C. K. Williams quotes:

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  • Poems have a different music from ordinary language, and every poem has a different kind of music of necessity, and that's, in a way, the hardest thing about writing poetry is waiting for that music, and sometimes you never know if it's going to come.

  • When you begin to write poems because you love language, because you love poetry. Something happens that makes you write poems. And the writing of poems is incredibly pleasurable and addictive.

  • I think poetry always lives its life, and people come to it and people go away from it, 'people' in the sense of larger numbers of people. It's as though you begin to think that poetry is a resource, and that at certain times people seem to need it or want it or can find sustenance in it, and at other times they can't.

  • I tended to write poems about both social and spiritual problems, and some problems one doesn't really want to solve, and so the problems themselves are solved. You certainly don't want to solve problems in poems that haven't been solved in the world.

  • If you spend your whole life being depressed about life, you're wasting it.

  • If you spend your whole life being depressed about life, youre wasting it.

  • One becomes a grandfather and one sees the world a little differently. Certainly the world becomes a more vulnerable place when one has a grandchild, or now I have two. And I think that possibly there's some tenderness that came out of just time and age and being a parent and grandparent.

  • I don't like denial. I don't like repression.

  • My father read poetry to me, encouraged me to memorize poems. But the writing of it was quite a different thing.

  • A dark poem is meant to redeem the dark part.

  • The more I write, the more the silence seems to be eating away at me.

  • Poetry confronts in the most clear-eyed way just those emotions which consciousness wishes to slide by.

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