Cecil Day-Lewis quotes:

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  • They who in folly or mere greed Enslaved religion, markets, laws, Borrow our language now and bid Us to speak up in freedom's cause.

  • Flying alone! Nothing gives such a sense of mastery over time over mechanism, mastery indeed over space, time, and life itself, as this.

  • Selfhood begins with a walking away, And love is proved in letting go.

  • High sprits they had: gravity they flouted.

  • Now the peak of summer's past, the sky is overcast And the love we swore would last for an age seems deceit.

  • We do not write in order to be understood; we write in order to understand.

  • Love is proved in the letting go.

  • A poet is not a public figure. A poet should be read and not seen.

  • There's a kind of release And a kind of torment in every goodbye for every man.

  • The poetic myths are dead; and the poetic image, which is the myth of the individual, reigns in their stead.

  • It is unwise to equate scientific activity with what we call reason, poetic activity with what we call imagination. Without the imaginative leap from facts to generalisation, no theoretic discovery in science is made. The poet, on the other hand, must not imagine but reason--that is to say, he must exercise a great deal of consciously directed thought in the selection and rejection of his data: there is a technical logic, a poetic reasoning in his choice of the words, rhythms and images by which a poem's coherence is achieved.

  • To travel like a bird, lightly to view | Deserts where stone gods founder in the sand, | Ocean embraced in a white sleep with land; | To escape time, always to start anew... | Hooded by a dark sense of destination... | Travelers, we're fabric of the road we go; We settle, but like feathers on time's flow.

  • We who fly do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet.

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