The planets A cosmic pastoral (poems) Hardcover 1976 by Diane Ackerman
On February 19, 1974, shortly before visiting Timothy Leary in prison, Carl Sagan sent the psychedelic pioneer a letter discussing evolution, the possibility of extraterrestrial life, and the details of the upcoming visit. The postscript read:
P.S. The enclosed poem, ‘The Other Night’ by Dianne Ackermann [sic] of Cornell, is something I think we both resonate to. It’s unfinished so it shouldn’t yet be quoted publically.
But the poem was eventually finished and, along with fourteen others, included in the 1976 poetry anthology The Planets: A Cosmic Pastoral (public library) by Diane Ackerman — a whimsical and wonderful ode to the universe, celebrating its phenomena and featuring a poem for each planet in the Solar System, as well as one specifically dedicated to Carl Sagan.
From “Venus”:
Low-keyed and perpetual, a whirling sylph whose white robe stripes around her; taffeta wimpled like a nun’s headcloth; a buxom floozy with a pink boa; mummy, whose black sediment desiccates within; wasp-star to Mayan Galileos; an outpatient wrapped in post-operative gauze; Cleopatra in high August– her flesh curling in a heat mirage lightyears from Alexandria; tacky white pulp spigoted through the belly of a larva; the perfect courtesan: obliging, thick-skinned, and pleated with riddles,
Venus quietly mutates in her ivory tower.
Deep within that libidinous albedo temperatures are hot enough to boil lead, pressures 90 times more unyielding than Earth’s. And though layered cloud-decks and haze strata seem to breathe like a giant bellows, heaving and sighing every 4 days, the Venerean cocoon is no cheery chrysalis brewing a damselfly or coaxing life into a reticent grub, but a sniffling atmosphere 40 miles thick of sulphuric, hydrochloric, and hydrofluoric acids all sweating like a global terrarium, cutthroat, tart, and self-absorbed. No sphagnum moss or polypody fern here, where blistering vapors and rosy bile hint at the arson with which the Universe began.
Hubble Space Telescope photograph taken within minutes of Mars’ closest approach to Earth in 60,000 years, on Aug. 27, 2003. Click images for moreFrom “Mars”:
The quickest route from Candor to Chaos follows Coprates (the much-travelled Shit River), through da Vinci and Galileo bypassing Bliss, many moons from Tranquility. But, Romantics, take heart: you can breakfast in Syria, lunch in Sinai, track the Nile to its source (Nilokeras) before dinner, and there, making ablutions to Osiris, win a boon to Eden, where all four rivers of Paradise converge, then spend the night in Pandora, or with Ulysses, Proteus, or even Noah, in the Land of Gold (Chryse) or by the Leek-green Sea.
From “The Other Night (Comet Kohoutek)”:
Last night, while cabbage stuffed with brown sugar, meat and raisins was baking in the oven, and my potted holly, dying leafmeal from red-spider, basked in its antidote malathion, I stepped outside to watch Kohoutek passing its dromedary core through the eye of a galaxy. But only found a white blur cat-napping under Venus: gauzy, dis- solute, and bobtailed as a Manx.
Pent-up in that endless coliseum of stars, the moon was fuller than any Protestant had a right to be. And I said: Moon, if you’ve got any pull up there, bring me a sun-grazing comet, its long hair swept back by the solar wind, in its mouth a dollop of primordial sputum. A dozing iceberg, in whose coma ur-elements collide. Bring me a mojo that’s both relict and reliquary. Give me a thrill from that petrified seed.
Mars was a stoplight in the north sky, the only real meat on the night’s black bones. And I said: Mars, why be parsimonious? You’ve got a million tricks stashed in your orbital backhills: chicory suns bobbing in viridian lagoons; quasars dwindling near the speed of light; pinwheel, dumbbell, and impacted galaxies; epileptic nuclei a mile long; vampiric moons; dicotyledon suns; whorling dustbowls of umbilical snow; milky ways that, on the slant, look like freshly fed pythons.
From “Diffraction (for Carl Sagan)”:
When Carl tells me it’s Rayleigh scattering that makes blue light, canting off molecular
grit, go slowgait through the airy jell, subdued, and outlying mountains look swarthy, or wheat
blaze tawny-rose in the 8:00 sun, how I envy his light touch on Earth’s magnetic bridle.
Knee-deep in the cosmic overwhelm, I’m stricken by the ricochet wonder of it all: the plain
everythingness of everything, in cahoots with the everythingness of everything else.
I’ve always been baffled by people who write about nature only in terms of, say, junipers and cornfields, eschewing all things so-called ‘scientific,’ as if science were, per se, the spoil-sport of feeling. So wonderless a view of nature really doesn’t appeal to me; I don’t see the Universe divided up that way, into ‘The Junipers’ on the one hand and ‘The Amino Acids’ on the other.
So how did Sagan know of Ackerman? Most likely, through his second wife — the author photograph on the back of The Planets: A Cosmic Pastoral was taken by artist and writer Linda Salzman Sagan, whom Carl married in 1968. The two divorced in 1981, after Sir Sagan fell in love with Annie Druyan in the course of creating the Voyager Golden Record, which Linda co-produced. Cosmic love, it seems, is always a little more complicated than the poets might wish us to believe.
Complement with the first poem published in a scientific journal, which actually turned out not to be the first.
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