Chase Twichell

1950 / Connecticut / United States

The Immortal Pilots

The noise throws down
twin shadows, hunting shadows
on a black joy ride.
They roar up the silver vein of the river
and out over the stony peaks,

which have been shrunken to a luminous
green musculature on the screens.
Who are the pilots, too high to see
the splayed hearts of deer tracks

under the apple trees, or smell
the cider in the fallen fruit?
Who are the vandals that ransack
the wilderness of clouds?

Below them, a thin froth of waterfall
spills from a rock face.
They see its sudden wreckage,

its yielding gouts,
and the wind tear into the papery
leaves of the poplars, roughing them up

so the undersides show—
a glimpse of paleness
like a glimpse of underwear.
The pilots are young men,
and still immortal.

Already in the cold
quadrants of their hearts
they imagine the whole world

flowering beneath them. It feels
like love, like being with a woman
who flowers beneath them,

so that they wonder
how it would feel to go on
riding the young green world that way,
to a climax of spectral light.
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