29+ Martha Ronk Quotes On Education, Constitution And Dreamy

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Top 10 Martha Ronk Quotes

  1. Our mind is dark in some way, and so we use rhetoric as a kind of prop or foil.
  2. I can't remember the past, or I can't see very clearly, or I've gotten older and the person I was isn't there anymore, and the place I grew up isn't where I live now.
  3. Looking out a window from different vantage points changes what you see and therefore what you write.
  4. I think those of us who use language are always trying for this, trying to keep everything from floating away by trying to write about it despite failure.
  5. A number of poems don't work alone. They need to fit together to work.
  6. I can't move my body slowly. I can't move the line slowly. So I end up with way too much, often opaque to me later.
  7. Gardens do offer a temporal tableau and certainly mean differently in different eras and indeed geographies (think of the formal gardens in France).
  8. If it's a drop of dew, it will dissolve.
  9. I prefer always to think that I am creating a book, not a series of stand-alone poems.
  10. I'm always somehow drawn to that sense of how fragile things are and how a garden means so differently depending upon whose language you happen to be in or whose century you happen to be in.

Martha Ronk Short Quotes

  • I spend a lot of time revising. I'm not somebody who can move slowly.
  • Even your own memory changes over time because of circumstances or even because your body changes.
  • For me, failure has to be acknowledged, needs to be faced in some way.
  • Language is as fragile as the little alpine plant.
  • I try to attach myself to things around me so that they don't slip away.
  • Each of us is present, but partially.

Martha Ronk Famous Quotes And Sayings

I think about the kinds of gardens that Queen Elizabeth put up. She made gardens in the shape of an "E," for Elizabeth, just one more way in which she used symbolism to solidify her reign: appearing as the Virgin Queen, for example, or wearing a dress embroidered with eyes and ears to indicate that she knew all that was going on in her castle; she had spies. — Martha Ronk

Everyone had always told me I had to see alpine flowers, since I was writing about flowers, and I had never seen these. So I happened to be teaching a class at the University of Colorado, and I got to go for hikes that took me there. But my perspective was most often down at ground level, trying to see quite tiny exquisite flowers. — Martha Ronk

One of the things I've always thought is that if I were to write a poetics, it would have to do with the poetics of failure, and the way in which all the things that you claim or that you try for are already based on the limits of language. — Martha Ronk

I've always been interested in the fragility of things, and with special urgency now because of climate change, but also because of the accidents of reading. — Martha Ronk

I'm in California, so I know people who are natives who tell me there's lots of weather here, but it's not the same as being in Vermont. Since I grew up on the East Coast I miss that weather all the time. You'd think I'd get used to not having it, but I don't. — Martha Ronk

I know that in some ways I operate from a kind of antiquated interest in imagery, while many contemporary poets are not so interested in imagery. I think part of it is my training, and just my visual sense of things. — Martha Ronk

I want literature to open all the doors that I can't open by myself, and to allow me to see things that I wouldn't otherwise see. — Martha Ronk

I'm really interested in what you remember, how you remember, what your perspective is as opposed to somebody else's. — Martha Ronk

One of the reasons I like immersing myself in different texts, putting myself in the company of other writers, is that they do change your vocabulary. They change what you write about or they change the length of lines. — Martha Ronk

You can get a sense of the wonderful power of framing by holding your fingers up in a kind of square, walking around the room and framing it differently - how that changes the nature of what you think the room is like. — Martha Ronk

Shakespeare, of course, makes us ever aware of transience, not only in the sonnets, but also powerfully in his plays - spectacles for a brief period of time and then gone, as when Prospero describes the pageant fading, leaving "not a rack behind." — Martha Ronk

Often poets fall into groups that exclude others, and don't pay attention to those who write in different ways. It seems so limited to me. — Martha Ronk

The days start to be charged not because tomorrow you're leaving, but because in three weeks you're leaving. The future impinges. So you start to think about the frame. — Martha Ronk

Life Lessons by Martha Ronk

  1. Martha Ronk's work emphasizes the importance of understanding the complexities of life, and the need to be open to the possibilities of change and growth.
  2. Her poetry explores the power of language to convey emotion and meaning, and encourages readers to think deeply about the world around them.
  3. Her work also highlights the value of self-reflection, and encourages readers to take time to reflect on their own lives and experiences.
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