Howard Nemerov, an esteemed American poet and Pulitzer Prize winner, explored the human condition with wit, intelligence, and compassion in his lyrical verse. His poetry, characterized by its elegance and clarity, captured the essence of life in all its beauty and complexity, earning him acclaim as one of the finest poets of his generation.
"We're not in love with Literature all the time - especially when you have to teach it every day."
"I think there's one thing which distinguishes our art - we don't consider. We don't think. We write a little verse because it comes to us."
"Mostly the thought and the verse come inseparably. In my poem Poetics, it's as close as I come to telling how I do it."
"When modern writers gave up telling stories, they gave up the greatest thing we had."
"When Robert Frost was alive, I was known as the other new England poet, which is to be barely known at all."
"Language is remarkable, except under the extreme constraints of mathematics and logic, it never can talk only about what it's supposed to talk about but is always spreading around."
"I liked the kid who wrote me that he had to do a term paper on a modern poet and he was doing me because, though they say you have to read poems twice, he found he could handle mine in one try."
"Robert Frost had always said you mustn't think of the last line first, or it's only a fake poem, not a real one. I'm inclined to agree."
"When I was starting to write, the great influence was T.S. Eliot and after that William Butler Yeats."
"I've never read a political poem that's accomplished anything. Poetry makes things happen, but rarely what the poet wants."
"For a Jewish Puritan of the middle class, the novel is serious, the novel is work, the novel is conscientious application why, the novel is practically the retail business all over again."
"Shakespeare tells the same stories over and over in so many guises that it takes a long time before you notice."
"I think there was a revolution in poetry, associated chiefly with Eliot and Pound; but maybe it is of the nature of revolutions or of the nature of history that their innovations should later come to look trivial or indistinguishable from technical tricks."