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It used to be that phrases and lines would come into my head, often many of them in a period of five days or a week, and maybe I didn't know what I was talking about, but the words had a kind of heaviness or deliciousness to them. -- Donald Hall
It used to be that one poet in each generation performed poems in public. In the twenties, it was Vachel Lindsay, who sometimes dropped to his knees in the middle of a poem. Then Robert Frost took over, and made his living largely on the road. -- Donald Hall
By 1968, I had lived 10 years in Michigan. Gradually, I had come to love watching Detroit's baseball club in its small, beautiful, antiquated Tiger Stadium - a baseball park as fine as Fenway Park or Wrigley Field, though it never got the adulatory press. -- Donald Hall
Friends die, friends become demented, friends quarrel, friends drift with old age into silence. -- Donald Hall
A fellowship to Oxford acquainted me with the depths of English cooking. By the twenty-first century, London's best restaurants are as good as Paris's, but not in the 1950s. -- Donald Hall
My parents were willing to let me follow my nose, do what I wanted to do, and they supported my interest by buying the books that I wanted for birthdays and Christmas, almost always poetry books. -- Donald Hall
Can build plane ... Delivery about three months. -- Donald Hall
Love is like sounds, whose last reverberations / Hang on the leaves of strange trees, on mountains / As distant as the curving of the earth, / Where the snow hangs still in the middle of the air.
-from Love is Like Sounds -- Donald Hall
On September twentieth every year, I got to choose my menu - meatloaf, corn niblets, and rice were followed by candles on chocolate cake with vanilla icing and a scoop of Brock-Hall ice cream. -- Donald Hall
The form of free verse is as binding and as liberating as the form of a rondeau. -- Donald Hall
There are books all around me ... I don't read as much as I used to, but I always have a book or two going. -- Donald Hall
We learned how to love each other by loving together
good things wholly outside each other. -- Donald Hall
We are all dying
of something, always,
but our degrees of
awareness differ
- from Tubes -- Donald Hall
Joe DiMaggio batting sometimes gave the impression, the suggestion that the old rules and dimensions of baseball no longer applied to him, and that the game had at last grown unfairly easy. -- Donald Hall
For most baseball fans, maybe oldest is always best. We love baseball because it seizes and retains the past, like the snowy village inside a glass paperweight. -- Donald Hall
My problem isn't death but old age. I fret about my lack of balance, my buckling knee, my difficulty standing up and sitting down. -- Donald Hall
Baseball, because of its continuity over the space of America and the time of America, is a place where memory gathers. -- Donald Hall
I don't publish anything I haven't worked over 100 times. -- Donald Hall
I've had someone, my assistant, type for me. I've done it that way for more than 50 years because I type with one finger, although quite rapidly. -- Donald Hall
In 1952, I recited aloud for the first time, booming in Oxford's Sheldonian Theatre from a bad poem that had won a prize. I was twenty-three. -- Donald Hall
Divorce was miserable, as it always is, and we divorce for the same reasons we marry. -- Donald Hall
I watch a white landscape that turns pale green, dark green, yellow and red, brown under bare branches, until snow falls again. -- Donald Hall
Today when I begin writing I'm aware: something that I don't understand drives this engine. -- Donald Hall
I grew up in the suburbs of Connecticut - during the school time of year - but I preferred it in New Hampshire. I preferred the culture, the landscape, the relative solitude. I've always loved it. -- Donald Hall
When I was nineteen,
I told a thirty-
year-old man what a
fool I had been when
I was seventeen.
