Born in 1924, in Galati, Romania, Nina Cassian has published over fifty books -- besides poetry, she has works of fiction and books for children. Since 1985 she has lived in exile in the United States. Among those Cassian credits with strong influences on her poetry is mathematician / poet Dan Barbilian / Ion Barbu (1895-1961). This poem by Cassian illustrates those mathematical influences:
Monday, January 31, 2011
Sunday, January 30, 2011
Sonnet for a geometry teacher
Wisconsin poet Ronald Wallace has fun with math-words in the following sonnet that celebrates a teacher of plane geometry.
Labels:
ellipse,
geometry,
infinity,
intersect,
mathematics,
poetry,
Ronald Wallace,
square,
trapezoid
Friday, January 28, 2011
Poems starring mathematicians - 8
Even though Johnny Depp played a mathematician in his recent film, The Tourist, we don't learn much about what mathematicians think or do from that story. Poetry offers more insight. Mathematician and writer Sherman Stein gives us this portrayal:
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Self-portrait with numbers
Visual poet Geof Huth lives and blogs in Schenectady, NY. In 2010 he turned 50 and early in 2011 he sent me (via snail mail, on smooth white paper) a letter. The letter is a poem; the poem is a celebration of life, a sort of self-portrait, using numbers. Geof gave me permission to post it here.
Labels:
counting,
digit,
Geof Huth,
JoAnne Growney,
meter,
natural number,
numbers,
poem,
poetry,
portrait
Monday, January 24, 2011
Poem and parody -- isomorphic?
In mathematics, algebraic systems that have different objects but the same structure are described as isomorphic. The parody in poetry illustrates the same idea -- a new poem is created that matches the form of a chosen poem, but uses different words. For example, here are the opening stanzas of a poem published in 1799 by Robert Southey (1777-1843) that was later parodied by Lewis Carroll (1832-1898) in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Integrals -- a poem
Integrals by Jonathan Holden
Erect, arched in disdain,
the integrals drift from left
across white windless pages
to the right,
serene as swans.
Erect, arched in disdain,
the integrals drift from left
across white windless pages
to the right,
serene as swans.
Labels:
Integral,
integration,
Jonathan Holden,
mathematics,
poetry,
sum,
swan,
tables
Thursday, January 20, 2011
Hyperbolic effects
Last month I went to the Hyperbolic Crochet Coral Reef Exhibit at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History -- for a photo scroll down to the end of this post -- and that visit provoked me to begin searching for the term "hyperbolic" in poems. I came close when I found "hyperbola" in a poem by Jonathan Holden and hyperbole in a sonnet by Elizabeth Barrett Browning:
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Poetry inspired by Chaos
Poet Robin Chapman studies the language learning of children -- and has collaborated with physics professor Julien Sprott on a lovely and fascinating collection The Art and Poetry of Chaos: Images from a Complex World (World Scientific, 2005). In the following poem Chapman offers (as she does throughout the poetry of the collection) a human interpretation of technical terminology.
Labels:
chaos,
complex,
Julien Sprott,
mathematics,
neighbor,
poetry,
Robin Chapman
Monday, January 17, 2011
Dr King's dream and Black math students
Today is our public celebration of the January 15 birthday of Martin Luther King, Jr (1929-1968) who was both preacher and poet in the "I have a dream" speech he delivered on the steps at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington D.C. on August 28, 1963.
Labels:
Black,
dream,
free,
injustice,
Martin Luther King,
mathematics,
parity,
poetry
Friday, January 14, 2011
Rather like an elephant
What is mathematics?
These days I am outside of mathematics looking in and my views of the subject are more complex than during the days when I was a professor and mathematician. Back in my math-prof days -- when I moaned about those who held the view that mathematics is merely computation -- I tried to explain to uncompreheding friends the role of calculation within mathematics with this analogy: computation is to mathematics as spelling is to poetry. But those for whom computation is all of their mathematics do not accept this argument. Indeed, I myself now have the notion that one can navigate life competently without algebra -- much as I get along without Spanish or Chinese. But I regret not knowing them -- they are, like algebra, among the world's important languages.
These days I am outside of mathematics looking in and my views of the subject are more complex than during the days when I was a professor and mathematician. Back in my math-prof days -- when I moaned about those who held the view that mathematics is merely computation -- I tried to explain to uncompreheding friends the role of calculation within mathematics with this analogy: computation is to mathematics as spelling is to poetry. But those for whom computation is all of their mathematics do not accept this argument. Indeed, I myself now have the notion that one can navigate life competently without algebra -- much as I get along without Spanish or Chinese. But I regret not knowing them -- they are, like algebra, among the world's important languages.
Labels:
art,
calculation,
computation,
elephant,
John Godfrey Saxe,
mathematician,
nonsense,
pattern,
poetry,
professor
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Geometry and autism
We do not easily describe what goes on inside our own heads and have still greater difficulty seeing into the minds of others. Pennsylvania poet Barbara Crooker uses images from geometry to help us to see into autism.
Labels:
autism,
Barbara Crooker,
equal,
geometry,
grid,
hexagon,
mathematics,
pentagon,
poetry
Monday, January 10, 2011
Tribute to four teachers
Many people offer advice about education--and, in particular, about mathematics education. I'm skeptical of general pronouncements because my encounters with learning (as student or teacher or parent) have been singular: one mind meeting another mind for a period of exchange. Here's a poem that recalls four of my teachers, three of them teachers of mathematics.
Labels:
Elinor Blair,
geometer,
intuition,
Laura Church,
mathematics,
Miriam Ayer,
one-form,
poetry,
T K Pan,
teacher,
trigonometry
Friday, January 7, 2011
Which are "real" numbers?
The adjective "real" in the term "real number" causes confusion for many whose mathematics is casual rather than intense. I like the mathematical definition of a number as real iff it corresponds to a point on the number line -- for this gives the abstract number a geometric counterpart (an attachment to reality) -- but there are others for whom the reality of a number depends on its emotional connections, perhaps used in ways that poet Ginger Andrews uses numbers in the following poem.
