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"To write poetry means to exist in that joy which preserves in words the mystery of proximity to the Most Joyous. Joy is the joy of the poet."
"Remembrances of the Poet", Martin Heidegger
"The Chinese poet relates that men did not want to hear the song that he was playing on his flute of jade; then he played it to the gods, and they inclined their ears; and ever since, men, too have listened to the song . . . " And thus he went from the gods to those whom the image cannot dispense.
I and Thou , Martin Buber
" . . . a dance always imitates an archetypal gesture or commemorates a mythical moment. In a word, it is a representation, and consequently a reactualization, of illud tempus, 'those days'."
Myth of the Eternal Return, Mircea Eliade
"Immature poets imitate, mature poets steal; bad poets deface what they take, and good poets make it into something better, or at least something different."
T.S. Eliot
"Ignorant people use the most idiotic words sometimes with a dignity, a force of feeling that makes them glow and flare. I listen in profound silence . . . later I try to imitate. I almost always fail."
William Carlos Williams
I am soft sift
In the hourglass - at the wall
Fast, but mined with a motion, a drift,
And it crowds and it combs to the fall;
I steady as a water in a well, to a poise, to a pane
But roped with, always, all the way down from the tall
Fells or flanks of the voel, a vein
Of the gospel proffer, a pressure, a principle, Christ's gift.
"The Wreck of the Deutschland", Gerard Manley Hopkins
He drew forth a phrase from his treasure and spoke it softly to himself:
-- A day of dappled seaborne clouds --
The phrase and the day and the scene harmonized in a chord. Words. Was it their colours? He allowed them to glow and fade, hue after hue; sunrise gold, the russet and green of apple orchards, azure of waves, the greyfringed fleece of clouds. No, it was not their colours; it was the poise and balance of the period itself. Did he then love the rhythmic rise and fall of words better than their associations of legend and colour? Or was it that, being as weak of sight as he was shy of mind, he drew less pleasure form the reflection of the glowing sensible world through the prism of a language manycoloured and richly storied than from the contemplation of an inner world of individual emotions mirrored perfectly in a lucid supple periodic prose?
Portrait of the Artist as a Yong Man, James Joyce
" . . .On the other hand there is Flossie, my wife, who is the rock on which I have built. But as far as my wish is concerned, I could not be satisfied by five hundred women. As I said at the beginning, I was always an innocent child . . . Men have given direction to my life and women have always supplied the energy."
William Carlos Williams
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