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Muriel Rukeyser

Read through the most famous quotes from Muriel Rukeyser




The sources of poetry are in the spirit seeking completeness.


— Muriel Rukeyser


#poetry #seeking #sources #spirit

Those who speak of our culture as dead or dying have a quarrel with life, and I think they cannot understand its terms, but must endlessly repeat the projection of their own desires.


— Muriel Rukeyser


#culture #dead #desires #dying #endlessly

Our poems will have failed if our readers are not brought by them beyond the poems.


— Muriel Rukeyser


#brought #failed #our #poems #readers

Nourish beginnings, let us nourish beginnings. Not all things are blest, but the seeds of all things are blest.The blessing is in the seed.


— Muriel Rukeyser


#beginnings #blessing #blest #let us #nourish

Breathe-in experience, breathe-out poetry.


— Muriel Rukeyser


#experience

A work of art is one through which the consciousness of the artist is able to give its emotions to anyone who is prepared to receive them. There is no such thing as bad art.


— Muriel Rukeyser


#anyone #art #artist #bad #consciousness

Exchange is creation.


— Muriel Rukeyser


#exchange

I hear the singing of the lives of women. They clear mystery, the offering, and pride.


— Muriel Rukeyser


#hear #i #lives #mystery #offering

If there were no poetry on any day in the world, poetry would be invented that day. For there would be an intolerable hunger.


— Muriel Rukeyser


#day #hunger #intolerable #invented #poetry






About Muriel Rukeyser






Did you know about Muriel Rukeyser?

She was 66. Her poem "To be a Jew in the Twentieth Century" (1944) on the theme of Judaism as a gift was adopted by the American Reform and Reconstructionist movements for their prayer books something Rukeyser said "astoniMuriel Rukeyserd" her as Muriel Rukeyser had remained distant from Judaism throughout her early life. In addition to her poetry Muriel Rukeyser wrote a fictionalized memoir The Orgy plays and screenplays and translated work by Octavio Paz and Gunnar Ekelöf.

Muriel Rukeyser (December 15 1913 – February 12 1980) was an American poet and political activist best known for her poems about equality feminism social justice and Judaism. One of her most powerful pieces was a group of poems entitled The Book of the Dead (1938) documenting the details of the Hawk's Nest incident an industrial disaster in which hundreds of miners died of silicosis.

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