Although they mostly employ mathematical language in order to describe nature...but from time to time, physicists cave in to poetry. In this post, you will read some of the best poems written by the most renowned physicists in the world.
Robert Oppenheimer
He was an American theoretical physicist who contributed to our understanding of atoms, black holes and quantum tunneling. He wrote the following poem describing his memories of New Mexico.
It was evening when we came to the riverWith a low moon over the desertThat we had lost in the mountains, forgotten.What with the cold and the sweatingAnd the ranges barring the sky.And when we found it again...In the dry hills down by the river,Half withered, we hadThe hot winds against us.
There were two palms by the landing;The yuccas were flowering; there wasa light on the far shore, and tamarisks.We waited a long time, in silence.
Then we heard the oars creakingAnd afterwards, I remember,The boatman called us.We did not look back at the mountains.
Tamarisks |
Oppenheimer's friend, British physicist Paul Dirac, who hated poetry, quipped, "In science, one tries to tell people, something that no one ever knew before, in such a way as to be understood by everyone. But in poetry, it's the exact opposite!"
Paul Dirac
Ironically, Dirac wrote the following poem; quite full of gloom!
Age is, of course, a fever chillThat every physicist must fear.He's better dead than living stillWhen once he's past his 30th year.
He was a Nobel Prize winning physicist and this poem, which is attributed to him, shows his dedication towards physics. Dirac was a complicated character; in fact, Einstein described him as an awful balance between genius and madness.
Albert Einstein
Einstein had a great reverence for Baruch Spinoza, who was a Dutch philosopher of Portuguese origin, best-known for his conceptions of the self and the universe.
How much do I love that noble man,More than I could tell with words!I fear though he'll remain aloneWith a holy halo of his own...
Galileo Galilei
He was an Italian astronomer who is known to have broken the foundations of Aristotelian physics. Galileo discovered the law of inertia and made pioneering contributions to astronomy.
He wrote the following appreciation poem for mathematics; a free verse.
Nature is written in this grand bookWhich stands continually openBefore our eyesBut cannot be understoodWithout first learningTo comprehend the languageIn which it is written.
Without whichIt is impossible..To even understand a wordWithout whichOne is just wanderingIn a dark labyrinth.
Richard Feynman
He was an American Nobel Prize winning physicist who contributed to our understanding of the interaction between light and matter.
Out of the cradleOnto dry landHere it is standing:Atoms with consciousness;Matter with curiosity.Stands at the sea,Wonders at wondering: I,A universe of atomsAn atom in the universe.
In this poem, Feynman has demonstrated the great extent of his intellect and imagination. It shows the evolution of life from the oceans to land-walking creatures. It also shows that on an astronomical scale, his existence is meaningless; but on this scale, in which he's in, he himself is the universe!
James Maxwell
He was a Scottish physicist who unified the phenomena of electricity, magnetism and optics into one single framework. His work is considered equivalent to that of Einstein's.
The world may be utterly crazyAnd life may be labour in vain;But I'd rather be silly than lazy,And would not quit life for its pain.