crashinglybeautiful:

“Awareness and self-consciousness are delicate matters. Trying to examine more deeply what poems are and how they work has informed my life and brought me great joy. I don’t think that attentiveness ever diminishes experience. There are times, however, when you don’t want to be self-conscious. One is while writing the first draft of a new poem. At that stage too much consciousness is limiting and therefore damaging. It can wall off the permeable, the mysterious, everything you don’t already know. When I write, I don’t know what is going to emerge. I begin in a condition of complete unknowing, an utter nakedness of concept or goal. A word appears, another word appears, an image. It is a moving into mystery. Everything I am and know and have lived goes into a poem. I hope I’ll never be governed by theoretical knowledge when I set out to write. Poems are born in part from the history and culture of other poems, but in writing I hope to learn a new thing, something fresh about what’s going on in that moment, in my own life and in the world. Craft consciousness is essential to the finished poem, but comes later.”
—Jane Hirshfield (born 24 February 1953) from a 1997 Atlantic Monthly interview. With thanks to The Beauty We Love.

crashinglybeautiful:

“Awareness and self-consciousness are delicate matters. Trying to examine more deeply what poems are and how they work has informed my life and brought me great joy. I don’t think that attentiveness ever diminishes experience. There are times, however, when you don’t want to be self-conscious. One is while writing the first draft of a new poem. At that stage too much consciousness is limiting and therefore damaging. It can wall off the permeable, the mysterious, everything you don’t already know. When I write, I don’t know what is going to emerge. I begin in a condition of complete unknowing, an utter nakedness of concept or goal. A word appears, another word appears, an image. It is a moving into mystery. Everything I am and know and have lived goes into a poem. I hope I’ll never be governed by theoretical knowledge when I set out to write. Poems are born in part from the history and culture of other poems, but in writing I hope to learn a new thing, something fresh about what’s going on in that moment, in my own life and in the world. Craft consciousness is essential to the finished poem, but comes later.”

—Jane Hirshfield (born 24 February 1953) from a 1997 Atlantic Monthly interview. With thanks to The Beauty We Love.

(via libraryphantomg5)

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    Beautiful. I suspect Ms. Hirshfield is a real poet, while I’m not. For me, it’s a matter of suddenly having a string of...
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