“For poems are like rainbows; they escape you quickly.”
Langston Hughes (1902–1967) American writer and social activist
The Big Sea (1940)
Cornell Chronicle interview (1999)
“For poems are like rainbows; they escape you quickly.”
Langston Hughes (1902–1967) American writer and social activist
The Big Sea (1940)
Herbert Hoover (1874–1964) 31st President of the United States of America
To Christopher Morley, quoted in Saturday Review Treasury (1957)
“Reading a poem in translation is like kissing a woman through a veil.”
Anne Michaels book Fugitive Pieces
Source: Fugitive Pieces
Ryōkan (1758–1831) Japanese Buddhist monk
Variant translation:<br>Who says my poems are poems?<br>My poems are not poems.<br>After you know my poems are not poems,<br>Then we can begin to discuss poetry! <br class="br"> "Zen Poetics of Ryokan" in Simply Haiku: A Quarterly Journal of Japanese Short Form Poetry (Summer 2006) http://www.hermitary.com/articles/ryokan_poetics.html <br class="br">Dewdrops on a Lotus Leaf : Zen Poems of Ryokan (1993)
“or that writing a poem you can read to no one
is like dancing in the dark.”
Ovid (-43–17 BC) Roman poet
Source: The Poems of Exile: Tristia and the Black Sea Letters
Donald Justice (1925–2004) Poet, teacher
Poem
Departures (1973)
Muriel Rukeyser (1913–1980) poet and political activist
Source: The Life of Poetry (1949), p. 31
Context: The meanings of poetry take their growth through the interaction of the images and the music of the poem. The music is not the rhythm, which is a representation of life, alone. The music involves the interplay of the sounds of words, the length of the sequences, the keeping and breaking of rhythms, and the repetition and variation of syllables unrhymed and rhymed. It also involves the play of ideas and images.
Jericho Brown (1976) American writer
On how poems might be structured around a political theme in “JERICHO BROWN in conversation with MICHAEL DUMANIS” http://www.benningtonreview.org/jericho-brown-interview in Bennington Review (2018 Oct 27)
“You must believe: a poem is a holy thing — a good poem, that is.”
Theodore Roethke (1908–1963) American poet
Poetry and Craft (1965)