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Because I know tomorrow |
his faithful gelding heart will be broken |
when the spotted mare is trailered and driven away, |
I come today to take him for a gallop on Diaz Ridge. |
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Returning, he will whinny for his love. |
Ancient, spavined, |
her white parts red with hill-dust, |
her red parts whitened with the same, she never answers. |
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But today, when I turn him loose at the hill-gate |
with the taste of chewed oat on his tongue |
and the saddle-sweat rinsed off with water, |
I know he will canter, however tired, |
whinnying wildly up the ridge's near side, |
and I know he will find her. |
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He will be filled with the sureness of horses |
whose bellies are grain-filled, |
whose long-ribbed loneliness |
can be scratched into no-longer-lonely. |
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His long teeth on her withers, |
her rough-coated spots will grow damp and wild. |
Her long teeth on his withers, |
his oiled-teakwood smoothness will grow damp and wild. |
Their shadows' chiasmus will fleck and fill with flies, |
the eight marks of their fortune stamp and then cancel the earth. |
From ear-flick to tail-switch, they stand in one body. |
No luck is as boundless as theirs. |
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