Poetry |

“The Astronauts”

The Astronauts

 

If I’m the sun, then people I love

whirl past me in elliptical orbits

like comets, once in a hundred years.

And if I’m a planet, each is a moon

with a dark side. Crooked in the arm

of a galaxy, I spiral at light-speed,

but since all matter’s in motion I

appear to be sitting still

in an armchair, reading the learned

astronomer’s biography. Cecilia

Payne-Gaposhkin, who charted

more stars than anyone in her Harvard

observatory, lived down the street

from where my daughter fought

first to root then to be free

of Daddy and me. Astronauts,

argonauts, kids want to be naught

but themselves, without our gravity

warping the space and time a hero

claims. Snubbing the likeness of all

happy families, they’re eager to grapple

with Venus and Mars, or the Martian

twin satellites, Terror and Fear. I siren

come closer, darling — both are here.

Contributor
Joyce Peseroff

Joyce Peseroff’s sixth poetry collection, Petition (2020, Carnegie Mellon),was named a “must-read” by the Massachusetts Book Awards. She is the poetry columnist for Arrowsmith Journal, and blogs on writing and literature for “So I Gave You Quartz” at www.joycepeseroff.com

Posted in Poetry

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