William Stafford Quotes About Writing

We have collected for you the TOP of William Stafford's best quotes about Writing! Here are collected all the quotes about Writing starting from the birthday of the Poet – January 17, 1914! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 9 sayings of William Stafford about Writing. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
All quotes by William Stafford: Giving Language Waiting Writing more...
  • Writing itself is one of the great, free human activities. There is scope for individuality, and elation, and discovery. In writing, for the person who follows with trust and forgiveness what occurs to him, the world remains always ready and deep, an inexhaustible environment, with the combined vividness of an actuality and flexibility of a dream. Working back and forth between experience and thought, writers have more than space and time can offer. They have the whole unexplored realm of human vision.

    Dream   Writing   Space  
  • My question is "when did other people give up the idea of being a poet?" You know, when we are kids we make up things, we write, and for me the puzzle is not that some people are still writing, the real question is why did the other people stop?

    Giving Up   Real   Kids  
    William Stafford (1978). “Writing the Australian Crawl: Views on the Writer's Vocation”
  • I have this feeling of wending my way or plundering through a mysterious jungle of possibilities when I am writing. This jungle has not been explored by previous writers. It never will be explored. It's endlessly varying as we progress through the experience of time. These words that occur to me come out of my relation to the language which is developing even as I am using it.

  • I don't see writing as a communication of something already discovered, as "truths" already known. Rather, I see writing as a job of experiment. It's like any discovery job; you don't know what's going to happen until you try it.

  • You shouldn't have standards that inhibit you from writing It really doesn't make any difference if you are good or bad today. The assessment of the product is something that happens after you've done it.

  • A student comes to me with a piece of writing, holds it out, says, 'Is this good?' A whole sequence of emergencies goes off in my mind. That's not a question to ask anyone but yourself.

    Writing   Mind   Pieces  
  • What you have to do as a writer is . . . write day in and day out no matter what happens.

    William Stafford, Paul Merchant, Vincent Wixon (2003). “The answers are inside the mountains: meditations on the writing life”, Univ of Michigan Pr
  • A writer is someone who has found a process that will bring about new things.

    Writing   Process   Found  
    William Stafford (1978). “Writing the Australian Crawl: Views on the Writer's Vocation”
  • A student brings something to discuss, saying, "I don't know whether this is really good, or whether I should throw it in the wastebasket." The assumption is that one or the other choice is the right move. No. Almost everything we say or think or do - or write - comes in that spacious human area bounded by something this side of the sublime and something above the unforgivable.

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William Stafford quotes about: Giving Language Waiting Writing