Musing this morning, this blogger found these words:
My
hands
hold a pen
and my fingers
translate thoughts into
words on paper. Sometimes
I meet someone who
thinks with fingers
like I do.
Mathematical language can heighten the imagery of a poem; mathematical structure can deepen its effect. Feast here on an international menu of poems made rich by mathematical ingredients . . . . . . . gathered by JoAnne Growney. To receive email notifications of new postings, contact JoAnne at joannegrowney@gmail.com.
Musing this morning, this blogger found these words:
My
hands
hold a pen
and my fingers
translate thoughts into
words on paper. Sometimes
I meet someone who
thinks with fingers
like I do.
THANK YOU, Greg Coxson,
for frequent sharing of MATHY POEMS with me!
Gregory Coxson, professor and researcher in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the US Naval Academy, is a supporter of integration of the arts with the sciences and enjoys writing poems. (Here is a link to his previous appearances in this blog -- including a couple of poems that he created.)
Greg has sent me some sample poems from the Summer, 2025 issue of Up.St.ART, a magazine that focuses on and celebrates the arts in the Annapolis, MD region. The issue that Coxson alerted me to has a special collection of Harvested Words -- poems built by selecting phrases from another publication. From this collection I share a poem, shown below, that is built from phrases selected from the book Probable Impossibilities by Alan Lightman; the selector is poet Natalie Canavor of Annapolis, MD, and she has given me permission to include her poem here:
Glimmerings by Natalie Canavor
THANK YOU, Peter Cameron,
for your generous sharing of mathematical ideas and their links!
Happening soon -- the Conference on Theoretical and Computational Algebra -- scheduled to take place in Evora, Portugal, June 29 - July 3, 2025. (Conference information is available at this link.) A special feature of this conference will be the honoring of mathematician Peter Cameron. As mathematicians and poetry-lovers and bloggers, Peter and I discovered each other online. This link leads to Cameron's first "Mathematics and poetry" blog posting (on April 6, 2010) and in Cameron's posting on July 14, 2010 (entitled "Mathematics and Poetry, 2") he links to my blog (first posting March 23, 2010) with this statement:
JoAnne Growney has posted on her blog a poem structured using prime factorisations: I think it is a lovely poem, and urge you to take a look.
This link leads to a summary-description of Cameron's blog and this link goes to his first "Mathematics and poetry" posting. AND, here is a link to the search-results for the term "poetry" in his blog.
I would like to celebrate Peter Cameron by sharing the opening stanzas of his ten-stanza mathy poem, "Millennium":
Recently I found (on X @letsplaymath) this thoughtful and poetic musing by Denise Gaskins :
Mathematical beauty
is when our mind's eye is opened
to see something new -- or
to see something old in a new light.
A good friend who is a strong and active supporter of math-poetry links is Annapolis Naval Academy Professor Greg Coxson -- and, in a recent article (in this newsletter from a subgroup of the Mathematical Association of America -- MAA) entitled "Meet Me on the Bridge Between Mathematics and Poetry," Coxson offers several poems. One of these is "The Art of Numbers" by Scotland mathematician-poet Eveline Pye -- and she has given me permission to offer it in my blog:
The Art of Numbers by Eveline Pye
We talk of beautiful words, art, buildings
when they're not part of the natural world.
An x in Algebra is no more abstract than
an idea in philosophy, just more useful.
Split This Rock is an activist poetry organization that calls poets to a greater role in public life and reaches out to a network of socially engaged poets; the organization is centered in Washington, DC but reaches all over the world . . . One of their ongoing activities is the selection of a Poem of the Week -- and one of their recent choices was a challenging and fascinating poem that included frequent uses of mathematical notation to express its ideas.
Submission Deadline -- September 24, 2025
Space Byi *2025 is an experimental digital art platform dedicated to exploring the intersection of mathematics, geometry, and artistic expression. As an official pavilion of The Wrong Biennale, they provide "a space for artists, mathematicians, and creative thinkers to engage in boundary-pushing visual and conceptual explorations."
In particular, this site extends a call for mathematical poetry -- information at this link -- to be submitted via email on or before September 24, 2025 -- to Radoslav Rochallyi at info@rochallyi.com.
