John Balaban, author of Passing through a Gate (Copper Canyon Press, 2024), a collection of poems, essays, and translations, has written numerous books of poetry, as well as fiction, nonfiction, and Vietnamese translations, and his work has been awarded the Academy of American Poets’ Lamont Prize, a National Poetry Series selection, and two nominations for the National Book Award. His Locusts at the Edge of Summer: New and Selected Poems won the 1998 William Carlos Williams Award from the Poetry Society of America. Balaban lives with his wife and daughter in Raleigh, North Carolina, where he teaches at North Carolina State University.

Photograph by Carolla Clift.

Walking Down into Cebolla Canyon

by John Balaban
1.
Everything about us, for better or worse,
we make ourselves, with marvelous exceptions
like the snow peaks rinsed in rose light
at dusk on the Sangre de Cristo range.
Or the bleached, broken jaw of a mule deer,
its teeth scattered among cactus wreaths
beside the trail, down from the mesa,
where the river stammers against volcanic
rocks and pools where spooked trout skim
through aspen leaves tumbling in clear water.
People on couch
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