PART THREE MEMORIAL
I trace the outline
of horses encased
in hydrated lime
an offering
to return home
to loam to ground water
the horses buried
on-site to free up
the creeks and crease of
their pasts
their makeup all song
and morning and mane
here, enshrined
with the memory
of a stock pond
horses buried
thigh-deep in mud
clawing for the first
world
for something we left
behind
The second full-length collection by Oklahoma-based poet Jake Skeets, a member of the Navajo Nation (and the third appointed as the Nation’s Poet Laureate) is the brilliantly and heartbreakingly devastating collection Horses (Minneapolis MN: Milkweed Editions/Toronto ON: McClelland and Stewart, 2026), a title that follows his full-length debut, Eyes Bottle Dark with a Mouthful of Flowers (Milkweed Editions, 2019). As the notes at the back of the collection provide:
In 2018, approximately 191 horses were found dead at a stock pond on the Navajo Nation. The horses were identified as feral horses, wild horses, or free-roaming horses. Stock ponds are used as water stations for roaming livestock in what has been called an arid landscape. The stock pond where the horses were found was near Gray Mountain in Northern Arizona. It had been dry because of the extreme drought the Navajo Nation is facing, caused by decades-long aggression by the United States and the changing climate. The horses were found thigh- and neck-deep in the mud, some horses on top of other horses.
These animals were
searching for water to stay alive. In the process, they unfortunately burrowed
themselves into the mud and couldn’t escape because they were so weak.
– Former Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez
The horses were found in a circle, mud caked in their coats. Some horses were found upright as if running. The Navajo Nation, as a response sprayed the horses with hydrated lime to speed up decomposition and buried the horses on-site. Today, the feral horse problem is contributing to the drought conditions of the Navajo Nation.
One horse survived and
her name is Grace.
Set with opening lyric, Horses is constructed as a book-length suite in four sections—“HORSES,” “HOOTSO,” “ENTANGLEMENTS 1” and “AND STILL DEER SOFTEN”—writing a collection a dream-land of decolonial meditations on apocalypse through fences and boundaries, pipelines and blockades and dried-up lakebeds, all of which lead back to the book’s foundation: of dead wild horses and climate crises. “there [ ] a long garden,” he writes, mid-way through the collection, “lush / locked, an oasis there / and we [ ] our torsos / touching in the tickseed // never touching though / a wildfire burns along the highway / in our memory of each other / you come closer to the asphalt [.]” Acknowledging a loss amid losses, his is a lyric composed across a hush; composed amid moments held in space. Skeets’ lines are remarkably pointed, composing Horses as a kind of essay-poem around a devastated landscape, writing both a love song to the land and its inhabitants as well as offering warning, elegy and witness. “When we get to the dead horses,” he writes, near the end of the collection, as part of “FIELD SONG,” “I suppose the wind / is felt, deep blue within the silt of it—when we get to the field, / I close my shutter left open.”
There’s a heft to this collection, writing the legacy of dead horses “mired in mud” seeking water, a narrative encapsulation and elegy around landscape and loss, colonial and climate impact. “In the beginning, breath—erosive slather of wind and vein. / Waters saint the church caught at the throat, / callus, calcium, a bitter tide. The first body bent / into locust into tower : a mountain physics, an early river.” There’s such a sense of the physical landscape articulated through these pages, writing a perspective and a space even through citing their slow erosion. Or, as he writes:
there was a lake here you
say
I repeat there was a lake
here
as if to at least see my voice
touch yours
and you trace my lip with
your [ ]
there [ ] a lake
here
and just because there isn’t
anymore
doesn’t we mean we don’t feel
the water echo beneath us