One of the strong and consistent promoters of connections between mathematics and the arts is Sarah Hart and she recently gave the 2025 Einstein Public Lecture at Clemson University (sponsored by AMS, the American Mathematical Society) entitled "A Mathematical Journey Through Literature."
Hart is the author of Once Upon a Prime: The Wondrous Connections Between Mathematics and Literature (Flatiron Books, 2023) -- NYTimes review here; purchase info here. Her presentation, summarized here in an AMS article entitled "The Axiom of a Sonnet," explored ways that the guidelines for a sonnet -- or other poetic structure -- are similar to the guidelines for a mathematical structure such as a group or a ring. A thought-provoking quote from her presentation:
Several weeks ago I was surprised and delighted to receive an email from Lillian Liu, a high school student in Westchester, New York and also is a mentee of the Association for Women in Mathematics (AWM) -- with mentor Dr. Annalisa Crannell, emerita professor at Franklin & Marshall College in Pennsylvania and someone I have been privileged to know.
High school junior Lillian Liu has recently founded The Hyperbolic Review -- her response to noticing that "mathematical poetry isn’t as widely discussed or recognized as it should be. It seemed that many people weren’t even aware of its existence." Because this blog shows my connection with mathy poetry, Liu reached out to me, via email, and sent me this link to Issue 1 of The Hyperbolic Review: https://www.thehyperbolicreview.com/issue-1.
Below I offer the opening stanzas of "Asymptotes" by Devanshee Soni; following this sample will be a link to The Hyperbolic Review -- containing the complete poem and lots of others.
Once again, my mathematician-poet-friend Sarah Glaz has carefully organized a math-poetry reading -- this one to be held at the upcoming Bridges Math-Arts Conference, July 14-18, 2025 in Eindhoven, Netherlands. Details concerning the exact time and location for the reading, scheduled for Thursday, July 17, will be announced here at this link.
Below I offer a sampling from the poets who will be reading at Eindhoven -- a CENTO that I have built by inclusion of a phrase from a poem by each of the poets registered for participation in Bridges 2025. (Information about the poets is found here at this website maintained by Sarah Glaz._
WE CELEBRATE MATHEMATICS
The power of a theorem lies
with a diagram of clockwise arrows
hovering high over the town,
while infinite time is waiting
and triple sixes strive
in-between our beginnings and ends.
One of my very-special math-poetry connections -- and a frequent sharer of new poems with me -- is Gregory Coxson, Professor in the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at the US Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland. Recently he sent me the poem "Math Class" by Poet Mary Crow -- a poem that deals with the role of women in math. I offer its opening lines below, followed by a link to the complete poem. (A good poem to stimulate class discussion of the currently-growing status of women in math.)
Math Class by Mary Crow
Somehow that shriveled arm
seemed the perfect arm
for tracing the odd shapes of geometry
in white on our black chalkboard
showing us a woman could do
this unwomanly thing
and sometimes a girl would let out a giggle
almost like a pig squeak
and our teacher would stop, chalk
in her lifted hand
and her back would stiffen
as she turned and glared at us
then returned
to tracing out her mysteries
we girls thought
meant math is for old maids . . .
Crow's complete poem is available online here at poets.org.
A worthy organization in Washington, DC in which to get involved is FREE MINDS BOOK CLUB (https://freemindsbookclub.org/about-us/) -- an organization that collects books and provides reading opportunities for incarcerated individuals AND ALSO offers online presentations of poems (https://freemindsbookclub.org/poems/) for volunteers to read and offer comments. I encourage you to participate -- participants need not be poets, simply interested readers!
Here are the opening lines of one of the poems I found at the Free Minds website; please visit the site to sign in and read more:
Here at the website We Are Teachers I found a delightful collection of 38 Math Poems for Students in All Grade Levels. Although I liked the offering there of "Eighteen Flavors" by Shel Silverstein I found the sample there to be incomplete (only ten flavors) and I searched further to find Silverstein's complete poem (found here) and, ice-cream lover that I am, I offer it below:
A Pennsylvania poet whose work I enjoyed and learned from has recently passed away -- Harry Humes, who taught literature and film at Kutztown (PA) University and produced and edited (until his retirement in 1999) a bi-annual poetry journal, Yarrow.