'We were always,' he
said glancing down, 'a
fool two years ago. -- Donald Hall
One Oxford poet confessed to me that I had been scary because I talked American and wore tennis shoes. -- Donald Hall
Some days I feel good about my work, and sometimes I feel I've never written anything worthwhile. That's par for the course. -- Donald Hall
Opposites are attracted when each one is anxious about its own character. -- Donald Hall
I was at Harvard with a whole bunch of poets, and that was very rare. They published a lot of books because there was an excitement after the war that translated into poetry. -- Donald Hall
When I finished my initial year at Oxford, I flew home to marry Kirby, who had been my girlfriend in college. We had met on a blind date. -- Donald Hall
After a couple of years of public high school, I went to Exeter - an insane conglomeration of adolescent males in the wilderness, all of whom claimed to hate poetry. -- Donald Hall
However alert we are, antiquity remains an unknown, unanticipated galaxy. -- Donald Hall
Horace, when he wrote the Ars Poetica, recommended that poets keep their poems home for ten years; don't let them go, don't publish them until you have kept them around for ten years: by that time, they ought to stop moving on you; by that time, you ought to have them right. -- Donald Hall
Each year the big garden grew smaller and Jane - who grew flowers by choice, not corn or stringbeans - worked at the vegetables more than I did. Each winter I dreamed crops, dreamed marvels of canning ... and each summer I largely failed. Shamefaced, I planted no garden at all. -- Donald Hall
I really feel better about aging at the age of 86 than I did at 70. -- Donald Hall
Both my New Hampshire great-grandfathers wore facial hair: the Copperhead who fought in the war and the sheep farmer too old for combat. -- Donald Hall
I don't have a computer. I never have had one. -- Donald Hall
I'm happy to feed the squirrels - tree rats with the agility of point guards - but in fair weather, they frighten my finches. They leap from snowbank to porch to feeder and stuff their cheek pouches with chickadee feed. -- Donald Hall
Baseball is fathers and sons. Football is brothers beating each other up in the backyard. -- Donald Hall
Less is more, in prose as in architecture. -- Donald Hall
As I grew older - collapsing into my seventies, glimpsing ahead the cliffs of the eighties, colliding into eighty-five - poetry abandoned me. -- Donald Hall
We die of habits,
deplorable ones
like merely living:
finally fatal.
- from Tubes -- Donald Hall
In December of 1952, my first wife, Kirby, and I left Vienna to drive through the Russian sector of Austria into Yugoslavia. -- Donald Hall
In 2013 there were 7,427 poetry readings in April, many on a Thursday. For anyone born in 1928 who pays attention to poetry, the numerousness is astonishing. In April 1948, there were 15 readings in the United States, 12 by Robert Frost. So I claim. The figures are imaginary, but you get the point. -- Donald Hall
Chipmunks jump, and
greensnakes slither.
Rather burst than
not be with her.
Bluebirds fight, but
bears are stronger.
We've got fifty
years or longer.
Hoptoads hop, but
hogs are fatter.
Nothing else but
Us can matter. -- Donald Hall
In the fifties, no one wore beards. In Eisenhower's day, as in the time of the Founding Fathers, all chins were smooth, while during the Civil War, beards were as common as sepsis. -- Donald Hall
Sweet death, small son, our instrument
Of immortality,
Your cries and hungers document
Our bodily decay. -- Donald Hall
Every now and then I meet someone certain of personal greatness. I want to pat this person on the shoulder and mutter comforting words: "Things will get better! You won't always feel so depressed! Cheer up!" -- Donald Hall
When I was 12, I had a fondness for horror movies like the 'Wolfman.' The boy next door said I should read Poe. -- Donald Hall
We approached Athens from the north in early twilight, climbing a hill. When we reached its peak, we were dazzled to look down and see the Acropolis struck by one beam of the setting sun, as if posing for a picture. -- Donald Hall
Not everything in old age is grim. I haven't walked through an airport for years, and wheelchairs are the way to travel. -- Donald Hall
It's almost relaxing to know I'll die fairly soon, as it's a comfort not to obsess about my next orgasm. -- Donald Hall
You think that their dying is the worst thing that could happen. Then they stay dead. -- Donald Hall
To grow old is to lose everything. -- Donald Hall
When I lived summers at my grandparents' farm, haying with my grandfather from 1938 to 1945, my dear grandmother Kate cooked abominably. For noon dinners, we might eat three days of fricasseed chicken from a setting hen that had boiled twelve hours. -- Donald Hall
In anything you write - in a short story, a poem - there has to be a counter-motion; it can't go all in one direction. -- Donald Hall
When I lament and darken over my diminishments, I accomplish nothing. It's better to sit at the window all day, pleased to watch birds, barns, and flowers. -- Donald Hall
If the poet wants to be a poet, the poet must force the poet to revise. If the poet doesn't wish to revise, let the poet abandon poetry and take up stamp-collecting or real estate. -- Donald Hall
I read poems for the pleasure of the mouth. My heart is in my mouth, and the sound of poetry is the way in." ~from an interview in Narrative magazine -- Donald Hall
Nothing I do will make death disappear
Or let your shudder or your knowledge go.
