Friday, December 13, 2013

Airplane


I remember the first time
The feeling dawned; I didn't know its name

I was flying in the small plane
Over a midnight blue night landscape,
And I could not see the horizon.

Sitting in the passenger seat,
Belted in, the instruments on
The cockpit panels glowed red
As we droned on, the backward dance
Of language from a small-town tower
Disappearing into the letters, numbers,
Monotone:
Whiskey Bravo One Niner Niner,
Indistinct

I could not tell if those stars were
In the constellation
Or the lights of tiny
Towns or farmyards
Along the river, down below.

There simply was no line of earth and sky
No, none that I could see.

Not that it mattered much.

That suspension, I suppose, as I recall,
Flying toward a landing strip
That meant I would be home
Was my first brush with pure
Suspended peace.

And it was years on, the
Young girl grown,
I learned that homeostasis
Was one of life's true gifts,

That fleet oneness, later blossoming
Unbidden, as autumn
Reds, leaves golden in the
Floating flash
Reflected in the car's half-opened
Windows and across a rain-splashed
Windshield,
In the drowsy motion
There, glittered by the diamond
Drops, sudden sun blooming into memory,
Flying in the moment, then, I

Understood the balance.

Another Kind of Winter Count


Down along the windbreak across the road,
Where little hedge apples fell
Onto the back of
Not a rack, but just some old
Cart there

We’d watch the green day turn to
Rose as the sun set, often orange in those
Long ago summers. 
And even when
The nighttime came on,
We could see by the
Dark lit sky,
And home was where
The grand willow
Was the only architecture
In that large back yard,
Before our mother’s lilac hedge kept out the pasture.

In an early dark
I think how I don’t want
To forget a lot of things,
So many memories, so many stories.
I am taking my winter count.