Top 37 Quotes & Sayings by Norman MacCaig

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Scottish poet Norman MacCaig.
Last updated on September 17, 2024.
Norman MacCaig

Norman Alexander MacCaig DLitt was a Scottish poet and teacher. His poetry, in modern English, is known for its humour, simplicity of language and great popularity.

However, I learned something. I thought that if the young person, the student, has poetry in him or her, to offer them help is like offering a propeller to a bird.
In fact a lot of them I think are absolute baloney. Those Charles Olsens and people like that. At first I was interested in seeing what they were up to, what they were doing, why they were doing it. They never moved me in the way that one is moved by true poetry.
It's like breathing in and out to me. It's like having a conversation with someone who isn't there. Because it has to be addressed to somebody - not a particular person, or very rarely.
And it's impossible for me to read Henry James.
I don't think of myself all the time.
And if they haven't got poetry in them, there's nothing you can do that will produce it.
All those authors there, most of whom of course I've never met. That's the poetry side, that's the prose side, that's the fishing and miscellaneous behind me. You get an affection for books that you've enjoyed.
When I go fishing I like to know that there's nobody within five miles of me. — © Norman MacCaig
When I go fishing I like to know that there's nobody within five miles of me.
But you'd have a job to find many of my poems which would seem to be very influenced by a particular person.
I only keep books that I like very much. Otherwise I'd throw them out.
But I hang on to books. I love them. I even think they're very nice decor in a room - far better than paintings... That's not quite true!
People haven't got the interest in long long works these days. A lack of interest which I share.
I said I have no powers of invention. Well, I also have no powers of mimicry.
There are some friends you don't meet for twenty years and when you meet them again it's as if no twenty years has happened - you're lucky when that happens. I feel the same about books.
When I was a teacher, teachers would come into my classroom and admire my desk on which lay nothing whatever, whereas theirs were heaped with papers and books.
I used to have a great love for Dostoyevsky and Tolstoy, the big boys of the last century.
Well, I love fishing. I wouldn't kill a fly myself but I've no hesitation in killing a fish. A lot of men are like that. No bother. Out you come. Thump. And that's not the only reason.
I don't care whether a book is a first edition or not. I'm not a bibliophile in that word's natural sense. — © Norman MacCaig
I don't care whether a book is a first edition or not. I'm not a bibliophile in that word's natural sense.
I'm very gregarious, but I love being in the hills on my own.
I never think about poetry except when I'm writing it. I mean my poetry.
I used to fish the Border rivers, but nowadays you have to queue up for a shot and I can't stand that.
And the second question, can poetry be taught? I didn't think so. — © Norman MacCaig
And the second question, can poetry be taught? I didn't think so.
When I was asked to be Writer in Residence at Edinburgh I thought, you can't teach poetry. This is ridiculous.
And some poets are far better read off the page because they're very bad speakers. I'm thinking of one in particular whom I won't name, a good poet, and he reads in such a dry, boring way, your eyes start drooping.
I was very interested in American poetry for many years. Much less now.
A terrible thing about getting oldish is that your friends start dying, and in the last ten years I have lost seven or eight of my closest.
When I talk of hearing a poet's voice speaking, I always think of it as in the presence of the man.
Anybody who writes doesn't like to be misunderstood.
And in a way, that's been a help to me, because I take great passions for a particular poet - sometimes it lasts for many years, sometimes only for a while. This happens to everybody.
If I wrote a play with four characters every single one of them would talk like me regardless of age or sex.
All I write about is what's happened to me and to people I know, and the better I know them, the more likely they are to be written about.
I find it's impossible for me to read Proust. — © Norman MacCaig
I find it's impossible for me to read Proust.
Well, I'm a light traveller. I chuck things away.
I learned words, I learned words; but half of them died from lack of exercise. And the ones I use often look at me with a look that whispers, Liar.
In some ways I'm a reticent man, and for quite a number of years there wasn't very much of my real true deep feelings in my writing.
I just didn't want to shoot other people.
Landscape is my religion. ...God in a green legend, I lean over the pool In a testament of leaves. I dangle my twinkling mood Before me in a cool cave roofed with branches And floored with a skin of water.
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