Carriage Horse

I took a detour to Wildwood Stables when hiking over and around Day Mountain, which is where I saw this beautiful horse in the window of the barn.

My inclination was to include Whitman's Song of Myself, 32, but I got hung up on the line, "Not one is respectable or unhappy over the whole earth." I kept looking at the expression on this horse's face and wasn't so sure.


Nothing wants to suffer. Not the wind
as it scrapes itself against the cliff. Not the cliff

being eaten, slowly, by the sea. The earth does not want
to suffer the rough tread of those who do not notice it.

The trees do not want to suffer the axe, nor see
their sisters felled by root rot, mildew, rust. 

The coyote in its den. The puma stalking its prey.
These, too, want ease and a tender animal in the mouth

to take their hunger. An offering, one hopes, 
made quickly, and without much suffering.

The chair mourns an angry sitter. The lamp, a scalded moth.
A table, the weight of years of argument.

We know this, though we forget.

Not the shark nor the tiger, fanged as they are.
Nor the worm, content in its windowless world

of soil and stone. Not the stone, resting in its riverbed.
The riverbed, gazing up at the stars.

Least of all, the stars, ensconced in their canopy,
looking down at all of us— their offspring—

scattered so far beyond reach.


Nothing Want to Suffer, by Danusha Lameris

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