Immense Poem by Paul Butters

Immense



When The Great Bard wrote his epic plays
America was the new frontier
A widening world of wonder.
But now we look with eagle-eyed telescopes
Out into the depths of space
Beyond the beyond
Back through countless miles and aeons
To Thirteen point eight billion years ago
When our universe appeared.

Send your minds-eye through swirling sandstorm fogs,
Each grain a galaxy
Each galaxy a beach
Of stars.

Most stars are circled
By endless varieties
Of worlds.
There must be Earths out there,
Again too many to number
Making our own a single speck
In that endless night.

The saddest thing, of course,
Is that all these worlds are out of reach,
Unless we find a wormhole
Or that fiction "Star Trek" comes to pass.

Without some warp drive
We are marooned on this island
We call Earth.
Yet we can look
And think:
Imagine what it's like out there
On sister Earths
In jungles,
Up mountains
And on sky-blue seas.

Saturday, December 19, 2015
Topic(s) of this poem: space
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Paul Butters 19 December 2015

Many Thanks Edward. I do Love Space. And pondering the meaning of existence!

1 0 Reply
Edward Kofi Louis 19 December 2015

Into the depths of space! With the muse of life. Nice work.

0 0 Reply
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Paul Butters

Paul Butters

Leeds, West Yorkshire.
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