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Uncertain-Sea Principle, a Brilliant Quantum Poem by Richard Blanco

Alexandra De Castro
Published Jun 23, 2025

What happens when the beauty of the quantum world collides with the power of literature? The Brilliant (Quantum) Poetry Competition dares poets from around the globe to explore just that. This unique international contest, created to celebrate the International Year of Quantum Science and Technology, invites everyone to express quantum science in verse.

Poet Richard Blanco. USDA Photo by Lance Cheung.

Hosted virtually by The Brilliant Poetry Project, the call for submissions opened on March 21 this year and will close next week on June 30. Winners will be announced on November 10. In this framework, and to help inspire quantum enthusiasts, poet and engineer Richard Blanco shared his “stereoscope or contrapuntal poem,” Uncertain-Sea Principle, inspired by the quantum uncertainty principle introduced by Werner Heisenberg, one of the scientists who helped develop quantum mechanics 100 years ago. The author remarks that it can be read “in more than one way, such as left to right across the two columns or down first one column and then the other.”

Note: To read the poem from left to right across both columns, it must be opened on a desktop (laptop).

Uncertain-Sea Principle

after Werner Heisenberg

the more I try to measure x

the more I know where I am

I scribble my name across the sand

the more I know where I’m going

the ebb of each wave seduces me

the more I know how to get there

freighter lights burn on the horizon

like candelabras floating toward port

the more I know when I’ll arrive

the tide rises on cue to kiss the shore hello

the less I try to solve for y

the less I know where I am

rustling palms protest losing

their green to the darkness

the less I know where I’ve been

the ocean vanishes into the midnight sky

the less I know who I can be

there’s no horizon in the stark night

the less I know who I am

I erase my name with a wave of my palm

the more I try to determine my I

the less I can measure y

the less I know where I’m going

the burnt-orange moon rises, cools, disappears

the less I know how to get there

silhouettes of sailboats sleep till morning

the less I know when I’ll arrive

sea oats sway to the wind’s pitch

like inverted pendulums of timelessness.

the less I know where I am

seagulls abandon the sea every night

the more I can solve for x

the more I know where I’ve been

the sea gives and gives itself to the shore

yet returns again and again to itself

the more I know who I can be

the midnight sky vanishes into the ocean

the more I know who I am

even in the dark my eyes shape clouds

the more I know that I am, here

I clutch a fistful of sand, breathe, listen

the less I can determine my self

Listen to the poem below, read by the author in the video

ā€œUncertain-Sea Principleā€ is from the book Homeland of My Body: New and Selected Poems by Richard Blanco. Copyright Ā© 2023 by Richard Blanco. Used with permission from Beacon Press and Richard Blanco.

Video edited by Serena Krejci-Papa

Feature picture edited by Alexandra De Castro

For general questions about IYQ, please contact info@quantum2025.org. For press inquiries, contact iyq2025@hkamarcom.com.