1.
The future is always beginning now.
Mark Strand
2.
We’re only here for a short while. And I think it’s such a lucky accident, having been born, that we’re almost obliged to pay attention.
Mark Strand
3.
Even this late it happens the coming of love, the coming of light. You wake and the candles are lit as if by themselves, stars gather, dreams pour into your pillows, sending up warm bouquets of air. Even this late the bones of the body shine and tomorrow’s dust flares into breath.
Mark Strand
4.
If every head of state and every government official spent an hour a day reading poetry we'd live in a much more humane and decent world.
Mark Strand
5.
A poem is a place where the conditions of beyondness and withinness are made palpable, where to imagine is to feel what it is to be. It allows us to have the life we are denied because we are too busy living. Even more paradoxically, poetry permits us to live in ourselves as if we were just out of reach of ourselves.
Mark Strand
6.
How those fires burned that are no longer, how the weather worsened, how the shadow of the seagull vanished without a trace. Was it the end of a season, the end of a life? Was it so long ago it seems it might never have been? What is it in us that lives in the past and longs for the future, or lives in the future and longs for the past? (from "No Words Can Describe It")
Mark Strand
7.
Pain is filtered in a poem so that it becomes finally, in the end, pleasure.
Mark Strand
8.
Once you start describing nothingness, you end up with somethingness.
Mark Strand
9.
Poetry is, first and last, language - the rest is filler.
Mark Strand
10.
I feel that anything is possible in a poem.
Mark Strand
11.
And at least in poetry you should feel free to lie. That is, not to lie, but to imagine what you want, to follow the direction of the poem.
Mark Strand
12.
Ink runs from the corners of my mouth. There is no happiness like mine. I have been eating poetry.
Mark Strand
13.
Poems not only demand patience, they demand a kind of surrender. You must give yourself up to them. This is the real food for a poet: other poems, not meat loaf.
Mark Strand
14.
But I tend to think of the expressive part of me as rather tedious - never curious or responsive, but blind and self-serving.
Mark Strand
15.
The reality of a poem is a very ghostly one. It suggests, it suggests, it suggests again.
Mark Strand
16.
Each moment is a place you've never been.
Mark Strand
17.
When I walk I part the air and always the air moves in to fill the spaces where my body's been.
Mark Strand
18.
No voice comes from outer space, from the folds of dust and carpets of wind to tell us that this is the way it was meant to happen, that if only we knew how long the ruins would last we would never complain.
Mark Strand
19.
She stood beside me for years, or was it a moment? I cannot remember. Maybe I loved her, maybe I didn't. There was a house, and then no house. There were trees, but none remain. When no one remembers, what is there? You, whose moments are gone, who drift like smoke in the afterlife, tell me something, tell me anything.
Mark Strand
20.
A life is not sufficiently elevated for poetry, unless, of course, the life has been made into an art.
Mark Strand
21.
Those hours given over to basking in the glow of an imagined future, of being carried away in streams of promise by a love or a passion so strong that one felt altered forever and convinced that even the smallest particle of the surrounding world was charged with purpose of impossible grandeur; ah, yes, and one would look up into the trees and be thrilled by the wind- loosened river of pale, gold foliage cascading down and by the high, melodious singing of countless birds; those moments, so many and so long ago, still come back, but briefly, like fireflies in the perfumed heat of summer night.
Mark Strand
22.
For some of us, the less said about the way we do things the better.
Mark Strand
23.
I certainly can't speak for all cultures or all societies, but it's clear that in America, poetry serves a very marginal purpose. It's not part of the cultural mainstream.
Mark Strand
24.
I tend to like poems that engage me - that is to say, which do not bore me.
Mark Strand
25.
From the reader's view, a poem is more demanding than prose.
Mark Strand
26.
In a field I am the absence of field.That is always the case. Wherever I am, I am what is missing. When I walk I part the air and always the air moves in to fill the space where my body has been. We all have reasons for moving. I move to keep things whole.
Mark Strand
27.
From the shadow of domes in the city of domes,
A snowflake, a blizzard of one, weightless, entered your room
And made its way to the arm of the chair where you, looking up
From your book, saw it the moment it landed. That's all
There was to it.
Mark Strand
28.
Nothing is the destiny of everyone, it is our commonness made dumb.
Mark Strand
29.
And yet, in a culture like ours, which is given to material comforts, and addicted to forms of entertainment that offer immediate gratification, it is surprising that so much poetry is written.
Mark Strand
30.
I believe that all poetry is formal in that it exists within limits, limits that are either inherited by tradition or limits that language itself imposes.
Mark Strand
31.
I think the best American poetry is the poetry that utilizes the resources of poetry rather than exploits the defects or triumphs of the poet's personality.
Mark Strand
32.
It's very hard to write humor.
Mark Strand
33.
It hardly seems worthwhile to point out the shortsightedness of those practitioners who would have us believe that the form of the poem is merely its shape.
Mark Strand
34.
These wrinkles are nothing These gray hairs are nothing, This stomach which sags with old food, these bruised and swollen ankles, my darkening brain, they are nothing. I am the same boy my mother used to kiss.
Mark Strand
35.
The burial of feelings has begun.
Mark Strand
36.
And what does it matter when light enters the room where a child sleeps and the waking mother, opening her eyes, wishes more than anything to be unwakened by what she cannot name?
Mark Strand
37.
I am not concerned with truth, nor with conventional notions of what is beautiful.
Mark Strand
38.
I have been eating poetry.
Mark Strand
39.
We are reading the story of our lives As though we were in it As though we had written it.
Mark Strand
40.
Life makes writing poetry necessary to prove I really was paying attention.
Mark Strand
41.
...In another time, What cannot be seen will define us, and we shall be prompted To say that language is error, and all things are wronged By representation. The self, we shall say, can never be Seen with a disguise, and never be seen without one.
Mark Strand
42.
To open the dictionary of the Beyond and discover what one suspected, that the only word in it is nothing.
Mark Strand
43.
The number of people writing poems is vast, and their reasons for doing so are many, that much can be surmised from the stacks of submissions.
Mark Strand
44.
I would say that American poetry has always been a poetry of personal testimony.
Mark Strand
45.
When we walk in the sun
our shadows are like barges of silence.
Mark Strand
46.
We all have reasons for moving. I move to keep things whole.
Mark Strand
47.
Even this late it happens: the coming of love, the coming of light.
Mark Strand
48.
Sometimes he did not know if he slept or just thought about sleep.
Mark Strand
49.
It came to my house. It sat on my shoulders. Your shadow is yours. I told it so. I said it was yours. I have carried it with me too long. I give it back.
Mark Strand
50.
Poetry is something that happens in universities, in creative writing programs or in English departments.
Mark Strand