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Eugenio Montale Quotes - IQDb - Internet Quotes Database

Quotes from Eugenio Montale


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I do not go in search of poetry. I wait for poetry to visit me.


There is also poetry written to be shouted in a square in front of an enthusiastic crowd. This occurs especially in countries where authoritarian regimes are in power.


Mass communication, radio, and especially television, have attempted, not without success, to annihilate every possibility of solitude and reflection.


For my part, if I consider poetry as an object, I maintain that it is born of the necessity of adding a vocal sound (speech) to the hammering of the first tribal music.


True poetry is similar to certain pictures whose owner is unknown and which only a few initiated people know.


This proves that great lyric poetry can die, be reborn, die again, but will always remain one of the most outstanding creations of the human soul.


The poet does not know - often he will never know - whom he really writes for.


Strangely, Dante's Divine Comedy did not produce a prose of that creative height or it did so after centuries.


However, poetry does not live solely in books or in school anthologies.


Today not even a universal fire could make the torrential poetic production of our time disappear. But it is exactly a question of production, that is, of hand-made products which are subject to the laws of taste and fashion.


But poets were not considered dangerous and they were advised to exercise self-censorship. At most, poets were requested not to write at all. I took advantage of this negative liberty.


Art is the production of objects for consumption, to be used and discarded while waiting for a new world in which man will have succeeded in freeing himself of everything, even of his own consciousness.


Many of today's verses are prose and bad prose.


It has often been observed that the repercussion of poetic language on prose language can be considered a decisive cut of a whip.


In reality art is always for everyone and for no one.


Evidently the arts, all the visual arts, are becoming more democratic in the worst sense of the word.


There is poetry even in prose, in all the great prose which is not merely utilitarian or didactic: there exist poets who write in prose or at least in more or less apparent prose; millions of poets write verses which have no connection with poetry.


Poetry is the art which is technically within the grasp of everyone: a piece of paper and a pencil and one is ready.


Narrative art, the novel, from Murasaki to Proust, has produced great works of poetry.


Man cannot produce a single work without the assistance of the slow, assiduous, corrosive worm of thought.