Some of the greatest poetry is revealing to the reader the beauty in something that was so simple you had taken it for granted.
--
At an interview with Stephen Colbert at Montclair Kimberley Academy on January 29th, 2010.Neil deGrasse Tyson
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May she be granted beauty and yet not
Beauty to make a strangers eye distraught,
Or hers before a looking-glass, for such,
Being made beautiful overmuch,
Consider beauty a sufficient end,
Lose natural kindness and maybe
The heart-revealing intimacy
That chooses right, and never find a friend.William Butler Yeats
In Poetry I have a few axioms, and you will see how far I am from their centre. I think Poetry should surprise by a fine excess and not by singularity it should strike the reader as a wording of his own highest thoughts, and appear almost a remembrance Its touches of Beauty should never be halfway thereby making the reader breathless instead of content: the rise, the progress, the setting of imagery should like the Sun come natural to him shine over him and set soberly although in magnificence leaving him in the luxury of twilight but it is easier to think what Poetry should be than to write it and this leads me on to another axiom. That if Poetry comes not as naturally as the leaves to a tree it had better not come at all.
John Keats
The greatest poets never write poetry. The Homers and Shakespeares are not the greatest they are only the greatest that we can know. And so with Handel among musicians. For the highest poetry, whether in music or literature, is ineffable it must be felt from one person to another, it cannot be articulated.
Samuel (novelist Butler
To return to my lecturing days: I automatically gave low marks when a student used the dreadful phrase "sincere and simple" "Flaubert writes with a style which is always simple and sincere" under the impression that this was the greatest compliment payable to prose or poetry. When I struck the phrase out, which I did with such rage that it ripped the paper, the student complained that this was what teachers had always taught him: "Art is simple, art is sincere." Someday I must trace this vulgar absurdity to its source. A schoolmarm in Ohio? A progressive ass in New York? Because, of course, art at its greatest is fantastically deceitful and complex.
Vladimir Nabokov
Poetry must be read to be poetry. It may be that one reader is all that I deserve. If this is so, I want that reader to be you.
William Saroyan
Tyson, Neil deGrasse
Tytler, Alexander Fraser
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