Quote of the Day
an admirable concern to keep lines open to writing in Ireland, Scotland, Wales and America.
Seamus Heaney
|
|
Book Search
Subscribe to our mailing list
|
|
Review of Rebecca Elson
The Independent - A Week in Books: The lost star who still sheds light on inner and outer space
By Boyd Tonkin - 03 November 2001 Self-promoting science writers often like to claim that the literary tradition in Britain derides and despises what they do. That may be true of minor pundits; for major poets, it's demonstrably false. From John Donne's raids on Renaissance "new philosophy" to the science-friendly work of current poets such as Lavinia Greenlaw, one strand of English verse has always relished the quests of the experimental intellect. And for most of modern history, the pernicious doctrine of the "two cultures" was quite unknown. Less than 300 lines into Paradise Lost, Milton compares the shield on Satan's shoulders to "the moon, whose orb/ Through optic glass the Tuscan artist views/ At evening from the top of Fesole". The "Tuscan artist" is Galileo, whom the young poet had visited in 1639. Apart from the special case of literary doctors, professional scientists who practise poetry have been a far rarer breed. That scarcity makes it all the more poignant to discover a scientist-poet of real stature who has already finished an extraordinary life's work. Rebecca Elson, who died aged 39 in May 1999, found her vocation as an astronomer when she first looked through an "optic glass". Her father was a Canadian geologist, and childhood summers were spent pebble-sorting beside northern lakes ("It was a long time before I realised that, to most people, beaches were where you went to swim"). Then the star-gazing bug bit, and led to a career that meant "my mind could wander over all the questions of space and infinity and origins that I had always loved to think about." After a master's degree in British Columbia, where attending the otherwise all-male classes felt "like walking into the men's bathroom by mistake", Elson studied for a PhD at Cambridge, followed by research work at Princeton and Harvard. She specialised in the "globular clusters" of stars that "drift around in the halo of our galaxy", and probed the unfathomable "dark matter" that fills much of the universe. In 1991, she moved back to the Institute of Astronomy at Cambridge, where she worked to great professional acclaim on data from the Hubble Space Telescope. In 1996, she married the Italian artist Angelo di Cintio; a couple of years later, the cancer she had suffered from a few years before returned. Her legacy consists of 52 scientific papers and a luminous body of poetry (which she had written since her teens). Carcanet Press has collected her best poems, with extracts from her notebooks and an autobiographical essay, as A Responsibility to Awe (£6.95). This is a wise and haunting volume, which I can't recommend too warmly. Elson's metaphors from cosmology and evolution cut both ways. Her science shapes the ordinary poetic traffic of love and time, desire and decay as in "Carnal Knowledge", where "The body aches/ To come too/ To the light... Express in its own algebra/ The symmetries of awe and fear". Equally, the feel of nearby things can illuminate the universe: "Constellations" imagines star-systems "not as minor gods/mounted in eternal in memoriam", but as "lambada dancers/Practising their slow seductions/ On the manifolds of space". For all her vast themes, Elson's language is often skittish or playful. (No other astronomer of repute can ever have composed a poem called "Hanging out his Boxer Shorts to Dry"). Yet she can be almost mystical: a fine fragment on "dark matter" unites it with the secret tug of the unconscious, "A sudden swerve of thought, mid-stride:/ The deep well of almost weightless memory,/ The dense body of a passing god." "Who will I have been/ When I'm gone?" pleads a notebook entry, weeks before Rebecca Elson's death. From her peers' accounts, she was a cosmologist of high distinction; and from the evidence in A Responsibility to Awe, a singularly gifted poet, too. Most of all, perhaps, she was someone whose rich life proved that sparring specialisms betray the wholeness of the human mind. Read her book and do your bit to bury those "two cultures" for good. |
Share this...
Quick Links
Carcanet Poetry
Carcanet Classics
Carcanet Fiction
Carcanet Film
Lives and Letters
PN Review
Video
Carcanet Celebrates 50 Years!
The Carcanet Blog
We've Moved!
read more
Books of the Year
read more
One Little Room: Peter McDonald
read more
Collected Poems: Mimi Khalvati
read more
Invisible Dog: Fabio Morbito, translated by Richard Gwyn
read more
Dante's Purgatorio: Philip Terry
read more
|
We thank the Arts Council England for their support and assistance in this interactive Project.
|
|
This website ©2000-2025 Carcanet Press Ltd
|