lacuna

lacuna

A Poem by m.s.early

I.
Her name was Alnico,
and she rotated madly
clockwise like seasons in time with the earth
while the face of the moon
husked stars from her shadows,
inclined to keep smiling in the light of her mirth.


II.
His name was Cuprum.
He drew a circumference
as wide as an orbit around sun and moon.
He stood like a fulcrum,
centered and stoic,
while she stayed in the bounds of her cyclic commune.


III.
And each time she passed him
A light wave emitted;
they shared an electron on a covalent plane.
The light was intense now,
saturating their sphere
and the wattage was measured for loss and for gain.


IV.
The dimension between them
was apparently empty,
yet beautifully arranged as she passed through his space.
Electrical chemistry,
though they never were touching,
was obviously induced between lovers displaced.

© 2014 m.s.early


Author's Note

m.s.early
Alnico is an alloy used to make magnets. aluminium (Al), nickel (Ni) and cobalt (Co)
Cuprum is latin for copper.
Lacuna is an unfilled space.

When a magnet passes between two conductors (such as copper) electricity is generated. Although the space between appears empty, there is a measurable current.

Cheers!

My Review

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Reviews

Electrified brilliance. Currents in my head turn the lightbulb on as I'm reading a clever, unique take on the love of two people.

@{/:o)

Posted 10 Years Ago


m.s.early

10 Years Ago

Thank you blackrose. I'm glad you got a "charge" out of it ;)
BlackRose

10 Years Ago

Haha, your very watt'come. ;o)
m.s.early

10 Years Ago

Whew... I deserved that one ;-)
What a unique and clever take on chemistry to make a startlingly charming poem! :D
A set of realistic characters created from elements, this story plays like a real love account.
I love how their attraction is literally magnetic, and how their names sound like real-life names.
"they shared an electron on a covalent plane" sounds like some kind of molecular date night.
I love the way diction is played with in the poem, and adds to its meaning. Way to go!

Posted 10 Years Ago


m.s.early

10 Years Ago

Thank you so much. I let the geek in my creep out on this one :)
Love and attraction portrayed in scientific brilliance. Wonderful piece...loved it!!

Posted 10 Years Ago


m.s.early

10 Years Ago

Thank you very kindly :)
Electrical chemistry,
though they never were touching,
was obviously inducted between lovers displaced.

Excellent poetry, and fantastic metaphor too, what all things in the universe the great lovers will be compared, it never will end as far as humans inhabit in this earth, displaced lovers connected through electricity and telepathy, proud of you for these latest technology in poetry

Posted 10 Years Ago


m.s.early

10 Years Ago

Thank you Linda. That was a very touching review.
Linda alexander

10 Years Ago

You most welcome, take care
The poetry informed by physics has always intrigued me, as a chemist, and I've been wont to attempt it myself. That is the entire project of the Ondines, being the poetry of the waves. This, too, interests me--the treatment of the flow of current invisible to the sensorium, but generated in accordance with some prescribed natural law. Perhaps it may be of interest to you to investigate what precisely such a law might be. (I would add, also, that the term for a current generated by a moving B-field is "induced," and not "inducted.")

Posted 10 Years Ago


m.s.early

10 Years Ago

Thank you for the depth of your comments :)
great insight before the poem really helped this along, a fine write, just a suggestion if I may, I don't think "and" is needed in the beginning of the third stanza.

Posted 10 Years Ago


m.s.early

10 Years Ago

Thank you for reading Rene :)
This poem is cleverly thought out. Awesome job! I really enjoyed it!

Posted 10 Years Ago


m.s.early

10 Years Ago

Thank you so much Brittany :)
Adding a little logic to the laws of attraction very cool :)

Posted 10 Years Ago


m.s.early

10 Years Ago

Thank you so much Vidya :)
Vidya Bacchus

10 Years Ago

You are welcome :)
We are such stuff as stars are made, and all that. Really enjoyed this; nothing more to add to what other reviewers said. Science truly is the language of the gods.

Posted 10 Years Ago


m.s.early

10 Years Ago

Thank you so much Marie :)
I like the way you explain attraction and connection through science and poetry. Had I been taught like this in school maybe I would have wanted to continue on. You got mad skills :)

Posted 10 Years Ago


m.s.early

10 Years Ago

Ha! Write what you know is what they told me. Sorry... sometimes the geek slips out :)
lost girl

10 Years Ago

Hey! don't hide the geek...they are pros at what they know...I wish I had been more studious :)

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Added on March 6, 2014
Last Updated on March 7, 2014

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m.s.early
m.s.early

VA



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"A poet's work is to name the unnameable, to point at frauds, to take sides, start arguments, shape the world, and stop it going to sleep." -Salman Rushdie more..

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