< Page:Poems by Isaac Rosenberg (1922).djvu
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POEMS BY ISAAC ROSENBERG

tricky slickness, trusting to chance effects, but a subtle suggestiveness, and accident that is the consequence of intention."

Here are a few sentences from some "Notes on Art":

"Life stales and dulls; the mind demands noble excitement, half-apprehended surmises, the eternal desire, the beautiful. It is a vain belief that Art and Life go hand-in-hand; Art is, as it were, another planet.

"Mere representation is unreal, is fragmentary. The bone taken from Adam remains a bone. To create is to apply pulsating rhythmic principles to the part; a unity, another nature, is created."


To Miss Seaton.

"Thanks so much for the Donne. I had just been reading Ben Jonson again, and from his poem to Donne he must have thought him a giant. I have read some of the Donne; I have certainly never come across anything so choke-full of profound meaningful ideas. It would have been very difficult for him to express something commonplace, if he had to."

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