Humes' poetry was not mathy but I connected with it deeply because we had Pennsylvania in common, Back in 2010, in the early days of this blog, I posted Humes' poem "The Butterfly Effect" at this link. Here is a screenshot of the poem's opening lines:
Recent Presidential misstatements and distortions of American politics and policies are disturbing -- and I have pulled from my shelf a literary anthology This Is What America Looks Like. published in 2021 by the Washington Writers Publishing House and containing fiction and poetry from writers in DC, Maryland, and Virginia. (Purchase is available at amazon.com.) In this collection I found, in the poem "D.C." by Donald Illich, the phrase "here, where presidents lied" -- and since the poem contains a couple of quantitative words, I offer it below:
D.C. by Donald Illich
I'd never seen rats
crawl down city streets
until I came here,
where presidents lied,
Today I look back to this "Fib" posted last year and to other previous Earth Day postings. -- as I HOPE that we can learn to save our planet!
A brief reminder that the STEAM POWERED POETRY VIDEO CONTEST -- announced in this this posting from last November -- has its entry deadline approaching very soon -- on Wednesday, April 30. And here is a direct link to contest information.
Write a poem . . .Create a video of you reading it . . . SUBMIT!
It delights me that the American Mathematical society links math and poetry by sponsoring a student poetry contest each year. AMS recently announced this year's winners (along with videos of the winning poems) -- and I offer samples of the winning poems (from college, high school, and middle school students) below:
from "Proof" by Emilynne Newsom, Harvey Mudd College
There's a practice you will see in math.
It is a way of showing what is true.
In steady step-by-step it lays a path
from what you know to what you seek to prove. (Find the rest here.)
from "Homeric Simile ... " by Samanyu Ganesh, The Westminster Schools
Just as the sea otters grasp each others' paws
whilst sleeping, latently
basking in the stillness of their moonlit sanctuary, drifting
assuredly . . . (Find the rest of this poem here.)
from "forever" by Nora McKinstry, Edmond Heights, K-12
a mobius strip is a never ending loop a
forever-going cycle of one small strip
but still it goes on and on
impossible to stop but easily created . . . (Find the rest here.)
One of my recent delights was to be contacted by mathematician Lakshmi Chandrasekaran, a mathematician that is one of the team at Her Maths Story -- a website (found at https://hermathsstory.eu/ ) that publicizes and celebrates the stories of female mathematicians. A bit of background about the website is shown in the screen-shot below:
Exploring the internet, looking for mathy poems, I came across the website Poemverse -- and I entered the search term math and was led to an exciting list of possibilities -- and plentiful outcomes also occurred when I searched using other mathy terms -- algebra, geometry, etc... I also found a collection of "Poetry for the Math Haters" -- at this link. Below I offer two verses found there -- alas, without information about the contributing poets.
Finding Humor in Math Hating
Mathematical Mischief by Jessica Rose
Oh, math, your tricks and riddles,
Leave my brain tangled and in a fiddle,
But in this battle of numbers and wit,
I'll find humor, and never submit.
Mathematical Laughter by David Scott
Math, my eternal nemesis, it seems,
Yet I'll laugh at your complex schemes,
For in this world of calculations and strife,
A little humor is the elixir of life.
AND, here is a link to some YouTube math songs!
In the United States, April is both National Poetry Month and Mathematics and Statistics Awareness Month. Visits to the links in the preceding sentence will offer lots of information about these monthly celebrations (as will exploring this blog). AND, below I offer a poetic celebration of mathematics.
American poet Harry Mathews (1950-2017) was a member of OULIPO and divided his time between New York and Paris; much of his work moved outside the restrictions of traditional poetic forms.
Here are the opening lines of his poem, "Safety in Numbers":
from Safety in Numbers by Harry Mathews
The enthusiasm with which I repeatedly declare you my one
And only confirms the fact that we are indeed two,
Not one; nor can anything we do ever let us feel three
(And this is no lisp-like alteration: it's four
That's a crowd, not a trinity), and our five
Fingers and toes multiplied leave us at six-
As time passes I find -- to my delight -- more and more mathy poems available via internet. Recently I was alerted to a fascinating poem appearing recently in The Mathematical Intelligencer (Vol 47, p. 39, 2025).-- "I am the Zero" by Md Sadikur Rahman. Here is one of its stanzas (and the complete poem is available at this link):
from I Am the Zero by Md Sadikur Rahman
I am the mirror in the middle of the number line,
Where numbers see their reflections with the proper sign.
