
has the same colors as the tiny scene described in the poem -
except for the silver shining sea.
The poem also refers to an earlier time when my fellow-travelers were my own family, chugging along in our model T. That time is also a precious memory. We always sang as we rode, the melody for the youngest, harmony for my father's rich bass and my mother's and my altos.
Here is my poem about the scene that solidified a random group of fellow-travelers into temporary comradeship:
The great plains lay behind us in the darkness
as our airplane chased the unseen setting sun
obscured by blankets, layer on layer, of cloud.
Still high above Sierra peaks a small rift opened,
a cloud-shored crevasse that pointed west, and through it
a gleaming golden patch, no larger than
a postage stamp (as measured on my window).
Red-gold water reflected hidden sun,
with black cutouts of silhouetted land--
a map of the Bay from delta in the north
to San Jose, Twin Peaks of San Francisco
limned by glint of ocean, all the islands--
Angel, Yerba Buena, Alcatraz--
as clear as letters on a printed page and,
tinier than a mouse’s eyelash, the towers
of the bridges--Bay Bridge, Golden Gate.
As a child I lived within the limits
of that small patch. We drove to San Jose
from Berkeley (in my father’s model T )
almost every Sunday to Grandma’s house
to meet the aunts and uncles, to feast upon
Grandma’s chicken soup with home-made noodles.
We watched the building of the bridges,
took evening picnics to see the cable carriage,
spider-like, spin wire, strand by strand.
Cloud curtains closed our view again, the plane
changed angle, “seat belts fastened, seats upright,
trays in stowed position.” We descended
through billows of blowing mist and saw the runway
only moments before the plane touched down.
Phyllis Sterling Smith, January 13, 2002
what a beauty! your words made me travel with you all the way until landing! Thanks for visiting me and thus bringing me here, I am glad I didnt miss this beauty. Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteoh you can read my offering for SS at
ReplyDeleteMy Journey
I was swept up in this post!
ReplyDeleteSuch great descriptions. You made it realistic for me. I've flown into San Francisco twice this year, but unfortunately at night. I missed out on seeing any beauty.
ReplyDeleteI always enjoy my visits here so, you have such a way of sweeping me up into your recollections.
ReplyDeleteVivid and revealing. The trips I make to your posts are inspiring and delightful!
ReplyDeleteyou sucked me right into it...
ReplyDeleteleveller
If flying felt as beautiful as you described the vistas, I would enjoy it.
ReplyDeleteI enjoy your writing. Thanks for the read.
You captured the beauty with wonderful words!
ReplyDeleteThat was lovely. I've missed out on the view both times I've flown in there too. Once at night, and once, no magical breaks in the cloud. Maybe it will be 3rd time lucky next time!
ReplyDeleteAfter reading the poem, I feel I have just become your fellow traveler through time. Very enjoyable...
ReplyDeleteI was really drawn in...felt like I was sitting right there next to you..
ReplyDeleteVery beautiful. MY writings are in the Writers Lounge if you are interested.
ReplyDeleteso very enjoyable...the combination was a beautiful read...thank you..i want some of that chicken soup with homemade noodles...
ReplyDeleteWhat great imagery. I think the poem should remain untitled.
ReplyDelete