Lucille Clifton Quotes

On this page you can find the TOP of Lucille Clifton's best quotes! We hope you will find some sayings from Poet Lucille Clifton's in our collection, which will inspire you to new achievements! There are currently 39 quotes on this page collected since June 27, 1936! Share our collection of quotes with your friends on social media so that they can find something to inspire them!
All quotes by Lucille Clifton: Children Culture Eyes Universe Writing more...
  • I write from my knowledge not my lack, from my strength not my weakness. I am not interested if anyone knows whether or not I am familiar with big words, I am interested in trying to render big ideas in a simple way. I am interested in being understood not admired.

  • wishes for sons by Lucille Clifton i wish them cramps. i wish them a strange town and the last tampon. I wish them no 7-11. i wish them one week early and wearing a white skirt. i wish them one week late. later i wish them hot flashes and clots like you wouldn't believe. let the flashes come when they meet someone special. let the clots come when they want to. let them think they have accepted arrogance in the universe, then bring them to gynecologists not unlike themselves.

    Believe  
    Lucille Clifton (1991). “Quilting: poems, 1987-1990”, BOA Editions Ltd.
  • may you kiss the wind then turn from it certain that it will love your back

    Lucille Clifton (1991). “Quilting: poems, 1987-1990”, BOA Editions Ltd.
  • the lost women I need to know their names those women I would have walked with, jauntily the way men go in groups swinging their arms, and the ones those sweating women whom I would have joined After a hard game to chew the fat what would we have called each other laughing joking into our beer? where are my gangs, my teams, my mislaid sisters? all the women who could have known me, where in the world are their names?

    Lucille Clifton (1993). “Next: new poems”, Bookslinger
  • All people, even one's own children, come with baggage. When they're little, you have to help them carry it. But when they grow up, you have to do that difficult thing of setting their baggage down and taking up your own again.

  • Come celebrate with me that every day something has tried to kill me and has failed.

    Lucille Clifton (2013). “The Book of Light”, p.25, Copper Canyon Press
  • The end of a thing, is never the end, something is always being born like a year of a baby.

  • Poems come out of wonder, not out of knowing.

  • I do not feel inhibited or bound by what I am. That does not mean that I have never had bad scenes relating to being Black and/or a woman, it means that other people’s craziness has not managed to make me crazy.

  • What they call you is one thing. What you answer to is something else.

    "Fooling with Words (Part One)". billmoyers.com. May 28, 1999.
  • My Mama Moved Among the Days My Mama moved among the days like a dreamwalker in a field; seemed like what she touched was here seemed like what touched her couldn't hold, she got us almost through the high grass then seemed like she turned around and ran right back in right back on in

    Lucille Clifton, “My Mama Moved Among The Days”
  • If i should enter the house and speak with my own voice, at last, about its awful furnitutre, pulling apart the covering over the dusty bodies; the randy father, the husband holding ice in his hand like a blessing, the mother bleeding into herself and the small imploding girl, i say if i should walk into that web, who will come flying after me, leaping tall buildings? you?

    Lucille Clifton (2013). “The Book of Light”, p.41, Copper Canyon Press
  • I think that were beginning to remember that the first poets didn't come out of a classroom, that poetry began when somebody walked off of a savanna or out of a cave and looked up at the sky with wonder and said, "Ahhh." That was the first poem.

  • Intellect doesn't translate across cultures; intuition does.

  • Tell the truth... maybe just to see clearly, as clearly as possible.

  • don’t write out of what I know; I write out of what I wonder. I think most artists create art in order to explore, not to give the answers. Poetry and art are not about answers to me; they are about questions.

  • Every pair of eyes facing you has probably experienced something you could not endure.

  • People wish to be poets more than they wish to write poetry, and that's a mistake. One should wish to celebrate more than one wishes to be celebrated.

  • You cannot play for safety and make art.

    "Come Celebrate with Me: Lucille Clifton and David Mura". Interview with Bill Moyers, billmoyers.com. March 22, 1995.
  • We cannot create what we can't imagine.

  • blessing the boats (at saint mary’s) may the tide that is entering even now the lip of our understanding carry you out beyond the face of fear may you kiss the wind then turn from it certain that it will love your back may you open your eyes to water water waving forever and may you in your innocence sail through this to that

    Lucille Clifton (1991). “Quilting: poems, 1987-1990”, BOA Editions Ltd.
  • Things don't fall apart. Things hold. Lines connect in thin ways that last and last and lives become generations made out of pictures and words just kept.

    Fall  
    Lucille Clifton (1976). “Generations: a memoir”, Random House (NY)
  • I am a black woman poet and I sound like one.

  • Even when the universe made it quite clear to me that I was mistaken in my certainties ... I did not break. The shattering of my sureties did not shatter me.

  • the lesson of the falling leaves the leaves believe such letting go is love such love is faith such faith is grace such grace is god i agree with the leaves

    Lucille Clifton (1974). “An ordinary woman”
  • they ask me to remember but they want me to remember their memories and I keep on remembering mine

    Lucille Clifton (1993). “Next: new poems”, Bookslinger
  • I don't go get a poem. It calls me and I accept it.

  • In the bigger scheme of things the universe is not asking us to do something, the universe is asking us to be something. And that's a whole different thing.

  • Poetry is a matter of life, not just a matter of language.

  • telling the truth about children's lives is radical.

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  • We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 39 quotes from the Poet Lucille Clifton, starting from June 27, 1936! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!
    Lucille Clifton quotes about: Children Culture Eyes Universe Writing