Le ciel est, par-dessus le toit, The sky is, up above the roof, Si bleu,
si calme! So blue, so calm! Un arbre, par-dessus Je toit, A tree there,
up above the roof, Berce sa palme. Waves leaves of palm. La cloche, dans
le ciel qu'on voit, A church bell, in the sky I see, Doucement tinte.
Softly tolls. Un oiseau, sur l'arbre qu'on voit, A bird, upon the tree I
see, Chante sa plainte. Sadly calls. PAUL VERLAINE Like Verlaine, we are
in prison. The prison is our Earth, "which is so pretty"; our atmosphere
and its clouds, its "marvellous clouds". (You would think that Verlaine,
Prevert and Baudelaire had been comparing notes!) The sky is up above
the roof... A tree there, up above the roof... Stars in the sky, like
birds ... their rays, like bells (and here we are with Apollinaire!)
What we see opens the way to what we guess at; what we observe Ieads us
towards the unobservable. A poem releases images, and the invisible
grows big with reality. Astronomcrs are a little like poets (indirectly
from the Greek 7tostco, make): they make the universe by interpreting
messages, extrapolating spectra, and inventing 'models' of the cosmos or
of stars - fictional constructions whose observable part constitutes
only a small fraction of the whole, and which only the inductive logic
of the theoretician allows us to consider as representing unique
physical reality.