Irish poet Eavan Boland (1944-2020) died last week and news of her death has caused me to look back and remember. In this year in which the US celebrates 100 years of women's suffrage, I am reminded of this poem in the Irish Times in which Boland celebrated 100 years of Irish women's suffrage, a poem entitled "Our future will become the past of other women." Here is a brief excerpt from that poem:
A hundred years ago a woman’s vote
Becoming law became the right
Of Irish women. We remember them
As we celebrate this freedom.
One of my favorite of Boland's poems is her tribute to another master of language, Grace Murray Hopper (1906-1988) -- Hopper was a computer pioneer and a navy rear admiral. Here is the opening stanza of Boland's poem:
Showing posts with label Eavan Boland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eavan Boland. Show all posts
Monday, May 4, 2020
Tuesday, December 26, 2017
Problems with no solutions
The syllable-square stanza is a poetic form I often turn to when scientific terminology gives me little hope of matching traditional patterns of rhyme or rhythm -- counting syllables gives discipline and invention to my word choices, and these are for me essential in writing poetry.
As a grandparent of school-age children I am deeply worried about the world they are inheriting. I want it to offer a healthy environment and safety with vast opportunities for women as well as men. And my own writing often supports these views. I encourage readers to use the blog SEARCH to find an assortment of poems on a theme -- such as "girl" or "environment" or . . . For example, here is a link to postings that include the word opportunity. Scrolling through that list leads to this posting of Eavan Boland's poem, "Code," which honors Grace Murray Hopper.
Square worries
Unless miracles give
our earth new resources
that prove unlimited,
unchecked population
growth and climate change are
problems with no solutions.
As a grandparent of school-age children I am deeply worried about the world they are inheriting. I want it to offer a healthy environment and safety with vast opportunities for women as well as men. And my own writing often supports these views. I encourage readers to use the blog SEARCH to find an assortment of poems on a theme -- such as "girl" or "environment" or . . . For example, here is a link to postings that include the word opportunity. Scrolling through that list leads to this posting of Eavan Boland's poem, "Code," which honors Grace Murray Hopper.
And here is my small, worried square:
Square worries
Unless miracles give
our earth new resources
that prove unlimited,
unchecked population
growth and climate change are
problems with no solutions.
Labels:
Eavan Boland,
Grace Murray Hopper,
opportunity
Friday, June 8, 2012
Computer code -- is poetry?
Dubliner Eavan Boland is a master poet (and one of my favorites); Ireland shares her with the creative writing program at Stanford University. In Against Love Poetry (Norton, 2001), we find Boland's tribute to the also-amazing master of language, Grace Murray Hopper (1906-1988).
Code by Eavan Boland
Code by Eavan Boland
An Ode to Grace Murray Hopper 1906-88
maker of a computer compiler and verifier of COBOL
Poet to poet. I imagine you
at the edge of language, at the start of summer
in Wolfeboro, New Hampshire, writing code.
You have no sense of time. No sense of minutes even.
They cannot reach inside your world,
your gray work station
with when yet now never and once.
You have missed the other seven.
This is the eight day of Creation.
Labels:
Bloomsburg University,
COBOL,
code,
compiler,
computer,
Eavan Boland,
Grace Murray Hopper,
language,
mathematician,
mathematics,
poem,
zero
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