“Mars opposition” happens when Earth passes between the Sun and Mars. The event occurs every 779.94 days (roughly two years and two months) and will take place this year on October 13. Mars will appear to be rising in the east as the Sun is setting in the west. It will also be one of the brightest objects in the night sky, second only to Venus among the planets. It may even be visible during the day.
In 1956, Mars was in
opposition on September 10 and Robert Conquest commemorated the event with “For
the 1956 Opposition of Mars,” written in 1957 and collected in Between Mars
and Venus, (1962). Thom Gunn described it as “one of the best poems since
the war”:
“Red on the south horizon,
brighter than
For fifteen years, the
little planet glows,
And brightest yet its
kindled themes impose
On the imaginings of man.
War’s omen once. Then
source of fate’s firm rays,
Or, punched through the precarious sky,
A hole on hell. And then a
dry
Quantum of knowledge
merely, cold in space.
“Only in names from
legend, history, dream,
The heart showed on its
map the regions drawn:
The Horn of Ammon and the
Bay of Dawn.
Now, fantasy and knowledge
gleam
One red; and by the next
close opposition
Observers in the exosphere
Should see it many times
as clear,
And by the next one yet,
match touch with vision,
“Grasping whatever starts
beneath those noons’
Blue-black intensities of
sky; on sand
Blood-orange where the
blue-green lowlands end;
In thin air; under two
small moons;
As spring’s green flux
pours down from where the pole is;
Till yellow clouds fade,
while blue, higher,
Catch the set sun with
faintest fire
Over Arcadia or the Lacus
Solis.
“Pure joy of knowledge
rides as high as art.
The whole heart cannot
keep alive on either.
Wills as of Drake and
Shakespeare strike together;
Cultures turn rotten when
they part.
True frontiers march with
those in the mind’s eye:
--The white sound rising
now to fury
In efflux from the hot venturi
As Earth’s close down,
gives us the endless skies.”
The exosphere, as mentioned in the second stanza, is the
outermost layer of the Earth’s atmosphere. The Soviets launched Sputnik 1 thirteen months after the Mars opposition, in October
1957, and it reached a maximum altitude of about 583 miles. The lower boundary of
the exosphere ranges between 310 and 620 miles, depending on solar activity. Sputnik
reached the exosphere, as did subsequent Soviet and American satellites. All would
have been able to “see” Mars, as Conquest writes, “many times as clear,”
without the Earth's atmospheric distortions. The second of the next two oppositions he describes
in the second stanza would have occurred on Dec. 30, 1960. Conquest was rather
optimistic. In 1965, Mariner 4 came within 6,000 miles of Mars and took the first
close-up photos of its surface. On Dec. 2, 1971, the Soviet Union’s Mars 3
lander made the first successful landing on the planet.
Conquest’s final stanza captures the grand space romance of those years. Science and art, with imagination in common, are the supreme human enterprises: “True frontiers march with those in the mind’s eye.” In a 1969 essay, "Space Odysseys: Apollo 8 and 2001" (The Abomination of Moab, 1979), Conquest quotes that final stanza and writes:
"The idea of space flight, as of adventure and exploration in general, is in a sense child-like. It is in childhood that certain essential components of the adult human being are established--the sense of wonder, intellectual curiosity, the Allfühling. Only those whose adolescence has been such a terrific experience that it has burnt the bridges to childhood are without them, and they are as incomplete as a purely childish adult would be. It is adolescent priggishness and self importance which objects to Apollo."
It is only appropriate that Conquest always retained his esteem for science fiction, a genre dismissed (by some) as unworthy of any but juvenile attention.
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