatens the clarity of the day. Rain threatens the clinging of the day to the present. Always, such rain will pass. Puddles in post holes, precarious ascent to the cloudless light. Rain clears the path in hindsight but nurtures the future to come quickly, like cacti with brief, brilliant blossoms. Let the thorns be your payment for grasping the blooms.