
A ROOM FOR POETRY
Image CopyrightŪJonathan Earl Bowser. Used with permission.

This section is dedicated to the beautiful art of poetry. Currently the site is
dedicated mainly to the poems of my favorite poet: Pablo Neruda. Although a few
other contributions and short stories are included as well.
Observing Companion
by M. Barlow Pepin - 1992
It is a crystal clear evening in October. The setting crescent moon is rock-steady
on the horizon, with a distinctive bluish earthshine. Conditions at our club's
new observing site are definitely worth the 30 mile drive. It is a good
night to search for elusive objects with my new telescope. The 7-inch refractor
is a hound dog for faint targets. After setting up and talking about observing with others,
I spend a few hours immersed in searching for globular clusters and planetary
nebulae.
When the southern Milky Way has finally set, leaving the constellation Cygnus
still high overhead, I slew the telescope northeast into Perseus, finding
some faint galaxies worth exploring. It is a crisp evening, turning colder
by the minute. A hot cup of coffee would be good right now.
I feel my head sinking, but am pulled back to awareness by a voice from the
darkness. A new member of the club is standing behind me, carrying a fluorescent
lantern with red cellophane taped over it. The things puts out about 1,000 candlepower
and leaks white light all over the place.
''Pretty good seeing tonight, yeah? Can I borrow the eyepiece you told me about
to look at Saturn before it sets?" - "Sure buddy. Anything. Just turn off that
lantern." - "Oh, yeah. Sorry." The searchlight is switched off. The specter departs,
clutching my eyepiece. My night vision is gone. I can't see my hand in front of my face.
I am waiting for my eyes to adapt to the dark, still dwelling on the probable fate
of my expensive eyepiece, when another voice from the darkness asks, ''What are
you looking at?"
And just when I thought I was set for a peaceful night of solo stargazing ...
"Nothing special. You can take a look."
The newcomer brushes by me. My night vision is slowly returning. I can barely make out a
figure dressed in white.
"So how do I look at something?" She asks. Her voice has an unusual accent.
"Just look into the eyepiece, right here." I switch on my red penlight. As she
bends down to the eyepiece, the faint cone of light illuminates a pristine
profile. A thin, golden belt gleams at the waist of her white shift. On a chilly
night like this, she is wearing sandals. Definitely not an experienced observer.
"Everything is swimming in a fog!" "The telescope must not be in focus for you.
Just turn this knob very slowly until the stars get as small as possible." "Oh, now it gives
a very good view! It looks like two tiny clouds dancing among the stars."
"You are right. It's two galaxies in the constellation Perseus. They are
clouds of stars, like the Milky Way."
"Yes, I know about the Milky Way - I didn't know there were others, though.
I have never looked into this kind of magic glass."
This makes me laugh, "Well, they are good optics, but I don't think it is magic."
She steps away from the telescope in the darkness, tangling her foot in the power cord.
I reach out to keep her from falling and she caches my wrist. Her fingers are cold. I can
feel her shivering. "Excuse me, I am so clumsy", she apologizes. "You must be
really cold." "Brrr, yes! I should have worn my winter cape." "Here, put on my
jacket if you like. This sweater is warm enough for me."
I hold up the jacket and she quickly puts in on. "Thank you. That's much better."
"Are you alone?" I ask her. "Yes, I couldn't talk any of my sisters into coming down."
"Big family?" "Father, mother, and six younger sisters. Not very exciting. My
father is strict, so I don't leave very often. Will you show me some more
things in the sky?"
I check to see that my telescope is still polar aligned. She asks, "What
are you looking at?" I have to point this little telescope at the North Star so
I can find other obejects more easily in the larger telescope."
I then give the standard star party tour. She seems very impressed by the
Andromeda Galaxy. The new telescope is performing fantastically. We can see
the dark stretch of Andromeda's dust lane. Impossibly, some of the galaxy's
stars even seem resolved. We wander for a long time through the star clusters of
Auriga. The globular cluster M15 is almost on the horizon, but still glows
like a scoop of diamond chips.It is an exceptional night for observing. The
seeing is great and I have never noticed such complete transparency.
It is time for a break. I pour coffee from my thermos into two styrofoam cups and
hand her one. My eyes are so adapted to the dark that the white cups seem
to glow.
"Thank you," she says sipping her coffee. "This drink is bitter, but good.
That northern star, Polaris you called it? It seems higher in the sky than
I remember." "You must be from the South somewhere, it would be lower from
there. I notice that you have an accent. Where are you from anyway?"
"Greece. But i haven't been there in a long time. I haven't look up at the
sky in a long while either."
She puts her cup on the grass and goes back to the telescope. It is still
tracking the Orion Nebula as the constallation rises higher. Sitting motionless
at the eyepiece, she starts singing in a soft voice. The Greek words sound
strange, the tune unlike any I have ever heard before.
"What's that?" "It is a song about the sky my father taught me. It goes, 'Orion
is still, he hunts no more in the forests of Boeotia."
The hours pass unnoticed. After finding everything I can think of, my
companion still asks for more and more objects. We waste about ten minutes
looking for the elusive Rosette Nebula in Monoceros. She tosses her head and
laughs. The merry sound echoes across the field. I sense heads turning at the
other telescopes. "Well, I don't need to see verything, but I want to see one more
thing in the sky." "What do you want to see?" "That little cloudy star cluster
over there."
"Okay. That's the Pleiades." I swing the dew-covered telescope over to the west.
As I frame the cluster in the finder, she whispers, "Notice anything?"
"What do you mean?" "I want you to look very carefully in your finding
telescope. Do you notice anything ... different?"
I force myself to concentrate on the view in the finder, on the sparkling star
cluster I have observed a hundred times. She's right. Something is different.
The Pleiades are out of shape. One of the 4th-magnitude stars is gone. The
occultation of a bright Pleiad would have been publicized. We would all be
watching, waiting for it. I hastily check the finder. There is nothing
blocking the lenses. Six bright stars stare back at me. I look up. The
difference is obvious, even to the naked eye.
"You are right! But how could a girl like you notice that? You said you hardly
ever look at the sky. I have got to let somebody else know about this!"
I start to yell for another observer to confirm the incredible event. Then I
feel her hand on my shoulder. "Stop. Please don't tell anyone! And please
don't call me girl. My name is Maia, and I'm much older than you are. Besides,
I said I hardly ever look up at the sky. I look down from it all of the time."
Suddenly, a fragment of mythology from a star guide leaps into my mind: Maia,
the oldest of the Pleiades, the most beautiful daughter of Atlas. But what ...?
A sense of unreality creeps over me, and I feel my brain start to go supernova. Maia
senses my panic. She touches my shoulder reassuringly.
"Don't worry," she whispers. "I can go back up, before anyone notices, or believes
what they are seeing. My sisters will be worried, though. I have got to go now.
I will come back to see you again, after dark sometime."
A cold blast of wind comes out of nowhere, stinging my eyes. The telescope rattles in
on its mount. There is a drumming, rushing sound, like doves taking off. Then silence.
When I open my eyes, I'm sitting on the ground. Maia is gone. It is cold. Trying to
shake off the feeling of shock, I get up and line my telescope up with the
little group of stars sinking in the west. My hands are shaking. Seven bright
stars sparkle in the eyepiece; nothing unusual. One of them flickers slightly.
What a dream. As I look away I see my jacket lying on the grass. There is
something bright resting on it. I pick it up. A slender, braided golden
belt gleams in my hand. I stare at the Pleiades until dawn washes its light
away. The old constellations continue their eternal motion as pale light slowly
grows in the east.
Image CopyrightŪJonathan
Earl Bowser. Used with permission.