Labels:
geometric,
Ginger Andrews,
mathematics,
number,
number line,
poetry,
real,
real number
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
Mathematics and race
Sherman Alexie is a Spokane / Coeur d’Alene Indian from Wellpinit, Washington. Besides several collections of poetry, Alexie has published novels and short-stories; he wrote the screen-play for the 1998 film, Smoke Signals. Here, in verse, he deals with the mathematics of racial identity:
Monday, January 3, 2011
New poems from old -- by permutation
One of the founding members of the Oulipo, Jean Lescure (1912-2005), devised categories of permutations of selected words of a poem to form a new poem; three of these rearrangements are illustrated below using the opening stanza of "Mathematics or the Gift of Tongues" by Anna Hempstead Branch (1875-1937). Here is the original stanza from Branch's poem:
Labels:
Anna Hempstead Branch,
Jean Lescure,
mathematics,
Oulipo,
permutation,
poetry,
word play
From 2010 -- titles and dates of posts
List of postings March 23 - December 31, 2010
A scroll through the 12 months of titles below may lead you to topics and poets/poems of interest. Also helpful may be the SEARCH box at the top of the right-hand column; there you may enter names or terms that you would like to find herein.
Dec 31 The year ends -- and we go on . . .
Dec 30 Mathematicians are NOT entitled to arrogance
Dec 28 Teaching Numbers
Dec 26 Where are the Women?
Dec 21 A Square for the Season
Dec 20 "M" is for Mathematics and . . .
A scroll through the 12 months of titles below may lead you to topics and poets/poems of interest. Also helpful may be the SEARCH box at the top of the right-hand column; there you may enter names or terms that you would like to find herein.
Dec 31 The year ends -- and we go on . . .
Dec 30 Mathematicians are NOT entitled to arrogance
Dec 28 Teaching Numbers
Dec 26 Where are the Women?
Dec 21 A Square for the Season
Dec 20 "M" is for Mathematics and . . .
Friday, December 31, 2010
The year ends -- and we go on . . .
Immortal Helix by Archibald MacLeish (1892-1982)
HEREUNDER Jacob Schmidt who, man and bones,
Has been his hundred times around the sun.
HEREUNDER Jacob Schmidt who, man and bones,
Has been his hundred times around the sun.
Labels:
Archibald MacLeish,
helix,
inscribed,
mathematics,
poetry,
point,
sphere,
surface
Thursday, December 30, 2010
Mathematicians are NOT entitled to arrogance
Godfrey Harold “G. H.” Hardy (1877 – 1947) was an English mathematician known for his achievements in number theory and mathematical analysis. One of Hardy's lasting contributions is his 1940 essay, ;A Mathematician's Apology, which offers his self-portrait of the mind of a working mathematician. Here, written in lines and stanzas -- as a found poem -- is the opening paragraph of Hardy's essay:
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
Teaching Numbers
Californian Gary Soto writes for both children and adults and much of his work suits both groups. Here from A Fire in My Hands (Houghton Mifflin, 2006) is "Teaching Numbers":
Sunday, December 26, 2010
Where are the Women?
Here is a small square poem about a paradox that's been on my mind recently.
Little Women
In school, many
gifted math girls.
Later, so few
famed math women!
Little Women
In school, many
gifted math girls.
Later, so few
famed math women!
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
A Square for the Season
Now, near the Solstice,
we turn on bright lights
and give gifts. Oh, Sun,
please shorten our nights
with your quick return.
Season's Greetings
to mathematicians, to poets, and to all who inspire them--
from JoAnne Growney.
we turn on bright lights
and give gifts. Oh, Sun,
please shorten our nights
with your quick return.
Season's Greetings
to mathematicians, to poets, and to all who inspire them--
from JoAnne Growney.
Labels:
JoAnne Growney,
mathematician,
mathematics,
poem,
poet,
poetry,
solstice,
square
Monday, December 20, 2010
"M" is for Mathematics and . . .
Today's poem by Miroslav Holub (1923-98) is square, having 5 lines of 5 letters each; it describes the letter M by using what is "not M" -- a style of reasoning often used to good effect in both poetry and mathematics.
Labels:
complement,
mathematics,
Miroslav Holub,
poetry,
square,
square poem
Saturday, December 18, 2010
An Elegy from Argentina
Mathematicians are mourning the too-soon death of Cora Sadosky (1940-2010) on December 3. Born in Argentina, Sadosky earned her doctoral degree at the University of Chicago in 1965 and published more than fifty papers in harmonic analysis and operator theory. A strong advocate for women in mathematics (1993-95 president of AWM) and active in promoting greater participation of African-Americans in mathematics, Sadosky was a long-time faculty member at Howard University.
Here, in recognition of the contributions of Cora Sadosky, is "An Elegy" by Argentinian poet Mirta Rosenberg. Using Rosenberg's words for her mother, we celebrate a foremother in mathematics:
Here, in recognition of the contributions of Cora Sadosky, is "An Elegy" by Argentinian poet Mirta Rosenberg. Using Rosenberg's words for her mother, we celebrate a foremother in mathematics:
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Can we trust numbers?
Poet Lucia Perillo was honored Monday evening, December 13 at the Library of Congress -- as her collection Inseminating the Elephant won the 2010 Bobbit National Prize for Poetry. It was my good fortune to be there to hear her read. She is direct and upretentious, tough and witty. An evening of good poetry read well. Perillo has an undergraduate degree in wildlife management and her deep understandings of the natural world are evident in her poems. In an earlier collection, we find "In Light of the Absent Constant," a Perillo poem of science and number:
Labels:
Lucia Perillo,
mathematics,
minus,
number,
one,
poetry,
sums,
zero
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
New poems from old -- by substitution
Poet Lee Ann Brown was the featured poet at the November, 2010 Conference on Constrained Poetry at UNC Ashville; this conference celebrated the 50th anniversary of the founding of Oulipo. In a poetry sampler archived from the Boston Review, we find "Pledge" (see below) and other samples of Brown's work. Recordings are available at Penn Sound.
