Top 8 Quotes & Sayings by Helen Bevington

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American poet Helen Bevington.
Last updated on November 7, 2024.
Helen Bevington

Helen Smith Bevington was an American poet, prose writer, and educator. Her most noted book, Charley Smith's Girl (1965), was "banned by the library in the small town of Worcester, N.Y., where she grew up, because the book tells of her minister father's having been divorced by her mother for affairs that he was carrying on with younger female parishioners."

American - Poet | 1906 - 2001
The poor South. Already guilty of slavery, it became guilty of cigarettes.
nobody alive or dead deserves to be called a poetess.
being asked to decide between your passion for work and your passion for children was like being asked by your doctor whether you preferred him to remove your brain or your heart.
I always return to Paris, taking my selves along - past self, customary self, the self I never had. — © Helen Bevington
I always return to Paris, taking my selves along - past self, customary self, the self I never had.
I don't feel like a survivor. I feel left behind.
It seems an odd idea to my students that poetry, like all art, leads us away from itself, back to the world in which we live. It furnishes the vision. It shows with intense clarity what is already there.
I had a perfect confidence, still unshaken, in books. If you read enough you would reach the point of no return. You would cross over and arrive on the safe side. There you would drink the strong waters and become addicted, perhaps demented - but a Reader.
poetry ... shows with a sudden intense clarity what is already there.
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