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Cape Canaveral’s Pioneers Asleep

      Cape Canaveral’s Pioneers Asleep

Modern poetry modern verse contemporary poetry contemporary verse modern poem contemporary poem 

Archibald Whidden, pioneer on Cape Canaveral and grandfather of Phillip Whidden

I wonder if the lights across lagoon

Waves, little though they are, the lights and waves,

Portend some goodness underneath the moon

Like new moon light on marble architraves.

The houses on the shores send out their light.

Canaveral’s lagoon holds little dreams

Much smaller than the brains of sting rays, slight

As brains of horseshoe crabs beneath the beams

From windows in the white frame buildings sent

Across the water.  Dreaming in the beds

Inside the bedrooms does not bear the scent

Of Atlas missiles in the sleeping heads.

  No scenes from orbiting space telescopes

    Invaded pioneering dreams with hopes.

Phillip Whidden

4 Comments

  1. Stephen Zorn

    How long has your family been in Canaveral? They had no idea what would become of the little sleepy town.

    Reply
    • phillipw

      I just now saw your comment. I never check here. I was waiting for an e-mail. Sorry. I believe my father arrived there in 1923.

      Reply
      • Kenneth Allee Cook

        Philip,
        Are you related Alle Whidden? He was my Grandfather but he died before I was born.
        Regards,
        Ken Cook

        Reply
        • phillipw

          I don’t know. That name does not mean anything to me. Sorry. Was Alle/Allee a pioneer on Cape Canaveral? A resident of south Florida? Can you give me more clues, please?

          Reply

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