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Are You Sirius?
A Sirius Romance
She’s Nature’s art in full disgrace beginning with her longing face. Below her bangs the eyebrows mate, her eyes are runny, teeth like slate. Her ears, unlike smooth tiny seashells, swing a lot like misshaped cowbells. Her twitching nose is ski-slope long and never has inspired a song. With lips severely under-drawn and tongue that yaps from dusk to dawn, with sour breath to make one reel, this is one gal no one would steal. But I’m a pooch who loves her smile when we’re romancing doggy style. |
That's really good, Ralph. I enjoyed it.
Cosmic Canines Two dogs, one large as Jupiter, the other small as Mercury, dance gravitationally round a star we call the Now. As solar winds whip past their fur, they gambol through the galaxy, glee plain as tongues and tail-wags, sound of woofs, and breaths of wow. Immersed within the quantum whir, they move with such agility, they make a light beam look earthbound, and teach with every bow how, lost in a ray of timeless play, to romp and revel in today. Tweak: The penultimate line was: "lost in the rays" |
After Studying the Hubble Ultra-Deep Field
(Rondeau Redoublé) “Once upon a time, faint lumps of light— coiled bluish millipede, plump tawny snail— each formed of scores of flames, whose rays took flight soon after the Bang, appeared exquisite and frail as spores,” you muse as you tramp along this trail through oak and hickory filtering the might of the low-slung sun. You’re lost in a fairy tale of once-upon-a-time, as flecks of light wink softly from radio towers on the height like fireflies sparking the dusk. A fingernail of moon appears while, beyond a long-winged kite, coiled bluish millipede, plump tawny snail— invisible as viruses—glide and sail on waves of ion seas. How did the night, beyond a jet plane’s woolly water tail, form multitudes of flames whose rays took flight? You suddenly catch sight of a wary white- tailed doe and her fawns, which follow without fail as without fail the world became just right, just right for a bang, a bang zapping the frail and exquisite, as exquisite as the pale but darkening skyline. Somewhere out of sight a hoot owl harmonizes with the wail of air-raid sirens. Things were looking bright once upon a time. |
Betelgeuse
The red giant Betelgeuse is the dimmest seen in years, prompting some speculation that the star is about to explode. —National Geographic The stars of Orion are not the same **as they were a few months ago, for his right hand has dimmed so much **you scarcely see its glow. Yes, Betelgeuse, the supergiant **lighting up the sky, has lost its luster, barely noticed **by the naked eye. Yet still it’s so immensely bloated, **if swapped with our own star, it would eat Earth, Mars and Jupiter **like a bear at a salad bar. When Father Time soon gives the order **to explode, so shall it, glittering like a glockenspiel **struck by a metal mallet. In a hundred thousand years—or now— **whenever it takes place, it will be brighter than the moon, **and all the human race will watch in awe an event that happened **in the middle ages of a well-upholstered gaseous blob **that’s gone through its life stages. But if tonight that cosmic whale **so pale now in Orion spews its seed of elements **like the floss of a dandelion to make more suns and worlds and life **(akin to me, in fact), I’d feel as high as the moon itself **to catch it in the act. |
This one is not about a particular planet, but an Italian philosopher. A supporter of the heliocentric Copernican view of the solar system, envisaging an infinite universe of numerous worlds moving in space, he was tried by the Inquisition for heresy and burned at the stake.
Giordano Bruno (1548-1600) Folks reckoned the Earth is so rare that the rest of all space must be bare **and empty of creatures, **but among all their teachers one asserted what most wouldn’t dare. That philosopher’s surname was Bruno. His claim? We’re not numero uno **and each star is a sun— **that there’s not merely one but bajillions!—a thing we now do know? But for a heretical scholar, it could be quite risky to holler **that we’re not the hub **of existence, ’cause, bub, you will blaze from your shoes past your collar. (Appeared in The Asses of Parnassus.) |
Meditation on a Twilight Union
Luminous, numinous, Venus and Jupiter triangle-set with a **scimitar moon: soon they’ll descend into invisibility; stars will appear and the **crickets will croon. Vega, Arcturus, and countless bright crystals will quiver the heavens and **dazzle the eye. Journey your eyes to the phantasmagorical reaches of space and your **spirit might fly! Alpha Centauri, Ca- nopus, Capella: stars incontrovertibly **gave us all birth; Ponder the chill of deep space, though, your mind will then unhesitatingly **kiss Mother Earth! |
I reposted this poem ("Sol Concealed") in Post #92.
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Neil Armstrong (1930-2012)
You could fly while still growing and green, could repair any flying machine **by your twenties, and tested **new rocket planes, crested the clouds in your bright X-15. In due course, you were picked for Apollo (undreamed of by falcon or swallow) **to land on the moon, **and to do it quite soon so the Commies could no more than follow. You touched the moon’s hide, took a stride, spoke of steps and of leaps, then all pride **disappeared as you turned **toward your planet and learned that your thumb is precisely as wide! (Appeared in The Society of Classical Poets.) |
An Affinity with Infinity
Views on the universe flit round like bats inside my head. It seems I even dream of planets and ETs, savor the cream of nebulae on the Milky Way. The rats of science brood about the fact that cats can be alive and dead at once, a beam of light be waves and particles. Why deem my cosmic place like dogs asleep on mats? Though comfortable on Earth (at least somewhat) I daydream about being on a crew of rovers zipping fast as light. Though told that isn’t possible, I am a sot, drunk on the kaleidoscopic hue of suns that made both bat and marigold. |
Ralph's back. Hooray! And what a great poem; it made me chuckle all the way through :-)
Martin, your dog (I almost typed 'god') sounds like a real character. Have you ever written any dog poetry? Thanks for the additional info. re. Sirius. I know a couple who named their house 'Sirius'; initially I thought they'd called it 'Serious', silly me. Your poem 'The Dog Star' made me laugh. I like limericks. The rhyme scheme of 'Cosmic Canines' is very effective, I think. Well, it's all good. I'm sorry I haven't written anything new for a while; I'm a bit tied up with work at the moment, but I might be slightly less busy next week :-) Best wishes, Fliss |
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