Nov. 19th, 2002

Medium

Nov. 19th, 2002 08:42 am
novapsyche: Sailor Moon rising into bright beams (Default)
I.

I am in awe
of the absolute sensation
of God. It nebulizes
around the wetware node.
The eager gray godhead
effervesces into life.
I am rendered
speechless, full of breath.

II.

There is no light here.
There are naked nuclear nucleotides
and that is all. No eye
has spied this energy,
only speculated.
For the source of light
is hidden from view.
The hylic iris cannot witness
the utterly immaterial.

III.

Hear, O Israel--
the Echoverse resounds
with God.
The stars resound with God
and our ear are aglow
with glorious vibration.
The echoes reverberate
unto eternity.
novapsyche: Sailor Moon rising into bright beams (Default)
The sky in SE Michigan was overcast last night, so I was unable to see any meteor showers. (Maybe if I'd gone out earlier in the evening, before midnight.) But perhaps I'll still be rewarded with a view of celestial child's play.

Lunar Eclipse Tuesday Night to Dim Moon

Hours after skywatchers are treated to the Leonid meteor shower of the century, they can head outside again to observe another celestial show. On the evening of Nov. 19, the full Moon will dip into Earth's shadow, creating a penumbral lunar eclipse.

Lunar eclipses, like solar eclipses, are created by geometrical alignments of the Sun, Earth and Moon. The Sun casts two areas of shadow behind Earth. The umbra is a region of total shadow. It is flanked by two cone-shaped areas of semi-darkness called the penumbra.

Penumbral eclipses can occur because the Moon’s orbit is tilted 5 degrees compared to Earth's plane of movement around the Sun. When the Moon crosses into the umbra, partial or total lunar eclipses occur. Penumbral eclipses occur, naturally, when the Moon enters the penumbra. Lunar eclipses happen only when the Moon is full.

The first contact between Moon and shadow will be at 6:32 p.m. EST (23:32 UT). Along the West Coast of the United States, the eclipse begins during daylight and before the Moon rises. Viewer’s there will see a portion of the event – what’s visible after the sun goes down and the Moon comes up.

The eclipse will peak at 8:47 p.m. EST and will end at 11:01 p.m. EST. Various portions of the event will be visible to half of the world, including the Americas, Europe, Africa and Central Asia.

I

Nov. 19th, 2002 09:55 am
novapsyche: Sailor Moon rising into bright beams (Default)
I sat down tonight
and read I.
I wanted to start somewhere short;
I hadn't realized how long I would be.
Iamb, the first true word,
from the Greek iambos.
On through bright iceblink, and then fishy ictus,
a smile at idioplasma.

Then dear appreciation
for the English language,
just some ways down.
Imbricate. A solid cascade.
A gown of infinite folds.
novapsyche: Sailor Moon rising into bright beams (Default)
haphazard hands hover
in feverous foliage
desperate for deliverance.
Angelic earthlings inhabit.

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novapsyche: Sailor Moon rising into bright beams (Default)
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