map applying the four-color theorem (public domain)‘Of a Feather’ and Other Poems by C.B. Anderson The Society July 14, 2025 Culture, Humor, Poetry 1 Comment . Of a Feather Professor Swann was new among the fonts of knowledge chugging up the tenure track; he’d earned his place among the college fac- ulty with bold views and a fierce response to critics. Apropos to ambience the ivied walls lent, students dared attack his points with blatant relish for their lack of proper homage—Vive la résistance! The old department chair who’d vouched for Swann one year ago could scarce contain his chuckling: How fitting that the fledgling now must don the feathers of his elders, short on truckling admirers whom he could impose upon, forgetting he’d once been the ugly duckling. . . The Four-Color Problem —trying to prove that no more than four colors are required to color the regions of any map so that no two adjacent regions have the same color (proven in 1976 by Appel and Haken at The University of Illinois) Grim symbols grapple in the gaslight, much entangled, like a nest of snakes, a rash of colors bleeding on a map; they touch across established ink-line borders, clash and clamor in a reckless street fight. Such disorder isn’t easy to explain within the canon of topology, for reconciling meaning with the pain requires some recondite theology or garden-variety legerdemain. . . Buying Time Let us pretend our hearts are in the right places, and let us set aside the small differences that occur no matter what, even when things are going well. Tonight I want a level playground, to rebut ingrained assumptions which have cast a pall across our once well-lighted neighborhood, the area we’d thought we settled down in, not just settled for. It’s no surprise our former dreams fell flat; for all the good our wishes did, we might have closed our eyes and picked at random any run-down town we’d never heard of, which is precisely the problem: everything that we assumed was based on inexperience. The lot we blithely mortgaged might’ve served nicely in a short-term occupancy, but not for permanence. From the start we were doomed. . . C.B. Anderson was the longtime gardener for the PBS television series, The Victory Garden. Hundreds of his poems have appeared in scores of print and electronic journals out of North America, Great Britain, Ireland, Austria, Australia and India. His collection, Mortal Soup and the Blue Yonder was published in 2013 by White Violet Press. NOTE TO READERS: If you enjoyed this poem or other content, please consider making a donation to the Society of Classical Poets. The Society of Classical Poets does not endorse any views expressed in individual poems or commentary. ***Read Our Comments Policy Here*** One Response Roy Eugene Peterson July 14, 2025 I had almost forgotten how long a sentence can be sustained and how adept you are at still providing great rhymes in a laudable consistent manner. Each poem is interesting in its own way for the fascinating subjects that seem to be pulled out of thin air by a unique intellect yet are of significant interest and meaning. 1.) Poem #1 pulls together feathers and ugly duckling while making a great point about forgetting when someone was once a beginner in a position. 2.) With Poem #2 the color puzzle is something few of us likely ever knew about and then the masterful verse of reconciling disorder, which was beautifully phased. 3.) Poem #3 comes to a stark realization, “From the start we were doomed.” Great lessons in all of them. Reply Leave a Reply Cancel ReplyYour email address will not be published.CommentName* Email* Website Δ This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
Roy Eugene Peterson July 14, 2025 I had almost forgotten how long a sentence can be sustained and how adept you are at still providing great rhymes in a laudable consistent manner. Each poem is interesting in its own way for the fascinating subjects that seem to be pulled out of thin air by a unique intellect yet are of significant interest and meaning. 1.) Poem #1 pulls together feathers and ugly duckling while making a great point about forgetting when someone was once a beginner in a position. 2.) With Poem #2 the color puzzle is something few of us likely ever knew about and then the masterful verse of reconciling disorder, which was beautifully phased. 3.) Poem #3 comes to a stark realization, “From the start we were doomed.” Great lessons in all of them. Reply