See the world whole, and see it clearly then,
A globe of dirt crusted with bones of men.
If we walk, we walk on graves.
- from Shudder -- Donald Hall
I want to sleep like the birds then wake to write you again without hope that you read me. -- Donald Hall
When I was a child, I loved old people. My New Hampshire grandfather was my model human being. -- Donald Hall
Poetry is what I've done my whole life. And every important thing in my life had found itself into poems. -- Donald Hall
When we put words together - adjective with noun, noun with verb, verb with object - we start to talk to each other. -- Donald Hall
To desire to write poems that endure-we undertake such a goal certain of two things: that in all likelihood we will fail, and if we succeed we will never know it -- Donald Hall
I don't know where a poem comes from until after I've lived with it a long time. I've a notion that a poem comes from absolutely everything that every happened to you. -- Donald Hall
Poetry offers works of art that are beautiful, like paintings, which are my second favorite work of the art, but there are also works of art that embody emotion and that are kind of school for feeling. They teach how to feel, and they do this by the means of their beauty of language. -- Donald Hall
Virtually every beginning poet hurts himself by an addiction to adjectives. Verbs are by far the most important things for poems-especially wonderful tough monosyllables like "gasp" and "cry." Nouns are the next most important. Adjectives tend to be useless. -- Donald Hall
As Henry Moore carved
or modelled his sculpture every day,
he strove to surpass Donatello
4. and failed, but woke the next morning
elated for another try. -- Donald Hall
Your presence in this house is almost as painful and enormous as your absence. -- Donald Hall
Although I was paid a salary in Ann Arbor, my wife and children and I drank powdered milk at six cents a quart instead of the stuff that came in bottles. I was a tightwad. -- Donald Hall
Sound had always been my portal to poetry, but in the beginning, sound was imagined through the eye. -- Donald Hall
In football they measure forty-yard sprints. Nobody runs forty yards in basketball. Maybe you run the ninety-four feet of the court; then you stop, not on a dime, but on Miss Liberty's torch. In football you run over somebody's face. -- Donald Hall
Every afternoon, I shut the door of my bedroom to write: Poetry was secret, dangerous, wicked and delicious. -- Donald Hall
New poems no longer come to me with their prodigies of metaphor and assonance. Prose endures. I feel the circles grow smaller, and old age is a ceremony of losses, which is, on the whole, preferable to dying at forty-seven or fifty-two. -- Donald Hall
I have to do draft after draft ... It takes me a long time, but I love doing it, and I have to do it every day, or I feel slack. -- Donald Hall
Words seem like drops of water in a stream that has its own wholeness and its own motion. -- Donald Hall
I have seen so many poets who were famous, who won all sorts of prizes, disappear with their death. I write as good as I can and don't try to turn that into some hope for a future that I could never know. -- Donald Hall
Prose is not so dependent on sound. The line of poetry, with the breaking of the line - to me, sound is the kind of doorway into poetry. And my sense of sound, or my ability to control it, lapsed or grew less. -- Donald Hall
Baseball is continuous, like nothing else among American things, an endless game of repeated summers, joining the long generations of all the fathers and all the sons. -- Donald Hall
One day, of course, no one will remember what I remember. -- Donald Hall
I write longhand; I make changes longhand, and I have an assistant who types it up. She lives 70 yards away. Every afternoon, I have a case I leave out on the porch, and she brings it back the next morning. -- Donald Hall
Contentment is work so engrossing that you do not know that you are working. -- Donald Hall
I wish you were that birch rising from the clump behind you, and I the gray oak alongside. -- Donald Hall
If work is no antidote to death, nor a denial of it, death is a powerful stimulus to work. Get done what you can. -- Donald Hall
Many years, I would publish four books - an anthology, a book of criticism, a new book of poems, a book of essays. -- Donald Hall
Exiled by death from people we have known,
We are reduced again by years, and try
To call them back and clothe the barren bone,
Not to admit that people ever die.
