In half an hour's stargazing from the top of Robbins Farm, I saw two short swift streaks of light that I felt comfortable identifying as shooting stars of the Ursids and a third uncertain blip that might only have been my eyes adjusting to another star in the hard clear sky of 15 °F. They were striking out across the precession of the equinoxes, Thuban, Kochab and Mizar, Polaris. I could have missed others as I kept turning under the winter constellations that even a suburban night was finally cold enough for, the jewels of Mars and Jupiter, the quarter-moon coming up so huge and orange at the edge of the skyline that we checked to make sure it wasn't some kind of catastrophe: it shrank out of the haze of Boston and turned ice-white. I would have lain down in the snow if I had been wearing my leather jacket and filled my field of vision with stars. Instead
spatch praised my endurance for standing out in the sandblasting cold, even after I had to come back to the car because I took off one of my gloves and my fingers seized up: "You were dipped in the Atlantic . . . But your hands had reached into the deepest part." I held them in the dashboard vents until the color came back into them. When I carried his phone with its star-map app back across the field, it kept showing me the astronomy on the other side of the earth, an Etruscan underworld's worth of sky.
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