February 17, 2009

  • Mathematics and Poetry (review):

    Diamond-Faceted:

    Transformations
    of the Rock


    A discussion of Stevens's late poem "The Rock" (1954) in Wallace Stevens: A World of Transforming Shapes, by Alan D. Perlis, Bucknell University Press, 1976, p. 120:

    For Stevens, the poem "makes meanings of the rock." In the mind, "its barrenness becomes a thousand things/And so exists no more." In fact, in a peculiar irony that only a poet with Stevens's particular notion of the imagination's function could develop, the rock becomes the mind itself, shattered into such diamond-faceted brilliance that it encompasses all possibilities for human thought:

    The rock is the gray particular of man's life,
    The stone from which he rises, up—and—ho,
    The step to the bleaker depths of his descents ...

    The rock is the stern particular of the air,
    The mirror of the planets, one by one,
    But through man's eye, their silent rhapsodist,

    Turquoise the rock, at odious evening bright
    With redness that sticks fast to evil dreams;
    The difficult rightness of half-risen day.

    The rock is the habitation of the whole,
    Its strength and measure, that which is near,
    point A
    In a perspective that begins again

    At B: the origin of the mango's rind.

                        (Collected Poems, 528)

    A mathematical version of
    this poetic concept appears
    in a rather cryptic note
    from 1981 written with
    Stevens's poem in mind:

    http://www.log24.com/log/pix09/090217-SolidSymmetry.jpg

    For some explanation of the
    groups of 8 and 24
    motions referred to in the note,
    see an earlier note from 1981.

    For the Perlis "diamond facets,"
    see the Diamond 16 Puzzle.

    For a much larger group
    of motions, see
    Solomon's Cube.

    As for "the mind itself"
    and "possibilities for
    human thought," see
    Geometry of the I Ching.

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