<p>The American poet Louise Gluck won the Nobel Prize for Literature Thursday, only the 16th women to have ever done so.</p>.<p>Here are some of her most famous and more memorable lines and verses:</p>.<p>"We look at the world once, in childhood. The rest is memory"</p>.<p>-- from "Nostos"</p>.<p>"Poetry survives because it haunts and it haunts because it is simultaneously utterly clear and deeply mysterious; because it cannot be entirely accounted for, it cannot be exhausted."</p>.<p>-- from "American Originality: Essays on Poetry"</p>.<p>"I have very little taste for public life... I didn't think I was the sort of person they'd ever look at"</p>.<p>-- to The Boston Globe when she was named US Poet Laureate in 2003.</p>.<p>"Of two sisters one is always the watcher, one the dancer"</p>.<p>-- from "Descending Figure"</p>.<p>"The soul is silent. If it speaks at all it speaks in dreams"</p>.<p>-- from "It Is Daylight"</p>.<p>"As I saw it,/ all my mother's life, my father/ held her down, like/ lead strapped to her ankles.</p>.<p>She was/ buoyant by nature;/ she wanted to travel,/ go to the theater, go to museums./ What he wanted/ was to lie on the couch/ with the Times/ over his face,/ so that death, when it came,/ wouldn't seem a significant change."</p>.<p>-- from "Ararat"</p>.<p>"The unsaid, for me, exerts great power..."</p>.<p>-- from "Proofs and Theories"</p>.<p>"We respect, here in America / what is concrete, visible. We ask/ What is it for?"</p>.<p>-- from "The Seven Ages"</p>.<p>"I got up finally; I walked down to the pond./ I stood there, brushing the grass from my skirt, watching myself,/ like a girl after her first lover"</p>.<p>-- from "Marathon"</p>
<p>The American poet Louise Gluck won the Nobel Prize for Literature Thursday, only the 16th women to have ever done so.</p>.<p>Here are some of her most famous and more memorable lines and verses:</p>.<p>"We look at the world once, in childhood. The rest is memory"</p>.<p>-- from "Nostos"</p>.<p>"Poetry survives because it haunts and it haunts because it is simultaneously utterly clear and deeply mysterious; because it cannot be entirely accounted for, it cannot be exhausted."</p>.<p>-- from "American Originality: Essays on Poetry"</p>.<p>"I have very little taste for public life... I didn't think I was the sort of person they'd ever look at"</p>.<p>-- to The Boston Globe when she was named US Poet Laureate in 2003.</p>.<p>"Of two sisters one is always the watcher, one the dancer"</p>.<p>-- from "Descending Figure"</p>.<p>"The soul is silent. If it speaks at all it speaks in dreams"</p>.<p>-- from "It Is Daylight"</p>.<p>"As I saw it,/ all my mother's life, my father/ held her down, like/ lead strapped to her ankles.</p>.<p>She was/ buoyant by nature;/ she wanted to travel,/ go to the theater, go to museums./ What he wanted/ was to lie on the couch/ with the Times/ over his face,/ so that death, when it came,/ wouldn't seem a significant change."</p>.<p>-- from "Ararat"</p>.<p>"The unsaid, for me, exerts great power..."</p>.<p>-- from "Proofs and Theories"</p>.<p>"We respect, here in America / what is concrete, visible. We ask/ What is it for?"</p>.<p>-- from "The Seven Ages"</p>.<p>"I got up finally; I walked down to the pond./ I stood there, brushing the grass from my skirt, watching myself,/ like a girl after her first lover"</p>.<p>-- from "Marathon"</p>