Staring at the landscape of their pain
I swat at the fog of inevitability,
Try not to feel that no one knows
What he or she is doing—
Whether a hundred years ago
In these hills or today
Or the future any sensible person doubts.
I fail, feel only the chill of near-dawn.
Day’s destruction of mystery.
As a white man, my ignorance—
Traditionally—is holy.
After the fact
Comes sympathy, as if we could
Only love what was ruined or absent,
Purge passion with elegy.

Any tourist will tell you:
Envisioning is our medicine.
I, too, hope to see what I can’t see.