Poem-a-Day April 14: Buddhist Math

Imaginary Number

The mountain that remains when the universe is destroyed
is not big and is not small.
Big and small are

comparative categories, and to what
could the mountain that remains when the universe is destroyed
be compared?

Consciousness observes and is appeased.
The soul scrambles across the screes.
The soul,

like the square root of minus 1,
is an impossibility that has its uses.


Hello Friends,
Vijay Seshadri won the Pulitzer Prize in Poetry today, so I figured he deserved a poem-a-day. This one is for the math nerds especially!
Enjoy.
Ellen

P.S. Blogspot informs me that my Gorgeous Nothings post yesterday was a bit of a milestone: my 200th poem-a-day!*

* That math is (7 Aprils) time (30 days in April) minus (2012 [skipped April]) plus (a scattered stray or two) plus (13 poem-a-days this April) = more or less 200 somewhere hereabouts.

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