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"Mars Minster", The future of hardware on Mars... |
May 22 2007, 12:38 PM
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![]() The Poet Dude ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Moderator Posts: 5551 Joined: 15-March 04 From: Kendal, Cumbria, UK Member No.: 60 |
We went to York last Friday, and while we were wandering around the beautiful and imposing York Minster cathedral I had a bit of a moment...
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Mars Minster Standing in the Minster’s deep dark shadow, marrow-chilled by the late May wind I gazed up at the gargoyles grinning down from far above my head and said “Someday Mars will have a monument like this”. “Hmm? You think”? she sighed, click-a-clicking by my side, camera grabbing images of Time-flayed, now-green statues as we talked, walking in and out of the shadow’s spiky silhouette while crumpled Costa cups and burger wrappers blew around our feet. “Oh yeah,” I nodded, staring up, looking past the imps’ and elves’ chipped stone faces; past the stained-glass windows shining in the Sun; past the buttresses and towers to where the air was clear and blue as an iceberg’s frozen heart - - and I knew it was true. In another age, tho maybe not for a thousand years or more a mighty crowd will roar at the sight of monstrous doors swinging open and, surging forward, will be dwarfed by its great towers and walls of salmon-tinted stone. Probably not a cathedral tho; by then religion will be a strictly terrestrial thing: superstitions, myths and fairy tales for scaring Terran tots who will not go to bed. Instead – a great museum, the place where all Man’s Mars explorers are brought and laid to rest. In one small room: bruised and battered Beagle, or however many pieces of her shattered beetle shell they’ve found by Opening Day. In another gallery: case after case of ‘famous stones’, those seen through Viking’s and Pathfinder’s lenses before they too passed away. And in one endless Hall of Heroes the precious probes themselves, dead and rusted, dug out of the drifted dust and brushed ‘til spotlessly clean; seen now in a floodlight’s glare, stared at by a million passing martians every year, immortalised on the store’s shelves as postcards, rulers and pens… Another hall, another haul of electronic emissaries dragged free from Barsoom’s sucking sands to stand proud in the light again: Phoenix, with her claw-like hand, dwarfing Soviet Mars and broken backshells from a dozen different lands, all rescued from oblivion. Walking through its red rock corridors, heels click and clocking on fire-hued flagstones flensed from the flank of mighty Olympus’ slopes, any stick-limbed martian old and bold enough to lift their eyes will see a sight to make a Terran of the 21st century weep… Hanging from invisible threads of teased-out, cobweb diamond Old Odyssey and older Vikings will in formation fly; side by side: MRO and MGS, Mars Express and all the rest, space age pterodactyls with fragile silicon wings and solar-wind stained eyes, resting after all their years of service. Walking in their shadows, wide eyes sweeping to and fro, how many pale-skinned martians will know their epic history? How their every move was met on earthly message boards and forums with breathless glee or fear? Will they hear the sighs and cries of those of us whose lives revolved around their speckled pixel portraits even as the probes themselves revolved around Mars far below? Will they know how we sat long into the night, waiting for a sight of the latest canyon, crater or hill? Will those images still amaze, or will their glory have faded like the flags on the Vikings’ sides? And in one special hall, with mural-covered walls, spotlights will play upon the graceful forms of Mankind’s first true martians: two rovers, identical in shape and size, surprisingly fragile-looking in the gallery’s light will finally stand side by side, sisters reunited after many years apart. Their hearts, embedded in their metal chests, will beat again, as strong and proud as when they prowled the cinnamon-stained plains of Gusev and Meridiani. See? a martian mother will tell her infant son, Opportunity and Spirit, and reaching out with shaking hand she’ll touch the sand- scratched panels on their backs and thank them for their lives. We would not be here if they had failed, she’ll tell the sleeping babe, they turned Mars from a rock into a world. And walking away, her noble martian head held high she’ll turn one final time and say through crystal tears… Thank you. © Stuart Atkinson 2007 -------------------- |
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