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For an Earth-Landing

the sky sinks its blue teeth

into the mountains.

 

Rising on pure will

 

(the lurch & lift-off,

the sudden swing

into wide, white snow),

 

I encourage the cable.

 

Past the wind

& crossed tips of my skis

& the mauve shadows of pines

& the spoor of bears

& deer,

 

I speak to my fear,

 

rising, riding,

finding myself

 

the only thing

between snow & sky,

 

the link

that holds it all together.

 

Halfway up the wire,

we stop,

slide back a little

(a whirr of pulleys).

 

Astronauts circle above us today

in the television blue of space.

 

But the thin withers of alps

are waiting to take us too,

& this might be the moon!

 

We move!

 

Friends, this is a toy

merely for reaching mountains

 

merely

for skiing down.

 

& now we're dangling

like charms on the same bracelet

 

or upsidedown tightrope people

(a colossal circus!)

 

or absurd winged walkers,

angels in animal fur,

 

with mittened hands waving

& fear turning

 

& the mountain

like a fisherman,

 

reeling us all in.

 

So we land

on the windy peak,

touch skis to snow,

are married to our purple shadows,

& ski back down

to the unimaginable valley

 

leaving no footprints.

e
Written by
Erica Jong
1942 / American
Lines·Words
51·201
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