'Night Flight', a new poem by Sarah Holland-Batt
As my plane drops down in turbulence
I think of you and of Salt Lake City,
I think of ice stealing over the Great Lakes
and of Omaha and of adamant plains.
I think of all the places
I have never been: Caracas,
La Paz, Kingston. I think of the way
our bodies puzzled together in that room
over pine woods where night deer
passed in the snow, their lonesome
inscrutable tracks sluicing
in the morning’s melt, I think of
your eyes that are almost the colour
of mercury, of their unbearable weight,
I think of the plateau of your chest
rising, rising, and of your hand
resting on my right thigh,
of the slim glint of your wedding
band in the dove predawn light.
I think of how everything is defined
by distance: how close we were,
how far from steel mills in Pittsburgh
and those killing Chicago winds
and union towns near Detroit, Michigan
where loyalty is the only religion.
I think of the sound of your breathing,
which is the sound of fields
of blond Illinois wheat bent down,
I think of those silver silos
of harvest corn we saw in Schuylerville,
barns blazing in all that silence
as we drove through what we could
not think or say. There is no grace
in this kind of longing, there is only pain,
pain which I have always preferred
anyway – it is where I live,
and called love by any other name.
Sarah Holland-Batt
Comments (2)
Not a word wasted but so emotionally evocative.
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