Labels:
constrained poetry,
constraint,
Lee Ann Brown,
mathematics,
N+7,
Oulipo,
poetry,
square,
substitution,
Wallace Stevens
Monday, December 13, 2010
Satire Against Reason . . .
John Wilmot (1647-1680), 2nd Earl of Rochester, was a friend of King Charles II, and author of much satirical and bawdy poetry. Even though logical reasoning is central in mathematics, reason has not lead us to a utopian society -- and Wilmot's poem, "Satire Against Reason and Mankind," reminds us of the many ways that we can be wrong.
Labels:
error,
John Wilmot,
logic,
mathematics,
poetry,
rational,
reason,
reasoning
Saturday, December 11, 2010
Cryptography -- an MAA lecture and a poem
Living near the Silver Spring metro station, on the border of Washington, DC, makes travel to the offices of the Mathematical Association of America (MAA) an easy trip for me, and I am able to enjoy occasional lectures at MAA's Carriage House Conference Center. On December 9 I was fortunate to attend an entertaining and informative lecture on "Cryptography: How to Keep a Secret," by UC Irvine math-computer-science professor (and Numb3rs consultant), Alice Silverberg. (Podcasts of lectures are available at the MAA site.)
Labels:
Adam Rulli-Gibbs,
Alice,
Alice Silverberg,
Bob,
cryptography,
even,
MAA,
mathematics,
poem,
poetry,
secret
Thursday, December 9, 2010
8 January 2011 -- Math-Poetry at JMM
Here's an invitation for math-poets -- at 5 PM on Saturday, January 8 at the 2011 Joint Mathematics Meetings in New Orleans there will be an open reading of poetry related to mathematics. All are invited. Interested persons are invited to contact Gizem Karaali of Pomona College for more information.
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Poems starring mathematicians -- 7
Activist mathematician Chandler Davis -- an editor of The Mathematical Intelligencer, career mathematician at the University of Toronto, and author of It Walks in Beauty (Aqueduct Press, 2010) -- has written of his friendship with Norberto Salinas (1940-2005), a mathematician originally from Argentina who was a long-time faculty member at the University of Kansas:
Monday, December 6, 2010
Are all mathematicians equal?
My first posting for this blog (on March 23, 2010) featured one of my earliest poems, a tribute to mathematician Emmy Noether (1882 -1935) entitled "My Dance Is Mathematics." Even as it praised Noether's achievements, the poem protested the secondary status of math-women, not only in Noether's day but also today. It ends with the stanza :
Today, history books proclaim that Noether
is the greatest mathematician
her sex has produced. They say she was good
for a woman.
Today, history books proclaim that Noether
is the greatest mathematician
her sex has produced. They say she was good
for a woman.
Labels:
Audre Lorde,
AWM,
discrimination,
Emmy Noether,
Marianne Freiberger,
Math Team,
mathematician,
mathematics,
NPR,
plus,
poetry,
Rachel Thomas
Saturday, December 4, 2010
Horizon line
Poet James Galvin often uses mathematical imagery in his poems.
Art Class by James Galvin
Let us begin with a simple line,
Drawn as a child would draw it,
To indicate the horizon,
Art Class by James Galvin
Let us begin with a simple line,
Drawn as a child would draw it,
To indicate the horizon,
Labels:
center,
geometry,
horizon,
James Galvin,
line,
mathematics,
poetry,
radius,
Strange Attractors
Thursday, December 2, 2010
Will I really NEED algebra after school?
For those of us who create and teach mathematics, algebra is one of our much-used language skills. We cannot imagine lives in which we do not write equations easily. Thus inclined, we insist on the worth of algebra for students. Taking an opposite view, here from Hanging Loose Press editor Robert Hershon is an algebra-protest poem.
Labels:
algebra,
equation,
mathematics,
poetry,
Robert Hershon
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Minimal poem from Saroyan
This poem appears in Complete Minimal Poems by Aram Saroyan (Ugly Duckling Presse, 2007). Another of Saroyan's minimal poems was posted on November 9.
Labels:
Aram Saroyan,
even,
mathematics,
poem,
poetry,
seven,
Ugly Duckling Presse,
wordplay
Sunday, November 28, 2010
Poetry with base 10
In his collection, Rational Numbers (Truman State, 2000) Harvey Hix presents "Orders of Magnitude" -- a collection of 100 stanzas in which each stanza has ten lines and each line has ten syllables. Beyond this numeric structure is frequent use of mathematical imagery; here are samples (stanzas 42 and 100):
Labels:
curvature,
decimal,
Euclid,
fractions,
Gauss,
H. L. Hix,
mathematics,
numbers,
orders of magnitude,
poetry,
rational,
Strange Attractors,
Truman State
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
A square riddle -- by Sylvia Plath
Metaphors by Sylvia Plath (1932-1963)
I'm a riddle in nine syllables,
An elephant, a ponderous house,
A melon strolling on two tendrils.
O red fruit, ivory, fine timbers!
This loaf's big with its yeasty rising.
Money's new minted in this fat purse.
I'm a means, a stage, a cow in calf.
I've eaten a bag of green apples,
Boarded the train there's no getting off.
This 9 x 9 square first appeared in Crossing the Water (Faber and Faber, 1971).
I'm a riddle in nine syllables,
An elephant, a ponderous house,
A melon strolling on two tendrils.
O red fruit, ivory, fine timbers!
This loaf's big with its yeasty rising.
Money's new minted in this fat purse.
I'm a means, a stage, a cow in calf.
I've eaten a bag of green apples,
Boarded the train there's no getting off.
This 9 x 9 square first appeared in Crossing the Water (Faber and Faber, 1971).
