This week, a guest theme run by Zenobia Driver : poems about flying.
(Poem #1951) Impressions of a Pilot Flight is freedom in its purest form, To dance with the clouds which follow a storm; To roll and glide, to wheel and spin, To feel the joy that swells within. To leave the earth with its troubles and fly, And know the warmth of a clear spring sky; Then back to earth at the end of the day, Released from the tensions which melted away. Should my end come while I am in flight, Whether brightest day or darkest night; Spare me no pity and shrug off the pain, Secure in the knowledge that I'd do it again. For each of us is created to die, And within me I know, I was born to fly. |
Some time ago, I was reading 'On Wings of Fire' by Dr. Abdul Kalam, and came across a reference to a poem about Darius Greene. While trying to track down that poem, I came across lots of other poems about flying and realized that this was one topic that was not sufficiently represented in the poems we read in school, college etc, or on the minstrels. (A notable exception to this being 'An Irish Airman Foresees His Death' by W.B.Yeats, which is reproduced and quoted everywhere, but that is not about flying alone and it has only one reference to the 'lonely impulse of delight' that 'drove to this tumult in the clouds'.) So here are some poems that describe the joy of flying, the reasons for flying, the irreverent attitude of fighter pilots and of course, the story of Darius Greene. For those who want to read more quotes, poems etc about flying, http://www.skygod.com/quotes/misc.html is one good site. I thought I would start with a poem that describes the sensation of flying. I loved the first paragraph - I can feel a plane rolling and spinning and dancing with the clouds as I say the lines. Also loved the analogy of flight as freedom. The last paragraph was great too - wouldn't it be marvellous if you knew exactly why you were on this earth, and you knew that you were doing exactly that and you absolutely loved it? Zenobia [Martin adds] As usual, contributions to the theme are welcome - send them in!
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