Sharon Olds Quotes (33 Quotes)


    I think that there are fiction writers for whom that works well. I could never do it. I feel as if, by the time I see that it's a poem, it's almost written in my head somewhere.

    This creature of the poem may assemble itself into a being with its own centrifugal force.

    I'm not sure that the benefit - as a writer and as a citizen - that I would get from reading at least the front page of the Times every day or every other day would outweigh the depression.

    I'm probably so out of it at my age that I don't know what people think.

    I wish I wrote more about the world at more distance from myself.


    I was very afraid that I wouldn't be able to do this job well. And the time never came back.

    If I wrote in a sonnet form, I would be distorting. Or if I had some great new idea for line breaks and I used it in a poem, but it's really not right for that poem, but I wanted it, that would be distorting.

    Well, one thing I'm really interested in, when I'm writing, is being accurate.

    We're all taking on too much, we're all asking too much of ourselves. We're all wishing we could do more, and therefore just doing more.

    At one point I took on a new job, and I just didn't have time to do anything but work.

    The teaching is very rewarding, and very time-consuming, and very exhausting. But it's wonderful. The community here at NYU is very precious to me.

    So I did quit coffee and I did quit smoking. But I haven't managed that with drinking!

    Everyone is so different. I sometimes wish I wrote in a different way. You know, that feeling of So-and-so writes slowly, if only I wrote slowly.

    The older I get, the more I feel almost beautiful.

    I think that my work is easy to understand because I am not a thinker, I am not a... How can I put it I write the way I perceive, I guess.

    It might be a bad thing, not to know what's going on in the world. I can't say I really approve of it.

    Maybe we can use a metaphor for it, out of dance. I think for many years I was aware of the need, in dance and in life, to breathe deeply and to take in more air than we usually take in.

    To me, the mind seems to be spread out in the whole body - the senses are part of the brain. I guess they're not where the thinking is done.

    My poems - I don't even like the sound of that, in a way. Not that anyone else wrote them. But we know that only people who are really close to us care about our personal experience.

    These are the true religious,
    the purists, the pros, the ones who will not
    accept a false Messiah, love the
    priest instead of the God.

    Their spirits and their visions are embodied in their craft. And so is mine. It's not Jane Saw Puff. But the clarity of Jane Saw Puff is precious to me.

    The fact that there was a lot of anger and sorrow and a sense of connection to destructive feelings in The Father doesn't bother me.

    Well, "The Wellspring" was written from 1983 to 1986. And it had a section in the beginning that was poems that began from others' experience.

    The decision for me was whether to have "The Father" be a book that told a story - from the point of view of this speaker, the daughter - without, as in the earlier books, then having a section on something else and a section on something else.

    The amount of horror one used to hear about in one village could be quite extreme. But one might not have heard about all the other villages' horrors at the same time.

    I didn't have time to sit down and look at the work of a year and choose what to type.

    When I quit all these things and said I didn't have any time, I meant I didn't have any time.

    I think this is true for all artists. My senses are very important to me.

    Who wants to put together something that will bear some relationship to the vision or memory or experience or story or idea or dream or whatever.

    Every poet I know - although there may be some I don't know who lead very different lives, who maybe live in the country and don't teach - tends to be just like the rest of us just really busy, really overcommitted.

    Because a poem is not written while running or while answering the phone. It's written in whatever minutes one has. Sometimes you have half an hour.

    There are some fine books and essays about that. Lewis Hyde has written about alcoholism and poets and the role that society gives its writers - encouraging them to die.

    Many poets write books. They'll tell you: Well, I've got my next book, but there are two poems I need to write, one about x, one about y. This is a wonder to me.


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    Poetry - Time - Literature - Work & Career - Sense & Perception - Books - Experience - World - Dancing - Smoking - Communities - Love - Imagination & Visualization - Writing - Anger - Daughters - Teaching - Countries - Relationship - View All Sharon Olds Quotations

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