The Boy's First Flight |
The Boy's First Flight |
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![]() Mr.Politicly Incorrect ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Member Posts: 579 Joined: Sep 2005 Member No: 8,405 ![]() |
This isnt my work but i loved it and thought i would share it....this is also the first poem ever recognized by NASA
The Boy's First Flight 06.10.03 One side of our house was desert And the other, the one facing east, Was Eden itself. I didn't know this until I bounced on a trampoline And landed on the garage roof, me the unpaid astronaut, Age nine, knees scuffed from a rough landing. I looked about, stunned. A breeze lived In the sycamore and a single-engine airplane Hung by a thread of exhaust in the darkening sky. This was 1961. I asked, "Is this for us?" meaning the bushel of stars, Pitched and pulsating their icy thorns. The moon was a tiger's tooth, Hooked in a frightening way. I walked back And forth on the roof, arms out for balance. I saw my cat and dog, and they saw me, perhaps in awe, Because they did lift their eyes to me. And now it's 1999, the end of the millennium, And it's certainly the end of my knees, Those springs long gone. A latch of rust groans in each knee- How they would love that payload of a taut trampoline. I see these children, how they jump, fall back, and jump again. If only I could sit on a roof, in summer, If only I could watch a Shuttle-what lever does the commander push To make a smile on his face, her face? I'm in the dark, literally, Ice cubes rattling in my tea. The crickets sing in the weeds, And soon the Shuttle, dime-bright, will lift off And pull away. My friends, my suited up pilgrims, What news will you bring? |
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