Upon hearing the glacier’s been declared officially dead

That hollering wind catches again

in my throat the way it once

caught at our tent all night it hasn’t

died down by morning blowing 

open my mind’s shutters to that 

interminable static snowfield ascent

with neither ropes nor poles

cold’s iron taste sunlight banging

like a gate in my sternum i grew old

expecting the crevasse-edge to crack

breakage i still carry in my pack

though years have fallen through us

and we’ve little occasion to speak

the glacier is dead news i zip

into a cool hidden pocket and keep

walking deforming and flowing

under the weight of zero gathering

a force that sucks the world we

knew through its infinite mouth

Sara Burant

Sara Burant is the author of a chapbook, Verge (Finishing Line Press). Her poems and reviews appear in journals such as Ghost Proposal, Ruminate, Pedestal, and Heavy Feather Review, among others. She lives in Eugene, Oregon where she practices breathing in these anxious times. 

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