image from newshub.com
Comets
“After one taste of madness, one can be consumed
by thoughts that follow behind like the fiery tail of
a comet.”--Mona Sorma.
Comets are similar to asteroids,
Celestial bodies orbiting the sun,
Composed mostly of frozen ammonia,
Called by many as “dirty snowballs”,
Coming past earth in regular cycles,
Coma is the cloud of gasses forming around it,
Carbon dioxide, water vapor, and ammonia.
Cosmic consciousness expands our minds.
Orion the Hunter can easily be seen in November.
Mega-constellations are low-orbit satellites.
Eridanus constellation is called “the River”.
Tarantula nebula is a large magellanic cloud.
Stingray nebula is the youngest known planetary nebula.
Glenn Buttkus
Pleiades & Acrostic Poetry
Posted over at d'Verse Poets Pub
Extremely well written and creative. I love your take on the prompt!
ReplyDeleteI love how you fill your poetry with facts. Comets are amazing, and I wish I could gaze at one.
ReplyDeleteA great astronomical take on the prompt - and kudos for trying two different forms!
ReplyDeleteYour opening quote is so sharp and wise. I learned a lot about space phenomena reading your poems today.
ReplyDeleteGreat job, Glenn! I love the hard ‘c’ sound in the Pleiades and the informative tone of the acrostic. The ‘dirty snowballs made me smile – reminded me of the Frank Zappa song: ‘Watch out where the huskies go / and don’t you eat that yellow snow’! Which also kind of leads to cosmic consciousness – Zappa was spacy.
ReplyDeleteCosmic phenomenon in poetry - well done Glenn - hard to make the descriptions poetic but you managed it
ReplyDelete"Coma is the cloud of gasses forming around it,
Carbon dioxide, water vapor, and ammonia."
Such precision, Glenn - factoids folded into specific shapes and sizes to fit the prompt. Love it.
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed!!!
ReplyDeleteHappy Tuesday
Much🖤love
A poetic education is the best kind.
ReplyDeleteWell conceived Glenn, like a brace of thoroughbred verse. Very far out, left me pleasantly spaced out — oh shit, did I really just write that... good write brother...
ReplyDeleteLove the bit of science mixed in with the poetry. I am a stargazer and always will be...
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed this take, Glenn. Informative with a lyrical touch...excellent quote too.
ReplyDeleteAs usual you have risen to the creative challenge!
ReplyDeleteVery informative! and also an excellent poem.
ReplyDeleteCosmic poetic science!
ReplyDeleteA star gazing lesson given in poetry. So very well done! Hard facts are there but they take on a softness in the reading as they flow in the reading. A nice way to begin my Thanksgiving morning, reading poetry about the stars!
ReplyDelete