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
Saturday, November 20, 2010
More from Guillevic
My October 13 post presented three small poems by the French poet Guillevic (1909-97). Strongly drawn to his work, I have purchased the collection Geometries (translated 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 are three additional samples from Geometries:
Here are three additional samples from Geometries:
Friday, November 19, 2010
Syllable-Sestina -- a square permutation poem
Some poetry is "free verse" but many poems are crafted by following some sort of form or constraint--they might be sonnets or ballads or pantoums or squares, or possibly even a newly invented form. From poet Tiel Aisha Ansari I learned of a "syllable sestina challenge" from Wag's Revue. The desired poem contains six lines and only six syllables, which are repeated using the following permutation-pattern (the same pattern followed by the end-words in the stanzas of a sestina):
Labels:
constraint,
free verse,
mathematics,
permutation,
poem,
poetry,
sestina,
square,
syllable-sestina,
Tiel Aisha Ansari,
Wag's Review
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Celebrate Constraints -- Happy Birthday, OULIPO
Patrick Bahls and Richard Chess of the University of North Carolina at Ashville have organized a "Conference on Constrained Poetry" to be held on November 19-20 in celebration of the 50th Anniversary of OULIPO (short for French: OUvroir de LIttérature POtentielle), founded in 1960 by Raymond Queneau and François Le Lionnais. The group defines the term littérature potentielle as (rough translation): "the seeking of new structures and patterns that may be used by writers in any way they enjoy." Constraints are used to trigger new ideas and the Oulipo group is an ongoing source of novel techniques, often based on mathematical ideas -- such as counting letters and syllables, substitution algorithms, permutations, palindromes, and even chess problems.
Monday, November 15, 2010
Special square stanzas
My recent posting (November 14) of a symmetric stanza by Lewis Carroll illustrates one variety of "square" poem -- in which the number of words per line is the same as the number of lines. My own square poems (for examples, see October 7 or June 9) are syllable-squares; that is, each stanza has the same number of syllables per line as there are lines. Lisa McCool's poem below is, like Carroll's, a word-square; in McCool's poem -- in addition to the 6x6 shape -- the first words of each line, when read down, match the first line of the poem, and the last words of each line, when read down, match the last line of the poem.
Labels:
Lewis Carroll,
Lisa McCool,
Marian Dunn,
square,
symmetric
Sunday, November 14, 2010
Symmetric stanza
Although the following stanza by mathematician-author Lewis Carroll first appears to be a merely melodramatic example of Victorian verse, a bit of scrutiny reveals its special symmetry.
I often wondered when I cursed,
Often feared where I would be—
Wondered where she’d yield her love
When I yield, so will she,
I would her will be pitied!
Cursed be love! She pitied me…
This 6 line stanza by Carroll (well-known for for his nonsense verse) reads the same both horizontally and vertically.
I often wondered when I cursed,
Often feared where I would be—
Wondered where she’d yield her love
When I yield, so will she,
I would her will be pitied!
Cursed be love! She pitied me…
This 6 line stanza by Carroll (well-known for for his nonsense verse) reads the same both horizontally and vertically.
Labels:
Lewis Carroll,
mathematics,
nonsense verse,
poetry,
symmetry
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Theorem-proof / Cut-up / poems
For mathematicians, reading a well-crafted proof that turns toward its conclusion with elegance and perhaps surprise -- this mirrors an encounter with poetry. But can one have that poetry-math experience without being fluent in the language of mathematics? Below I offer a proof (a version of Euclid's proof of the infinitude of primes) and a "cut-up" produced from that proof-- and I invite readers (both mathematical and non-mathematical) to consider them as poems.
Labels:
Brion Gysin,
contradiction,
cut-up,
Euclid,
finite,
infinite,
mathematics,
poem,
poetry,
prime,
proof,
theorem,
William Burroughs
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Minimal Poem
Labels:
Aram Saroyan,
mathematics,
minimal,
poem,
poetry,
Ugly Duckling Presse,
wordplay
Monday, November 8, 2010
One type of "mathematical" poetry
When I began (in the 1980s) collecting examples of "mathematical poetry," I sought lines of verse that included some mathematical terminology. More recently, my view has expanded to include structual, visual, and algorithmic influcences from mathematics; however, the two samples from the work of William Blake (1757-1827), presented below, fit into that initial category -- selected as "mathematical" because of their vocabulary -- one speaks of "infinity," the other of "symmetry." (Blake was an artist as well as poet and his volumes of poetry were illustrated with his prints.) The following stanza is the opening quatrain for Blake's poem "Auguries of Innocence."
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Troubles with math, expressed poetically
Should I admit that I sometimes feel a bit of resentment toward people who are insistently articulate about their difficulties with mathematics? As if that good energy might be turned toward learning the subject they decry.
On the whole, though, it seems better to face the fact that we folks who speak the language of mathematics are the odd ones. Here are perceptive trouble-with-math poems by John Stone (1936-2008), who wrote as a parent trying to help with homework, and Elizabeth Savage, who compares a pair of differently-able friends.
On the whole, though, it seems better to face the fact that we folks who speak the language of mathematics are the odd ones. Here are perceptive trouble-with-math poems by John Stone (1936-2008), who wrote as a parent trying to help with homework, and Elizabeth Savage, who compares a pair of differently-able friends.
Labels:
count,
cubes,
differences,
divide,
Elizabeth Savage,
homework,
John Stone,
math,
mathematics,
new math,
poetry,
polynomials,
Pythagoras,
squares
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Creation from "nothing"
Christian Otto Josef Wolfgang Morgenstern (1871-1914) was a German writer whose poetry often involved paradox or nonsense and whose witticisms are oft-quoted by his German admirers; for example, the following line from "The Impossible Fact" ("Die unmögliche Tatsache", 1910): "Weil, so schließt er messerscharf / Nicht sein kann, was nicht sein darf." which may be translated as "For, he reasons pointedly / That which must not, can not be."
Labels:
Christian Morgenstern,
mathematics,
nothing,
paradox,
poetry,
spaces,
translation
Sunday, October 31, 2010
The Fib -- a form that gathers strength
The "Fib" is a poetry form in which the numbers of syllables per line follow the pattern of the Fibonacci numbers. (See also April 19 and April 29 postings.) The sequence of Fibonacci numbers starts with 0 and 1 and then each successive Fibonacci number is the sum of the two preceding. Thus, the non-zero members of the sequence are:
1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, . . .
Poet Athena Kildegaard's collection Red Momentum (Red Dragonfly Press, 2006 ) consists entirely of Fibonacci poems. The following samples from Kildegaard's collection illustrate the way that increasing line lengths can build to dramatic effect. From a simple start, complexity grows.
