“…good American poets are surprisingly individual and independent; they have little of the member-of-the-Academy, official man-of-letters feel that English or continental poets often have. When American poets join literary political parties, doctrinaire groups with immutable principles, whose poems themselves are manifestoes, the poets are ruined by it. We see this in the beatniks, with their official theory that you write a poem by putting down anything that happens to come into your head; this iron spontaneity of theirs makes it impossible for even a talented beatnik to write a good poem except by accident, since it eliminates the selection, exclusion, and concentration that are an essential part of writing a poem. Besides, their poems are as direct as true works of art are indirect: ironically, these conscious social manifestoes of theirs, these bohemian public speeches, make it impossible for the artist’s unconscious to operate as it normally does in the process of producing a work of art.”
“Fifty Years of American Poetry”, pp. 327–328
The Third Book of Criticism (1969)
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
Randall Jarrell215
poet, critic, novelist, essayist 1914–1965Related quotes
Richard Wilbur (1921–2017) American poet
National Book Award Acceptance Speech (1957)
Context: When a poet is being a poet — that is, when he is writing or thinking about writing — he cannot be concerned with anything but the making of a poem. If the poem is to turn out well, the poet cannot have thought of whether it will be saleable, or of what its effect on the world should be; he cannot think of whether it will bring him honor, or advance a cause, or comfort someone in sorrow. All such considerations, whether silly or generous, would be merely intrusive; for, psychologically speaking, the end of writing is the poem itself.
Carl Oglesby (1935–2011) American political activist
"The Deserters: The Contemporary Defeat of Fiction" (1972)
Northrop Frye (1912–1991) Canadian literary critic and literary theorist
"Quotes", The Educated Imagination (1963), Talk 3: Giants in Time
“…whether they write poems or don’t write poems, poets are best.”
Randall Jarrell (1914–1965) poet, critic, novelist, essayist
“Recent Poetry”, p. 227
Kipling, Auden & Co: Essays and Reviews 1935-1964 (1980)
“We all write poems; it is simply that poets are the ones who write in words.”
John Fowles book The French Lieutenant's Woman
Source: The French Lieutenant's Woman
“If you cannot be a poet, be the poem.”
David Carradine (1936–2009) American actor and martial artist
“The poet should be responsible to the poem.”
Ataol Behramoğlu (1942) Turkish writer
The Poet's Poetic Responsibility (2012)
“The distinction between a major and minor poet is the ability to write a long poem successfully.”
Herbert Read (1893–1968) English anarchist, poet, and critic of literature and art
Form in Modern Poetry(1932)