They say Voyager crossed the heliopause
last summer with thirty thousand years to go
to clear the sun’s gravity. Our plutonium
spark, a flicker of human warmth returning
to the stars like that first purple martin
returning again in the spring to the place
where he was hatched or the salmon
swimming up blue streams. We are called
home to where our atoms first began,
the water, the sky, the stars. The silent iron
in our blood aches for the supernovae
and so lying on our backs beneath
the wind-swaying oak trees, we hold
hands and watch the stars, imagining that
long journey whose end we’ll never know.
—
PAD 2014 #2 | We Write Poems: We Wordle #12
James Brush is a teacher and writer who lives in Austin, TX. He tries to get outside as much as possible.
It’s a fantastic adventure, don’t you think? Wonderful poem, and thank you for joining I this wee, James.
– Misky
Thank you, Misky. I’m enjoying getting back into writing and posting more regularly again.