"For the musician, before he has begun his work, all is in readiness so that the operation of his creative spirit may find, right from the start, the appropriate matter and means, without any possibility of error. He will not have to make this matter and means submit to any modification; he need only assemble elements which are clearly defined and ready-made. But in how different a situation is the poet! Before him is ordinary language, this aggregate of means which are not suited to his purpose, not made for him. There have not been physicians to determine the relationships of these means for him; there have not been constructors of scales; no diapason, no metronome, no certitude of this kind. He has nothing but the coarse instrument of the dictionary and the grammar. Moreover, he must address himself not to a special and unique sense like hearing, which the musician bends to his will, and which is, besides, the organ par excellence of expectation and attention; but rather to a general and diffused expectation, and he does so through a language which is a very odd mixture of incoherent stimuli."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Originally delivered as a lecture (late 1927); Pure Poetry: Notes for a Lecture The Creative Vision (1960)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Paul_Val%C3%A9ry
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Paul Valéry
66 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Paul Valéry →
Related Quotes
"An intelligent woman is a woman with whom one can be as stupid as one wants."
"[T]he soul of love is the invincible difference of lovers, while its subtle matter is the identity of their desires."
"Le mal de prendre une hypallage pour une découverte, une métaphore pour une démonstration, un vomissement de mots pou…"
"Collect all the facts that can be collected about the life of Racine and you will never learn from them the art of hi…"
"Vous n’avez ni la patience qui tisse les longues vies, ni le sentiment de l’irrégularité, ni le sens de la place la p…"
"We civilizations now know ourselves mortal."
"Poetry is simply literature reduced to the essence of its active principle. It is purged of idols of every kind, of r…"
"Science is feasible when the variables are few and can be enumerated; when their combinations are distinct and clear.…"
"Science means simply the aggregate of all the recipes that are always successful. All the rest is literature."
"The painter should not paint what he sees, but what will be seen."