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Hyperion
 
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Image Title:  Hyperion
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Favorites: 0 
 By: Gabriella  M.  
  Copyright ©2009

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Photographer Gabriella  M.  Gabriella  M. {Karma:33863}
Project #67 Emotion Camera Model hubble satelit
Categories Abstracts
Film Format digital
Portfolio Lens in built
Uploaded 8/6/2009 Film / Memory Type digital
    ISO / Film Speed
Views 436 Shutter
Favorites Aperture f/
Critiques 3 Rating
Pending
/ 0 Ratings
Location City -  Bucharest
State - 
Country - Romania   Romania
About The Evening Star departs. The sky
With growing wings he beckons,
And thousand-year-long flights go by
In just as many seconds.

A flood of stars unfolds below,
Above – more stars that twinkle;
He seems to be a lightning flow
Astray amidst their sprinkle.

Out of the chaos vales sublime
Surrounding him and surging,
He sees, beyond the dawn of time,
The streaming lights emerging.

As they emerge and spill around
Like giant seas amassing
He flies, his yearning mind unbound,
Until all turns to nothing.

For where he lands there’s no domain
Nor eye that can discover,
And time itself struggles in vain
From bareness to recover.

It’s but a void, yet he does find
A thirst that draws him over,
A deep abyss resembling blind
The failure to remember.

LUCEAFARUL – Mihai Eminescu

Mihai Eminescu was the most famous and influential Romanian poet.
The poem Luceafarul (“Evening Star”), first published in 1883, is considered as being the greatest Romanian poetic masterpiece.
Luceafăr in Romanian is the name of the morning star (the planet Venus) and is also linked to the Greek Titan Hyperion.
The name Luceafăr is similar with the Latin Lucifer.
This poem includes elements of Vedic cosmogony.
The Evening Star departs. The sky
With growing wings he beckons,
And thousand-year-long flights go by
In just as many seconds.

A flood of stars unfolds below,
Above – more stars that twinkle;
He seems to be a lightning flow
Astray amidst their sprinkle.

Out of the chaos vales sublime
Surrounding him and surging,
He sees, beyond the dawn of time,
The streaming lights emerging.

As they emerge and spill around
Like giant seas amassing
He flies, his yearning mind unbound,
Until all turns to nothing.

For where he lands there’s no domain
Nor eye that can discover,
And time itself struggles in vain
From bareness to recover.

It’s but a void, yet he does find
A thirst that draws him over,
A deep abyss resembling blind
The failure to remember.

LUCEAFARUL – Mihai Eminescu

Mihai Eminescu was the most famous and influential Romanian poet.
The poem Luceafarul (“Evening Star”), first published in 1883, is considered as being the greatest Romanian poetic masterpiece.
Luceafăr in Romanian is the name of the morning star (the planet Venus) and is also linked to the Greek Titan Hyperion.
The name Luceafăr is similar with the Latin Lucifer.
This poem includes elements of Vedic cosmogony.


The Evening Star departs. The sky
With growing wings he beckons,
And thousand-year-long flights go by
In just as many seconds.

A flood of stars unfolds below,
Above – more stars that twinkle;
He seems to be a lightning flow
Astray amidst their sprinkle.

Out of the chaos vales sublime
Surrounding him and surging,
He sees, beyond the dawn of time,
The streaming lights emerging.

As they emerge and spill around
Like giant seas amassing
He flies, his yearning mind unbound,
Until all turns to nothing.

For where he lands there’s no domain
Nor eye that can discover,
And time itself struggles in vain
From bareness to recover.

It’s but a void, yet he does find
A thirst that draws him over,
A deep abyss resembling blind
The failure to remember.

LUCEAFARUL – Mihai Eminescu

Mihai Eminescu was the most famous and influential Romanian poet.
The poem Luceafarul (“Evening Star”), first published in 1883, is considered as being the greatest Romanian poetic masterpiece.
Luceafăr in Romanian is the name of the morning star (the planet Venus) and is also linked to the Greek Titan Hyperion.
The name Luceafăr is similar with the Latin Lucifer.
This poem includes elements of Vedic cosmogony.


