“Words that tear and strange rhymes”
Peter Cameron's Blog 2023-11-27
In his youth, Paul Simon thought of himself as a poet:
On a tour of one-night stands My suitcase and guitar in hand And every stop is neatly planned For a poet and a one-man band
He thought about his craft:
My thoughts are scattered and they’re cloudy They have no borders, no boundaries They echo and they swell From Tolstoy to Tinkerbell Down from Berkeley to Carmel Got some poems in my pocket and a lot of time to kill
or, rather negatively given that poetry should communicate,
I have my books And my poetry to protect me I am shielded in my armor
And surprisingly often he describes problems with the process:
And the song I was writing is left undone I don’t know why I spend my time Writing songs I can’t believe With words that tear and strange rhymes
or
The poet writes his crooked rhyme Holy holy is his sacrament Thirty dollars pays your rent On Bleecker Street
or
My life seems unreal, my crime an illusion A scene badly written in which I must play
or again
My words like silent raindrops fell And echoed in the wells of silence
These songs included much of his best work at the time. But then, after a while, he was able to write
Funny how my memory slips While looking over manuscripts Of unpublished rhyme Drinking my vodka and lime
And after that, this theme becomes much less prominent in his work.
For me, things were somewhat similar. Like many people, I wrote poetry in my youth. Julian Jaynes says something like “Poems are rafts grasped at by men drowning in inadequate minds”, but I think I knew from early on that one of the main reasons was to practise my writing, so that when I had something to say I could say it clearly. When Bob Dylan renounced the over-elaborate imagery of Blonde on Blonde for the clean simplicity of John Wesley Harding, I took that as a role model.
Could Simon’s experience happen in mathematics? It is possible to imagine that an important mathematical truth is expressed in “words that tear and strange rhymes”. More worryingly, an argument written in the most elegant style could be wrong, and we may be less likely to see the mistake because the writing is so good.
Recently I have been struggling with a proof in which the trivial case fought back and I had to devise an absurdly complicated argument to cope with it, but all the rest came out quite easily, with the inequalities falling into place. So there can be a mismatch between subject and style, which is not entirely our fault.