Hibernal Solstice
By marandina
- 1969 reads
Dark winter dawn
broken by shards
of sunlight beckoning
the shortest day.
A diurnal heraldry
calling Jupiter and Saturn,
a Christmas star
forged by skies.
Midwinter monument,
Newgrange tomb aligned,
watches the death and
rebirth of sun Gods.
Ancient stones await
on Wiltshire plains.
Silent solar winds
traverse empyrean Heavens.
Durrington Walls host
Neolithic ghosts,
feasting, animals mating,
crops being blessed.
Poles tilt once more,
light commanding night,
on a perpetual journey
negotiated through millennia.
Since the advent of time.
Footnotes:
Image at https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/0f/Irelands_history.jpg/220px-Irelands_history.jpg. Free for public use.
Newgrange is a prehistoric monument in Ireland. Its entrance is aligned with the rising sun on the Winter Solstice. Stonehenge is configured to correlate with the sun setting at this time of year.
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Comments
This poem is very much on my
This poem is very much on my spiritual level Paul. The Winter Solstice will soon be upon us, when In the depths of winter we think about the shortest day and longest night. We light candles to remind us that the light will return in the Spring.
You describe this so well in your imaginative poem, which I very much enjoyed reading.
Blessings at this time and I wish you a Happy Winter Solstice.
Jenny.
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I hadn't realised about the
I hadn't realised about the coming 'conjunction' (to our eyes!) of Jupiter and Saturn. Thank you for mentioning it!
I like your first verse for a bright clear December morning!
All have been fascinated by the turn of the year, and looking for the return of sunshine and warmth, and so has given rise to many religious vain rites down the ages. As we don't know the date of Christ's coming as the Light of the world, it has been chosen to be celebrated at such time also, where the darkness and our need for light is so impressive.
Rhiannon
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Lovely, just my kind of poem.
Lovely, just my kind of poem. :)
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Thoroughly enjoyed reading
Thoroughly enjoyed reading this. The solstice always feels like a special time. I always put my Christmas tree up and decorate the house on the solstice, and it's a family event (when it can be!) - my kids make special efforts to be at home for the solstice, to help with the decorating, and because it's when I allow Christmas songs and food for the first time! When they were little they were very frustrated that we were the last to decorate, but now they rather like it. There is something very strong linking us to the shortest and longest days.
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I am always suspicious of this
I am always suspicious of this kind of thing it can't be easy to "backtrack' to calculate orbits the further back in time the more because of perturbations, apart from the fact that the equations of motion are all highly non-linear. The kind of thing they study in chaos theory. Well, I can't prove it and neither can they! Or?
Keep well! Tom Brown
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