"Tennyson follows his feelings in creating each line. He follows the music in his head. If you had asked him, at the end of the day, to describe the prosody of the poem to you, he would no doubt have had to think for a moment before he could answer you, not because he was ignorant of the terms, but because he had been writing a poem, not a metrical exercise. At every point, he was exerting his free will. And the outcome of that exertion was the form."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Poets from EnglandUniversity of Oxford facultyCritics from the United KingdomJournalists from England20th-century British poets
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Ch. 4: The Sense of Form (pp. 24-25)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/James_Fenton
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
James Fenton
17 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by James Fenton β
Related Quotes
"Poetry carries its history within it, and it is oral in its origins, its transmission was oral."
"Poetry is not a metrical exercise."
"It is not what they built. It is what they knocked down. It is not the houses. It is the spaces between the houses. Iβ¦"
"Yes You have come upon the fabled lands where myths Go when they die, But some, especially the Brummagem capitalist Jβ¦"
"A serious mistake in a nightie, A grave disappointment all round Is all that you'll get from th'Almighty, Is all thatβ¦"
"Windbags can be right. Aphorists can be wrong. It is a tough world."
"The writing of a poem is like a child throwing stones into a mineshaft. You compose first, then you listen for the reβ¦"
"Imitation, if it is not forgery, is a fine thing. It stems from a generous impulse, and a realistic sense of what canβ¦"
"We are never such kleptomaniacs as in our juvenilia. We steal from our masters. We steal from our friends, from our eβ¦"
"There is always a nasty surprise in store for the imperial mind. It is typical of the imperial point of view that it β¦"