Music of the Spheres: Difference between revisions

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==Poetry==
==Poetry==
During a trip to England, O'Donnell met a poet named Malcolm Guite at a festival on the Isle of Wight, where they had their first conversation about pre-Copernican astrophysics and C.S. Lewis. Quickly realizing they shared a passion for these ideas, O'Donnell asked Guite to write a collection of poems for ''Music of the Spheres''. Guite wrote a collection of fourteen poems which he called ''Seven Heavens, Seven Hells; A Sequence for the Spheres''<ref>http://www.wshu.org/post/poetry-inspired-destinys-music-spheres#stream/0</ref> and gave them to Bungie to read over. O'Donnell loved the poems and Bungie purchased the rights to them and Guite had his name for his poetry in the first ''Destiny'' game's credits.<ref>https://www.bungie.net/en-US/Destiny/Credits</ref>
During a trip to England, O'Donnell met a poet named Malcolm Guite at a festival on the Isle of Wight, where they had their first conversation about pre-Copernican astrophysics and C.S. Lewis. Quickly realizing they shared a passion for these ideas, O'Donnell asked Guite to write a collection of poems for ''Music of the Spheres''. Guite wrote a collection of fourteen poems which he called ''Seven Heavens, Seven Hells; A Sequence for the Spheres''<ref>http://www.wshu.org/post/poetry-inspired-destinys-music-spheres#stream/0</ref> and gave them to Bungie to read over. O'Donnell loved the poems and Bungie purchased the rights to them. Guite had his name for his poetry in the first ''Destiny'' game's credits.<ref>https://www.bungie.net/en-US/Destiny/Credits</ref>


As years passed and ''Music of the Spheres'' was seemingly not going to release, Guite considered putting ''Seven Heavens, Seven Hells'' into a number of his books, but the author whom Guite had admired, Michael Ward, said the poems didn't fit into any of the collections he proposed thematically. ''Seven Heavens, Seven Hells'' remained unpublished.
As years passed and ''Music of the Spheres'' was seemingly not going to release, Guite considered putting ''Seven Heavens, Seven Hells'' into a number of his books, but the author whom Guite had admired, Michael Ward, said the poems didn't fit into any of the collections he proposed thematically. ''Seven Heavens, Seven Hells'' remained unpublished.
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