The Evening Star departs. The sky
With growing wings he beckons,
And thousand-year-long flights go by
In just as many seconds.

A flood of stars unfolds below,
Above – more stars that twinkle;
He seems to be a lightning flow
Astray amidst their sprinkle.

Out of the chaos vales sublime
Surrounding him and surging,
He sees, beyond the dawn of time,
The streaming lights emerging.

As they emerge and spill around
Like giant seas amassing
He flies, his yearning mind unbound,
Until all turns to nothing.

For where he lands there’s no domain
Nor eye that can discover,
And time itself struggles in vain
From bareness to recover.

It’s but a void, yet he does find
A thirst that draws him over,
A deep abyss resembling blind
The failure to remember.

LUCEAFARUL – Mihai Eminescu

Mihai Eminescu was the most famous and influential Romanian poet.
The poem Luceafarul (“Evening Star”), first published in 1883, is considered as being the greatest Romanian poetic masterpiece.
Luceafăr in Romanian is the name of the morning star (the planet Venus) and is also linked to the Greek Titan Hyperion.
The name Luceafăr is similar with the Latin Lucifer.
This poem includes elements of Vedic cosmogony.


The Evening Star departs. The sky
With growing wings he beckons,
And thousand-year-long flights go by
In just as many seconds.

A flood of stars unfolds below,
Above – more stars that twinkle;
He seems to be a lightning flow
Astray amidst their sprinkle.

Out of the chaos vales sublime
Surrounding him and surging,
He sees, beyond the dawn of time,
The streaming lights emerging.

As they emerge and spill around
Like giant seas amassing
He flies, his yearning mind unbound,
Until all turns to nothing.

For where he lands there’s no domain
Nor eye that can discover,
And time itself struggles in vain
From bareness to recover.

It’s but a void, yet he does find
A thirst that draws him over,
A deep abyss resembling blind
The failure to remember.

LUCEAFARUL – Mihai Eminescu

Mihai Eminescu was the most famous and influential Romanian poet.
The poem Luceafarul (“Evening Star”), first published in 1883, is considered as being the greatest Romanian poetic masterpiece.
Luceafăr in Romanian is the name of the morning star (the planet Venus) and is also linked to the Greek Titan Hyperion.
The name Luceafăr is similar with the Latin Lucifer.
This poem includes elements of Vedic cosmogony.


The Evening Star departs. The sky
With growing wings he beckons,
And thousand-year-long flights go by
In just as many seconds.

A flood of stars unfolds below,
Above – more stars that twinkle;
He seems to be a lightning flow
Astray amidst their sprinkle.

Out of the chaos vales sublime
Surrounding him and surging,
He sees, beyond the dawn of time,
The streaming lights emerging.

As they emerge and spill around
Like giant seas amassing
He flies, his yearning mind unbound,
Until all turns to nothing.

For where he lands there’s no domain
Nor eye that can discover,
And time itself struggles in vain
From bareness to recover.

It’s but a void, yet he does find
A thirst that draws him over,
A deep abyss resembling blind
The failure to remember.

LUCEAFARUL – Mihai Eminescu

Mihai Eminescu was the most famous and influential Romanian poet.
The poem Luceafarul (“Evening Star”), first published in 1883, is considered as being the greatest Romanian poetic masterpiece.
Luceafăr in Romanian is the name of the morning star (the planet Venus) and is also linked to the Greek Titan Hyperion.
The name Luceafăr is similar with the Latin Lucifer.
This poem includes elements of Vedic cosmogony.


The Evening Star departs. The sky
With growing wings he beckons,
And thousand-year-long flights go by
In just as many seconds.

A flood of stars unfolds below,
Above – more stars that twinkle;
He seems to be a lightning flow
Astray amidst their sprinkle.

