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They asked if I were Sun or Moon.     A light to blaze, or one to borrow; To gild the morn or guard the noon,     To shine, or dream in silvery sorrow. But I, soft-rooted, could not rise, For mine are humbler, greener ties. I am the Earth, slow-breathing sphere,     With veins of rivers, heart of loam; Where seasons spin their fragile year,     And every creature builds a home. I cradle dawn, I bury dusk, And wear both sunlight and its husk. The Sun may crown me, fierce and gold,     The Moon may haunt my sleeping seas; Yet neither warmth nor wonder bold     Could make me less than roots and breeze. For stars may rule the sky above But I am soil, and grief, and love. I bear the bloom, the ash, the thorn,     The poet’s field, the mourner’s tomb; From every death, a seed is born,     From every night, a brighter bloom. They ask again. What light am I? I am the ground where lights may die.
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Dec 7, 2025
Dec 7, 2025 at 4:16 PM UTC
In Orbe Meo
They asked if I were Sun or Moon.     A light to blaze, or one to borrow; To gild the morn or guard the noon,     To shine, or dream in silvery sorrow. But I, soft-rooted, could not rise, For mine are humbler, greener ties. I am the Earth, slow-breathing sphere,     With veins of rivers, heart of loam; Where seasons spin their fragile year,     And every creature builds a home. I cradle dawn, I bury dusk, And wear both sunlight and its husk. The Sun may crown me, fierce and gold,     The Moon may haunt my sleeping seas; Yet neither warmth nor wonder bold     Could make me less than roots and breeze. For stars may rule the sky above But I am soil, and grief, and love. I bear the bloom, the ash, the thorn,     The poet’s field, the mourner’s tomb; From every death, a seed is born,     From every night, a brighter bloom. They ask again. What light am I? I am the ground where lights may die.
arcturusb
Written by
Dec 7, 2025
Dec 7, 2025 at 4:16 PM UTC
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