W. S. Merwin speaks of certain urges in writing poetry that are common to nearly all poets:
There is an affinity which everyone must have noticed between poetry – certain kinds and moments of it – on the one hand, and such succinct forms as the proverb, the aphorism, the riddle, on the other. . . . There are qualities that they obviously have in common: an urge to finality of utterance, for example, and to be irreducible and unchangeable. The urge to brevity is not perhaps as typical of poetry as we would sometimes wish, but the urge to be self-contained, to be whole, is perhaps another form of the same thing, or can be, and it is related to the irreversibility in the words that is a mark of poetry.
(Quoted on page 18 of Understanding W. S. Merwin, by H. L. Hix. University of South Carolina Press, 1997.)
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