Last week I boarded the train on a trip from Pittsburgh Pennsylvania to New Rochelle, New York. The ride, about eight hours in total, lacked the typical stressors of airplane travel. I’ve always liked trains and after this longer trip, I discovered the rails do something I never noticed before. They sing.
During a handful of long stretches, the familiar clickety-clack we all associate with a moving train faded and a resonating hum emitted. I found it hypnotizing; since I am not a musician I don’t know if the notes were in a major or minor key or which key. It started with a low note and increased until the note reached a soprano and ended. The audible phenomenon lasted only a short distance and varied. Think of a finger circling the lip of a wine glass on a grander scale.
Rail Song
By Ann Chiappetta
Rails and wheels marry
Sharing the miles
Conversations carry
Conductor sashays past
In the distance the horn blast
Rebounds reaches the last car.
Pastoral corridor lulls
The song is heard
A message
It conveys
The paring of rail and wheel
The joy of invention.
Disembarking upon arrival
from west to east .
The urge to thank the thrumming metal beast
For performing it’s rail song
Twitches fingers
Stays with me.
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