His very well-worn, tired old tweed
hanging loosely from his slender back
Trotting across the campus courtyard
his shoes going clickety-clackScurrying along, shoelaces flapping
balancing a tower of books
Spectacles skewed, pencil in mouth
in disarray, he certainly looksBack in the great auditorium
his absolute favourite place
All awkwardness suddenly vanished
disappeared, gone without traceVividly explaining
with body and speech
About the universe
and its outer reachThe students all seem
to forget about time
As the professor
begins to defineStrange chemical compositions
of red giants and nebulas of gas
Electromagnetic spectrums
of multiverse with unlimited massHis audience now fully immersed
in this fabulous voyage of mind
Visiting far away galaxies
leaving earth and its troubles behind~
---------------------------Webster's definitions:
Well-worn (showing the effects of extensive use or wear)
Scurry (to go or move quickly or in haste)
Red giant (a star in an intermediate stage of evolution, characterized by a large volume, low surface temperature, and reddish hue)
Nebula (a cloudlike, luminous or dark mass composed of gases and small amounts of dust)
Electromagnetic spectrum (the entire range of wavelengths or frequencies of electromagnetic radiation extending from gamma rays to the longest radio waves and including visible light)
Multiverse (a theoretical reality that includes a possibly infinite number of parallel universes)
YOU ARE READING
Poems & Writings inspired by Webster's Dictionary
PoetryThe idea behind this book is to publish a poem or piece of writing regularly - hopefully once a week. But there is a twist. My poems will be inspired by "Webster's Encyclopedic Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language", 1994 edition. Can poet...