“Many poets…write as if they had been decerebrated, and not simply lobotomized, as a cure for their melancholia.”

“A Verse Chronicle”, p. 149
Poetry and the Age (1953)

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Randall Jarrell 215
poet, critic, novelist, essayist 1914–1965

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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.

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