Articles/Essays – Volume 04, No. 3
An Exit From Utah
This is the place.
B. Young, 1847
My knot, my clot, my Utah,
Good gouty wrinkled nurse
Turned dear disease, insufferable
Sweet scurf, my bloat, my fever,
You’re all the pain I am.
And I’ll prescribe our health:
Take roads, take all these pesky
Limbs, wrenched or lopped off,
Take valleys, our gawking wounds,
And string them, stretch them, love,
Splay them out here on the long
Salt rack toward Nevada.
The bleach, the healing eye
That sears, the poisonous sweet
Action of this wind will rinse
Our oily blood, will conspire
Against my kissing face
To sting the light into me:
At ninety miles an hour
The blood’s old coils
And convoluted pains of heart
And head unwind, stretching
Clean as chrome on the long
Salt rack toward Nevada;
Under me the quick engine,
Steady like prayer, is purring
To this vacancy of wind, the land
Resolved to space and speed,
“This is the place,” the slicing
Light, the atomizing seas
Of liquid sage, “This
Is the place; this is the place.”