Quotes from Salvatore Quasimodo


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Poetry is also the physical self of the poet, and it is impossible to separate the poet from his poetry.


The poet's spoken discourse often depends on a mystique, on the spiritual freedom that finds itself enslaved on earth.


War, I have always said, forces men to change their standards, regardless of whether their country has won or lost.


The poet's other readers are the ancient poets, who look upon the freshly written pages from an incorruptible distance. Their poetic forms are permanent, and it is difficult to create new forms which can approach them.


An exact poetic duplication of a man is for the poet a negation of the earth, an impossibility of being, even though his greatest desire is to speak to many men, to unite with them by means of harmonious verses about the truths of the mind or of things.


My readers at that time were still men of letters; but there had to be other people waiting to read my poems.


Europeans know the importance of the Resistance; it has been the shining example of the modern conscience.


According to them, the poet is confined to the provinces with his mouth broken on his own syllabic trapeze.


Thus, the poet's word is beginning to strike forcefully upon the hearts of all men, while absolute men of letters think that they alone live in the real world.


Religious poetry, civic poetry, lyric or dramatic poetry are all categories of man's expression which are valid only if the endorsement of formal content is valid.


Even a polemic has some justification if one considers that my own first poetic experiments began during a dictatorship and mark the origin of the Hermetic movement.


As the poet has expected, the alarms now are sounded, for - and it must be said again - the birth of a poet is always a threat to the existing cultural order, because he attempts to break through the circle of literary castes to reach the center.


The writer of stories or of novels settles on men and imitates them; he exhausts the possibilities of his characters.


The poet does not fear death, not because he believes in the fantasy of heroes, but because death constantly visits his thoughts and is thus an image of a serene dialogue.


The antagonism between the poet and the politician has generally been evident in all cultures.


Religious power, which, as I have already said, frequently identifies itself with political power, has always been a protagonist of this bitter struggle, even when it seemingly was neutral.


A poet clings to his own tradition and avoids internationalism.


The Resistance is a moral certainty, not a poetic one. The true poet never uses words in order to punish someone. His judgment belongs to a creative order; it is not formulated as a prophetic scripture.


In opposition to this detachment, he finds an image of man which contains within itself man's dreams, man's illness, man's redemption from the misery of poverty - poverty which can no longer be for him a sign of the acceptance of life.


He passes from lyric to epic poetry in order to speak about the world and the torment in the world through man, rationally and emotionally. The poet then becomes a danger.