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.
“When I cannot write a poem, I bake biscuits and feel just as pleased.”
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
Anne Morrow Lindbergh 72
American aviator and author 1906–2001Related quotes
“I prefer the absurdity of writing poems
to the absurdity of not writing poems.”
Source: Nothing Twice: Selected Poems
“Please tell me you're just feeling tired
cause if it's more than that I feel that I might break”
Again I Go Unnoticed
“I will write the evangel-poem of comrades and of love.”
Starting from Paumanok, 6
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)
"An Interview with Gwendolyn Brooks", Contemporary Literature 11:1 (Winter 1970)
Interview with Grace Shulman. Quarterly Review of Literature 1969