Wipe Away
• 09/14/22 at 04:38AM •Wipe away
tear drops,
coming from
your eyes,
removing sorrow
with a kiss,
silencing all
the sighs.
Good times
may follow
the truth
we defy.
Living life
the fullest
with love
and survive.
Wipe away
tear drops,
coming from
your eyes,
removing sorrow
with a kiss,
silencing all
the sighs.
Good times
may follow
the truth
we defy.
Living life
the fullest
with love
and survive.
Waylaid clouds,
against jagged hills,
amassing moisture
later to spill
on dry, arid land,
bringing greeness,
to our state, again.
Far away,
off goes he,
sailing ships,
his mastery.
Sea going lad,
across the main.
Ever to be,
hard to explain.
NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day:
Earlier this month, the Sun exhibited one of the longer filaments on record. Visible as the bright curving streak around the image center, the snaking filament's full extent was estimated to be over half of the Sun's radius -- more than 350,000 kilometers long. A filament is composed of hot gas held aloft by the Sun's magnetic field, so that viewed from the side it would appear as a raised prominence. A different, smaller prominence is simultaneously visible at the Sun's edge. The featured image is in false-color and color-inverted to highlight not only the filament but the Sun's carpet chromosphere. The bright dot on the upper right is actually a dark sunspot about the size of the Earth. Solar filaments typically last from hours to days, eventually collapsing to return hot plasma back to the Sun. Sometimes, though, they explode and expel particles into the Solar System, some of which trigger auroras on Earth. The pictured filament appeared in early September and continued to hold steady for about a week.
Photo by Alan FriedmanAverted Imagination
Have I reached
that point of anxiety,
where I am at
my level of incompentcy?
Finding, it's hard
when I cannot
work or garden
in our yard.
NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day:
What are those red filaments in the sky? They are a rarely seen form of lightning confirmed only about 35 years ago: red sprites. Research has shown that following a powerful positive cloud-to-ground lightning strike, red sprites may start as 100-meter balls of ionized air that shoot down from about 80-km high at 10 percent the speed of light. They are quickly followed by a group of upward streaking ionized balls. The featured image was taken late last month from the Jeseniky Mountains in northern Moravia in the Czech Republic. The distance to the red sprites is about 200 kilometers. Red sprites take only a fraction of a second to occur and are best seen when powerful thunderstorms are visible from the side. APOD in world languages: Arabic, Bulgarian, Catalan, Chinese (Beijing), Chinese (Taiwan), Croatian, Czech, Dutch, Farsi, French, French (Canada), German, Hebrew, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, Montenegrin, Polish, Russian, Serbian, Slovenian, Spanish, Taiwanese, Turkish, and Ukrainian
Photo by Daniel Ščerba
Speaking of rain.
I am not,
but fire
and smoke
we have a lot.
When evening time
has bid adieu,
at last, it came,
I am alone with you.
Many times
I fail to see,
what a loss
you are for me.
I see your smile,
in times of reverie,
knowing our past,
will never be,
the same for you
as it is for me.
There was a time
so many days ago
when words of rhyme,
yes but mainly no.
Words I knew about,
words of soft whisper,
words of a loud shout,
words would appear.
Writing the words,
heard in my head,
if not done quickly,
were soon dead.
A loss of a moment,
a terrible waste,
then I'll "pack my tent"
and leave in disgrace.
Ralph Waldo Emerson ~ (1803 –1882) American poet, philosopher, essayist and abolitionist. His first two collections of "Essays" First Series (1841) and Second Series (1844), represent the core of his thinking. They include "Self-Reliance", "The Over-Soul", "Circles", "The Poet", "Experience" and "Nature". His work has greatly influenced the thinkers, writers and poets that followed him. , He wrote: "In all my lectures, I have taught one doctrine, namely, the infinitude of the private man" Wikipedia