Poem 92
My history teacher (Poem 40) said we lost a generation of mathematicians who were navigators in bombers during WWII – and a lot of those were New Zealanders … this is me sometime in the 80s looking in the window of a shop in Manners Mall that sells coins stamps and Egyptian figurines, wondering what’s happened to the man behind the relics …
( references here to ‘coming in on a wing and a prayer’, wartime airfield newsreels identified only as ‘somewhere in England’ and Churchill’s Battle of Britain ‘but for these men’ speech … )
Distinguished Flying Medal, Logbook And Photos – $850
Icons his book of trigonometric prayer in his photograph the high wool-lined collar of the leather jacket RAF hair face unlight unserious a man who took his mathematics over Germany most nights and recorded the tale in triangulations walking the dividers over the map and home dawn 'somewhere in England' coming in on an equation and the distant otherworld sound of but for these men on the radio … but for this man the sliver and ribbon his fingers could take photos that weren't the last after all a book that didn't burn against his chest inside cracking leather scorching fleece things that rode past death to the later more delicate sacrifice of a price