Home Planet News

a journal of literature & art

The Literary Review

Page 8

Issue 10           Page 7

New Snow

I know the different names for snow:

dense, compact, sherbet burned into the mind

on gray days when nothing moves,

when even a finger feels a twinge of cold.

I want to leave this frozen world,

watch the mercury reach higher temperatures,

and not remain a rigid pane in frigid atmosphere.

I want to leave behind false promises,

the dull days of torpid vigor

when every limb feels enervated.

I want to crawl into a wigwam,

feed the fire, watch it grow,

become a coal of glowing embers.

Today I saw a picture of Mercury,

our smallest celestial neighbor,

its egg-yolk shining in the sun.

Oh to inhabit the sunlit top,

the only once illumined pole.

For there, in the melting ice,

a patch of life begins to grow.

Lady Big
© Carrie Higgins Lorenz: Lady Bug

Frontier Life

A rocket launched from a pad on earth,

a robot to roam in place of our feet,

the journey resembles a trip out west

to massive, bloody, Arizona rocks

dotting the horizon of burnt soil

once part of abandoned shrines.

What will this mechanical rover

discover in million year old rubble?

Amino acids, the building block,

complex proteins, remnants of water,

soil once teeming with life

now parched by a cold desert?

Few men or women will live to see

the secrets of a planet unfold

until we send those of our own

to stand, touch, smell, and hear

in their own minds an alien land.

And soon, once the rocks are mined

for chemical riches, others will follow,

build pueblos like our native people,

restore canals to their former glory,

praise the sun even in painful cold.

Aliens Traveling Light Speed from Another Galaxy, Observing Earth

Look at these pathetic creatures!

Is this the best they can do?

afraid to leave their planet’s orbit

but once in thirty or forty years

to land on the nearest dead moon.

Instead they circle their planet

and re-enter the atmosphere

always with damage to their craft,

the weight of gravity too great upon them.

For this they send probes in their stead

to test, mine, and explore

the other planets closer to the sun.

They can’t even travel beyond the moon!

Why not crush these dwarfs now?

They have no future confined

to what will soon become

a little ball of dust and cloud.

Now teeming, they will one day

annihilate themselves.

We left our home planet light years ago

on the verge of its explosion

when we perfected hyperdrive

and defied gravity.

We saw these primitives in telescopes

at the dawn of their race

when they were but ape men

beating clubs in branches of trees.

At this time, we had not yet learned

to travel the speed of light.

We could only watch them

from a comfortable distance.

Now we have the power

to descend as gods on these bugs,

end their petty squabbles,

and make them serve our desires.

But hold! We should be wary

to take rash action

lest we forget why we left our home.

Instead, let us observe them,

send mocking messages to them,

and where necessary,

intervene to prevent disaster.

Let them discover for themselves

the mysteries of light speed

and hyper drive; the desire

to rise above their station

and leave their stifling planet

to discover the wide expanse

of the great cold void beyond.

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