A poem only comes into existence when it is being read. But each time it is read it begins a new life. And in a different way.
Sent by Bert Bevers
www.alberthagenaars.nl
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
CHARLES OLSON (2)
Form is never more than an expression of content.
Observation of any kind is, like argument in prose, properly previous to the act of the poem, and, if allowed in, must be so juxtaposed, apposed, set in, that it does not, for an instant, sap the going energy of the content towards its form.
www.alberthagenaars.nl
Observation of any kind is, like argument in prose, properly previous to the act of the poem, and, if allowed in, must be so juxtaposed, apposed, set in, that it does not, for an instant, sap the going energy of the content towards its form.
www.alberthagenaars.nl
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