by Pola Rosen,   Ed.D.
                  During April, National   Poetry Month in the United States, each state selects a poet laureate. Education   Update interviewed two poet   laureates. We hope you will discover a host of emotions and inspiration to write   your own couplets, sonnets or iambic pentameter, as the spirit moves   you.
                  
                    John Hollander, Connecticut
                    At what age   did you start writing?
                    At about 14, I started to write for my high-school newspaper, and   became one of its editors at 16, when I also wrote the humor column. I had been   writing bad lyrical verse for a couple of years, but turned to comic and satiric   light verse, which I occasionally put in my column. I was also—along with a few   intensely literary friends (all of whom ended up as physicians and medical   researchers)—reading modern literature totally outside of school work: Harry   Levin’s brilliant and recently published James Joyce provided us with a   introductory guide-book and a couple of us even went down to a meeting or so of   the James Joyce Society at Gotham Book Mart. I still wanted to be a journalist   when I started college, at Columbia (the huge preponderance of my classmates   were returning WWII veterans—I’ve always likened my undergraduate days as being   at college surrounded by many older brothers) and wrote nothing but news copy   for the daily paper my first semester; subsequent to that, I became interested   in the study of literature and published a few very bad poems in the Columbia   Review, the literary magazine. My first writing in verse that I have since been   able to acknowledge as serious were some translations from Les Fleurs du Mal   that I did as a freshman in college; they were certainly better written than any   of my own “poems”.
                    Can you   share some of the inspirations for your writing?
                    I’ve never thought of “inspiration” as applying to anything I   have experienced, so I’ll have to be silent in this case. I would never have   written a poem without having read and heard many others from many times (and,   indeed, songs in other languages), so if you’d like you could say that my   Inspiration has come from poetry itself.
                    What are   some of the challenges you’ve faced?
                    Always, trying to get better and trying to avoid turning out   products or ever making a cheap shot; continuing to write in a world which,   owing to the decline in American education over the past sixty years, has become   increasingly unconscious of history and deaf to the articulated sound of both   verse and prose unless it is the transcription of vernacular spoken   dialogue.
                    Describe   turning points in your career as a writer.
                    Deciding, early in college that I wanted to write poetry; my   decision to be a teacher, which meant doing scholarly criticism, getting a Ph.D.   and teaching literature, and thereafter having to cope with the complex   relations among teaching, writing criticism, my poetry.
                    Who were/are   some of your mentors?
                    If you mean “teachers”, in school (at the Bronx H.S. of Science)   a teacher both of English and German named Harry Rothman; at Columbia, Mark Van   Doren, Lionel Trilling, Moses Hadas, Andrew Chiappe, Meyer Schapiro; at Harvard,   Reuben A. Brower, I.A. Richards and Roman Jakobson; but also my friends and   fellow-students at Columbia Allen Ginsberg and Richard Howard, from whom I   learned vast amounts; Harvard--Stanley Cavell, Richard Poirier, George Kateb;   and then there were the people who I felt were teaching me when I was young from   the pages of their writing—George Bernard Shaw in from sixth grade on; W.H.   Auden (long before I ever got to know him) from my senior year in high-school,   and George Orwell, starting in college. And after that all the great poetry and   fiction and philosophical writing in which I immersed myself. In the case of the   poets, it was often that I needed to be taught by one how to deal with   another—quite often, an earlier—one: Wallace Stevens and Hart Crane took me back   to Whitman, for instance, and Milton showed me just why Spenser was so great and   remarkable, but so did Joyce.
                    List some of   your favorite books/poems.
                    There are too many to list, and “favorite” is too problematic if   you care as much about a great many poems, novels, works of history and   philosophy as I do. If you’d narrow the field for me, I might perhaps be able to   talk about which books or authors’ oeuvres were most important for me at what   moment, or, say, my favorite 19th-century American poets (I’d then say Emerson,   Whitman, Dickinson, Melville, but also the minor fin-de-siècle poet Trumbull   Stickney.)#