Today is International Women's Day, celebrated with a charming video at google.com and here with lines from Enheduanna (2285-2250 BCE), the earliest woman known to me who was both poet and mathematician.
The true woman who possesses exceeding wisdom,
She consults a tablet of lapis lazuli,
She gives advice to all lands,
She measures off the heavens, she places the
measuring cords on the earth.
These lines (found in the preface, translated from Sumerian sources by Ake W Sjoberg and E Bergmann S J) and much more poetry-with-math are found in Strange Attractors: Poems of Love and Mathematics (AK Peters, 2008) -- a collection edited by Sarah Glaz and me.
Showing posts with label wisdom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wisdom. Show all posts
Saturday, March 8, 2014
Friday, January 3, 2014
Count what counts
When I visited Iceland last month, I looked in the bookstores of Reykjavik for bilingual (Icelandic-English) poetry collections; I found none. I did, however, acquire a copy of The Sayings of the Vikings (Gudrun Publishing, 1992), a translation by Bjorn Jonasson of Hávamál -- "sayings of the high one" -- from the Poetic Edda, a collection of Old Norse poems from the Viking era and attributed to Odin. Here are several samples that involve number or measurement:
The Nature of Hospitality
I would be invited
everywhere
if I needn't eat at all.
The Nature of Hospitality
I would be invited
everywhere
if I needn't eat at all.
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