1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, . . .
Poet Athena Kildegaard's collection Red Momentum (Red Dragonfly Press, 2006 ) consists entirely of Fibonacci poems. The following samples from Kildegaard's collection illustrate the way that increasing line lengths can build to dramatic effect. From a simple start, complexity grows.
Labels:
Athena Kildegaard,
FIB,
Fibonacci,
mathematics,
one,
poetry,
zero
Friday, October 29, 2010
Ghost stories in algebra -- Happy Halloween!
Born in Yugoslavia, Charles Simic emigrated at age 15 to Chicago; widely known and respected as a poet and teacher (at the University of New Hampshire), Simic served as US Poet Laureate during 2007-08. This little poem is from The World Doesn't End (Mariner Books, 1989).
Ghost Stories Written by Charles Simic
Ghost Stories Written by Charles Simic
Labels:
algebra,
Charles Simic,
equation,
mathematics,
minus,
plus,
poetry,
X
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Continuing Climate Concerns
Split This Rock, an activist confederation of poets concerned with vital human issues, has directed attention to environmental concerns by publishing my "Mitigation of Toxins" as their poem of the week for this final week in October; please follow the link and enjoy this poem and others their archive offers. ("Mitigation of Toxins" first appeared in Innisfree and also is included in my new collection, Red Has No Reason .)
In continued support of climate concerns--which seem to me often to fit a square-poem format -- here is "Arctic," a 5x5 square by poet Linda Benninghoff, author of six chapbook collections.
In continued support of climate concerns--which seem to me often to fit a square-poem format -- here is "Arctic," a 5x5 square by poet Linda Benninghoff, author of six chapbook collections.
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
A Lemma by Constance Reid
Constance Reid (1918-2010), died on October 14. Sister of a mathematician (Julia Robinson), Reid wrote first about life in World War II factories that supported the war effort and then, later, several biographies (including one of her sister) and other books about mathematics. Kenneth Rexroth's poem "A Lemma by Constance Reid" (offered below) is based on material appearing in Reid's popular book From Zero to Infinity: What Makes Numbers Interesting (Thomas Y Crowell, 1955). Reid is known for the enthusiasm and clarity with which she presented mathematical ideas--seeking to attract and to satisfy non-mathematical readers.
Monday, October 25, 2010
Writing poetry like mathematics
In an article about the Chilean mathematician and poet Nicanor Parra, Paul M Pearson says, : "Parra almost wrote poetry like he would a mathematical theorem using an extreme 'economy of language' with 'no metaphors, no literary figures.' " Today I present work by Nicanor Parra and Richard Aston, both of whom write their poetry with the same economy and care that are used when writing mathematics.
Labels:
arithmetic mean,
economy,
mathematician,
mathematics,
Nicanor Parra,
nothing,
plane,
poet,
poetry,
power,
precision,
Richard Aston,
Sisyphus,
whole,
zero
Saturday, October 23, 2010
"The Equation" by Owen Sheers
This posting is brief to encourage you to have time to read Owen Sheers' fine poem several times and let it settle in and be part of you. Thanks to F J Craveiro de Carvalho, University of Coimbra, Portugal, who brought the poem to my attention.
Thursday, October 21, 2010
I miss you, Martin Gardner
Martin Gardner (1914-2010), featured also in my June 6 posting, would have been 96 years old today--October 21, 2010. All over the world lovers of mathematical puzzles have taken time today to celebrate Gardner's puzzling--and the ways it stimulated their own. Although Gardner disclaimed poetic gifts, he popularized puzzle poems written by others -- and he introduced the poetry strategies of the OULIPO (see March 25, August 5, and August 23 postings) to American readers. Here is a puzzle poem, by an unknown author, included in Gardner's Puzzles from Other Worlds (Vintage, 1984) and in Strange Attractors (A K Peters, 2008).
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
Giraffe -- novel (& prose poem) by May Swenson
Poet and playright May Swenson (1913-89) was born in Utah to Mormon parents and grew up in a home in which Swedish was the primary language. Swenson wrote of the experience of poetry as "based in a craving to get through the curtains of things as they appear, to things as they are, and then into the larger, wilder space of things as they are becoming." Here are the opening stanzas of Swenson's prose poem, "GIRAFFE: A Novel," from In Other Words: New Poems (Knopf, 1987). I think this is FUN -- and hope you also enjoy it.
Labels:
counting,
giraffe,
May Swenson,
poem,
prose poem
Sunday, October 17, 2010
The Length of a Coastline
In the nineties, fifteen or so years ago, when I began posting mathematical poems on the Internet, two of my earliest connections were Ken Stange, a poet and polymath and professor of psychology at Ontario's Nipissing University, and his daughter Kate, then a teen. Kate publicized her love of mathematics and poetry by creating an online collection,"Mathematical Poetry: A Small Anthology" which she has continued to maintain for many years--during which she has completed undergraduate and graduate studies in mathematics.
Labels:
anthology,
Benoit Mandelbrot,
coastline,
distance,
Euclid,
fractal,
function,
infinite,
Kate Stange,
Ken Stange,
mathematical,
million,
poetry,
ruler,
significant digit
Friday, October 15, 2010
Voices in a Geometry Classroom
I have been invited to return next week (October 20 at 7 PM) to Bloomsburg University, where I taught mathematics for lots of years, for a poetry reading. Preparation for the reading (which celebrates my new book, Red Has No Reason) drew my thinking back to my teaching days at Bloom and to "Geometry Demonstration," a poem about the arguments in my head as I faced a particularly challenging class of geometry students. Here it is.
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Varieties of triangles -- by Guillevic
My introduction to French poet Guillevic (1909-97) came from UK poet Tim Love who found three of his triangle poems translated into Italian. Jacqueline Lapidus translated them for me from French into English, after which I also found Guillevic's collection Geometries (Englished by Richard Sieburth, Ugly Duckling Presse, 2010) -- with its circles, ellipses, parallels, and so on. And so, beyond these three, there will be more to enjoy later.
