Diane Glancy

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I try. I am trying. I was trying. I will try. I shall in the meantime try. I sometimes have tried. I shall still by that time be trying.
- Diane Glancy
Collection: Perseverance
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The word is important in Native American tradition. You speak the path on which you walk. Your words make the trail.
- Diane Glancy
Collection: Native American
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Words - as I speak or write them - make a path on which I walk.
- Diane Glancy
Collection: Writing
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Poetry examines an emotional truth. It's an experience filtered through the personality of the poet. We look to poetry for visions, not scientific truths. The poet's job is to combine new elements. Explore their melting, seeping into one another.
- Diane Glancy
Collection: Jobs
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Writing is the hammer & chisel that breaks down the established way of thinking. A concrete event, then an abstraction. An image, then a thought. Finally, writing builds another establishment with the fragments.
- Diane Glancy
Collection: Writing
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Poetry saves what is human in this world going gaudy & insane. In exploring small truths, something larger might turn up, adding dimension, insight, vision, recognition to our lives. We just might be more complete, more aware after a poem.
- Diane Glancy
Collection: Poetry
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Who thinks of justice unless he knows injustice?
- Diane Glancy
Collection: Thinking
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Poetry is road maintenance for a fragmented world which seeks to be kept together. It's been an integral activity for a long time.
- Diane Glancy
Collection: Long
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It is easier to gnaw through bone. Than the hide of the heart.
- Diane Glancy
Collection: Heart
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Who creates unless he has a vacuum to fill?
- Diane Glancy
Collection: Creativity
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20th century poetry is a piƱata. Images break from the earth when the poet strikes it.
- Diane Glancy
Collection: Poetry
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Poetry uses the hub of a torque converter for a jello mold.
- Diane Glancy
Collection: Mold