Friday, January 8, 2016

Celebrating the Winter Sky



Dear Family, Friends, & Colleagues –

Happy New Year 2016! I was able to view the winter stars, some planets, and the Moon over the Yuletide holiday break, and I’d like to share some of that stelliferous magic with you through this edition of Quotemail. So here are some poems about the North Wind and the stars (from the archaic Greek Orphic Hymns), along with a poem about the North Star (Polaris) by H. P. Lovecraft, and a poem by Sara Teasdale about the winter stars.


FROM THE ORPHIC HYMNS
Editor’s Note: The annual cycle of the seasons and its effects on our natural surroundings are recurring themes throughout world literature. The Orphic poets – a guild of ancient Greek philosopher-bards named after their legendary founder, Orpheus – celebrated the changing of the seasons, the wonders of the natural world, and their lofty ideals in poetic chants, several dozen of which were preserved in written form after centuries of oral transmission. In the poetic forms of their prescientific age (ca. 1000-500 BCE), the Orphic poets chose to personify the forces of nature, the celestial orbs, and abstract ideals in order to explain how and why the natural world and the human social order function in the ways that they do.

Orphic Hymn #6: To the Stars

With holy voice I call the stars on high,
Pure sacred lights and genii of the sky.
Celestial stars, the progeny of Night,
In whirling circles beaming far your light,
Refulgent rays around the heavens ye throw,
Eternal fires, the source of all below.
With flames significant of Fate ye shine,
And aptly rule for men a path divine.
In seven bright zones ye run with wandering flames,
And heaven and earth compose your lucid frames:
With course unwearied, pure and fiery bright
Forever shining through the veil of Night.
Hail twinkling, joyful, ever wakeful fires!
Propitious shine on all my just desires;
These sacred rites regard with conscious rays,
And end our works devoted to your praise.

Orphic Hymn #79: To the North Wind

Boreas, whose wintry blasts, terrific, tear
The bosom of the deep surrounding air;
Cold icy power, approach, and favoring blow,
And Thrace a while desert exposed to snow:
The misty station of the air dissolve,
With pregnant clouds, whose frames in showers resolve:
Serenely temper all within the sky,
And wipe from moisture, Aether's beauteous eye.


FROM THE POEMS OF H. P. LOVECRAFT (1890-1937)
Editor’s Note: H. P. Lovecraft is regarded by literary scholars as the “Edgar Allan Poe” of the 20th century. He was an imaginative author of “weird fiction” – a genre that combines science fiction, fantasy, and horror – and also an accomplished poet. His work has inspired, among others, the creators/writers of Babylon 5 and Doctor Who.

“Polaris” (1920)

Slumber, watcher, till the spheres,
Six and twenty thousand years
Have revolved, and I return
To the spot where now I burn.
Other stars anon shall rise
To the axis of the skies;
Stars that soothe and stars that bless
With a sweet forgetfulness:
Only when my round is o’er
Shall the past disturb thy door.


“Winter Stars” (1920)
By Sara Teasdale (1884-1933)

I went out at night alone;
The young blood flowing beyond the sea
Seemed to have drenched my spirit’s wings —
I bore my sorrow heavily.

But when I lifted up my head
From shadows shaken on the snow,
I saw Orion in the east
Burn steadily as long ago.

From windows in my father’s house,
Dreaming my dreams on winter nights,
I watched Orion as a girl
Above another city’s lights.

Years go, dreams go, and youth goes too,
The world’s heart breaks beneath its wars,
All things are changed, save in the east
The faithful beauty of the stars.


Until next time – be sure to go outside or look out your favorite window on a winter evening, and enjoy the view!

Rob


“Humankind will pursue the inmost secrets of Nature even into the heights and will study the motions of the sky. Nor is this enough; when nothing yet remains to be known than the farthest boundary of the Earth, they will seek even there the last extremities of Night.”
Heart of the Cosmos (Hermetic Tractate, Early 1st Millennium CE)

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