Truth From the Four Corners
the Southwest is calling!
21 years have passed since our last Spring trip
to the Four Corners in March,
there is a clarity to the Southwest,
water is the Great Blurrer,
as back East feet of rain in a year
erodes what is before us,
and energizes plants to round the clean lines
that rock and wind can make,
here only inches of rain come a year,
here geology slaps you in the eye:
mesas of russet red sandstone hold high
and are encircled by talus at their bases,
synclines, anticlines,
memories of volcanoes in rocks beneath the feet,
below uranium and coal wait to be used,
rivers carve deep and true,
until there are canyons, one Grand,
and the Goosenecks
where a river has created a serpentine wonder of gorges,
whole national parks hold the Fantastic
in rock sculpted over eons,
blessed with the memories of the wonder of water's passage,
and where there is enough water, it empowers cottonwoods and agriculture,
another clarity the Southwest shouts is of the touch of the Indigenous peoples,
who found home here and left their buildings and artifacts
to give us clues, insights into their commonality with us,
and into their profound expression of the truth of the world
that their buildings asserted in their every line,
the truth of what the dance
of Sun, and Moon, and Earth, over the year
reveals to us of the grand design above, below, and before,
it is of what our days should mean,
we live now in troubled times
within which fear of our dark sides,
of our own mortality,
can make us feel alone and lost,
how wonderful it can be to be in the Southwest
where we can grasp and hold the awe that is Earth's gift to us,
from the wonders of the natural world,
and from the wonders of Indigenous peoples in the past,
and their descendants still here,
all who deserve to have their gifts known.
by Henry H. Walker
February 5, ‘26