
"Poetry and Grammar"
Lectures in America (1935)
Source: Dialogues of the Soul and Mortal Self in Time (1975), p. v
"Poetry and Grammar"
Lectures in America (1935)
Diary, 29th August 1932.
Quotation posted with the permission of the National Scottish Library, Edinburgh, Scotland.
On if the poet has a responsibility in “‘The language is constructing our ideas more than we are deploying the language’: An interview with Gregory Pardlo” http://gulfcoastmag.org/reviews-and-interviews/art-and-reviews/an-interview-with-gregory-pardlo/ in Gulf Coast Magazine (2019 Jul 17)
“Our poetry in the eighteenth century was prose; our prose in the seventeenth, poetry.”
Augustus William Hare and Julius Charles Hare Guesses at Truth (London: Macmillan, ([1827-48] 1867) p. 143.
Misattributed
Form in Modern Poetry(1932)
The Usurpation Of Language (1910)
Context: Though science makes no use for poetry, poetry is enriched by science. Poetry “takes up” the scientific vision and re-expresses its truths, but always in forms which compel us to look beyond them to the total object which is telling its own story and standing in its own rights. In this the poet and the philosopher are one. Using language as the lever, they lift thought above the levels where words perplex and retard its flight, and leave it, at last, standing face to face with the object which reveals itself.
"The Spirit of the Age", p. 18.
Company Manners: A Cultural Inquiry into American Life (1954)
“Meredith is a prose Browning, and so is Browning. He used poetry as a medium for writing in prose.”
The Critic as Artist (1891), Part I
“Let us look to beautiful poetry for the material of a beautiful prose.”