Conrad Aiken wrote in a letter:
Is there any getting away from the fact that even the slightest step in literature, from the less to the more “poetic” is a step from the less to the more “arranged?” “Arranged” in the richest sense -- embracing selection, order, emphasis. To “arrange” at all is, if you like, artificial: but it is an essential of all art. . . . I quite agree with you that the “less arranged” has its own cool sort of charm, adapts itself admirably to certain moods more colloquial and less intense; but I think its range is, in comparison with that of the “more arranged,” infinitely small -- Theoretically, one should seek in a work of art the utmost complexity, or arrangement, consistent with brevity -- should one not?
(Quoted from page 263 of The Life of the Creative Spirit, by H. Charles Romesburg.)
For a brief biography of Conrad Aiken, click here. For images of or relating to Conrad Aiken, click here.
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