Astronomy Club of Asheville
Home StarGazes Star Parties Photos IDA Links Articles Weather
The Star-Splitter
by Robert Frost
You know Orion always comes up sideways.
Throwing a leg up over our fence of mountains,
And rising on his hands, he
looks in on me
Busy outdoors by lantern-light with something
I should
have done by daylight, and indeed,
After the ground is frozen, I should have
done
Before it froze, and a gust flings a handful
Of waste leaves at my
smoky lantern chimney
To make fun of my way of doing things,
Or else fun
of Orion's having caught me.
Has a man, I should like to ask, no rights
These forces are obliged to pay respect to?"
So Brad McLaughlin mingled reckless
talk
Of heavenly stars with hugger-mugger farming,
Till having failed
at hugger-mugger farming,
He burned his house down for the fire insurance
And spent the proceeds on a telescope
To satisfy a life-long curiosity
About our place among the infinities.
"What do you want with one of those
blame things?"
I asked him well beforehand. "Don't you get one!"
"Don't
call it blamed; there isn't anything
More blameless in the sense of being
less
A weapon in our human fight," he said.
"I'll have one if I sell my
farm to buy it."
There where he moved the rocks to plow the ground
And
plowed between the rocks he couldn't move,
Few farms changed hands; so rather
than spend years
Trying to sell his farm and then not selling,
He burned
his house down for the fire insurance
And bought the telescope with what it
came to.
He had been heard to say by several:
"The best thing that we're
put here for's to see;
The strongest thing that's given us to see with's
A telescope. Someone in every town
Seems to me owes it to the town to keep
one.
In Littleton it may as well be me."
After such loose talk it was
no surprise
When he did what he did and burned his house down.
Mean laughter
went about the town that day
To let him know we weren't the least imposed
on,
And he could wait--we'd see to him to-morrow.
But the first thing
next morning we reflected
If one by one we counted people out
For the
least sin, it wouldn't take us long
To get so we had no one left to live with.
For to be social is to be forgiving.
Our thief, the one who does our stealing
from us,
We don't cut off from coming to church suppers,
But what we miss
we go to him and ask for
He promptly gives it back, that is if still
Uneaten,
unworn out, or undisposed of.
It wouldn't do to be too hard on Brad
About
his telescope. Beyond the age
Of being given one's gift for Christmas,
He had to take the best way he knew how
To find himself in one. Well, all
we said was
He took a strange thing to be roguish over.
Some sympathy
was wasted on the house,
A good old-timer dating back along;
But a house
isn't sentient; the house
Didn't feel anything. And if it did,
Why not
regard it as a sacrifice,
And an old-fashioned sacrifice by fire,
Instead
of a new-fashioned one at auction?
Out of a house and so out of a farm
At one stroke (of a match), Brad had to turn
To earn a living on the Concord
railroad,
As under-ticket-agent at a station
Where his job, when he wasn't
selling tickets,
Was setting out up track and down, not plants
As on a
farm, but planets, evening stars
That varied in their hue from red to green.
He got a good glass for six hundred dollars.
His new job gave him leisure
for star-gazing.
Often he bid me come and have a look
Up the brass barrel,
velvet black inside,
At a star quaking in the other end.
I recollect a
night of broken clouds
And underfoot snow melted down to ice,
And melting
further in the wind to mud.
Bradford and I had out the telescope.
We spread
our two legs as it spread its three,
Pointed our thoughts the way we pointed
it,
And standing at our leisure till the day broke,
Said some of the best
things we ever said.
That telescope was christened the Star-splitter,
Because it didn't do a thing but split
A star in two or three the way you
split
A globule of quicksilver in your hand
With one stroke of your finger
in the middle.
It's a star-splitter if there ever was one
And ought to
do some good if splitting stars
'Sa thing to be compared with splitting wood.
We've looked and looked, but after all where are we?
Do we know any better
where we are,
And how it stands between the night to-night
And a man with
a smoky lantern chimney?
How different from the way it ever stood?
The Star-Splitter in Acrobat format