Today's poem is by Margot Schilpp
The de Havilland Comets
All through those last flights the cracks spread
like tiny silver zippers. People sat strapped
to the seats and looked out the square windowsacross the earth's sweep. Flights took off.
Flights landed. Flights flew from London
to Rome, from Berlin to Cairo. Shatner's goonon the airplane's wing is fearsome, but imagine
being a passenger on the de Havilland Comet,
looking out the window at the distant cotton cloudsand smoking a Dunhill while mulling the wine list.
I'm bending a paper clip back and forth,
feeling it get warm, and watching the crooklighten and twist. If ever we wanted engineers
to re-test something thoroughly, it would be
planes, and they thought they had. Hoursof pressurization, shields between the engines
and fuel tanks, reinforced fuel lines, new
smoke detectors. None of it matteredbecause no one knew the Comets had exploded
after fractures from rivets started the planes'
skin peeling away as the metal fatigued.I can't smooth the paper clip to its pristine
sleekness, and can't forget the Comets. I push
on them just to the point of breakage. Beyond.
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Copyright © 2019 Margot Schilpp All rights reserved
from Afterswarm
Carnegie Mellon University Press
Reprinted by Verse Daily® with permission
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