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Life & Mortality Quote by Gerald Brenan

"The cliche is dead poetry"

About this Quote

Cliches don’t just bore Brenan; they betray. Calling them “dead poetry” is a neat little act of literary exorcism: the phrase admits that every cliche started life as something vivid, musical, maybe even shocking, and then got repeated until its meaning slipped out like air from a punctured tire. What’s left is the husk of art - the sound of feeling without the felt experience.

Brenan’s intent is corrective, almost moral. He’s warning writers that language isn’t a neutral delivery system; it’s a living instrument that dulls with overuse. A cliche gives you the shortcut of recognition, but that’s exactly the problem: recognition replaces perception. The reader doesn’t see; they nod. And that nod is the death of poetry, because poetry depends on re-sensitizing the world, making the familiar strange enough to notice again.

The subtext is also a jab at social comfort. Cliches are communal currency: safe phrases that let us signal belonging and avoid risk. Brenan suggests that when we reach for them, we’re opting out of thought. “Dead poetry” implies a kind of linguistic afterlife where old metaphors shuffle around, technically intact but spiritually vacant.

Context matters: Brenan belonged to a 20th-century literary culture obsessed with freshness of perception (think modernism’s allergy to stale forms). His line lands as both aesthetic critique and cultural diagnosis: when language fossilizes, so does attention.

Quote Details

TopicPoetry
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The cliche is dead poetry
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About the Author

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Gerald Brenan (April 7, 1894 - 1987) was a Writer from England.

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