
Ezra Pound, ABC of Reading (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1934), p. 103.
About
Lecture on Modern Poetry (1914)
Ezra Pound, ABC of Reading (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1934), p. 103.
About
“The fact that you can write verse is in itself a certificate that you can write prose.”
What It Means to Be a Poet in America (1926)
What It Means to Be a Poet in America (1926)
Context: Whenever I begin to write a poem or draw a picture I am, in imagination, if not in reality, back in my room where I began to draw pen-and-ink pictures and write verses in my seventeenth year. Both windows of the room look down on the great Governor’s Yard of Illinois. This yard is a square block, a beautiful park. Our house is on so high a hill I can always look down upon the governor. Among my very earliest memories are those of seeing old Governor Oglesby leaning on his cane, marching about, calling his children about him.
Interview at Skidmore College Aug 1995,published 'Paris Review' no 144 Fall 1997
The Art of Poetry - interview 1995 with Downing & Kunitz
“Writing free verse is like playing tennis with the net down.”
Address at Milton Academy, Massachusetts (17 May 1935)
1930s
Variant: Writing free verse is like playing tennis with the net down.
“Anyone may be an honorable man, and yet write verse badly.”
On peut être honnête homme et faire mal des vers.
Act IV, sc. i
Le Misanthrope (1666)