10 of the Best Poems about Science and Technology
Start writing a post
Lifestyle

10 of the Best Poems about Science and Technology

Science and Technology

2196
10 of the Best Poems about Science and Technology

.

Best Poems about Science and Technology

I am no poet,' the scientist Michael Faraday once said, 'but if you think for yourselves, as I proceed, the facts will form a poem in your minds.' Although they're often viewed as being at odds – such as in John Keats's famous worry about Isaac Newton unweaving the rainbow through explaining the colour spectrum – science and poetry have often been bedfellows. Since the metaphysical poets such as John Donne and Andrew Marvell some four hundred years ago, whose work incorporated scientific ideas, poets over the last few centuries have engaged with scientific discoveries, questions, and ideas. Here are ten of the very best poems about science, technology, and machinery.

Edgar Allan Poe, 'Sonnet – To Science'. Poe was greatly interested in science, and among his literary achievements is a long prose-poem-cum-essay, Eureka, which is subtitled in some editions of Poe's work 'An Essay on the Material and Spiritual Universe'. In this shorter poem, a sonnet following the Shakespearean or English rhyme scheme, Poe calls science 'true daughter of Old Time' which 'alterest all things with thy peering eyes'.

Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Canto LVI from In Memoriam. 'Who trusted God was love indeed / And love Creation's final law – / Tho' Nature, red in tooth and claw / With ravine, shriek'd against his creed': this poem from Tennyson's long elegy for his friend, Arthur Henry Hallam, was published in 1850. In this canto from the longer poem, Tennyson engages with the nineteenth-century geological debate surrounding the fossil record: the so-called 'dinosaur canto' sees Tennyson fearing the Nature (and God) don't value either the individual creature within a species or the species as a whole, because so many 'types' have gone extinct.

Robert Browning, 'Caliban upon Setebos'. A good morning poem scientific to pair with Tennyson's above. Although its most immediate literary inspiration was Shakespeare's The Tempest, this 1863 poem by Robert Browning (1812-89) was written just four years after the publication of Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species, and the poem is a response to the implications of Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection.

Walt Whitman, 'When I Heard the Learn'd Astronomer'. Science can increase the magic of the natural world, rather than detract from it. In this short poem, Whitman (1819-92) describes how hearing an astronomy lecture opens his mind up to the wonders of the night sky: 'When I heard the learn'd astronomer … I wander'd off by myself, / In the mystical moist night-air, and from time to time, / Look'd up in perfect silence at the stars.'

Emily Dickinson, 'A Light exists in Spring'. As the Keats example quoted at the start of this post demonstrates, not all poems about science have been celebratory. Here, Emily Dickinson examines the gulf between what science can analyse and understand, and what human nature somehow senses in a way that stands aside from the scientific: 'A Color stands abroad / On Solitary Fields / That Science cannot overtake / But Human Nature feels.'

Ambrose Bierce, 'Technology'. Bierce (1842-c.1914) is best-known for The Devil's Dictionary, but he was also a poet. Here he addresses in a comic poem the issue of technology: ''Twas a serious person with locks of gray / And a figure like a crescent; / His gravity, clearly, had come to stay, / But his smile was evanescent.'

Rudyard Kipling, 'The Secret of the Machines'. Kipling (1865-1936) was a prolific writer of short stories and poems, and in this poem he ponders new technology and machinery: 'We were taken from the ore-bed and the mine, / We were melted in the furnace and the pit – / We were cast and wrought and hammered to design, / We were cut and filed and tooled and gauged to fit …'

Stephen Spender, 'The Pylons'. For Spender (1909-95) in this poem, which spawned the name of a whole poetic movement (the 'Pylon Poets' of the 1930s), the electricity pylons springing up across the English countryside are symbols of the future, placed in a landscape that has been largely unchanged for centuries. Whilst cities have been radically transformed in the last few hundred years by a succession of technological innovations – industry, factories, skyscrapers, the advent of the motorcar – the English countryside has largely remained the same, yet this is precisely where the pylons have been situated … or, at least, is the place where they are the most conspicuous.

Edwin Morgan, 'The Computer's First Christmas Card'. In this poem, the Scottish poet Edwin Morgan (1920-2010) gives us an unusual Christmas poem supposedly 'written' by a computer, and its attempt to produce the simple message 'Merry Christmas'. A humorous poem from the 1960s about the early technology of the modern computer.

Sarah Howe, 'Relativity'. Howe wrote this poem about scientific ideas – specifically relating to Einstein's General Theory of Relativity and its impact on subsequent physics – and read it to Stephen Hawking, to whom the poem is dedicated. It's beautiful, moving, and shows that science continues to inspire some of the finest poetry.

.

Report this Content
This article has not been reviewed by Odyssey HQ and solely reflects the ideas and opinions of the creator.
the beatles
Wikipedia Commons

For as long as I can remember, I have been listening to The Beatles. Every year, my mom would appropriately blast “Birthday” on anyone’s birthday. I knew all of the words to “Back In The U.S.S.R” by the time I was 5 (Even though I had no idea what or where the U.S.S.R was). I grew up with John, Paul, George, and Ringo instead Justin, JC, Joey, Chris and Lance (I had to google N*SYNC to remember their names). The highlight of my short life was Paul McCartney in concert twice. I’m not someone to “fangirl” but those days I fangirled hard. The music of The Beatles has gotten me through everything. Their songs have brought me more joy, peace, and comfort. I can listen to them in any situation and find what I need. Here are the best lyrics from The Beatles for every and any occasion.

Keep Reading...Show less
Being Invisible The Best Super Power

The best superpower ever? Being invisible of course. Imagine just being able to go from seen to unseen on a dime. Who wouldn't want to have the opportunity to be invisible? Superman and Batman have nothing on being invisible with their superhero abilities. Here are some things that you could do while being invisible, because being invisible can benefit your social life too.

Keep Reading...Show less
Featured

19 Lessons I'll Never Forget from Growing Up In a Small Town

There have been many lessons learned.

40388
houses under green sky
Photo by Alev Takil on Unsplash

Small towns certainly have their pros and cons. Many people who grow up in small towns find themselves counting the days until they get to escape their roots and plant new ones in bigger, "better" places. And that's fine. I'd be lying if I said I hadn't thought those same thoughts before too. We all have, but they say it's important to remember where you came from. When I think about where I come from, I can't help having an overwhelming feeling of gratitude for my roots. Being from a small town has taught me so many important lessons that I will carry with me for the rest of my life.

Keep Reading...Show less
​a woman sitting at a table having a coffee
nappy.co

I can't say "thank you" enough to express how grateful I am for you coming into my life. You have made such a huge impact on my life. I would not be the person I am today without you and I know that you will keep inspiring me to become an even better version of myself.

Keep Reading...Show less
Student Life

Waitlisted for a College Class? Here's What to Do!

Dealing with the inevitable realities of college life.

115373
college students waiting in a long line in the hallway
StableDiffusion

Course registration at college can be a big hassle and is almost never talked about. Classes you want to take fill up before you get a chance to register. You might change your mind about a class you want to take and must struggle to find another class to fit in the same time period. You also have to make sure no classes clash by time. Like I said, it's a big hassle.

This semester, I was waitlisted for two classes. Most people in this situation, especially first years, freak out because they don't know what to do. Here is what you should do when this happens.

Keep Reading...Show less

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Facebook Comments