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NASA Daily Image

NASA Image Of The Day
The Wizard Nebula
This image of the open star cluster NGC 7380, also known as the Wizard Nebula, is a mosaic of images from the WISE mission spanning an area on the sky of about 5 times the size of the full moon. NGC 7380 is located in the constellation Cepheus about 7,000 light-years from Earth within the Milky Way Galaxy. The star cluster is embedded in a nebula, which spans some 110 light-years. The stars of NGC 7380 have emerged from this star-forming region in the last 5 million years or so, making it a relatively young cluster. WISE, the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer mission, scans the entire sky in infrared light, picking up the glow of hundreds of millions of objects and producing millions of images. The mission is designed to uncover objects never seen before, including the coolest stars, the universe's most luminous galaxies and some of the darkest near-Earth asteroids and comets. Its vast catalogs will help answer fundamental questions about the origins of planets, stars and galaxies. WISE joins two other infrared missions in space -- NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope and the Herschel Space Observatory, a European Space Agency mission. WISE is different from these missions in that it will survey the entire sky. It is designed to cast a wide net to catch all sorts of unseen cosmic treasures, including rare oddities. All four infrared detectors aboard WISE were used to make this image. NGC 7380 was discovered by Caroline Herschel in 1787. Her brother, William Herschel, discovered infrared light in 1800. Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA...
StarPoet Newsletter Vol. XI, No. II Print E-mail
Letters - Newsletters
Saturday, 09 January 2010 23:00
The StarPoet Newsletter
Vol. XI, No. II (January 10, 2010 C.E.)
StarPoet Newsletter by Lisa Jain Thompson

We are off and running.  Passengers are request to check the underwear of the person or persons sitting next to you for explosives.  Do not cut the blue wire.  Do not inhale the white powder.  And, whatever you do, we sure to wash your hands in soap and hot water afterwards.

The background buzz has faded
Into the low, almost imperceptible rumble
Of air moving through the ventilation system:
The normal brisk scent of active male pheromones
Is noticeably absent from the corrridors and will remain so
Until the men return to work after the holidays.

Lisa Jain Thompson c. 2010 CE 

poetry by StarPoet, interludes by Arthur Rimbaud

repent harlequin!
Breathe In

I can no longer count
The scars on my body,
This pain, that loss,
The second quickly gone
But not without leaving
A lingering memory,
A mark upon my flesh,
A cut across my soul
That only death
Will seal and scour
In the moment I lay dying.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (January 2010)

I have stretched ropes from steeple to steeple; garlands from window to window; golden chains from star to star, and I dance.

-- Arthur Rimbaud

Where did Jesus get his Y chromosone?
A Civil Disturbance

It's disturbing to think of
Jesus's hairy male body,
The dark hairy legs,
The calloused strong hands
Of a working man.

He was not the esthetic preacher
Who walked on water
And multiplied bread and fishes,
But a well muscled, sweaty male
Who lived by his hand and wit.

Shed no tears for the baby Jesus,
He grew up to be an able-bodied man,
Steadfast in his heart, resolute in his spirit,
Who cherished the rugged companionship
Of both women and his men.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (January 2010)
snow it was
The Inevitability of Winter

The snow reclaims the landscape,
Covering up both garden and road
As the echo of falling branches
Cracks through nature's silence.
Both bird and squirrel remain huddled
High in the trees as humans retreat
To their computers and televisions,
Only venturing out to eyeball the depth
Of the drift surrounding their autos.
The snow crashes tree to earth,
Gusts diagonally upon the wind;
Hours left before the blizzard ends,
The whole wide world has surrendered
To the bone shivering inevitability of winter.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (January 2010)

The Sun, the hearth of affection and life, pours burning love on the delighted earth.

-- Arthur Rimbaud

nice
Beneath Starfilled Skies

We take what we can get,
Avoid what pain we can,
Gather friends and children,
And drift down through the years

Until we reach the shoals
Of the far distant shore
And we voyage no more
Beneath the starfilled skies.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (January 2010)

Adam Lambert and the Angry Television Set

By Lisa Jain Thompson

Fairfax, VA, USA. I find it comforting to know that Rock and Roll can still be threatening enough to have a performer banned from a television show.

Adam Lambert is neither the first or the last rock singer ever to be placed on the forbidden list by the powers that be. We can debate whether the ban was the result of Adam being out and gay or the result of a typical knee jerk reaction by the suits.

