Quotes by James Schuyler
One tends to write beyond what's needed.
To change your phrase somewhat, I know that I like an art where disparate elements form an entity.
In the past I have declined to comment on my own work: because, it seems to me, a poem is what it is; because a poem is itself a definition, and to try to redefine it is to be apt to falsify it; and because the author is the person least able to consider his work objectively.
Well, if this is poetry, I'm certainly never going to write any myself.
The aim of the poet, or other artist, is first to make something; and it's impossible to make something out of words and not communicate.
However, intention needn't enter in, and if a reader sees things in a religious way, and the work is dogmatically acceptable, then I don't see why it should not be interpreted in that way, as well as in others.
However, if a poem can be reduced to a prose sentence, there can't be much to it.
It is always pleasant to learn that someone takes an interest in a work which one enjoyed writing.
I do not usually revise much, though I often cut, particularly the end or toward the end of a poem.
It seems to me that readers sometimes make the genesis of a poem more mysterious than it is (by that I perhaps mean, think of it as something outside their own experience).