Add me to a number, and there is no change.
But multiply by me, I kill that one, leafing nothing in exchange.
Dividing by me? That's a troublesome thing,
Even the brightest minds must pause and think.
Here are several powerful lines from Lutken's poem "Emmy Noether and the Conservation of Hope":
. . . . Her awe of abstract algebra endured.
Against winds feeling hatred,
purge of Jews from academics.
she wrote, thought, taught from home.
Flames reaching the streets
forced a journey of tears,
exile to America/
She searched the heart of mathematics
and physics from wherever.
Lutken's complete poem is available at this link; for and previous postings in this blog of work by E. R. (Emily) Lutken, follow this link. A varied collection of postings featuring Emmy Noether may be found at this link.
AND, to further celebrate women in math and poetry, explore the labels in the right-hand column of this blog AND use the SEARCH box.
Celebrating WORLD POETRY DAY -- with a memory!
As a child I became acquainted with poetry -- poetry that I came to love -- through a copy of A Child's Garden of Verses by Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894), an undated edition by Avenel Books that was on our farmhouse bookshelf when I was growing up.
Block City by Robert Louis Stevenson (1850–1894)
What are you able to build with your blocks?
Castles and palaces, temples and docks.
Rain may keep raining, and others go roam,
But I can be happy and building at home.
Non-poets often wonder about the use of patterns in poems -- does following a set of constraints help of hinder the process? For me, often -- though not always -- constraints push me to discovery. Below I offer a triangular poem by Washington, DC poet E. Laura Golberg which I re-found recently in the Journal of Humanistic Mathematics (JHM); Golberg's poem remembers the costs of war.
Pension Building, Washington, DC by E. Laura Golberg
A
dis-
play
of the
normal
curve can
be found in
old buildings
where feet have
rubbed away the
middle of stair steps.
Here, wounded Union
veterans pulling one foot
over the new marble, wore
off atoms. Men with crutches
placed them firmly at an angle.
Their boots scuffed the stairs.
Those who had been refused
pensions descended, while
dragging feet. Today, the
building, with its pillars
and open space is used
as a museum. Balls
may be held here;
hems of formal
gowns weep
down the
stairs.
Friday, March 14 (3.14) will be π-day -- and I look back and remember how one of my high school math teachers challenged me and my classmates to come to class prepared to recite as many digits of π as we could remember, I was not a particularly good memorizer and was delighted to learn that the lengths of the words in this sentence:
How I wish I could calculate pi !
are the first seven digits of pi . . . . and the lengths of the words in the following rhyme give the first thirteen digits:
See, I have a rhyme assisting
my feeble brain,
its tasks sometime resisting.
Recently on the weekly program Poetry Moment on WPSU -- a radio station in Central Pennsylvania -- poet Marjorie Maddox featured work by another Pennsylvania poet and Emeritus Professor at Penn State University, Emily Grosholz.
Grosholz' featured poem, "Holding Patterns," is a villanelle: Here are its opening lines:
We can’t remember half of what we know.
They hug each other and then turn away.
One thinks in silence, never let me go.
The sky above the airport glints with snow
That melts beneath the laws it must obey.
We can’t remember half of what we know.
Found on Facebook recently -- this snapshot of my syllable-count triangle from an earlier blog posting . . . I like the way that choosing words that conform to a pattern stimulates my thoughts.
From a blog posting back in 2018 |
Black mathematicians and female mathematicians often have not been given the credit they deserve -- and I have been delighted to find this website that features eleven famous African-American mathematicians -- six of which are women. This website celebrates:
2.) Fern Hunt (1948- ) Fern Hunt is best known for her work in applied mathematics and mathematical biology. Throughout her great career, she has been involved with biomathematics, patterns in genetic variation, and chaos theory. She currently works as an educator and presenter with the aim of encouraging women and minority students to pursue graduate degrees in mathematics and other STEM fields.
5.) Katherine Johnson (1918-2020) Katherine Johnson was the main character of the critically acclaimed film "Hidden Figures." Her contributions in the field of orbital mechanics, alongside fellow female African American mathematicians Dorothy Vaughan and Mary Jackson, were critical to the United States’ success in putting astronaut John Glenn into orbit in 1962. She was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama in 2015.
