Showing posts with label Poet Laureate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poet Laureate. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Mark Strand, late Poet Laureate, on writing and his self-identity

"My identity is hopelessly wrapped up in what I write, and my being a writer. 

If I stopped writing, I would simply feel the loss of myself. When I don’t write, I don’t feel properly alive. 

There was a period in my life, for five years, when I didn’t write any poems. They were among the saddest years of my life, perhaps the saddest years. I wrote a lot of other things. None of them satisfied me the way the writing of poetry does, but I did them, just because I had to be ready, in case poetry came back into my life and I felt capable enough to write poems that weren’t terrible. 

I refuse to write if I feel the poems I’m writing are bad. My identity is not that important, finally. Not dishonoring what I consider a noble craft is more important. 

I would rather not write than write badly and dishonor poetry—even if it meant I wasn’t properly myself. I mean, this sounds high and noble, but in fact, it’s not. 

I love poetry. I love myself, but I think I love poetry as much as I love myself."