Labels:
angle,
base,
equilateral,
Guillevic,
isosceles,
Jacqueline Lapidus,
scalene,
side,
Tim Love,
triangle
Monday, October 11, 2010
Varieties of palindromes in poetry
My posting for October 6 mentioned palindromes. Today we continue with the topic, including illustrations of the various ways they may influence poems. A number such as 12345654321, which reads the same if its digits are reversed, is the sort of palindrome one encounters in arithmetic. Palindromic poetry includes more variety. These sentences, taken from a list compiled by Ralph Griswold, are samples of palindromes in which the unit is a single letter.
Saturday, October 9, 2010
"The Seventh" by Attila Jozsef
Attila József (1905-1937) is one of the most important Hungarian poets of the 20th century.
The Seventh by Attila József
If you set foot on this earth,
you must go through seven births.
Once, in a house that's burning,
once, among ice floes churning,
once, amidst madmen raving,
once, in a field of wheat swaying,
once, in a cloister, bells ringing,
once, in a pigsty a-squealing.
Six babes crying, not enough, son.
Let yourself be the seventh one.
The Seventh by Attila József
If you set foot on this earth,
you must go through seven births.
Once, in a house that's burning,
once, among ice floes churning,
once, amidst madmen raving,
once, in a field of wheat swaying,
once, in a cloister, bells ringing,
once, in a pigsty a-squealing.
Six babes crying, not enough, son.
Let yourself be the seventh one.
Labels:
Attila Jozsef,
Hungary,
mathematics,
poet,
poetry,
seven,
seventh
Thursday, October 7, 2010
Squares of Climate Concern
The square (with as many lines as syllables per line) is a poetry-form that has existed for centuries and is now enjoying a revival. Here are three small squares that come from my concerns for the precarious imbalances we humans have created within our natural environment.
There is no
place to throw
that's away.
There is no
place to throw
that's away.
Labels:
environment,
iceberg,
JoAnne Growney,
mathematics,
metaphor,
square,
square poem
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
"Poetry, in other words, is mathematics"
From Tim Love, British poet and member of the Computer Systems Group in the Engineering Department at Cambridge University, I received this link -- National Poetry Day: unlock the mathematical secrets of verse -- to an article announcing the October 7 holiday in the UK. The article's author, Steve Jones (a professor of genetics at University College), goes so far as to begin his third paragraph with the sentence quoted as title to this posting. Follow the link and form your own view. Is mathematics truly important to poetry?
Labels:
mathematical,
mathematics,
palindrome,
pattern,
Phil Bolsta,
poet,
poetry,
Tim Love
Monday, October 4, 2010
"The Reckoning" by M. Sorescu (Romania,1936-96)
Works by poet and playwright Marin Sorescu (1936-1996) continue to be popular with Romanian readers--and he is one of the most-frequently translated of Romanian poets. In "The Reckoning" we see and hear his irony twisting among images chosen from mathematics.
Labels:
Andrea Deletant,
Brenda Walker,
carry,
line,
Marin Sorescu,
mathematical,
mathematics,
one,
parallel,
poetry,
Romania,
Romanian,
sum,
two,
zero
Sunday, October 3, 2010
Art, poetry, and mathematics -- and Rafael Alberti
On September 23 I was privileged to hear Annalisa Crannell, mathematics professor at Lancaster's Franklin and Marshall College, speak on "Math and Art: the Good, the Bad, and the Pretty." This informative presentation, sponsored by the Mathematical Association of America (MAA) and pitched toward undergraduates, showed ways that artists use mathematics.
Labels:
Annalisa Crannell,
art,
Carolyn Tipton,
complexity,
flat,
infinity,
MAA,
mathematics,
perspective,
plane,
poetry,
Rafael Alberti,
sonnet,
space
Friday, October 1, 2010
Nursing--and other vital applications of counting
Although counting is one of the basic activities of mathematics, its importance also extends to the highest mathematical levels. We count the solutions to systems of equations, the crossings in a diagram of a knot, the intersections of surfaces in multi-dimensional space, the necessary repititions in a circuit covering the edges of a graph. Counting likewise imposes order on some of life's difficult and non-mathematical tasks. In Veneta Masson's poem, "Arithmetic of Nurses," we have a vivid picture of the careful alertness required of those who cares for ill patients.
Following Masson's poem, is "Things to Count On," one of my own poems of counting--a prose poem describing the way that numbers order the life of a frugal farmer and his family, working to make ends meet in Pennsylvania in the middle of the 20th century.
Following Masson's poem, is "Things to Count On," one of my own poems of counting--a prose poem describing the way that numbers order the life of a frugal farmer and his family, working to make ends meet in Pennsylvania in the middle of the 20th century.
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Is mathematics discovered -- or invented?
The issue of whether mathematics is invented or discovered is posed often. Less frequently, queries as to where poetry falls in these categories. Perhaps individual answers to these questions depend on how each of us, from the inside, views the workings of the mind. Here we have, from poet (and math teacher) Amy Uyematsu,"The Invention of Mathematics."
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
Friday, September 24, 2010
Reflections on the Transfinite
Georg Cantor (1845-1918), a German mathematician, first dared to think the counter-intuitive notion that not all infinite sets have the same size--and then he proved it: The set of all real numbers (including all of the decimal numbers representable on the number line) cannot be matched in a one-to-one pairing with the set of counting (or natural) numbers -- 1,2,3,4, . . . . Sets whose elements can be matched one-to-one with the counting numbers are termed "countable" -- and Cantor's result showed that the set of all real numbers is uncountable.
Cantor developed an extensive theory of transfinite numbers -- and poet (as well as philosopher and professor) Emily Grosholz reflects on these in a poem:
Cantor developed an extensive theory of transfinite numbers -- and poet (as well as philosopher and professor) Emily Grosholz reflects on these in a poem:
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Goldbach's conjecture -- easily stated but unsolved
This blog's July 20 posting featured work from poets who have spouses or siblings who are mathematicians. Today, introducing the work of Michele Battiste (who considers Goldbach's conjecture), we again honor that theme. Goldbach's conjecture asserts that every even integer greater than 2 can be expressed as a sum of two prime integers. For example, 4 = 2 + 2, 6 = 3 + 3, 8 = 3 + 5, 10 = 7 + 3 or 5 + 5, and so on. The conjecture was first proposed in 1742 by German mathematican Christian Goldbach in a letter to Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler -- and in 2010--though it has been verified for many, many, many even integers--it still remains unproved.
