Choose quotes font
If you study both 'Gilligan' and 'Brady,' you will see they are based on a similar philosophy: that
If you study both 'Gilligan' and 'Brady,' you will see they are based on a similar philosophy: that
If you study both 'Gilligan' and 'Brady,' you will see they are based on a similar philosophy: that
If you study both 'Gilligan' and 'Brady,' you will see they are based on a similar philosophy: that
If you study both 'Gilligan' and 'Brady,' you will see they are based on a similar philosophy: that
If you study both 'Gilligan' and 'Brady,' you will see they are based on a similar philosophy: that
Next quotes
Norman MacCaig:
A terrible thing about getting oldish is that your friends start dying, and in the last ten years INorman MacCaig:
All I write about is what's happened to me and to people I know, and the better I know them, the moNorman MacCaig:
All those authors there, most of whom of course I've never met. That's the poetry side, that's theNorman MacCaig:
And if they haven't got poetry in them, there's nothing you can do that will produce it.Norman MacCaig:
And in a way, that's been a help to me, because I take great passions for a particular poet - sometNorman MacCaig:
And it's impossible for me to read Henry James.Norman MacCaig:
And some poets are far better read off the page because they're very bad speakers. I'm thinking ofNorman MacCaig:
And the second question, can poetry be taught? I didn't think so.Norman MacCaig:
Anybody who writes doesn't like to be misunderstood.Norman MacCaig:
But I hang on to books. I love them. I even think they're very nice decor in a room - far better th