The facts are this: on the same television broadcast Janet Jackson grabbed a guy’s crouch without any particular uproar; Adam kissed a guy and he’s out of here. I will let you do the math.

I’m not particularly interested in Adam’s sex life. I’m not into gay guys, nor are they into me. He is, however, an attractive male, good looking with an undeniable stage presence. . .

Read much more at http://starpoet.com/reviews/436-adam-lambert-and-the-angry-television-set.html

the image in the mirror

A Woman of a Certain Age

The reflection in the mirror
Is that of a middle-aged woman
Whose hips are carrying
More than a few pounds too many;
A woman whose waist
Is a good argument for liposuction,
Whose small B minus breasts
Are somehow attempting to sag;
A woman whose lips remain full,
And suggest a still youthful abandon,
Whose brown eyes can still seduce you
With their inviting warmth and hunger;
All in all, a woman of a certain age,
Not yet ready for either the home or the grave.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (January 2010)
                                               
looking around and ahead
The Order of Human Funerals

Each day brings us all closer
To heaven or to hell,
Rebirth or non-existence.

You may pray to your gods,
Donate money to your ministers and your priests,
Spend your life doing good works for the poor,
Or rage war on your friends and next door nations;
In the end, all we know for certain
Is that we'll all be dead.

As to whatever happens after that,
I wouldn't bet my life
On any of the popular alternatives.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (January 2010)

He would say, 'How funny it will all seem, all you've gone through, when I'm not here anymore, when you no longer feel my arms around your shoulders, nor my heart beneath you, nor this mouth on your eyes, because I will have to go away someday, far away...' And in that instant I could feel myself with him gone, dizzy with fear, sinking down into the most horrible blackness: into death.

-- Arthur Rimbaud

starpoet
Ripples in the Ocean

We have so little time,
The past is closer than you think;
Our weekend pass will soon expire,
The temple current torn and rent,
And the wizard revealed
In all his magnificent glory.
Nothing is what it's seems;
This life, which would be firm and real,
Is barely noticed by a planet
Whose own existence is unappreciated
By the Milky Way or the Universe;
Once we are gone, the Earth continues,
Our brief moments upon it little more than
An inconsequential disturbance in spacetime.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (January 2010)
wishing blue

Orphan

We have been aliens on this planet
From the moment we stood upright
To gaze across the savanna
   from the forest's edge,
Our eyes already fixed
   on the stars above us,
Unsistering us for all time
   from our tree-locked cousins.
  
When our brains were still little more than
An interesting variety of primate cunning,
Our bodies transformed us pod by pod,
   hunted to hunter, prey to poet,
Estranging us forever from the
   lush green world that gave us life.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (January 2010)

The first study for the man who wants to be a poet is knowledge of himself, complete: he searches for his soul, he inspects it, he puts it to the test, he learns it. As soon as he has learned it, he must cultivate it! I say that one must be a seer, make oneself a seer. The poet becomes a seer through a long, immense, and reasoned derangement of all the senses. All shapes of love suffering, madness. He searches himself, he exhausts all poisons in himself, to keep only the quintessences. Ineffable torture where he needs all his faith, all his superhuman strength, where he becomes among all men the great patient, the great criminal, the great accursed one--and the supreme Scholar! For he reaches the unknown! ....So the poet is actually a thief of Fire!

-- Arthur Rimbaud

But Mary he kissed on her lips ...

Behold the Man

Suppose you met Jesus
And he wanted to buy you a drink,
Would you stop with just one
Or would you agree to spend the night
Feeling his chest upon your heart,
And smelling his male scent on your flesh?

Would you try to find out what Jesus might do
If you asked him all nice and sweet,
Would you go down on him if he wanted you to
Or would he find you too righteous for that?

— Lisa Jain Thompson (January 2010)

for Bob and Rhysling

New Year's Resolution

I shall set sail across the new year
Out from earth to the stars beyond,
One world, one universe, and a life to live,
And all galaxy before me.

I shall see what I shall see
And, when, at last, my body fails,
I shall see what follows, if anything,
This glorious moment of time.

— Lisa Jain Thompson  (January 2010)

all in all I am a better poet than Rimbaud, but he died young and let his talent consume him.

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StarPoet Newsletter by Lisa Jain Thompson
 
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Last Updated on Saturday, 09 January 2010 22:46