173 Quotes by Derek Walcott

  • Author Derek Walcott
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    The country that I was coming from, the island I was in, hadn't been written about, really. So I thought that I virtually had it all to myself, including the language that was spoken there, which was a French Creole, and a landscape that is not recorded, really, and the people.

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  • Author Derek Walcott
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    I am not in England; I live in the Caribbean. So I am not hungover by prizes and awards because it does not happen very often.

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  • Author Derek Walcott
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    There are some things people avoid saying in interviews because they sound pompous or sentimental or too mystical.

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  • Author Derek Walcott
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    When I come to England, I don't claim England; I don't own it. I feel a great kinship because of the literature and the landscape. I have great affection for Edward Thomas and Philip Larkin, but there's still this distance: looking on at what I'm admiring, separate from what I am. And that's OK.

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  • Author Derek Walcott
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    Individual writers have different postures, different stances, even different physical attitudes as they stand or sit over their blank paper, and in a sense, without doing it, they are crossing themselves; I mean, it's like the habit of Catholics going into water: you cross yourself before you go in.

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  • Author Derek Walcott
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    Modesty is not possible in performance in the Caribbean - and that's wonderful.

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  • Author Derek Walcott
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    I can't tear up a poem and be a sound bite for you. Why is that so hard for anyone to understand?

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  • Author Derek Walcott
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    That's another pompous expression that is out of fashion, to say that poetry is a gift. It sounds pompous because you say, 'Who gave you the gift, and what is this gift?' And the gift is where I am; the gift is what I have come out of, the people around me who, I think, are beautiful people.

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