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In her debut poetry collection, fisheries biologist Liz Renner chose to celebrate the organism she studied for her dissertation, the gizzard shad (Dorosoma cepedianum):
O silver-bellied keeper of the lake,/ Whose schools like drifting coins revolve below —/ You rise where sunlight quivers into wake,/ And churn the silt where hidden stories flow.
Renner is one of many scientists who told Nature why they write poetry, from explaining the complexities of their work to processing the difficulties they’ve faced in their careers. Writing poetry “slows you down”, says engineer and amateur poet Fionn Rogan. Poetry, he says, “is about looking seriously at the world and seeing what’s right in front of you, but you’ve forgotten to notice”.
Nature | 8 min read
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