Sunday 12 August 2012

Day 51: Meteors


The annual Perseids meteor shower happens this weekend. I've never managed to see a shooting star yet, but I still get excited by the whole concept and connotations of them.

Shooting stars and meteor showers can mean so many different things, can be used and viewed as many different metaphors and symbols , most especially of realisation and revelation. 

Like in this poem by amazing American poet Eleanor Lerman, where the news of a meteor shower inspires some existentialist contemplation.  

*(I was surprised to find hardly any poems on the subject matter of meteors! Apart from the classic Whitman one, 'Year of Meteors'. Does anyone out there know of any more?  I'd love to know!)


The Mystery of Meteors - Eleanor Lerman

I am out before dawn, marching a small dog through a meager park 
Boulevards angle away, newspapers fly around like blind white birds 
Two days in a row I have not seen the meteors
though the radio news says they are overhead 
Leonid's brimstones are barred by clouds; I cannot read 
the signs in heaven, I cannot see night rendered into fire

And yet I do believe a net of glitter is above me 
You would not think I still knew these things:
I get on the train, I buy the food, I sweep, discuss, 
consider gloves or boots, and in the summer, 
open windows, find beads to string with pearls 
You would not think that I had survived 
anything but the life you see me living now

In the darkness, the dog stops and sniffs the air 
She has been alone, she has known danger, 
and so now she watches for it always 
and I agree, with the conviction of my mistakes. 
But in the second part of my life, slowly, slowly, 
I begin to counsel bravery. Slowly, slowly, 
I begin to feel the planets turning, and I am turning 
toward the crackling shower of their sparks

These are the mysteries I could not approach when I was younger:
the boulevards, the meteors, the deep desires that split the sky
Walking down the paths of the cold park
I remember myself, the one who can wait out anything
So I caution the dog to go silently, to bear with me 
the burden of knowing what spins on and on above our heads

For this is our reward:Come Armageddon, come fire or flood, 
come love, not love, millennia of portents-- 
there is a future in which the dog and I are laughing 
Born into it, the mystery, I know we will be saved
  

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