Recently I came across the following poem -- posted by the source English Literature on Facebook -- and it reminded me with delight of the good times I have had reading aloud to my children and grandchildren and, since the poem is a bit mathy, I share it below with you!
Halfway Down by A. A Milne
Halfway down the stairs
is a stair
where i sit.
there isn't any
other stair
quite like
it.
i'm not at the bottom,
i'm not at the top;
so this is the stair
where
I always
stop.
Several days ago my email contained a surprise message -- containing a mathy poem -- from Ramandeep Johal, a theoretical physicist at IISER Mohali (Indian Institute of Science Education and Research) in northern India. I offer Johal's poem below -- a poem from his 2016 collection, The Sea of Tranquility
From One to Ten by Ramandeep Johal
Some things you find in pairs
some exist just alone.
While a trinity needs
some degree of unity,
a group of four
requires bit more.
Current politics has made me take more notice of several politicians' imaginary numbers -- far from fact and human needs. And, after a while -- to relax -- my mind moved on to the imaginary numbers of mathematics, and I found (at the PoetrySoup website) this poem which I'd like to share.
Imaginary Numbers by Robert Pettit
Anybody can consider this statement as moot:
Negative real numbers cannot have a square root.
When working with real numbers with values less than zero,
the squared product will be positive; so where do you go?
In a parabola, all points except zero lie above the x-axis.
Many students get confused because of this.
This placed mathematicians in a bit of a quandary.
That was until numbers were invented that are imaginary.
I did not find online biographical information about poet Pettit but I did find this link to his many many poems available at PoetrySoup -- a list going back all the way to 2010. AND here is a link to his 2010 limerick, "Seventeen."
This link leads to previous mentions of imaginary numbers in this blog.
Yesterday I made a blog posting with the same title as this one -- and this morning I discovered that my posting was full of links that were not working as I had expected. And so, I have deleted the post. I do, indeed, invite you to explore the blog -- lots of labels in the lower right-hand column can help you find specific posts. And another posting with come soon . . .
My friend and colleague, Marian Christie, has let me know that the math-poetry collection (with commentary) that she published in 2021 -- From Fibs to Fractals: Exploring Mathematical Forms in Poetry -- is now available for free download on her website. Here is the link for downloading. AND, this link leads to samples of Christie's own mathy poems. published earlier in her blog.
Looking by B. A. France
moon
light
rising
above the
skeletal treetops
she wonders what tomorrow brings
Poet Jonathan Holden (1941-2024) -- who, early in his career, was a math teacher -- died just a few weeks ago. Seeing his death notice has reminded me to revisit and again enjoy and appreciate his work. My first mention of Holden's work in this blog was in this posting in January, 2011 -- and here is a link to the list of postings in which his poetry is featured.
Two of Holden's mathy poems are included in the anthology that was gathered by mathematician-poet Sarah Glaz and me -- Strange Attractors, Poems of Love and Mathematics (A K Peters/ CRC Press, 2008). One of these is "The Departure of an Alphabet," a poem that deals with age-related decline of memory and reasoning. I offer its opening lines:
Minnesota teacher and writer Ben Orlin has done lots and lots to make mathematical ideas popular and accessible. One of his prominent activities is his website Math with Bad Drawings. In this posting from 2018, Poem on a Pyramid, Orlin uses the special pyramid called a tetrahedron to structure a poem. Each of the edges of the tetrahedron is associated with a line of verse and each triangular face is thereby associated with a three-line stanza. The poem below was constructed by associating a line with each of the six edges -- with a stanza for each of the four triangular faces.
![]() |
A tetrahedron -- for designing a poem |
Below, I offer Orlin's poem; for more details about its construction, visit and explore Orlin's wonderfully informative and stimulating website.
A quick reminder that the American Mathematical Society Student Poetry Contest DEADLINE is coming soon -- on February 2, 2025. Poems from three groups are solicited: middle school, high school, and college students.
Here is a link to my December blog posting that gives details about the contest.
This link shows a poster with the winning poems from last year's contest.
Here are this year's contest rules from the AMS Website.
Recently I was informed by Feedspot that this blog of mine, Intersections -- Poetry with Mathematics, was selected as one of the Top 90 Math Blogs on the web. At Feedspot's request, I invite you to follow that link and explore their list.
