slingshot moon and hungry sun

The moon is seen by daylight between two branches outlined against a sky of cloudless blue

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A few days ago, the poet’s glancing at the moon from a garden.

For a second, the moon looks close enough to grasp, but it’s receding from earth, astronomers say, at the rate fingernails grow, one and a half inches a year. The poet writes:

waxing gibbous moon

floats pale between the branches

ghostly slingshot stone

slowly spinning out into

                                          deep space

                        around

                                          the hungry

sun which will consume us all.

Like many folks, the poet feels the days getting shorter as their life lengthens, but has also heard that days, actually, are getting longer–over a dozen microseconds longer every year.

And all this time, with the sun expanding, slowly turning itself into a red giant star, growing more than a hundred times larger, it’s getting ready to devour and feed on the planets, with Mercury and Venus first in line to be consumed.

What unimaginable things Gaia has in store for us in 5 billion years’ time, the poet thinks.

They stop reflecting, dazzled enough by these circumstances to let silence soothe their mood as the moon inches away.

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Photos taken by Freddie Oomkens earlier this week

The moon seems further awy than in the first picture, we see more branches, the moon is smaller among them

Villa of the Mysteries, Pompeii


A poem by Ummidia Quadratilla, on learning that her husband, daughter, and son-in-law have been killed in the Vesuvian holocaust. The family’s seaside villa in Pompeii (now known as the Villa of the Mysteries) has just been destroyed by the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 AD, and the family died while helping their household to escape. Ummidia Quadratilla, a Roman-era Messager of the Tabernacle of Gaia, had stayed in Rome. Selections of her poems appear in The Dark Gospel and are translated by Freddie Omm:

Sweet home, bodies loved

Before the ash and pumice storm:

Thoughts, loves, lives, buried

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Words too crushed to speak

My loss through lasting love now

Silence covers all—

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Busts, scrolls in libraries,

(Like grapes left liquid in the press)

Some burned, crushed, some saved:

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We can only wait

For the centuries to come

To uncover us

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