
10 Great Quotes About Poetry, Writing, and Art by Marie Howe

Published by Paul Szlosek
Paul Szlosek was born in Southbridge, Massachusetts, but currently resides in the nearby metropolis of Worcester. He was co-founder and host of the long-running Poet’s Parlor poetry reading in Southbridge and Sturbridge, as well as a past recipient of the Jacob Knight Award for Poetry. His poems have appeared in various local publications including the Worcester Review, Worcester Magazine, Sahara, Concrete Wolf, and Diner. He’s probably best known in the Worcester poetry community for his fanatical obsession with obscure poetry forms, and has invented his own including the ziggurat, the streetbeatina, and (most recently) the hodgenelle. View all posts by Paul Szlosek

Thank you for sharing these, Paul. This is the one that resonates most with me:
“A poem occurs when it actually is an experience, not the record of an experience. It’s when the writing itself brings me somewhere I never thought I would go, and there’s a discovery in the writing.”
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Another exceptional post in the series, Paul! Thank you for continuing to find the words to keep us inspired and resolute.
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You are very welcome and thank you so much, Brad, for your kind comments.
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A stunning group of quotes by Marie Howe. My favorite is “Every poem holds the unspeakable inside it. The unsayable… The thing that you can’t really say because it’s too complicated. It’s too complex for us. Every poem has that silence deep in the center of it.”
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Thank you, Eugi! I am so glad you like the quotes. I too am especially fond of that particular quote.
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