Out of the chaos vales sublime
Surrounding him and surging,
He sees, beyond the dawn of time,
The streaming lights emerging.

As they emerge and spill around
Like giant seas amassing
He flies, his yearning mind unbound,
Until all turns to nothing.

For where he lands there’s no domain
Nor eye that can discover,
And time itself struggles in vain
From bareness to recover.

It’s but a void, yet he does find
A thirst that draws him over,
A deep abyss resembling blind
The failure to remember.

LUCEAFARUL – Mihai Eminescu

Mihai Eminescu was the most famous and influential Romanian poet.
The poem Luceafarul (“Evening Star”), first published in 1883, is considered as being the greatest Romanian poetic masterpiece.
Luceafăr in Romanian is the name of the morning star (the planet Venus) and is also linked to the Greek Titan Hyperion.
The name Luceafăr is similar with the Latin Lucifer.
This poem includes elements of Vedic cosmogony.


The Evening Star departs. The sky
With growing wings he beckons,
And thousand-year-long flights go by
In just as many seconds.

A flood of stars unfolds below,
Above – more stars that twinkle;
He seems to be a lightning flow
Astray amidst their sprinkle.

Out of the chaos vales sublime
Surrounding him and surging,
He sees, beyond the dawn of time,
The streaming lights emerging.

As they emerge and spill around
Like giant seas amassing
He flies, his yearning mind unbound,
Until all turns to nothing.

For where he lands there’s no domain
Nor eye that can discover,
And time itself struggles in vain
From bareness to recover.

It’s but a void, yet he does find
A thirst that draws him over,
A deep abyss resembling blind
The failure to remember.

LUCEAFARUL – Mihai Eminescu

Mihai Eminescu was the most famous and influential Romanian poet.
The poem Luceafarul (“Evening Star”), first published in 1883, is considered as being the greatest Romanian poetic masterpiece.
Luceafăr in Romanian is the name of the morning star (the planet Venus) and is also linked to the Greek Titan Hyperion.
The name Luceafăr is similar with the Latin Lucifer.
This poem includes elements of Vedic cosmogony.


The Evening Star departs. The sky
With growing wings he beckons,
And thousand-year-long flights go by
In just as many seconds.

A flood of stars unfolds below,
Above – more stars that twinkle;
He seems to be a lightning flow
Astray amidst their sprinkle.

Out of the chaos vales sublime
Surrounding him and surging,
He sees, beyond the dawn of time,
The streaming lights emerging.

As they emerge and spill around
Like giant seas amassing
He flies, his yearning mind unbound,
Until all turns to nothing.

For where he lands there’s no domain
Nor eye that can discover,
And time itself struggles in vain
From bareness to recover.

It’s but a void, yet he does find
A thirst that draws him over,
A deep abyss resembling blind
The failure to remember.

LUCEAFARUL – Mihai Eminescu

Mihai Eminescu was the most famous and influential Romanian poet.
The poem Luceafarul (“Evening Star”), first published in 1883, is considered as being the greatest Romanian poetic masterpiece.
Luceafăr in Romanian is the name of the morning star (the planet Venus) and is also linked to the Greek Titan Hyperion.
The name Luceafăr is similar with the Latin Lucifer.
This poem includes elements of Vedic cosmogony.

The Evening Star departs. The sky
With growing wings he beckons,
And thousand-year-long flights go by
In just as many seconds.

A flood of stars unfolds below,
Above – more stars that twinkle;
He seems to be a lightning flow
Astray amidst their sprinkle.

Out of the chaos vales sublime
Surrounding him and surging,
He sees, beyond the dawn of time,
The streaming lights emerging.

As they emerge and spill around
Like giant seas amassing
He flies, his yearning mind unbound,
Until all turns to nothing.

For where he lands there’s no domain
Nor eye that can discover,
And time itself struggles in vain
From bareness to recover.

