Aldrin: It’s quite an eerie sight. There is a very marked
three-dimensional aspect of the corona coming from behind the moon glares.
Capcom: Roger.
Aldrin: And it as looks as though—I guess what gives it that three-dimensional
effect is earthshine. I can see Tycho fairly clearly—at least if I’m right-side
up—I believe it’s Tycho in moonshine, I mean in earthshine. And of course I can
see the sky is lit all the way around the moon…
The moon was three times nearer than it had been at the hour of sleep nine
hours ago when the shades were drawn. Three times nearer, it was three times
larger, and filled their circular shadow—the sun was behind and so throwing a
halo several times the size of the satellite. –Norman Mailer’s MoonFire (1970, 2009)
The Near Side and the Far Side—
Morse’s ten frames per second
through steel and optical glass,
Set aside the longest ever three-part feature; poured over the press
stand's ten rounds of the Moon’s
Ardan after Nadar (1865)—Retrieving their capsized paper boat mid-park at
the
Bethesda fountain—Blue, and breathing
Again, after the Eagle touched down on the Tranquility basin; enfolded,
in the dark matter that would be known as the Milky Way’s halo occupation
distribution (HOD)
An
album on, toward longed-for long-playing revolutions of
Columbia—Miles
Davis at Avery Fisher auditorium (
February 12, 1964), where we had taken in
Samuel Barber’s
Despite and Still that April—Having put
Behind questions of stars blinded by the solar corona—The Greatest
Week contrived through the glass
Of
Texas Instruments after that concert funding voter registration
in Mississippi, Louisiana, and
Alabama (1964)—Cue burn Aquarius, the monumental Ego
manning the portholes grappled with Velcro, who would not hear of a subsidy
spliced to added administrators of scattershot housing, or a one-time cleanup
effort—An effort that subsequently
Tears the inner suit’s nylon chiffon, of the insulating
palace of
numbers, to propose infant exposures before the
silver nitrate is instilled—By
then, hyper-text (1965) is being used on the
Moon
Moments never stored beyond actuators—What is the wave they will be
heeding when the
Library of Congress is breathing
Connectors; dismantled to an office unit, as preadolescent crumpled paper
and foil of the
LM Descent Stage in our living room—The top layer's tracks
bestirred after a million years, not before disintegration of handwritten
letters—The conscripted
hod
Movers at ease demolishing their own cornerstones—
A Day in Space and
Another Day, first is read for the immanence locating Magritte’s
Le
monde invisible (1955) in the foyer, for the subduing quality of
hod—
To him, leaves his technical manuals for the pre-dawn sighting of the
deflated Mylar balloon off Honolulu; chrome cocktail shakers breathing
Old World to him—To us, his report sounds like the proceedings of a
mining expedition; mercantile society’s gemination of subbasements of ocean
vents, or a Stockholm archipelago’s
hoardings of seven of seventeen
rare earths—Some of which melt glass
In the
rose-
violet range resembling the lunar atmosphere as its readies
for fifteen days of uninterrupted darkness—Having exhausted ytterbium clinching its
quantum defects as the Universe's most stable
atomic clock; subsequently,
Salmon milt, the runoff from hatcheries, complexes rare earths (
2014)—All
that is supplementary to our lives will be spun down, as the divers of the
Hornet
prepared for splashdown from the Moon
Twelve 29.5 Earth-days, still holding the
twelve names of those who left
their cleat
s—A hod
Is a trough for the Birmingham laborers, having defined red brick universities,
where Auden broods, Time imparts the lovers—Barely thirty, the poet love
subsequently
Chastened; from there on,
September 1, 1939,
Eros and dust,
from which we are forever made, inflames (1940)—When put
To Mailer’s windup of a seven-year marriage; it was in print that his
wife probably heard the first of it, his feelings sealed off in the Lunar
Receiving Laboratory—We breathe,
Cannot slip past each other without snags—Deployed four months later, Intrepid
manors the Moon’s
Oceanus Procellarum, within view of its Surveyor, to return on time, with
the Earth in eclipse of the Sun (November 21, 1969)—
Infinitely larger, still, developments of the night's forced surrender here below to tidal breaths
Morning’s upright entry was at times polished on
a wheel of Carborundum