Sonnet 48
by Pablo Neruda - 1960
Two happy lovers make one bread,
a single moon drop in the grass.
Walking, they cast two shadows that flow together;
waking, they leave one sun empty in their bed.
Of all the possible truths, they chose the day;
they held it, not with ropes but with an aroma.
They did not shred the peace; they did not shatter words;
their happiness is a transparent tower.
The air and wine accompany the lovers.
The night delights them with its joyous petals.
They have a right to all the carnations.
Two happy lovers, without an ending, with no death,
they are born, they die, many times while they live:
they have the eternal life of the Natural.

Sonnet 2
by Pablo Neruda - 1960
Love, what a long way, to arrive at a kiss,
what loneliness-in-motion, toward your company!
Rolling with the rain we follow the tracks alone.
In Taltal there is neither daybreak nor spring.
But you and I, love, we are together
from our clothes down to our roots:
together in the autumn, in water, in hips, until
we can be alone together -- only you, only me.
To think of the effort, that the current carried
so many stones, the delta of Boroa water;
to think that you and I, divided by trains and nations,
we had only to love one another:
with all the confusions, the men and the women,
the earth that makes carnations rise, and makes them bloom!

Sonnet 4
by Pablo Neruda - 1960
You will remember that leaping stream
where sweet aromas rose and trembled,
and sometimes a bird, wearing water
and slowness, its winter feathers.
You will remember those gifts from the earth:
indelible scents, gold clay,
weeds in the thicket and crazy roots,
magical thorns like swords.
You'll remember the bouquet you picked,
shadows and silent water,
bouquet like a foam-covered stone.
That time was like never, and like always.
So we go there, where nothing is waiting;
we find everything waiting there.
Image CopyrightŪJonathan
Earl Bowser. Used with permission.

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