The First Stars
By onemorething
- 1190 reads
To see the first stars is to look
into the eyes of the most distant past -
here our older suns burn,
once stellar embryos become
the singular shine of the rotation of a cored mass.
Perhaps it is the faces of gods we think
we glimpse in the cosmic birth of hydrogen giants,
or white ladies who haunt the night sky, mouths full
of words that are spoken
only to the silence of the universe.
In the deepest darkness, they mutter,
from the slick of oil at the boundaries of time,
how they still bear witness to an army of light,
how they will always reach us.
Formed from gravitational disintegration,
amongst the tumult of molecular clouds,
comprised of heat and reconstruction - where
we are something, are nothing, we are everything,
the elements of supernovas,
the ancestors of change, the glimmer in our blood.
Image is from here: https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Woman_in_a_white_dress.jpg
Also on Twitter: https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Edward_Robert_Hughes_-_Night_with_her_Train_of_Stars_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg
- Log in to post comments
Comments
Wonderful poem Rachel, full
Wonderful poem Rachel, full of the mysteries of the oldest stars and what they mean to you. Very impressed by those lines:-
Perhaps it is in the faces of gods we think
we glimpse in the cosmic birth of hydrogen giants,
or white ladies who haunt the night sky, mouths full
of words that are spoken
only to the silence of the universe.
We can only really wonder at the great cosmos in our universe, not really understanding, but having our own imagined admiration for what's out there. I really like your theory in this great poem.
I adore the picture too, so beautiful.
Jenny.
- Log in to post comments
Brilliantly done. Some great
Brilliantly done. Some great turns of phrase but I love "slick of oil at the boundaries of time".
- Log in to post comments
Just a stellar poem - one of
Just a stellar poem - one of your very best.
- Log in to post comments
the other day there was a bit
the other day there was a bit on Inside Science about moons forming. In the past, this would have meant nothing to me, but now when this sort of thing crops up, I wonder how you will write about it?
"tumult of molecular clouds,
comprised of heat and reconstruction"
reminds me of trying to stay awake in a Brian cox series. It was very interesting, and it helps me understand your poems a little, but he did not make me feel the whole universe is part of every single soul, like this
- Log in to post comments