Can anyone suggest some poems that have themes related to astronomy? I have an assignment to write about one, but I don't want to do it on the ones I"m finding online. Which ones are your favorites?
Can anyone suggest some poems that have themes related to astronomy? I have an assignment to write about one, but I don't want to do it on the ones I"m finding online. Which ones are your favorites?
"The time has come," the Walrus said,
"To talk of many things:
Of shoes--and ships--and sealing-wax--
Of cabbages--and kings--
And why the sea is boiling hot--
And whether pigs have wings."
Tennyson's Ulysses perhaps? It isn't exactly themed, but it makes references to astronomy. In a sense, it is a classical/neo-classical convention to make references to the planets, and stars. Just think of Shakespeare's star imagery, or any other great poet's for that matter. The convention is rooted in antique thought, and has become a part of our cultural makeup.
That being said, of all the times I have encountered it, it was never the "main" theme, and merely a convention. The closest I can think of is Blake, though that too is a convention, though a very complex one.
When I Heard the Learn’d Astronomer
by Walt Whitman
When I heard the learn’d astronomer,
When the proofs, the figures, were ranged in columns before me,
When I was shown the charts and diagrams, to add, divide, and measure them,
When I sitting heard the astronomer where he lectured with much applause in the lecture-room,
How soon unaccountable I became tired and sick,
Till rising and gliding out I wander’d off by myself,
In the mystical moist night-air, and from time to time,
Look’d up in perfect silence at the stars.
What the Stars Meant
by John Koethe
On a backwards-running clock in Lisbon,
By the marble statue of Pessoa;
On an antique astrolabe in London
Tracing out the sky above Samoa,
Thousands of miles away—in time, in place,
Each night conspires to create a myth
That stands for nothing real, yet leaves you with
The vague impression of a human face.
The fragments fly apart and shift, trembling
On the threshold of a kind of fullness:
The minor wonder of remembering;
The greater wonders of forgetfulness.
For one looks back as someone else might yearn
For a new life, and set his course upon
The polestar, bid his adieus, and move on.
The journey takes a solipsistic turn,
Forsaking starlight for an inner glow,
And reducing all human history,
All human culture—highbrow, middle-, low-—
To one reflecting surface, one story.
What fills the heaven of a single mind?
The things that used to fill Kant’s mind with awe
—“The starry heavens and the moral law”—
Seem distant now, and difficult to find
Amid the message of satiety
Issuing from the corners of the sky,
Filled with monotonous variety:
Game shows, an interview with Princess Di,
And happy talk, and sitcoms and the news,
The **** that floats across your living room
Each weekday evening. Waiting in the pews,
Out in the desert where the cacti bloom,
Something else was forming, something stranger
Gathering in the gulf below the stairs—
As though the mystery of the manger
Were written in the day-to-day affairs
Of a world consecrated to Mammon,
Yet governed by those sacred absences
That make the spirit soar, and presences
At one remove, like the sound of Cuban
Drumbeats issuing from the Ricardos’
Love nest on the television station
Like distant thunder; or Leonardo’s
“Wave that flees the site of its creation.”
In the desert far beyond the city,
One hears the cadences for which one longs,
The lyrics of those half-forgotten songs,
—Some of them poignant, some of them witty—
Brimming with the melody of passage;
One feels the wind that blows the soul about,
Repeating its inscrutable message;
And as night falls, one sees the stars come out.
I found myself beneath a canopy
Of scenes left out of someone else’s life
—The dog that didn’t bark, Rosebud, Cain’s wife—
Arrayed above me in a panoply
Of glittering debris, gigantic swirls
Of stars, and slowly moving caravans
Of stars like tiny Christmas lights or pearls
Of tapioca, floating in a danse
macabre across the heavens as I stood,
Watching the pageant in the sky unfold.
I felt the chill of something much too old
To comprehend—not the Form of the Good,
But something inchoate and violent,
A Form of Darkness. Suddenly the songs
Floating through the revelry fell silent,
As in The Masque of the Red Death, as throngs
Of the dead twinkled at me from above.
The intimate domain of memory
Became an endless field of entropy
Transfigured, inking in the outlines of
Eurydice entombed, Orpheus immured,
And, in the center of their universe,
That subtler diadem of stars obscured
By the brighter constellations, the Hearse.
{excerpt}
Reason has moons, but moons not hers,
Lie mirror'd on her sea,
Confounding her astronomers,
But O! delighting me.
This fellow is associated with Cornell U. and not a poet per se.
Thank you very much!! I enjoyed the Koethe very much; what an intriguing poem!
"The time has come," the Walrus said,
"To talk of many things:
Of shoes--and ships--and sealing-wax--
Of cabbages--and kings--
And why the sea is boiling hot--
And whether pigs have wings."