Shenandoah
You must have seen
how, when
the sun,
that most valuable gold token,
had finally risen,
and the shadows were hidden—
tucked under their objects like a boxer’s chin—
the valley’s luxuriant ribbon,
from mountain
to distant mountain,
shed its fog like a reptile’s skin,
and was, for a minute, a purse held open,
a pair of cupped palms,
a bowl for alms.
*
Alex Turissini is a graduate of the MFA program at LSU. His poetry has appeared in The Gettysburg Review, Atlanta Review, Bayou Magazine, Up the Staircase Quarterly, and elsewhere, and he has been a contributor at the Sewanee Writers’ Conference. He lives and teaches in central Kentucky.

“Shed it’s fog like a reptile’s skin.” Thank you for that image!
Love this poem. Such startling imagery!
Beautiful.