Finding a quote for you…
VS

Vernon Scannell

All Quotes by Vernon Scannell

“Well, here I suppose is my life, or part of it, by which I would wish to be judged... poems which have been written from a sense of compulsion, a real need to explore and articulate experiences which have been important to me.”
— Vernon Scannell
“All I am is in my verse.”
— Vernon Scannell
“The poet , absorbed in the solving of formal problems, the struggle with slippery eels of language, has no time for dissimulation and he tells us more about himself than he knows.”
— Vernon Scannell
“I believe one of the functions of language used poetically is to explore experiences and hidden sources of behavior in a way that will not be tedious to the reader.”
— Vernon Scannell
“The authentic British poetry of the second world war was not a poetry of protest, still less was it inspired by patriotic enthusiasm”
— Vernon Scannell
“The servicemen of the 1939 - 45 war could not be disillusioned because they held not illusions to start with, the most common mood found everywhere was one of dour resolution, skeptical, resigned.”
— Vernon Scannell
“The best poetry of the second World war written by both British & American servicemen need not fear comparison with the generally more well highly regarded work of the 1914-18 poets.”
— Vernon Scannell
“The poet's need to try to find his own voice , a recognizable individual voice that carries the signature of his voice in almost every line . . . the unique tone being the consequence of the poet's rigorous search for truth ( his truth(, his absolute fidelity to the nature of the experience he was exploring.”
— Vernon Scannell
“The practice of reading aloud did do something towards attuning my ear .The subtle cadences of Elizabethan blank verse taught me more than the substantial study of English prosody could do at that time.”
— Vernon Scannell
“I was the living proof of T. S Eliot's assertion that poetry can communicate before it is understood.the conscious,analytical part of my response was lulled into a kind of stupor by the rhythms and richness of the imagery of the poetry I was reading.”
— Vernon Scannell
“The proper act of reading of a poem was not an act of passive submission but one of collaboration with its author.”
— Vernon Scannell