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NASA Image Of The Day
Hurricane Celia
Perfectly circular, powerful Hurricane Celia spaned hundreds of miles over the Pacific Ocean in this image from June 24, 2010. Rough-textured clouds surround the storm?s distinct eye. Farther from the center of the storm, spiral arms appear thinner and smoother. The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer, or MODIS, on NASA?s Aqua satellite captured this true-color image of Hurricane Celia at 1:55 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time on June 24, 2010. Just five minutes later, the U.S. National Hurricane Center classified Celia as a Category 4 hurricane with sustained winds of 135 miles per hour. Image Credit: NASA...
StarPoet Newsletter Vol. XI, No. IX Print E-mail
Letters - Newsletters
Sunday, 28 February 2010 00:00
The StarPoet Newsletter
Vol. XI, No. IX (February 28, 2010 C.E.)
StarPoet Newsletter by Lisa Jain Thompson

February is disappearing as fast as snow in Miami.  March is coming in like a pack of Allosaurs hunting down a sauropod. 

It's six o'clock and not dark yet,
The winter gods are losing their grip,
Soon our days will be longer than our nights,
The Equinox approaches.

All praise Ra and servant Apollo.

Lisa Jain Thompson c. 2010 C.E. 

We saw Martin Scorsese's Shelter Island last weekend.  It's brilliant and a a nicely creepy way to spend a couple hours.
for the one who set me on this course

Fragment 61b

two lips
   parted met
  
  
   [          ]
  

soft breast


... touched gently ...


   [         ]
  
  
night fell swiftly


... remember [ we, you ] ...


... my bitter-sweet imp ...


when morning woke us

— Lisa Jain Thompson (February 2010)

Rodger Wilton Young (April 28, 1918–July 31, 1943) was an American infantryman in the U.S. Army during World War II. He was killed on the island of New Georgia while helping his platoon withdraw under enemy fire. For his actions, he posthumously received the United States' highest military decoration, the Medal of Honor.

Galactic History

A World Like Any Other

He just don't grasp
The death bit, does he,
All living, all powerful,
God of all and everything;

And why should he care
About a single scrawny ape
Scratching out its existence
On a dull average world

When there is a universe
Most infinitely varied,
Filled with brave peoples
More talented and worthy;

Was Earth the only world
Willing to bend its knee,
Or were all the other planets
Already occupied by their dieties?

— Lisa Jain Thompson (February 2010)
boys and girls
Broken Web

Kerouac hurled himself across country,
More image than a writer,
An idea that caught then becomes cliché.

Hemingway captured a time and place,
Then wasted slowly while on safari
For some mystical, grace-filled  manhood.

Fitzgerald was a pure moment of America,
All glitter and gilded and blind celebration,
And crashed with his countrymen into depression.

All earned points off the back end of immortality
Unlike poor J. D., darling of academic poo-bahs
And the hero of adolescent boys..

— Lisa Jain Thompson (February 2010)

Oh, they've got no time for glory in the Infantry.
Oh, they've got no use for praises loudly sung.
But in every soldier's heart in all the Infantry
Shines the name, shines the name of Rodger Young.

—Frank Loesser, The Ballad of Roger Young

between here and there
Lettucework

Someday we will be laid out
Among the beautiful lettuces,
Joining the whore of Mytilene
Who sold her handiwork
To the highest Goddess,
Then vanished in quick oblivion
When she was finished.
The great Goddess favor us
No less than dear Sappho:
Adorned by the breathless earth,
We all are soon gone,
White caps upon the beach.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (February 2010)

Caught in ambush lay a company of riflemen
Just grenades against machine guns in the gloom.
Caught in ambush till this one of twenty riflemen
Volunteered, volunteered to meet his doom..

—Frank Loesser, The Ballad of Roger Young

following the blood

Tapenade

If I were an African American,
My skin would be several shades darker;
If I were a true caucasian white girl,
My flesh would be bleached for hours.
My cheekbones crossed the Bering Straights
A hundred centuries before my birth;
My Mediterranean olive reflects the lust
Of Romans, Greeks, and North Africans.
My droopy eyelid slips in from Britain
To frame my Sicilian brown eye;
The British Isles provide written history,
America, my home and birthplace.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (February 2010)
                                               
as time goes by
Día de los Muertos

Someday I will be as ancient
As the Coliseum and the Pyramids,
As little read as Catullus
Or Homer's lengthy Illiad.

