Rita Dove Quotes (59 Quotes)


    The American Dream is a phrase we'll have to wrestle with all of our lives. It means a lot of things to different people. I think we're redefining it now.

    I thought, after the Pulitzer, at least nothing will surprise me quite that much in my life. And another one happened. It was quite amazing.

    To write for PC reasons, because you think you ought to be dealing with this subject, is never going to yield anything that is really going to matter to anyone else. It has to matter to you.

    You have to imagine it possible before you can see something. You can have the evidence right in front of you, but if you can't imagine something that has never existed before, it's impossible.

    Without imagination we can go nowhere. And imagination is not restricted to the arts. Every scientist I have met who has been a success has had to imagine.


    I was apprehensive. I feared every time I talked about poetry, it would be filtered through the lens of race, sex, and age.

    If they don't read, if they don't love reading; if they don't find themselves compulsively reading, I don't think they're really a writer.

    When we are touched by something it's as if we're being brushed by an angel's wings.

    People write me from all over the country, asking me, and sometimes even telling me, what they think a poet laureate should do. I found that immensely valuable.

    She took a group of us to see a living author, just a book signing. But that's really all it took to get me started on realizing my dream.

    If we're going to solve the problems of the world, we have to learn how to talk to one another. Poetry is the language at its essence. It's the bones and the skeleton of the language. It teaches you, if nothing else, how to choose your words.

    It really wasn't until I was in college when I began to write more and more, and I realized I was scheduling my entire life around my writing.

    If only the sun-drenched celebrities are being noticed and worshiped, then our children are going to have a tough time seeing the value in the shadows, where the thinkers, probers and scientists are keeping society together.

    I keep the drafts of each poem in color-coded folders. I pick up the folders according to how I feel about that color that day.

    I have a high guilt quotient. A poem can go through as many as 50 or 60 drafts. It can take from a day to two years-or longer.

    I write short stories, and I wrote a play.

    I try to show what it is about language and music that enthralls, because I think those are the two elements of poetry.

    In working on a poem, I love to revise. Lots of younger poets don't enjoy this, but in the process of revision I discover things.

    The joy of working at something to find out what it means to me is what I grew up with.

    We tend to be so bombarded with information. . . This is antithetical to the kind of openness and perception you have to have to be receptive to poetry. . . . poetry seems to exist in a parallel universe outside daily life in America.

    What is ironic is that Allen Ginsberg's importance was in its twilight for so many years that it took his death to bring it to the front page. He electrified an entire world!

    My favorite poets may not be your bread and butter. I have more favorite poems than favorite poets.

    For years, I had heard about the lack of interest in literature in the U.S. and I had complained about it. I failed to understand how people could fail to be moved by art.

    The sound of the mandolin is a very curious sound because it's cheerful and melancholy at the same time, and I think it comes from that shadow string, the double strings.

    Under adversity, under oppression, the words begin to fail, the easy words begin to fail. In order to convey things accurately, the human being is almost forced to find the most precise words possible, which is a precondition for literature.

    I loved to read, but I always thought that the dream was too far away. The person who had written the book was a god, it wasn't a person.

    There are times in life when, instead of complaining, you do something about your complaints.

    The poetry that sustains me is when I feel that, for a minute, the clouds have parted and I've seen ecstasy or something.

    Being Poet Laureate made me realize I was capable of a larger voice. There is a more public utterance I can make as a poet.

    One definition of eternity is that we are not alone on this planet, that there are those who've gone before and those who will come, and that there is a community of spirits.

    There are distinct duties of a poet laureate. I plan a reading series at the Library of Congress and advise the librarian. The rest is how I want to promote poetry.

    Instead of trying to come up and pontificate on what literature is, you need to talk with children, to teachers, and make sure they get poetry in the curriculum early.

    For many years, I thought a poem was a whisper overheard, not an aria heard.

    I think reading Shakespeare's plays when I was young was extremely important. He had the ability to make utter strangers come alive.

    Going to the library was the one place we got to go without asking for permission. And they let us choose what we wanted to read. It was a feeling of having a book be mine entirely.

    My father is a chemist, my mother was a homemaker. My parents instilled in us the feeling that learning was the most exciting thing that could happen to you, and it never ends.

    I see a resurgence of interest in poetry. I am less optimistic about the prospects for the arts when it comes to federal funding.

    All of us have moments in our childhood where we come alive for the first time. And we go back to those moments and think, This is when I became myself.

    I think children have talent and insight, but it gets beaten out of them.

    Here's a riddle for Our Age when the sky's the limit, how can you tell you've gone too far.

    Have you ever heard a good joke? If you've ever heard someone just right, with the right pacing, then you're already on the way to poetry. It's about using words in very precise ways and using gesture.

    I didn't know writers could be real live people, because I never knew any writers.

    It's unfortunate that sometimes in schools, there's this need to have things quantified and graded.

    I was appointed Poet Laureate. It came totally out of the blue because most Poet Laureates had been considerably older than I. It was not something that I even had begun to dream about!

    What's invisiblesings, and we bear witness.

    Poetry is language at its most distilled and most powerful.

    I believe people may have a predisposition for artistic creativity. It doesn't mean they're going to make it.

    If we really want to be full and generous in spirit, we have no choice but to trust at some level.

    I carry a notebook with me everywhere. But that's only the first step.

    Can it be that even as one grows to fit the space one lives in, one cannot grow until there's space to grow.


    More Rita Dove Quotations (Based on Topics)


    Literature - Poetry - Education - Poets - People - Books - Art - Dreams - Life - Writing - Time - Librarian - Emotions - Library - Children - Reading - World - Thought & Thinking - Congress - View All Rita Dove Quotations

    Related Authors


    Ralph Waldo Emerson - Rabindranath Tagore - Maya Angelou - Thomas Middleton - Thomas Gray - Omar Khayyam - Novalis - Henrik Ibsen - Anne Sexton - A. E. Housman


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