The heart lies to itself because it must.
JACK GILBERT, "Naked Except for the Jewelry"
- We are resident inside with the machinery,
- a glimmering spread throughout the apparatus.
- We exist with a wind whispering inside
- and our moon flexing. Amid the ducts,
- inside the basilica of bones. The flesh
- is a neighborhood, but not the life.
JACK GILBERT, "Kunstkammer"
One of the great dangers is familiarity.
JACK GILBERT, The Paris Review, fall/winter 2005
Everyone forgets that Icarus also flew.
JACK GILBERT, "Failing and Flying"
- How astonishing it is that language can almost mean,
- and frightening that it does not quite.
JACK GILBERT, "The Forgotten Dialect of the Heart"
You have to write a poem the way you ride a horseyou have to know what to do with it. You have to be in charge of a horse or it will eat all dayyou’ll never get back to the barn. But if you tell the horse how to be a horse, if you force it, the horse will probably break a leg. The horse and rider have to be together.
JACK GILBERT, The Paris Review, fall/winter 2005
We must have the stubbornness to accept our gladness in the ruthless furnace of this world.
JACK GILBERT, "A Brief for the Defense"
- I ask myself what
- is the sound of women? What is the word for
- that still thing I have hunted inside them
- for so long? Deep inside the avalanche of joy,
- the thing deeper in the dark, and deeper still
- in the bed where we are lost. Deeper, deeper
- down where a woman's heart is holding its breath,
- where something very far away in that body
- is becoming something we don't have a name for.
JACK GILBERT, "Happening Apart from What's Happening Around It"
You can't go to Paris anymore; it's not there. Greece and Japan aren't there anymore. The places I've loved no longer exist.
JACK GILBERT, The Paris Review, fall/winter 2005
- We are all burning in time, but each is consumed
- at his own speed.
JACK GILBERT, "Burning (Andante Non Troppo)"
I failed high school; I got into college by mistake. I failed freshman English eight times. I was interested in learning, but I wanted to understand too, which meant I was fighting with the teachers all the time. Everybody accepted the fact that I was smart but I wouldn’t obey. I didn’t believe what they said unless they could prove it.
JACK GILBERT, The Paris Review, fall/winter 2005
- I have been easy with trees
- Too long.
- Too familiar with mountains.
- Joy has been a habit.
- Now
- Suddenly
- This rain.
The hard part for me is to find the poema poem that matters. To find what the poem knows that’s special. I may think of writing about the same thing that everyone does, but I really like to write a poem that hasn’t been written. And I don’t mean its shape. I want to experience or discover ways of feeling that are fresh. I love it when I have perceived something fresh about being human and being happy.
JACK GILBERT, The Paris Review, fall/winter 2005
I dream of lost vocabularies that might express some of what we no longer can.
JACK GILBERT, "The Forgotten Dialect of the Heart"
You have to understand I didn't visit places; I lived places. It makes all the difference in the world.
JACK GILBERT, The Paris Review, fall/winter 2005
- Can you understand being alone so long
- you would go out in the middle of the night
- and put a bucket into the well
- so you could feel something down there
- tug at the other end of the rope?
JACK GILBERT, "The Abandoned Valley"
- I believe Icarus was not failing as he fell,
- but just coming to the end of his triumph.
JACK GILBERT, Failing and Flying
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