As I grew up on a farm, mathematics -- with planting depth-and-distance measurements, with counting of animals and fenceposts, with angles of tree-branches, and many other basics -- was important background knowledge. As I grew older and experienced more city-time, the mathematics I encountered was more complex. When I visit Pittsburgh or San Francisco or New York City or . . . I feel the geometry that surrounds me. And I was reminded of those geometric feelings when I recently encountered this poem:
Mayakovsky in New York: A Found Poem by Annie Dillard
New York: You take a train that rips through versts.
It feels as if the trains were running over your ears.
For many hours the train flies along the banks
of the Hudson about two feet from the water. At the stops,
passengers run out, buy up bunches of celery,
and run back in, chewing the stalks as they go.
Bridges leap over the train with increasing frequency.
If you have TWO ways of saying something,
that enhances your understanding of it!
For those of you going to the Joint Mathematics Meetings in Seattle (JMM 2025), an important session available to attend is this one, scheduled for the morning of January 9 and sponsored by AWM, the Association for Women in Mathematics:
AWM Special Session on Exploring Mathematics through the Arts and Pedagogy in Creative Settings
And a very special presentation within this session that explores connections between Mathematics and Poetry is "Enhanced Understanding of Mathematics Through Poetry" -- presented by scientist, teacher, and writer Emily R. Lutken. Lutken's presentation is scheduled for the morning of Thursday, January 9 -- here is a link to the abstract and scheduling details for that event. Here is one of the mathy poems that will be part of Lutken's presentation:
In a recent NYTimes article I have learned of the passing of poet-mathematician Jacques Robaud (1932-2024) who was a key figure in the development of OULIPO (an organization that has explored writing using a variety of constraints). Here is a link to Robaud's poem "Amsterdam Street."
Today's Washington Post offers the obituary poet and scientist Myra Sklarew (1934-2024). Sklarew was a DC resident and activist -- and is featured in these past postings in this blog.
As the year ends, I am conscious of how quickly time seems to pass for me -- and this morning I found this thoughtful quote on Facebook (posted by Dead Poet -- visit this site and find lots more, often mathy, quotes) . . .
Christmas is coming and my thoughts are focused on gifts for grandchildren and family celebrations but I want to take a few minutes to share a Tibetan proverb shared by my friend Lisa Martin on Facebook -- and a wonderful idea to consider.
I much admire the work of Nikki Giovanni -- a poet who spoke both fearlessly and eloquently. As she deserved, her life was big news in the Washington Post -- I learned of her passing (on December 9) in a front-page article that celebrated her work and her person. Another informative Post tribute to Giovanni is available here -- and a rich sampling of her poetry is available here at PoetryFoundation.org.
Giovanni has not included math ideas in many of her poems but I did find some counting in "The Way I Feel" -- sampled in this blog at this link -- and I offer below a few lines from "Balances"; Giovaanni's complete poem is available here.
One of the important and wonderful organizations to which I belong is the Association for Women in Mathematics -- and each year AWM conducts an essay contest -- an opportunity for students to interview a math-woman and write about it. Three categories of entries are open -- for middle school, high school, and college students, Essays are being accepted now and until February 1, 2025. More information is available here.
The Association for Women in Mathematics was established in 1971 -- after I had completed my school years as a lonely math-girl. I celebrate the changes that bring women to equality in mathematics -- but sometimes also remember the past; the poem below is a comment on my high school and college days.
What Math Teachers Do
This message is for middle-school, high school and college students --
write a MATHY POEM, enter it in this contest:
American Mathematical Society
Math-Poetry Contest Announcement
This link leads to contest information and rules for submission.
The AMS Poetry Contest was first held in 2019; here's the Middle School winner:
For me, postings on X (Twitter) are a frequent source of math-poetry news. Today I found this:
![]() |
This link leads to information about Stange's award. |
A wonderful feature of the Internet is the opportunity it offers for rapid connection with ideas from people around the world -- and I have found delight in mathy poems from Africa, Australia, Canada, China, India . . . and many other places. Today's poem comes from poet Marian Christie -- who grew up in Zimbabwe and now lives in Kent, England (and has been other places in-between). (Here is a link to previous mentions of Christie's work in this blog.)
