Cosmos

Cosmos - Cover

A Poem

by James Applewhite

80 pages / 5.50 x 8.50 inches / no illustrations

ebook available

Poetry

Paperback / 9780807154991 / April 2014
Throughout his long career, James Applewhite skillfully navigated the world of science through poetry. His new book makes no exception, fearlessly exploring time and consciousness in relation to the universe as described by Big Bang cosmology—and as experienced by human beings in the everyday world. Applying experiences from his present-day life and also a multitude of memories from his childhood to scientific theories of the nature of the universe, the poet engages in a patient but relentless—and finally deeply rewarding—quest for a sense of meaning in a cosmos whose dimensions of space and time defy the human capacity to imagine. 
 
In his quest, Applewhite suggests the continuing possibility of a crucial connection to the universe through our seemingly tiny, evanescent experiences here on planet Earth. The poems in Cosmos help us value the human-related dimensions of being all the more as they are discerned against the cosmic vastness.
 
“We’ve known for a long time gravity
doesn’t exist,” Dr. Verlinde said.
This adhesion of all mass to itself is
following the vector of energy downward
with the thermodynamic arrow, which pierces us
with our moments. The illusion encloses,
scenes in mind return nonsensically—
my foot slips on the slick bank and for
a moment suspended in falling
I know the time slow down, seeing
the red-star sweet gum leaf
sliding with the current’s surface
that holds the late September sky
and heat in a thin film.
 
Then I pierce it, splashing through—
the rowboat my brother called the Peanut Shell
rocking out from the bank while
I arise back through the brown creek
skin and into air of the dream world
I know so well, where Henry is laughing.
 
—from “Reading the Science News”

A prolific poet, James Applewhite was inducted into the North Carolina Literary Hall of Fame in 2008 and is professor emeritus in creative writing at Duke University. He has received the Associated Writing Programs Contemporary Poetry Prize, the Jean Stein Award in Poetry from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, and a Guggenheim Fellowship in Poetry.

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