free-form poem I wrote for a class; about the 2017 eclipse in the Midwest |
We planned and planned And then the day came But something was awry We got up at 6, just like we had planned But the weather had plans of its own We looked at each other and then at our phones Clouds here, clouds there For a 0.5% difference Was it worth the drive? 2 hours, at least, there and then back Thousands of people, and the heat on top of it all We’ll stay, we decided The odds are far too slim What if we went for a 2 minute event and a cloud passed over our view? We nodded and separated, and they went to bed I had class, so I dressed and went on my way Classes went well, and then home I came Still in bed, those lazy butts But they arose and packed up To Glick Park, we cheered, and drove across town We found shady spot and made ourselves at home We made sandwiches and ate snacks as we eagerly awaited the event We were grateful that had attended a seminar the week before We learned a lot about the eclipse and what it meant in the grand scheme of things The moon just wanted to photo-bomb the Sun No big deal except it was We struggled with our phones to get pictures of what we saw I even cut up an extra pair of eclipse glasses and affixed it to my phone Trying desperately to capture the moment But the human eye is not a camera I could not get the same view All 99.5% of the eclipse, burned into my brain We whooped and hollered as it finished its slow pass And went about our lives, starting the first day of seven years When the next pass will come nearby Our 99.5% was great in our own minds But far greater was the satisfaction that Carbondale’s perfect view had been blocked by a wondering Cloud |