Here, below, is a screenshot of a poem by Christie that she posted recently on X (Twitter) (@marian_v_o) -- her poetic interpretation of the Pythagorean Theorem:
For some of us, holidays -- Thanksgiving and Christmas and . . . -- offer time to explore new projects. Here is a project for math/science students to try -- the Steam Powered Poetry Contest (entries September to April).
Students in Jr. High, High School and College/University create 1-minute videos showcasing their STEAM poems. No entry fee. Contest is open from September to April every year. More information here.
Below I offer is a sample poem (for which a video entry may be created) by contest organizer Heidi Bee Roemer. Find lots of samples at this link -- and encourage students you know to consider entry.
In the creation and development of both mathematics and poetry both PRECISION and IMAGINATION are important. Recently I came across the announcement of a book entitled Poetic Logic and the Origins of the Mathematical Imagination -- written by Canadian professor if semiotics, Marcel Danesi, and part of the Springer-Nature series, Mathematics in Mind, Here is a link to an overview of Danesi's book. And, in the publisher's summary of the Danesi book, we find this:
The aim of this volume is to look broadly at what constitutes the mathematical mind through the Vichian lens of poetic logic.
Reading Danesi's ideas and thinking about my own poetic musings has reminded me of a long-ago poem of mine, "Can A Mathematician See Red?" I posted this poem in this blog long ago (in August 2011, at this link) -- and I offer it again, below.
As I have previously mentioned, recently I have discovered mathy poems at the website poemverse.org, and I enjoy exploring there. One of my findings has been a collection of poems about geometry -- and I offer a sample below.
![]() |
More Poems about Angles may be found here. |
Another poemverse collection is Poems about math class -- at this link.
At the website X (Twitter) one of my frequent enjoyments is a Scrabblegram posting by David Cohen, writer from Atlanta, Georgia. Cohen writes stanzas -- often poetic -- that use each of the 100 tiles in a Scrabble game exactly once. More than a year ago, alerted by blogger and poet Marian Christie, I found and shared a mathy Scrabblegram ZERO at this link. And here is another, Countless, found at here Cohen's website.
![]() |
Scrabblegram by David Cohen (lots more here) |
This link leads to a long list of Scrabblegrams! And some of them are mathy!
Recently I have found a rich source of mathy poems to explore -- at the website poemverse.org. For example, there are Poems about Math Class and The Beauty of Geometry: Exploring Angles through Poetry and The Beauty of Haiku Poems about Math . . . . and . . . lots more . . .
Here are two samples, with a link to more:
![]() |
More mathy Haiku may be found here at poemverse.org. |
One of the most active and effective ambassadors for connections between mathematics and the arts is Gizem Karaali. Professor of Mathematics and Statistics at California's Pomona College. Poet and writer as well as teacher and researcher, Karaali is a founding editor of Journal of Humanistic Mathematics, a peer-reviewed open-access journal that publishes articles, essays, fiction and poetry with a rich variety of connections to mathematics.
Recently I rediscovered online one of Karaali's poems, a villanelle published almost ten years ago in the Mathematical Association of America's undergraduate magazine, Math Horizons (February, 2015, Volume 22, Issue 3).
A MATHEMATICIAN'S VILLANELLE by Gizem Karaali
When first did I learn to cherish the bittersweet taste of mathematics?
Mental torture, subtle joy, doubt and wonder, me in meaning
Must have come later, after the games, the limericks, the lyrics.
Strange ceremonies awaited me, mystical hymns, magic tricks,
After the first gulp of water, the first bite, the first bloodletting.
When first did I learn to cherish the bittersweet taste of mathematics?
Mike Ferguson (America-born but long-time Brit) is a retired teacher of English and creative writing AND a poet. I offer one of his poems below (a poem developed from a list and found here in Ferguson's blog, gravyfromthegazebo). Not only is Ferguson's poem mathy and thought-provoking, but it also can be a useful example to use with students. One of the effective strategies to use to discover and gather thoughts on a particular topic is to create a list. The activity of writing the list often leads to additional creative thinking and -- if a poem is a goal -- the list can become poetic. If you've never done so, try it!
