Randall Jarrell Quote

The poet needs to be deluded about his poems—for who can be sure that it is delusion? In his strongest hours the public hardly exists for the writer; he does what he ought to do, has to do, and if afterwards some Public wishes to come and crown him with laurel crowns, well, let it! if critics wish to tell people all that he isn't, well, let them—he knows what he is. But at night when he can't get to sleep it seems to him that it is what he is, his own particular personal quality, that he is being disliked for. It is this that the future will like him for, if it likes him for anything; but will it like him for anything? The poet's hope is in posterity, but it is a pale hope; and now that posterity itself has become a pale hope...


"Poets, Critics, and Readers", p. 227 - No Other Book: Selected Essays (1999)


The poet needs to be deluded about his poems—for who can be sure that it is delusion? In his strongest hours the public hardly exists for the...

The poet needs to be deluded about his poems—for who can be sure that it is delusion? In his strongest hours the public hardly exists for the...

The poet needs to be deluded about his poems—for who can be sure that it is delusion? In his strongest hours the public hardly exists for the...

The poet needs to be deluded about his poems—for who can be sure that it is delusion? In his strongest hours the public hardly exists for the...