Earlier this year, an email from James D. Herren let me know about his recent e-book, Wit and Wonder, Poetry with Rhythm and Rhyme -- a collection developed to be enjoyed by readers from 5th grade onward. Herren is an advocate of energetic rhyming verse, AND his collection has some mathy stuff -- including these two little poems. Thanks, Dave!
Prime by James D Herren
Our love is prime –
Divisible by none
But you and I,
For you and I Are One.
Showing posts with label perpendicular. Show all posts
Showing posts with label perpendicular. Show all posts
Thursday, April 6, 2017
Thursday, July 16, 2015
Celebrating Ada Lovelace
Recently I have purchased the anthology, Raising Lilly Ledbetter: Women Poets Occupying the Workplace (edited by Caroline Wright, M.L. Lyons & Eugenia Toledo, Lost Horse Press, 2015), and have found in it dozens of wonderful poems, including several that celebrate women of science. Below I offer a poem by New York poet Jo Pitkin that honors Ada Lovelace (1815-1852).
Bird, Moon, Engine by Jo Pitkin
Like a fence or a wall to keep me from harm,
tutors circled me with logic, facts, theorems.
But I hid the weeds growing wild in my mind.
By age five, I could plot the arc of a rainbow.
I could explain perpendicular and parallel.
In my mind, I heard the wind in wild weeds.
Bird, Moon, Engine by Jo Pitkin
Like a fence or a wall to keep me from harm,
tutors circled me with logic, facts, theorems.
But I hid the weeds growing wild in my mind.
By age five, I could plot the arc of a rainbow.
I could explain perpendicular and parallel.
In my mind, I heard the wind in wild weeds.
Labels:
Ada Lovelace,
Charles Babbage,
computer,
divided,
Jo Pitkin,
Lilly Ledbetter,
logic,
parallel,
perpendicular,
program,
theorem
Monday, August 15, 2011
Some cat!
My title is a borrowing from E. B. White's Charlotte's Web -- which I saw recently with grandchildren at Glen Echo Park's Adventure Theater. It (the title above) refers to my wonderful Himlayan, Noah, who lived to 15 years and 3 months; this posting is done in his memory. Herein we connect cats with mathematics.
Labels:
cat,
mathematics,
Noah,
perpendicular,
poetry,
rhyme,
T S Eliot
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Perpendicularity -- a symmetric relation
In 2010 both my October 13 and November 20 posts feature small poems by the French poet Guillevic (1909-97). Strongly drawn to his work, I have purchased the collection Geometries (Englished by Richard Sieburth, Ugly Duckling Presse, 2010); Guillevic has found in each geometric figure a personality and a voice. Buy the book and enjoy! Here is one of my favorites from the collection:
Labels:
Guillevic,
mathematics,
perpendicular,
poem,
poetry,
Richard Sieburth,
Ugly Duckling Presse
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
Poems of set paradox and spatial dimension
Universal Paradox by Sandra DeLozier Coleman
One gigantic set made of all that there is
Boggles the mind with paradoxes.
For it is greater than all, but smaller than this —
The set which consists of the subsets of it.
One gigantic set made of all that there is
Boggles the mind with paradoxes.
For it is greater than all, but smaller than this —
The set which consists of the subsets of it.
Labels:
cube,
dimension,
endpoint,
hypercube,
paradox,
perpendicular,
point,
Sandra DeLozier Coleman,
set,
space,
subset,
universal set
Monday, September 27, 2010
Ideal Geometry -- complex politics
Christopher Morley (1890-1957) was an American poet, novelist, and publisher who was the son of a poet and musician (Lilian Janet Bird) and a mathematics professor (Frank Morley) at Haverford College. His "Sonnet by a Geometer," below, is written in the voice of a circle and compares mathematical perfection with human imperfection. For us who read the poem 90 years after its writing, Morley's phrase in line 13 -- "They talk of 14 points" -- is puzzling at first.
Labels:
14 points,
3 points,
Christopher Morley,
circle,
Euclid,
geometer,
geometry,
mathematics,
perpendicular,
pi,
poetry,
point,
sonnet,
tangent,
World War I
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