This book argues that poetry is compatible with systematic knowledge
including science, and indeed inherent in it; it also discusses
particular poems that engage with such knowledge, including those of
Lucretius, Vergil, and Vita Sackville-West. The book argues that there
are substantial similarities between knowledge-making and poetry-making,
for example in their being shaped by language, including metaphor, and
in their seeking unity in the world, under the impulse of eros and
pleasure. The book also discusses some of the obstacles to a 'poetry of
knowledge', including scientific objectivism, the Kantian tradition in
philosophy, and the separation of the 'two cultures' in our academic and
intellectual institutions. The book is designed to be accessible to all
those interested in the issue of the 'two cultures', or in the role of
poetry and of science in contemporary culture.