Mark Strand Quotes (28 Quotes)


    Each moment is a place you've never been.

    From the reader's view, a poem is more demanding than prose.

    Nothing is the destiny of everyone, it is our commonness made dumb.

    I certainly can't speak for all cultures or all societies, but it's clear that in America, poetry serves a very marginal purpose. It's not part of the cultural mainstream.

    And at least in poetry you should feel free to lie. That is, not to lie, but to imagine what you want, to follow the direction of the poem.



    Poetry is, first and last, language - the rest is filler.


    It hardly seems worthwhile to point out the shortsightedness of those practitioners who would have us believe that the form of the poem is merely its shape.

    But I tend to think of the expressive part of me as rather tedious - never curious or responsive, but blind and self-serving.

    The number of people writing poems is vast, and their reasons for doing so are many, that much can be surmised from the stacks of submissions.

    I think the best American poetry is the poetry that utilizes the resources of poetry rather than exploits the defects or triumphs of the poet's personality.

    A great many people seem to think writing poetry is worthwhile, even though it pays next to nothing and is not as widely read as it should be.

    And yet, in a culture like ours, which is given to material comforts, and addicted to forms of entertainment that offer immediate gratification, it is surprising that so much poetry is written.


    I am not concerned with truth, nor with conventional notions of what is beautiful.

    I tend to like poems that engage me - that is to say, which do not bore me.

    I would say that American poetry has always been a poetry of personal testimony.

    A life is not sufficiently elevated for poetry, unless, of course, the life has been made into an art.

    There's a certain point, when you're writing autobiographical stuff, where you don't want to misrepresent yourself. It would be dishonest.

    For some of us, the less said about the way we do things the better.

    I believe that all poetry is formal in that it exists within limits, limits that are either inherited by tradition or limits that language itself imposes.

    And Robert Lowell, of course - in his poems, we're not located in his actual life. We're located more in the externals, in the journalistic facts of his life.

    Poetry is something that happens in universities, in creative writing programs or in English departments.

    Life makes writing poetry necessary to prove I really was paying attention.

    Usually a life turned into a poem is misrepresented.

    In a field I am the absence of field. That is always the case. Wherever I am, I am what is missing. When I walk I part the air and always the air moves in to fill the space where my body has been. We all have reasons for moving. I move to keep things whole.

    Pain is filtered in a poem so that it becomes finally, in the end, pleasure.


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