Posts tagged poetry.

How I’m rushing through this! How much each sentence in this brief story contains. “The stars are made of the same atoms as the earth.” I usually pick one small topic like this to give a lecture on. Poets say science takes away from the beauty of the stars — mere globs of gas atoms. Nothing is “mere.” I too can see the stars on a desert night, and feel them. But do I see less or more? The vastness of the heavens stretches my imagination — stuck on this carousel my little eye can catch one-million-year-old light. A vast pattern — of which I am a part — perhaps my stuff is was belched from some forgotten star, as one is belching there. Or see them with the greater eye of Palomar, rushing all apart from some common starting point when they were perhaps all together. What is the pattern, or the meaning, or the /why/? It does not do harm to the mystery to know a little about it. For far more marvelous is the truth than any artists of the past imagined! Why do the poets of the present not speak of it? What men are poets who can speak of Jupiter if he were like a man, but if he is an immense spinning sphere of methane and ammonia, must be silent?

Richard Feynman, Six Easy Pieces, 59-60, footnote. via { olena }

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Reblogging, from “1 year ago on June 07, 2011”.

I like that hurri[k]anes reblogged this, and tsunamis followed. :D

(via tsunamis)

Eventually we’ll just walk around and go “Oh god no, not more beautiful poetry! I’ve already read too much today!

Chris Impey, professor of Astronomy and author of How it Ends and How it Began

during “Alpha: Where does it begin?”, Part 1 of a roundtable titled “The Alpha and the Omega: Beginning and Ending” at The Helix Center for Interdisciplinary Investigation—a division of the New York Psychoanalytic Society & Institute.

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OS:
Isn’t it already like that? For example, just scrolling down Tumblr. We’re already there… we’re already over-saturated with information of all kinds. You have to be really really choosy these days. Unless you’re disconnected and far away, so someone else has chosen for you and you get whatever tricked down.

,What would a nonexpressive poetry look like? A poetry of intellect rather than emotion? One in which the substitutions at the heart of metaphor and image were replaced by the direct presentation of language itself, with “spontaneous overflow” supplanted by meticulous procedure and exhaustively logical process? In which the self-regard of the poet’s ego were turned back onto the self-reflexive language of the poem itself? So that the test of poetry were no longer whether it could have been done better (the question of the workshop), but whether it could conceivably have been done otherwise

Try something different this year
Believe in Magic

Bern Porter, Book of Do’s, 1982 
{ MoMA }

Bern Porter, Score 8

via { Spore }

How I’m rushing through this! How much each sentence in this brief story contains. “The stars are made of the same atoms as the earth.” I usually pick one small topic like this to give a lecture on. Poets say science takes away from the beauty of the stars — mere globs of gas atoms. Nothing is “mere.” I too can see the stars on a desert night, and feel them. But do I see less or more? The vastness of the heavens stretches my imagination — stuck on this carousel my little eye can catch one-million-year-old light. A vast pattern — of which I am a part — perhaps my stuff is was belched from some forgotten star, as one is belching there. Or see them with the greater eye of Palomar, rushing all apart from some common starting point when they were perhaps all together. What is the pattern, or the meaning, or the /why/? It does not do harm to the mystery to know a little about it. For far more marvelous is the truth than any artists of the past imagined! Why do the poets of the present not speak of it? What men are poets who can speak of Jupiter if he were like a man, but if he is an immense spinning sphere of methane and ammonia, must be silent?

Richard Feynman, Six Easy Pieces, 59-60, footnote.

We shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.