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Daily Inspiration Quote by Robert Graves

"To be a poet is a condition rather than a profession"

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Graves draws a line between the marketplace and the mind, and it’s a line he spent his whole career patrolling. “Condition” makes poetry sound less like a job title than a chronic state: something you live with, something that alters your metabolism. The phrasing quietly demotes the résumé logic of “professional poet” and replaces it with an older, thornier idea of vocation as temperament - even affliction. If you need to call it a profession, the implication goes, you’re already talking about the wrong thing.

The subtext is part aesthetic manifesto, part cultural side-eye. Graves came of age in a Britain that could celebrate poets as national ornaments while also forcing them to justify themselves in practical terms. After World War I, in particular, the poet-as-officer and poet-as-witness became a public figure, but also a commodity. Graves, marked by trauma and suspicious of easy public consolations, insists that poetry isn’t a service industry delivering “meaning” on demand. It’s a mode of perception that persists whether or not anyone is paying for it.

There’s also a defensive realism here from a novelist who knew the economics: prose keeps the lights on; poetry keeps the sensibility honest. By calling it a condition, Graves protects the art from careerism and protects the artist from the humiliations of branding. Poetry, in his framing, isn’t what you do. It’s what happens to you, and what you can’t quite stop yourself from doing back.

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TopicPoetry
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Robert Graves: Poetry as Condition, Not Profession
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About the Author

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Robert Graves (July 26, 1895 - December 7, 1985) was a Novelist from Ireland.

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