Life, the Underground and Everything, new poems get scientific

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London Underground (LU) is celebrating 350 years of the Royal Society, the world’s oldest science academy, with a new set of poems that reflect on the meaning of science.

We hope these poems will entertain Londoners and visitors to the Capital, as they travel on the Tube – itself one of the great technological achievements of our times
Judith Chernaik, founder of Poems on the Underground

The six poems will be displayed on Tube carriages for customers to enjoy from 1 February.

This latest collection of poems show the very different responses to science that Blake, Tennyson and four other poets have had to astonishing scientific discoveries made between the 18th and 21st centuries.
Science of evolution

In ‘Auguries of Innocence’ which begins ‘To see the World in a Grain of Sand’, William Blake, the great anti-science poet of the early Romanticism movement, attacks what he saw as barren materialism with his own visionary powers.

‘In Memoriam’, by Alfred, Lord Tennyson, the Victorian poet tries to come to terms with the new science of evolution and geological time.

Contemporary poems about space and time, earth and heaven, and the enduring mysteries of life and death will also be displayed in the advertising spaces on trains.

These include ‘In the Microscope’ by Miroslav Holub who was also a great Czech scientist, ‘It looks so simple from a distance’ by Anne Stevenson, ‘Out there’ by Jamie McKendrick and ‘Fulcrum/Writing a World’ by David Morley.

Judith Chernaik, writer, editor and founder of Poems on the Underground, said: ‘Many poets have been inspired by science and some scientists have also been successful poets.
Great technological achievements

‘We hope these poems will entertain Londoners and visitors to the Capital, as they travel on the Tube – itself one of the great technological achievements of our times.’

Frances Ashcroft, a Fellow of the Royal Society, said: ‘It seems appropriate that LU is celebrating the 350th anniversary of the Royal Society with a set of poems about science.

‘Often seen as worlds apart, science and poetry share common themes: both set out to explore the nature of life and the universe, both require insight and creativity, and both are vehicles for discovery.

‘No wonder then that some scientists have also been poets, and vice versa’

This new selection of six poems can also be seen on the Royal Society’s website from the start of February.

Today Richard Dawkins and Stephen Hawking belong to the Royal Society while in the past Isaac Newton and Charles Darwin have also been Fellows.

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