Monday, September 20, 2010
The Magic of Numbers -- Kenneth Koch
I first became acquainted with Kenneth Koch (1925-2002) through his small and hugely valuable paperback of teaching strategies, Wishes, Lies, and Dreams: Teaching Children to Write Poetry. Later, searching for poems about trains, I stumbled upon "One Train May Hide Another" -- which I return to again and again for its wise beauty. Today I present, for our reflection, Koch's poem, "The Magic of Numbers." Enjoy.
Saturday, September 18, 2010
Visual Poetry -- from Karl Kempton
Poet Karl Kempton offers readers a great variety of visual poetry -- often including elements of mathematics. Kaz Maslanka's MathematicalBlogspot , Geof Huth's Visualizing Poetics blog, and Dan Waber's Logolalia offer introductions to the work of Kempton and other visual poets. Here are three samples from Karl's collection, 3 Cubed: Mathematical Poems, 1976 - 2003 (Runaway Spoon Press, 2003).
Thursday, September 16, 2010
Prisoner's Dilemma -- and permutations
In game theory's original, single-play, Prisoner's Dilemma problem, two prisoners each are given the choice between silence and betrayal of the other. The optimal choice is betrayal -- and therein lies a paradox. Volume 1.3 of the online journal Unsplendid includes the following poem by Isaac Cates that reveals the nature of this classic decision dilemma.
Labels:
game theory,
Isaac Cates,
optimal,
paradox,
permutation,
play,
prisoner's dilemma,
sestina,
trust
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Ghosts of Departed Quantities
Years ago in calculus class I excitedly learned that an infinite number of terms may have a finite sum. Manipulation of infinities seems somewhat routine to me now but my early ideas of calculus enlarged me a thousand-fold. Algebra was a language, geometry was a world-view, and calculus was a big idea. Like any big idea, even though it had been hundreds of years in formation, it met with resistance. In 1764 Bishop George Berkeley attacked the logical foundations of the calculus that Isaac Newton had unified. Here, from the online mathematics magazine plus, is a description of the attack.
Labels:
Adam Dickinson,
Bishop Berkeley,
calculus,
Cantor,
finite,
infinite,
infinities,
Newton,
number,
plus,
poetry,
relation
Sunday, September 12, 2010
Word Play with the Hypotenuse
Here we have a playful treatment of the language of the Pythagorean Theorem in "Talking Big" by John Bricuth.
Labels:
big,
energy,
hypotenuse,
infinity,
John Bricuth,
Pythagorean Theorem,
square,
squared,
wordplay
Thursday, September 9, 2010
Grasping at TIME
Different persons experience time differently -- as illustrated by the few lines included below (part II of "Time" from my new collection, Red Has No Reason). This musing is followed by the beautifully precise "Four Quartz Crystal Clocks" by Marianne Moore (1887-1972).
Labels:
accuracy,
clock,
four,
JoAnne Growney,
Marianne Moore,
mathematics,
poetry,
precision,
quartz,
Red Has No Reason,
syllabic verse,
time
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
Against Intuition
One of my favorite poets (mentioned previously for her poem, "Pi" in my September 6 posting) is the Polish Nobelist (1996) Wislawa Szymborska. Her language is apt and spare, her thoughts are wise, and her gentle humor is frequent.
Labels:
Baranczak,
Cavanagh,
counter-intuitive,
David Hilbert,
infinite,
Janet Lewis,
mathematics,
paradox,
poetry,
set,
Wislawa Szymborska
Monday, September 6, 2010
More of Pi in Poetry
Recording artist Kate Bush has written a song entitled “Pi” which includes some of π's digits in the lyrics. Likewise, Polish Nobelist (1996) Wislawa Szymborska also features its digits in her poem, “Pi,” which begins:
Labels:
calculation,
circle,
circumference,
compact,
diameter,
digits,
infinite,
irrational,
pi,
Robert Morgan,
transcendental,
Wislawa Szymborska
Thursday, September 2, 2010
Rhymes help to remember the digits of Pi
Calculated at the website, WolframAlpha, here are the first fifty-nine digits of the irrational number π (ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter):
π = 3.1415926535897932384626433832795028841971693993751058209749...
Before computers became available to calculate π to lots of decimal places in an instant, people who did scientific calculations could keep the number easily available by memorizing some of the digits. The website fun-with-words offers several mnemonics for π , the most common type being a word-length mnemonic in which the number of letters in each word corresponds to a digit. For example the sentence, "How I wish I could calculate pi," gives us the first seven digits.
π = 3.1415926535897932384626433832795028841971693993751058209749...
Before computers became available to calculate π to lots of decimal places in an instant, people who did scientific calculations could keep the number easily available by memorizing some of the digits. The website fun-with-words offers several mnemonics for π , the most common type being a word-length mnemonic in which the number of letters in each word corresponds to a digit. For example the sentence, "How I wish I could calculate pi," gives us the first seven digits.
Labels:
circle,
circumference,
decimal place,
diameter,
digits,
irrational,
Mike Keith,
mnemonic,
pi,
Poe,
rhyme,
WolframAlpha
Monday, August 30, 2010
What is the point? -- consider Euclid
A two-line poem by Chilean poet, Pablo Neruda (1904-73), found in my bilingual edition of Extravagaria, reminded me of the poetic nature of several of the opening expressions of Euclid's geometry. Both of these follow:
Thursday, August 26, 2010
"Two Pair" by Howard Nemerov
This poem by Howard Nemrov (1920-1991) uses scientific terminology in ways that seem especially deft:
Two Pair
More money's lost, old gamblers understand
On two pair than on any other hand;
Two Pair
More money's lost, old gamblers understand
On two pair than on any other hand;
Monday, August 23, 2010
The Irrational Sonnet -- An Oulipian form
An irrational sonnet has 14 lines, just as the traditional sonnet, but differs in its stanza-division and rhyme: there are five stanzas--containing 3, 1, 4, 1 and 5 lines, respectively (these being the first five digits of the irrational number pi), and a rhyme scheme of AAB C BAAB C CDCCD. This form was devised by Oulipo member Jacques Bens (1931-2001) in 1963. (Previous postings concerning the Oulipo occurred on March 25 and August 5.)
