Never use the word 'audience.' The very idea of a public, unless the poet is writing for money, seems wrong to me. Poets don't have an 'audience'. They're talking to a single person all the time.
— Robert Graves
One gets to the heart of the matter by a series of experiences in the same pattern, but in different colors.
If there's no money in poetry, neither is there poetry in money.
Genius not only diagnoses the situation but supplies the answers.
Marriage, like money, is still with us; and, like money, progressively devalued.
Anthropologists are a connecting link between poets and scientists; though their field-work among primitive peoples has often made them forget the language of science.
In love as in sport, the amateur status must be strictly maintained.
What we now call 'finance' is, I hold, an intellectual perversion of what began as warm human love.
A remarkable thing about Shakespeare is that he is really very good in spite of all the people who say he is very good.
There's no money in poetry, but then there's no poetry in money, either.
A well chosen anthology is a complete dispensary of medicine for the more common mental disorders, and may be used as much for prevention as cure.
To be a poet is a condition rather than a profession.
If I were a girl, I'd despair. The supply of good women far exceeds that of the men who deserve them.
Prose books are the show dogs I breed and sell to support my cat.
The remarkable thing about Shakespeare is that he really is very good, in spite of all the people who say he is very good.