Irish poet and physicist Iggy McGovern
has written both humorous and serious verse. Today we have lines from him that startle and amuse -- below I present, with his permission, selections from his collection Safe House (Dedalus Press, 2010). Here are "Belfast Inequalities" and "Proverbs for the Computer Age":
Belfast Inequalities by Iggy McGovern
for Master Devlin
Who put the pie in Pythagoras,
who put the bra in algebra
and who was the first to say: Let x
be that unknown quantity in sex?
the answer's in some chromosome
and not the sums you do at home
Showing posts with label blog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blog. Show all posts
Sunday, December 20, 2015
Friday, July 25, 2014
Poems with "equation" in the title
One of the ways to explore this blog is to go to the right hand column and find the instruction, SEARCH.
A few moments ago I did this and entered the word "equation" and found a long list of links, many of the latter ones redundant since they are picking up archive listings of earlier postings. But the early ones can be fun to explore. Here are five of the first six items that the SEARCH BOX produced. And the first two of these links yield poems with "equation" in the title. Enjoy!
A few moments ago I did this and entered the word "equation" and found a long list of links, many of the latter ones redundant since they are picking up archive listings of earlier postings. But the early ones can be fun to explore. Here are five of the first six items that the SEARCH BOX produced. And the first two of these links yield poems with "equation" in the title. Enjoy!
Labels:
blog,
equation,
mathematics,
poetry,
search
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Surprise me!
Bob Grumman, a mathy poet whose work has appeared in this blog (21 June 2010) and a blogger, has recently been invited to write a Guest Blog for Scientific American. Here is a wonderful sentence about poetry that I have taken from his posting on 22 September 2012 (the third of his guest postings).
And I claim that nothing is more important for a poet
than finding new ways to surprise people with the familiar.
And I claim that nothing is more important for a poet
than finding new ways to surprise people with the familiar.
Visit Grumman's Guest Blog to find his illustrations of poetic surprise; after a pair of visual poems, ten x ten and Ellipsonnet, he discusses a poem by Louis Zukovsky in which the poet describes his poetics using the integral sign from calculus:
∫
Zukovsky's definite integral (which Grumman tells us is carefully copyright-protected) has the lower limit "speech" and upper limit "music."
Labels:
blog,
Bob Grumman,
information,
Integral,
John Beer,
Louis Zukovsky,
pantoum,
permutation,
Scientific American,
surprise
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Poets who Count
For some poets, counting is part of the language of the poem. For others, counting determines the structure. Here are two poems of the former sort -- "Counting" by British poet Philip Larkin (1922-1985) and "Adding It Up" by New England poet Philip Booth (1925-2007) -- followed by opening stanzas of a poem for which counting is part of both content and structure: "Millennium" by mathematician Peter Cameron .
Labels:
account,
add,
blog,
count,
counting,
measure,
numbers,
one,
Peter Cameron,
Philip Booth,
Philip Larkin,
poetry,
spiral,
ten,
translation,
two
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