The soft purr of a Piper Cub drifted over Italy's southern hills. Soul stirred by the landscape’s song, the young army pilot gently spoke.
“It’s mighty peaceful up here.”
Touching wheels to the tarmac, Woody shed his flight suit for an engineer’s desk and placed a viola beneath his chin.
For three score years Woody molded horsehair and wire into string song steadying the orchestra’s midriff with the vibrations of his spirit.
On Christmas Eve he played for the coming child, fell stricken and flew his last flight on instruments at Memorial.
Early New Year’s morn one could almost hear the faint soft purr of a Piper Cub as it banked to the right around the moon and merged with the waiting heavens.
This poem was written for a dear friend who played viola in the Belleville Philharmonic and other orchestra. In WW2, Woody flew reconnaissance missions in Italy. He graduated from Purdue University in engineering and worked for decades designing pipe line systems for Laclede Gas.