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| Recently Published Poetry
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The Astronomers They debate the meaning of rifts on Jupiter's cracked, crazed, planet-like moon. Oceans roiling under the surface? An eggshell coating of ice? And the off-center wobbles of stars-- do they suggest the orbits of planets, or nearby brown dwarves, unlit? The astronomers tune mechanical ears to search for the song of intelligent life. One night I take Teisha, 11 and poor, to the observatory. I want her to know the opening dome, shadowed craters, bright lunar disc, worlds beyond her own. As we walk up the hill, she tells me the plot of She's Having A Baby. She can't believe I've never seen it; she's rented it seven times. She peers through the telescope, shrugs. She sees a slice of holey cheese; no man, no mystery. When the astronomers find what they're seeking (an audible sigh, fragments of proteins) we will know that we're not unique. What life they find will also be a little lower than angels. We'll be left to our children, like Teisha, who says-- walking back to the car through the silvery night-- I can't wait to have babies. My cousin has a new baby, round-faced, bright as the moon. Published in Blue Unicorn, February 2005 |