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Muriel Rukeyser [1913-1980] American
Rank: 104
Poet


Muriel Rukeyser was an American poet and political activist, best known for her poems about equality, feminism, social justice, and Judaism. Kenneth Rexroth said that she was the greatest poet of her "exact generation".

Poetry, Experience, Science

QuoteTagsRank
Breathe-in experience, breathe-out poetry. Experience, Poetry
101
However confused the scene of our life appears, however torn we may be who now do face that scene, it can be faced, and we can go on to be whole.
102
Nourish beginnings, let us nourish beginnings. Not all things are blest, but the seeds of all things are blest. The blessing is in the seed.
103
The universe is made of stories, not of atoms. Science
104
I think there is choice possible to us at any moment, as long as we live. But there is no sacrifice. There is a choice, and the rest falls away. Second choice does not exist. Beware of those who talk about sacrifice.
105
Those who speak of our culture as dead or dying have a quarrel with life, and I think they cannot understand its terms, but must endlessly repeat the projection of their own desires.
106
The town of Gauley Bridge stands as a pattern for all those places where people are linked even in the middle of their suffering, where people fight against an evil condition so that other people need not go through the same fight.
107
Exchange is creation.
108
I hear the singing of the lives of women. They clear mystery, the offering, and pride.
109
If there were no poetry on any day in the world, poetry would be invented that day. For there would be an intolerable hunger. Poetry
110
The sources of poetry are in the spirit seeking completeness. Poetry
111
A work of art is one through which the consciousness of the artist is able to give its emotions to anyone who is prepared to receive them. There is no such thing as bad art.
112
The journey is my home.
113
In our period, they say there is free speech. They say there is no penalty for poets, There is no penalty for writing poems. They say this. This is the penalty.
114
Our poems will have failed if our readers are not brought by them beyond the poems.
115
I learned that I had been brought up as a protected, blindfolded daughter.
116
The actual world, not some fantastic structure that has nothing to do with reality, must provide the material for modern poetry.
117
I hope for quick, fluent copy and memorable pictures. The words would not 'describe' the pictures; the pictures would not 'illustrate' the words. Together, they would carry a stamp and tell a story.
118
I should like to use another word: 'audience' or 'reader' or 'listener' seems inadequate. I suggest the old word 'witness,' which includes the act of seeing and knowing by personal experience, as well as the act of giving evidence.
119
It is the single image, as used in a photograph or a painting - or the frame of a film - to which words have been added to enlarge the context. The method is not the same as that by which most paintings are named. It is closer in its performance to what dialogue does to a movie, to what the caption does to a good poster.
120
Editors have grown timid... a brave advance is almost inevitably followed by quick back-tracking, generally by dilution and debasement of the original intention.
121
One characteristic of modern poetry is that arrangement of parts which strikes many people as being violent or obscure.
122
The advertising men made it clear that there were two ways of looking at ideas in a war against fascism. Those of us who were working on the project believed ideas were to be fought for; the advertising men believed they were to be sold. The audience, those at home in wartime, were not 'citizens' or 'people.' They were 'customers.'
123
Local images have one kind of reality. 'U.S. 1' will, I hope, have that kind and another, too. Poetry can extend the document.
124

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