Celia was a lively cat

She lived with Mr. Hooke

She sat inside the kitchen

To catch the bits dropped by the cook.

 

Mr. Hooke sat by his microscope

And the things he saw he sketched

Celia dug her claws into the floor

And then her body stretched

 

Mr Hooke said “The more you pull

The longer you become

Then go back to your normal size

When your exercise is done

 

I wonder if the same applies

To bits of rope or wood

If a pull always gave the same result

That would be very good”

 

And so he tested out his thought

In St. Pauls, with a long, long wire

He put on weights; the wire went down

He took them off; it went back higher.

 

And Celia came along to help

Some coiled up wire to bring

“Oh Celia, you clever puss –

You have made a spring!

 

If we take some metal and use a key

So that it is tightly wound

When it unwinds we can use the force

To make clock-hands go round.

 

And if in future a material is made

Both stretchy and quite plastic

We can use little strips of this

And call them Bands Elastic

 

And they can use this stretchiness

Scientific girls and boys

To devise a whole variety

Of elastic band powered toys.

Author’s Note: Robert Hooke 1635-1703 was a remarkable scientist who discovered the Law of Elasticity, now known as Hooke’s Law. He helped Christopher Wren build St. Paul’s cathedral, and there are reports of him using the long drop beneath the dome to experiment on the elasticity of wires. He used these ideas to design balance springs for pocket watches, increasing their accuracy enormously – prior to Hooke’s work a good watch could be “out” by 15 minutes a day. After the invention of the balance spring watches could be within 15 seconds a day.

However, both the prediction of elastic bands and his possession of a cat are poetic licence. Celia’s name is given in recognition of Hooke’s work with the microscope – he catalogued many microscopic organisms (in a volume called Micrographia; all the drawings were done by hand). Hooke was also the first person to name the “little rooms” he saw in plants and animals cells.