I have no precious papyrus
To transport myself through time,
No desert caves to hid in
Until the moment is right.

All there is are these electrons
And volumes of fading pens
Stacked on shelves in my closet,
Waiting for my death.

Thousands of lines, blotted and crossed,
Lie ready for scholarly exegesis,
But my blood will have dried as decades pass
And my heart not beaten in a century.

My wit will be hidden unbantered,
My dimples never more be seen,
Neither word nor kiss will pass my lips,
Only these ashen ruins will remain.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (February 2010)

(It was he who drew the fire of the enemy
That a company of men might live to fight.
And before the deadly fire of the enemy
Stood the man, stood the man we hail tonight.).

—Frank Loesser, The Ballad of Roger Young

funny how the world slips by
When We Met

When we met
I took delight in your desire

Hungry for a lover
Who longed only for me
 
My blood stirred at your touch
And I was yours

   Years before
I admitted it to myself

— Lisa Jain Thompson (February 2010)
hey, Irish

Red Clouds

Pale red clouds above the sunrise,
Dark blue sky to the west,
Rain moving slowly down from the north
As February winds into March.

In another three months
I will work on my tan
And you can go from
White to red to white again.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (February 2010)

On the island of New Georgia in the Solomons
Stands a simple wooden cross alone to tell.
That beneath the silent coral of the Solomons
Sleeps a man, sleeps a man remembered well
.

—Frank Loesser, The Ballad of Roger Young

not me, not me

In Our Exuberance

In our exuberance,
Full of our youth
And sure of our genius,
We rolled through the sixties
Unfettered by rules or history.

What did we have to fear?
Antibiotics would cure us
And The Pill made us free;
All the world seemed ladies' choice
Even as the war raged on.

Life was a rude awakening
Cluttering our careful philosophies;
Children were a complication
That cared less how many degrees
Might paper our walls and bathrooms.

Some of us were quick learners,
Our working class families and schools
Ensuring we would not drift far;
As for the others, they still people
Their politics with the sureness of privilege:

The necessity of competitive pre-schools
To headstart their precious progeny,
The intrinsic wrongness of capitalism
And their necessity the central government
Provide them everything they rebelled against.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (February 2010)

He promises never to video tape again.

The Furnace

If Tiger had dallied with Anna Karenina or Madame Bovary,
Or cheated on his wife with the Presidential First Lady,
Perhaps we would have a skeleton on which to hang
A great Shakespearean Tragedy,

But he chose to drive his ball on a public course populated with
Reality show bimbos and minimum wage waitresses
Who would no more say no to him than refuse to serve him.
There is no great arc, no fifth act self-realization,
No emotional catharsis worthy of our attention,

He would still sit at our table, chairman of the board,
And ask the closest woman if she would like to bring him
His morning coffee and cue up his latest media clips,
Adding "please" only if he thought the camera's were still on.

— Lisa Jain Thompson  (February 2010)

Medal of Honor citation

Rank and organization: Private, United States Army, 148th Infantry, US 37th Infantry Division. Place and date: On New Georgia, Solomon Islands, July 31, 1943. Entered service at: Clyde, Ohio. Birth: Tiffin, Ohio. G.O. No.: 3, January 6, 1944.

    Medal of Honor Citation: On July 31, 1943, the infantry company of which Pvt. Young was a member, was ordered to make a limited withdrawal from the battle line in order to adjust the battalion's position for the night. At this time, Pvt. Young's platoon was engaged with the enemy in a dense jungle where observation was very limited. The platoon suddenly was pinned down by intense fire from a Japanese machine gun concealed on higher ground only 75 yards (69 m) away. The initial burst wounded Pvt. Young. As the platoon started to obey the order to withdraw, Pvt. Young called out that he could see the enemy emplacement, whereupon he started creeping toward it. Another burst from the machine gun wounded him the second time. Despite the wounds, he continued his heroic advance, attracting enemy fire and answering with rifle fire. When he was close enough to his objective, he began throwing hand grenades, and while doing so was hit again and killed. Pvt. Young's bold action in closing with this Japanese pillbox and thus diverting its fire, permitted his platoon to disengage itself, without loss, and was responsible for several enemy casualties.

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StarPoet Newsletter by Lisa Jain Thompson
 
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Last Updated on Sunday, 28 February 2010 11:44