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Sunday, May 9, 2010

I found the poem, "Lullabye for the Second Millennium" by J. Allyn Rosser, interesting. It provided an interesting "evolution" and "history" of the planet.



Lullabye for the Second Millennium
by J. Allyn Rosser
From the point of view of all time,
these recent changes signal
more a return to a nature
than a departure, than degradation.
In the beginning, after all,
there was boiling rock.
Then waters arranging their bodies
around an era of softer forms:
lichen, grassland, swaying treetops.
Then creatures, movingly fleshed,
treading pathways that hardened.
Then pavement hardening
and cities, monumental.
Soon mostly rock again,
and radiant. More and more like moon.
Soon, sooner than is being thought,
there will be even more light.
The creatures will have stopped
being able to move
or be moved.
And the rock will boil.
--Ben

2 comments:

cheyenne said...

I really like this project! It is really awesome and fun & I think it does a great job of blending two things that people don't easily associate: science & poetry! When I was reading the poems on this blog I thought of the poem "A Poem to Delight My Friends Who Laugh at Science-Fiction" by Edwin Rolfe, which is a poem I really enjoy. I'm not sure if it captures the same mood as the poem, but I thought it might be something you guys might like (its on page 617 in Nelson's Anthology). Great job!
-Cheyenne Stewart

cheyenne said...

*same mood as the poems on this blog