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Joanne the Poet - The Poetry of Joanne M. Clarkson

Poem “1957” in Cider Press Review

My poem about seeing Sputnik when I was a little girl is up now on the Cider Press Review website. This is a very vivid memory for me even after all these years. We had a close-knit neighborhood where all the moms were also my mom and the other children seemed like my brothers and sisters. But as I grew, as all of us mature beyond childhood, events in my life and the world intervened. My friend lost his life even as mankind explored the universe beyond.

1957

Later than bedtime, we stand

in the unpaved road looking up.

Neighbors not sure what to believe

as we search fixed constellations

for a single traveling light. Satellite.

Sputnik. The men of war

know the truth of bombs

masquerading as a field,

a field of moonlight. Mothers

count children in the dark

as we play hiding games

when suddenly, a red-headed girl

squeals and points toward

a slow moving star. A feeling

unfolds beyond fear and at seven

I already know I will remember

this night. How Bryan Flynn

found me and raced me back to base.

Bryan whose draft number

would be low. Who loved his old dog

and could pitch faster

than any of the other boys.

He would lose his life

while men walked on the moon.

Have you seen Star Link?

Low and slow, a satellite train.

Using my cell phone I can know

anything. I type in Bryan Flynn

and get thousands of hits. None

of them him except the power

of name. I remember

my mother rubbing her bare arms

that October, telling me how this night

would outlive us. How everything

we need to know is written in the sky.

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