From Larry Lesser, a professor at The University of Texas at El Paso (a researcher in math education) and a poet and songwriter and friend, today's poem offers a thoughtful reflection on the properties of a snowflake--and the fragility of thought and weather patterns. But first (and also from Lesser), here's a clever "2019" stanza
(in which each line has the number of syllables of the corresponding digit in that year):
Silence
is
sometimes the strongest thing we can say.
SNOWFLAKE by Lawrence Mark Lesser
Some say
‘‘no two alike’’,
others say
‘‘not too alike’’.
Like Koch,
we iterate
through identities
and intersections–
a thickening
fringe.
Microaggressions
and microaffirmations
quickly crystallize
‘til finite
mind’s surrounded
by endless boundary
whose dimension is not one, yet
not two, triggering
avalanches and
blizzards of
needles,
platelets,
and rime
over
once safe
terrain.
Who says
‘‘fragile’’ in the
climate we have
now?
I found Lesser's "Snowflake" here in The Mathematical Intelligencer 40, 81 (2018) -- and many examples of his work have appeared in earlier postings in this blog; here are links.
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