When we have experiences near to each other, we may try to connect them. We form superstitions. "Bad things come in threes" -- and something similar for good things. And we make poetry -- offering new associations that delight and surprise.
Gertrude Stein is one of my favorite poets. She was, like me, born in Pennsylvania (though she, unlike me, left and became Parisian). She creates almost-meaning from unlikely juxtapositions. I find in her work the delight of a puzzle to which I can find a partial solution. And come back for more. Here are two stanzas from Stein's "Stanzas in Meditation" that play with some mathematical meanings.
Showing posts with label Gertrude Stein. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gertrude Stein. Show all posts
Wednesday, December 14, 2011
A puzzle with a partial solution
Labels:
add,
average,
count,
Gertrude Stein,
mathematical,
poetry,
range
Sunday, September 11, 2011
A Piece of Coffee -- Stein with some math terms
I love the poetry of Gertrude Stein. Perhaps this is so because I have never taken a class in which her work was taught and I have never read it with pressure to "understand." I enjoy reading Stein's poems aloud. Because they keep me alert -- both eye and tongue. Because they puzzle me. And because I sometimes see something amazing, true and almost within reach. Here, from Tender Buttons / Objects: is "A Piece of Coffee."
Labels:
certain,
double,
Gertrude Stein,
necessity,
negative,
number,
single,
Tender Buttons
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Poems with permutations
Below, in the May 16 posting, this blog considered all of the permutations of a few words -- in search of "the best" arrangement. Today we illustrate word-permutations in poems.
First, a few lines from poet Gertrude Stein (1874-1946) -- who was masterful in her distortions of ordinary syntax and in her use of language in new ways. Stein played with both repetition and rearrangement; here is a brief example:
Money is what words are.
Words are what money is.
Is money what words are.
Are words what money is.
First, a few lines from poet Gertrude Stein (1874-1946) -- who was masterful in her distortions of ordinary syntax and in her use of language in new ways. Stein played with both repetition and rearrangement; here is a brief example:
Money is what words are.
Words are what money is.
Is money what words are.
Are words what money is.
Labels:
Brion Gysin,
Gertrude Stein,
permutation,
poem,
poetry
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