Established in honor of math-popularizer Martin Gardner (1914-2010), Celebration of the Mind Day occurs on October 21 each year. Lots of interesting information about Gardner and the celebration-day may be found at this link. This link leads to previous postings in this blog that feature Gardner and his work. Not a poet, Gardner called himself "an occasional versifier" and here is an example:
π goes on and on
And e is just as cursed
I wonder, how does π begin
When its digits are reversed?
For an array of mathy connections that celebrate the mind and stretch it, explore the links offered above!
Recently I have found a website maintained by Jenna Laib, a K-8 math specialist in the Boston area -- and at her website there I have found a posting of a Halloween poem with accompanying prose that considers the value of using numbers to tell stories. The poem is below -- and, along with it, the website offers many more.
![]() |
More about Raffi and Ken Whitely available at this link. |
Mathematician Ursula Whitcher is an Associate Editor for the American Mathematical Society's Mathematical Reviews and a poet -- someone whom I first met at a conference, "Creative Writing in Mathematics," at the Banff International Research Station in 2016. conferences. She is a versatile writer -- with a long list of publications available here at her website.
Here is Whitcher's mathematically-structured poem, "Tuesday," first published in 2019 in the Journal of Humanistic Mathematics, at this link.
Tuesday by Ursula Whitcher
Sometimes it is not possible to mend
what’s broken, either if you meant
to prove something impossible, or else
to save someone. Your best friend has
not eaten for six days. Your father loses things.
Your brother lies.
It’s Tuesday, so the week’s no longer new, and yet
nowhere near done.
All you can do is move
and keep on moving, trust
time changes shattered things
and lies once known are maps.
Author’s Note. This poem’s form is taken from the structure of the field with seven elements: the meter, in iambs, follows a pattern based on 5, 4, 6, 2, 3, the nontrivial values taken by powers of 5 (mod 7) as it generates the group of units of the field.
Previous mentions of Ursula Whitcher in this blog are listed at this link.
The second Tuesday in October has been selected as Ada Lovelace Day -- a time for celebrating that pioneering woman and all women in STEM.
Augusta Ada King, Countess of Lovelace, better known as Ada Lovelace (December 10, 1815–November 27, 1852) -- and daughter of the poet Lord Byron -- is celebrated as the world’s first computer programmer, the first person to combine the mathematical capabilities of computational machines with the poetic possibilities of symbolic logic (applied with clever imagination). (Many more biographical details may be found at this link.) And here is a link to an interesting article by Johns Hopkins voice Meghana Ravi entitled "Ada Lovelace found poetry in computer algorithms."
Something to think about . . . do some of us still cling? . . . obediently and thoughtlessly . . . to beliefs such as
I can't / poets can't understand mathematics
or
I can't / math people can't understand poetry
Current interactive teaching/learning processes are helping to revise those negative attitudes -- and my thoughts on the subject were brought to mind by a poem that showed up recently in my email. It is Poem 15 in the Poetry 180 project, an activity initiated in 2002 by Poet Laureate Billy Collins in 2002 -- a project that provides a poem for students for each day of the traditional school year. (Each Sunday subscribers get an email that provides a link to a poem for each day of the coming week.)
Poetry's special effects often come from the multiple meanings of terms used -- and today I offer a snip of a mathy item that I enjoyed and that plays with meaning -- an item I found a few days ago (September 19) on X (Twitter),
![]() |
A posting by California math teacher Howie Hua |
During the past weekend, long-time friends in Pennsylvania have reminded me that this is the week of The Bloomsburg Fair -- an annual event held in Bloomsburg, PA (where I lived with my family and taught mathematics at Bloomsburg University for a bunch of years). Public schools in Bloomsburg started their fall classes a week early so that students could have vacation-time during Fair Week -- held near the end of September. The fair brings farmers and gardeners and cooks and other creative country folk together to show their products and it was easy for me to get involved since I lived just a few blocks from the Bloomsburg Fairground. Moreover, Pennsylvania county fairs were familiar to me from my childhood. I grew up on a farm near Indiana, PA -- home of the Indiana County Fair, in which my father participated by exhibiting crops and animals and which I attended to enjoy Ferris-wheel rides and other carnival entertainments.
One of my celebrations of this fondly-remembered Bloomsburg event was to write a poem entitled "The Bloomsburg Fair," a poem with bits of math. Here is one of its stanzas.