Hurtling Lonely Glow
Higher than contrail clouds albatross cling wrap sky
the International Space Station flings by quicksilver bright
a needle of humanity over all the blue cold things. Astro-
nautical measurement is a profounder fathom of space:
missing us imagining us in our food and sleep activities
in every gold-melt city seam. We assemble irresistibly iron-
filing along the tectonic islands. We all occupy islands here.
The astronauts too, islanding up above. A hurtling lonely
glow in the western sky where the sun seals off the rim
of Earth—no longer the world entire—our planet island
in a vaster ocean surveyed by lonelier birds. Look
as we too soar one-thousand miles eastward
spinning away the hour of dusk
see them passing by shining
beacon shining albatross lonely
hurtled ones who know
better than cloud or bird
where high wind comes from
and where it goes.
Edie Meade is a writer, artist, and mother of four in Huntington, West Virginia. Recent work can be found in Feral, Still: The Journal, New Flash Fiction Review, Fractured Literary, Ghost Parachute, and elsewhere. Say hi on Twitter @ediemeade or https://ediemeade.com/.
Published February 7 2022