-from Exile -- Donald Hall
Obviously, death is ahead of me. I don't look forward to dying one little bit. But, you know, I simply don't worry about it because it's going to happen to me as it does to anybody. -- Donald Hall
Generation on generation, your neck rubbed the windowsill
of the stall, smoothing the wood as the sea smooths glass. -- Donald Hall
I live in the house my great-grandfather moved to in 1865 ... I spent all my summers here as a kid haying with my grandfather, and it was my favorite place in the world. -- Donald Hall
Of course newspaper sportswriting is mostly terrible - and of course it is usually the best writing in the paper. -- Donald Hall
I see no reason to spend your life writing poems unless your goal is to write great poems. -- Donald Hall
I think my very best work came out when I was about 60, not when I was 20. I was publishing all the time when I was in my 20s, and some of those poems I still like. And there were a few after 60, and in my 70s, that I like. But they became fewer and fewer. -- Donald Hall
Each season, my balance gets worse, and sometimes I fall. I no longer cook for myself but microwave widower food, mostly Stouffer's. My fingers are clumsy and slow with buttons. -- Donald Hall
If our goal is to write poetry, the only way we are likely to be any good is to try to be as great as the best. -- Donald Hall
In 1975, I quit my tenure, and we moved from Ann Arbor to New Hampshire. It was daunting to pay for groceries and the mortgage by freelance writing - but it worked, and I loved doing it. -- Donald Hall
The greatest kindness would put a bullet in his bright eye. -- Donald Hall
The pleasure we feel, reading a poem, is our assurance of its integrity. -- Donald Hall
And every year, Ronald McDonald takes the Pulitzer. -- Donald Hall
To grow old is to lose everything. Aging, everybody knows it. Even when we are young, we glimpse it sometimes, and nod our heads when a grandfather dies. Then we row for years on the midsummer pond, ignorant and content. -- Donald Hall
I expect my immortality will last about six seconds after my funeral. -- Donald Hall
Many times I have written something, and after it was published, I understood what I was saying. -- Donald Hall
I felt the need to be more open and expressive of my feelings, not just about the hills and the countryside, but about the daily life. -- Donald Hall
But Blake's voices returned to dictate revisions. -- Donald Hall
For better or worse, poetry is my life. -- Donald Hall
Mere literary talent is common; what is rare is endurance, the continuing desire to work hard at writing. -- Donald Hall
Worship is not love. -- Donald Hall
I've always felt that poetry was particularly erotic, more than prose was ... I say that you read poems not with your eyes and not with your ears, but with your mouth. You taste it. -- Donald Hall
As I look at the barn in my ninth decade, I see the no-smoking sign, rusted and tilting on the unpainted gray clapboard. My grandfather, born in 1875, milked his cattle there a century ago. -- Donald Hall
We made in those days tiny identical rooms inside our bodies which the men who uncover our graves will find in a thousand years shining and whole. -- Donald Hall
I'd heard of writers who say they hate to write. Not me. I love to do it. -- Donald Hall
In my life, I've seen enormous increase in the consumption of poetry. When I was young, there were virtually no poetry readings. -- Donald Hall
Even famous poets such as Marianne Moore and William Carlos Williams were rarely asked to read their poems. -- Donald Hall
Great literature, if we read it well, opens us up to the world and makes us more sensitive to it, as if we acquired eyes that could see through things and ears that could hear smaller sounds. -- Donald Hall
When it comes to poetry, I think partly the numbers of people attempting to write poems is probably a result or the reaction to technology. -- Donald Hall
Life is hell but death is worse.
- from No Deposit -- Donald Hall
Everything important always begins from something trivial. -- Donald Hall