It’s but a void, yet he does find
A thirst that draws him over,
A deep abyss resembling blind
The failure to remember.

LUCEAFARUL – Mihai Eminescu

Mihai Eminescu was the most famous and influential Romanian poet.
The poem Luceafarul (“Evening Star”), first published in 1883, is considered as being the greatest Romanian poetic masterpiece.
Luceafăr in Romanian is the name of the morning star (the planet Venus) and is also linked to the Greek Titan Hyperion.
The name Luceafăr is similar with the Latin Lucifer.
This poem includes elements of Vedic cosmogony.


The Evening Star departs. The sky
With growing wings he beckons,
And thousand-year-long flights go by
In just as many seconds.

A flood of stars unfolds below,
Above – more stars that twinkle;
He seems to be a lightning flow
Astray amidst their sprinkle.

Out of the chaos vales sublime
Surrounding him and surging,
He sees, beyond the dawn of time,
The streaming lights emerging.

As they emerge and spill around
Like giant seas amassing
He flies, his yearning mind unbound,
Until all turns to nothing.

For where he lands there’s no domain
Nor eye that can discover,
And time itself struggles in vain
From bareness to recover.

It’s but a void, yet he does find
A thirst that draws him over,
A deep abyss resembling blind
The failure to remember.

LUCEAFARUL – Mihai Eminescu

Mihai Eminescu was the most famous and influential Romanian poet.
The poem Luceafarul (“Evening Star”), first published in 1883, is considered as being the greatest Romanian poetic masterpiece.
Luceafăr in Romanian is the name of the morning star (the planet Venus) and is also linked to the Greek Titan Hyperion.
The name Luceafăr is similar with the Latin Lucifer.
This poem includes elements of Vedic cosmogony.


The Evening Star departs. The sky
With growing wings he beckons,
And thousand-year-long flights go by
In just as many seconds.

A flood of stars unfolds below,
Above – more stars that twinkle;
He seems to be a lightning flow
Astray amidst their sprinkle.

Out of the chaos vales sublime
Surrounding him and surging,
He sees, beyond the dawn of time,
The streaming lights emerging.

As they emerge and spill around
Like giant seas amassing
He flies, his yearning mind unbound,
Until all turns to nothing.

For where he lands there’s no domain
Nor eye that can discover,
And time itself struggles in vain
From bareness to recover.

It’s but a void, yet he does find
A thirst that draws him over,
A deep abyss resembling blind
The failure to remember.

LUCEAFARUL – Mihai Eminescu

Mihai Eminescu was the most famous and influential Romanian poet.
The poem Luceafarul (“Evening Star”), first published in 1883, is considered as being the greatest Romanian poetic masterpiece.
Luceafăr in Romanian is the name of the morning star (the planet Venus) and is also linked to the Greek Titan Hyperion.
The name Luceafăr is similar with the Latin Lucifer.
This poem includes elements of Vedic cosmogony.





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There are 3 Comments in 1 Pages
  1
Gabriella  M. Gabriella  M.   {K:33863} 8/6/2009
El poeme es muy largo.
Hyperion se enamoró de una mortal y se va hacia Demiurgos para solicitarle proseguirle sua immortalidad.
Es el viaje en el cosmos que es descrito en estas estrofas.
Abrazo.

  0


Gustavo Scheverin Gustavo Scheverin   {K:164501} 8/6/2009
WOW!, qué interesante imagen y qué interesantes los datos del about..., antes que nada me encantó el título, realmente suena fantástico y la imagen tiene un misterio primordial y gran dramatismo. Se trata del comienzo o del fin del universo?, tal vez el fin y el comienzo del universo sean la misma cosa... ¿qué papel jugamos en esta inmensidad cósmica?, esa es la pregunta sin respuesta...

Un abrazo!

  0


Gabriella  M. Gabriella  M.   {K:33863} 8/6/2009
is a manufacture of a hubble`s photo for a nebula.

  0


  1

 

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