The title of this posting ("Topology for Poets") comes from Maryland Poet Amy Eisner's poem "Lure" (offered below) -- a poem that plays with math concepts. (In mathematics, "topology" is a variant of geometry in two shapes are "equivalent" if one could be obtained from the other by stretching or bending.)
It was my pleasure to meet Amy when she read in the Takoma Park Third Thursday Poetry Series earlier this year. I like her work. Enjoy!
Lure by Amy Eisner
1.
My friend is crocheting a fishing line. This is not a gift and keeps no one warm.
This is withdrawing. Persisting in a flaw. Forfending.
She knows there’s something perverse in it. Like growing a mold garden.
Fishing does involve a hook, a line, and a net. But not like this.
Showing posts with label Amy Eisner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amy Eisner. Show all posts
Monday, October 21, 2013
Topology for poets
Labels:
Amy Eisner,
infinite series,
line,
mathematics,
net,
poem,
Takoma Park,
topology
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