Master Korran:

"Coruscant is not known for lush grassy hills, for changing seasons or for beautiful sunsets. Rather, Coruscant is known for its tight control on weather changes, blue skies during the day, artificial 'sunset color' during evening hours.

Its not that Coruscants sunrise and sunsets arent beautiful. They just pale once you leave the control and regulation. To see something natural, and see it not because someone picked it out of a bin of colors, or 'choose it'. But because thats the way it is. Thats how its supposed it look.

To see something as beautiful as a sunset or sunrise, you'd have to travel to a naturally beautiful planet. Naboo comes to mind, or perhaps Alderaan.

There are many beautiful and lovely planets that showcase the stunning bright colors of the sun setting, or more accurately, the spot where you are turning away from the bright star.

The colors though. They mesh as one with no distinction of beginning or end. Bright and vibrant. Or burnt and bloody. Color being relative to what planet you are standing on.

I have witnessed sunsets, bright with hope, gleaming with a new day promised. Putting to rest the end of an old time. Just bleeding with joy and happiness.

But I have also seen sunsets, warming the cooling blood on the streets. The hate and the despair leeching into the atmosphere. Mingling copper and rust in your mouth. The end of the day, the sun setting over millions of cold and lifeless forms. The blood in the sky, a mere echo of the blood on the ground. It cries and bleeds with the screams of millions. Those sunsets, are not beautiful. They are not joyous or peaceful. They promise more bloodshed, more war, more hate.

Of course, you cannot travel even a small portion of the known galaxy without watching many sunsets.

Many dawns awakening and many bright promises dying on the lips of the cold dead.

To me a sunset is either the end of a era, the beginning of a new hope. Or the start of a scarlet war.

Its all relative to where you are. Perhaps Coruscant is right in their controlling the weather after all.