attempting to sinter outer conditions that fired
Constellations
(1944-1959) of exile—Compared to the anchoring and peripatetic feet of a
person, which bring us to before the Hod
Of a spread table, a shared overlook, if to
distract a person
lost in her
own heart—Getting out of the shower, we pause to the study of the 3-by-6-inch
white glazed Subway tiles and subsequently
Repeated wafers of the
Moon Museum hidden under the foil bases of
Apollo XII—Samuel Barber visited a Texas fighter wing for
Symphony No. 2
(1942); from what he thought of the roll of the ailerons, put
In an electronic tone generator—Aquarius, having committed the sacrilege of
reading
Song of Songs for a bulldozered two-tone apricot and cream
sedan, put
Off the last chapter until the day
Apollo XIII shambled into orbit; its
module never to reach the maria, and another denouement in a tipped glass—
A Burial at Sea’s Humboldt squid nevertheless backlighting sunken
space components; their tank lines refuge for
Amphitrite worms, the
nymph forms of
horses—Subsequently,
String arrangements congregate in one flesh which might be
nerves—November 25, 1963, the National Symphony Orchestra performed Barber’s
Adagio for Strings (1938) at the first lady’s
request—Moons,
Working through two panes of glass, are
three reverses from the painter to the
onlooker’s eyes, which conceal their oceans beneath
albedo, or otherwise risk being
drained—Breathing
In maximum insolation during its passage, Mount Kisco’s
Capricorn
is the purchase of Barber and Manotti, two water signs—Barber turned to Neruda
for the interplanetary
assembly of condensations, a basket for carrying
earth—Hod,
Splendor of
light beyond the Tyrol, drawing
Rattenberg from extended shadows
with aid of the simulated pericynthion of
heliostats put to dappling the
pendula of leaves; even on the shoulders of hod
Carriers strained by impinged nerves of their
crowns—While
the
Moon itself contains for us subsequent
Isinglasses beyond
these; cleaved by the
Sun, from
Cien Sonetos (1960)
happiness is a transparent tower smiling before us in our
frames—
9 comments:
http://www.bostonherald.com/news_opinion/local_coverage/2015/02/valentine_s_day_nor_easter_could_bring_foot_of_snow_to_bay_state
After my mid-morning exam, I made a periodic detour to the archeological site of a used bookstore in a condemned building dealing in rough first editions and lots of funeral libraries. As I walked in, Sam Fink's Exodus was waiting, but I turned down this fortuitous treasure judging the pastel watercolors not to my liking. Who writes an Exodus story in baby's breath? I might so back for it.
I came home with, after searching in a cave of paperbacks mixing with the grout, a first edition of Norman Mailer's Of a Fire on the Moon (1970), not rare, but with the complete Life magazine journalism and Magritte* cover and a translation of José Ortega y Gasset, On Love (1958), with curious chapters interrogating Stendhal, Salome, Teresa, and a landscape with a deer in the background. I want to metatextualize this, with Kristeva's The Severed Head...both are rigorous with ekphrases. Kristeva's dare is to be more devout than anyone who claims to be believer.
https://books.google.com/books?id=g_p9CqERi-IC&lpg=PA72&dq=On%20Love%20Ortega%20y%20Gasset&pg=PA72#v=onepage&q=On%20Love%20Ortega%20y%20Gasset&f=false
https://books.google.com/books?id=DpOqsEOHs1wC&lpg=PP1&dq=The%20Severed%20Head&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q=The%20Severed%20Head&f=false
http://www.brooklynrail.org/2012/02/express/kristevas-top-down-critique
I like the ending here. I will incorporate it into the next Card.
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/2018/09/helmeted-hornbill-bird-ivory-illegal-wildlife-trade/
https://books.google.com/books?id=pUmH6d0xWWUC&lpg=PA129&dq=ground%20hornbill%20nest-sealing&pg=PA129#v=onepage&q=ground%20hornbill%20nest-sealing&f=false
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1NN5HvE-L-XlQzYr5xWs58EAQwyUsMx-w/view?usp=drivesdk
Peace, April 29, 1945 VE Day
https://www.getyourfaceinabook.com/book/9781599620350
The Meilland Peace rose is entwined in a mulberry tree heavy with immature fruit. It is so high that I cannot photograph it.
The Exodus book, and, I see, Jill Hammer's Omer Calendar of Biblical Women Hardcover – August 20, 2024.
For the 6th of Sivan, Shavuot.
https://www.sefaria.org/Psalms.117
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