The beauty of the sun. |
I never have seen such an unusual orange sun. Setting Sol, gaseous sphere abutting Earth’s horizon. Rays refracting longer through an atmosphere, life-giving fusion reactor billions of years old. God to primitive man, (object of worship still)… star. Stormy surface, prominence in abundance, spots every eleven years on average, eight minutes away measured by light speed. Busy hydrogen and helium afire, wherein even blades of grass are dependent. Dawn’s father (nexus of both night and day), ahold of planets, moons and asteroids, creating comet tails because of solar wind aplenty. The sun is significant pucker in space time itself; existing splendid to make day, to spark the invisible world, to manufacture DNA. In balance is this grand orange sun; it is a battle between its core’s inner fire and the relentless pull of gravity. Long-lived this sunset master-painter, this system tsar who rules with iron- like fist, who came into being, most likely, by a supernova explosion. Yet this stellar kingly plasma ball will expire without pomp, with no fanfare, without roar. A cold white dwarf (a lump of ash) it will become, one day, billions of years from now. Yet we don’t have to worry. For now, at least, orange beauty reigns supreme. 40 Lines Writer’s Cramp 10-20-17 |