Labels:
Drunken Boat,
irrational,
Jacques Bens,
Laurence Petit,
Oulipo,
pi,
Ravi Shankar,
rhyme scheme,
sonnet
Thursday, August 19, 2010
From Miroslav Holub -- a reflection on accuracy
In applications of mathematics, as in other scientific research, it is important to distinguish between the precision of measurements (how closely they agree with each other) and their accuracy (how closely measured values agree with the correct value). One of my favorite poets, Miroslav Holub (1923-98), also a research scientist (immunologist), has captured this dilemma with irony in his "Brief Reflection on Accuracy," translated from Czech by Ewald Osers.
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
From "Red Has No Reason" -- a poem about the nature of mathematics
My new poetry book, Red Has No Reason, is now available (from Plain View Press or amazon.com). Several of the poems mention math--and one of them comments on the nature of mathematics. Ideas for "A Taste of Mathematics" (below) came from a mathematics conference in San Antonio, TX (January 1993) where it was announced that the billionth digit in the decimal expansion of π is 9. Recently an amazing new calculation record of 5 trillion digits (claimed by Alexander J. Yee and Shigeru Kondo) has been announced.
Monday, August 16, 2010
Poetry and applied mathematics
Back in the 1980's when I began taking examples of poetry into my mathematics classrooms at Bloomsburg University, I think that I justified doing so by considering poetry as an application of mathematics. For example, Linda Pastan applies algebra to give meaning to her poem of the same title. Here are the opening lines.
Saturday, August 14, 2010
Zero-sum game -- in a poem by Okigbo
Game theory (with origins in the 1930s) was initially developed to analyze competitive decisions in which one individual does better at another's expense--"zero sum" games--and this term has become a part of everyday vocabulary; here we find it in a poem by Christopher Okigbo (1932-1967), a Nigerian poet.
Labels:
Biafra,
Christopher Okigbo,
competitive,
decision,
equation,
game,
game theory,
New Year,
Nigerian,
roots
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Excitement in mathematics classrooms
Poems from three women illustrate a range of emotional content in the mathematics classroom: Rita Dove's "Geometry" captures the excitement of a new mathematical discovery. Sue VanHattum's "Desire in a Math Class" tells of undercurrents of emotion beneath the surface in a formal classroom setting. Marion Deutsche Cohen's untitled poem [I stand up there and dance] offers a glimpse of what may go on in a teacher's mind as she performs for her class.
Sunday, August 8, 2010
A poem of calculus (of ants on a worm)
Philip Wexler plays with the terminology of calculus in this poem:
The Calculus of Ants on a Worm
Swarming tiny
bodies nibble
away, no limits,
The Calculus of Ants on a Worm
Swarming tiny
bodies nibble
away, no limits,
Labels:
anthology,
Cabin Fever,
calculus,
Carl Phillips,
curve,
degrees,
derivative,
divide,
infinite,
limits,
Mathematics of Breathing,
null,
Philip Wexler,
reduce,
triangle,
WordWorks
Thursday, August 5, 2010
Snowballs -- growing/shrinking lines
Today's post explores poetic structures called snowballs developed by the Oulipo (see also March 25 posting) and known to many through the writings of Scientific American columnist Martin Gardner (1914-2010). TIME Magazine's issue for January 10, 1977 had an article entitled "Science: Perverbs and Snowballs" that celebrated both Gardner and the inventive structures of the Oulipo. Oulipian Harry Mathews' "Liminal Poem" (to the right) is a snowball (growing and then melting) dedicated to Gardner. The lines in Mathew's poem increase or decrease by one letter from line to line. Below left, a poem by John Newman illustrates the growth-only snowball.
Labels:
Dominique Fitzpatrick-O'Dinn,
Harry Mathews,
John Newman,
Martin Gardner,
numbers,
one,
Oulipo,
snowball,
zero
Saturday, July 31, 2010
What nobody else has thought
Albert Szent-Gyorgyi (1893-1986) was a Hungarian Biochemist who discovered Vitamin C and won the 1937 Nobel Prize for Medicine. Szent-Gyorgi offered this summary of the research process: discovery is seeing what everyone has seen and thinking what noone else has thought. Mathematicians and poets join research scientists in that quest to see and say something new. I was reminded of Szent-Gyorgyi's view when I read this little poem, "The Roasted Swan Sings," by Mark Baechtel in the anthology, Cabin Fever (WordWorks, 2003):
Labels:
arrow,
axis,
Cabin Fever,
Carmina Burana,
discovery,
Mark Baechtel,
mathematician,
research,
Szent-Gyorgyi,
WordWorks
Thursday, July 29, 2010
A wedding song -- shaped by mathematics
This posting includes a stanza from of "A Wedding on Earth" by Annie Finch. In the poet's words: the poem has 11 stanzas with 11 lines for a total of 121 lines, this number symbolizing the two single members of a pair joining into a 2, which is the prevailing theme of the poem; and each stanza combining [averaging] the stanza of Spenser's epithalamion (18 lines) with Sappho's stanza (4 lines).
Labels:
angle,
Annie Finch,
balanced,
circling,
geometry,
intersection,
line,
mathematics,
one,
pairs,
paradox,
pyramid,
square,
Tupelo Press,
two,
wedding,
Wompo
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
Monday, July 26, 2010
Trouble with Math in School
Sad and lonely experiences seem to produce more poems than joyful ones. And so it is easier to find a poem about a trouble in a math class than success there. Jane Kenyon (1947-1995) was a poet and translator whose work I admire. Here is her math-class poem:
Labels:
country school,
division,
Jane Kenyon,
math,
mathematics,
radical,
trouble
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