I've been thinking a lot about last weekend's March for Our Lives and now it is the Easter weekend -- and these events have led me also to think about the heart and to reflect on this poem by Pennsylvania poet Gary Fincke entitled "The Billion Heartbeats of the Mammal."
The Billion Heartbeats of the Mammal by Gary Fincke
Feel this," my father says, guiding my hand
To the simple braille of his pacemaker.
"Sixty," he tells me, "over and over
Like a clock," and I mention the billion
heartbeats of the mammal, how the lifespan
Can be rough-guessed by the 800 beats
Per minute of the shrew, the 200
Of the house cat, speeding through their billion
In three years, in twelve. How slowly we act,
According to our pets. How we are stone
Showing posts sorted by date for query Fincke. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query Fincke. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Friday, March 30, 2018
Wednesday, November 29, 2017
Calculating Pi -- a poet's view
Initially I was drawn to a reading at The Writer's Center in Bethesda a couple of weeks ago because my neighbor, non-fiction writer and editor, Josh Tyree was reading from his London explorations, Vanishing Streets. But the two writer's who read with Tyree also were known to me and are remarkable:
Annie Finch, a poet I have known through WomPo, an online community (founded by her) that supports women-poets. Links to Annie's work in this blog -- which feature items that pay careful attention to syllable-counts -- are here, (for July 29, 1010) and here, (for June 27, 2015).
Gary Fincke, who was once almost a neighbor of mine -- I taught mathematics at Bloomsburg (PA) University and he taught and developed a creative writing program at nearby Susquehanna University -- and, before I moved south to the Washington, DC area, Gary and I knew each other through local literary events. It was great fun to hear Gary read not only poetry -- I offer a sample of his mathy work below -- but also short fiction; I came away from the November 11 reading with a copy of his new book of short stories, The Killer's Dog (Elixir Press, 2017), which is a very intriguing collection.
Fincke's poetry does not shy from mathematics and "The Butterfly Effect" was posted in this blog back on November 22, 2010. Here, from Fincke's collection, Blood Ties: Working-Class Poems (Time Being Press, 2002) is "Calculating Pi."
Calculating Pi by Gary Fincke
"Pi has been calculated to 480 million decimal points."
-- Newsweek
Printed out, this means six hundred miles of digits,
A paper carpet from Pittsburgh to Chicago
Annie Finch, a poet I have known through WomPo, an online community (founded by her) that supports women-poets. Links to Annie's work in this blog -- which feature items that pay careful attention to syllable-counts -- are here, (for July 29, 1010) and here, (for June 27, 2015).
Gary Fincke, who was once almost a neighbor of mine -- I taught mathematics at Bloomsburg (PA) University and he taught and developed a creative writing program at nearby Susquehanna University -- and, before I moved south to the Washington, DC area, Gary and I knew each other through local literary events. It was great fun to hear Gary read not only poetry -- I offer a sample of his mathy work below -- but also short fiction; I came away from the November 11 reading with a copy of his new book of short stories, The Killer's Dog (Elixir Press, 2017), which is a very intriguing collection.
Fincke's poetry does not shy from mathematics and "The Butterfly Effect" was posted in this blog back on November 22, 2010. Here, from Fincke's collection, Blood Ties: Working-Class Poems (Time Being Press, 2002) is "Calculating Pi."
Calculating Pi by Gary Fincke
"Pi has been calculated to 480 million decimal points."
-- Newsweek
Printed out, this means six hundred miles of digits,
A paper carpet from Pittsburgh to Chicago
Monday, November 22, 2010
Butterfly Effects
An equation or system of equations is said to be "ill-conditioned" if a small change in input data can produce a very large change in the output. This inverse relationship between input and output has become popularly known by the phrase "butterfly effect." Two poets from Eastern Pennsylvania, Gary Fincke and Harry Humes, have written poems about this phenomenon.
Labels:
butterfly effect,
chaos,
equation,
fractal,
Gary Fincke,
Harry Humes,
ill-conditioned
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