
{"For every difficult problem there’s a solution that’s simple, neat and wrong."
- H. L. Mencken.}
I never expected to be a ghost.
But then, I never expected to be aware of surprise or anything else after death.
Life had been an endless source of surprises. I should have expected the same thing of death.
Samuel Clemens has asked me to step in for Roland on his blog.
I was delighted. A blog is much like a newspaper column but without the scant pay and worse deadlines.
Better I get to ask questions of my readers. Such as
why did you start to write?
What keeps you at writing?
What shore are you heading your prose craft to?
To be fair I will tell you of my feelings towards writing :
1.) "Words are veils."
It is hard enough to put into them what one thinks. It is a sheer impossibility to put into them what one feels.
Such skepticism, however, never keeps me from trying.
2.) Writing is a lonely profession.
Chandler was right. But don't tell the sourpuss that. He's hard enough to "live" with as it is.
The writing profession is reeking with this loneliness.
All our lives we spend in discoursing with ourselves. . . . The loneliest people in the world we writers are.
Except that, while we are conversing and laughing with ourselves, we manage to shed our loneliness . . . to scatter it as we go along.
That is the express reason why your blogs are so important.
They are a chain of linked spirits holding on to one another through the darkness of the cyber-void.
3.) Persistence in writing is dedication for me. Vanity for you.
I jest of course. It is how we ghosts keep from going totally mad.
Why, then, do rational men and women engage in so barbarous and exhausting a vocation?
What keeps them from deserting it for trades that are less onerous, and, in the public eye, more respectable?
The answer, it seems to me, is as plain as mud.
An author is simply one in whom the normal vanity of all men is so vastly exaggerated that he finds it a sheer impossibility to hold it in.
His overpowering impulse is to dance before his fellow men,
flapping his wings and emitting his defiant yells.
It appeals to the little child in all of us creative beings.
This being forbidden by the Polizei of all civilized countries,
we take it out by putting our yells on paper or on the computer screen.
Such is the thing called self-expression. Such is the genesis of blogs.
4.) The Worth of Blogs : Education.
Education in the truest sense --
education directed toward awakening a capacity to differentiate between fact and appearance --
always will be a more or less furtive and illicit thing,
for its chief purpose is the controversion and destruction of the very ideas that the majority of men --
and particularly the majority of official and powerful men --
regard as incontrovertibly true. To the extent that I am genuinely educated.
I am suspicious of all the things that the average politician believes and the average pedagogue teaches.
Progress consists precisely in attacking and disposing of these ordinary beliefs.
5.) Why I "ghost"-wrote for an unpublished writer at the request of Samuel Clemens :
How could I not?
what a man Mark Twain is!
How he stood above and apart from the world, like Rabelais come to life again, observing the human comedy, chuckling over the fraudulence of man!
He regards all men as humbugs, but as humbugs to be dealt with gently,
as humbugs too often taken in and swindled by their own humbuggery.
Clemens is in a dark mood that Chandler's post upset some.
I tried to comfort him with the fact
that any man who afflicts the human race with ideas must be prepared to see them misunderstood.
I reminded him that the great artists of the world are never Puritans,
and seldom respectable.
No virtuous man - that is, virtuous in the Y.M.C.A. sense -
has ever painted a picture worth looking at, or written a symphony worth hearing, or a book worth reading.
*) Feel free to disagree with me. I am but a ghost.
I am often wrong. My prejudices are innumerable, and often idiotic.
My aim is not to determine facts,
but to function freely and pleasantly - as Nietzsche used to say, to dance with arms and legs.
Let me know why you write, why you continue to write despite rejections from agent or publisher, and what is your ultimate goal for your novels.
I'm truly interested.
***
- H. L. Mencken.}
I never expected to be a ghost.
But then, I never expected to be aware of surprise or anything else after death.
Life had been an endless source of surprises. I should have expected the same thing of death.
Samuel Clemens has asked me to step in for Roland on his blog.
I was delighted. A blog is much like a newspaper column but without the scant pay and worse deadlines.
Better I get to ask questions of my readers. Such as
why did you start to write?
What keeps you at writing?
What shore are you heading your prose craft to?
To be fair I will tell you of my feelings towards writing :
1.) "Words are veils."
It is hard enough to put into them what one thinks. It is a sheer impossibility to put into them what one feels.
Such skepticism, however, never keeps me from trying.
2.) Writing is a lonely profession.
Chandler was right. But don't tell the sourpuss that. He's hard enough to "live" with as it is.
The writing profession is reeking with this loneliness.
All our lives we spend in discoursing with ourselves. . . . The loneliest people in the world we writers are.
Except that, while we are conversing and laughing with ourselves, we manage to shed our loneliness . . . to scatter it as we go along.
That is the express reason why your blogs are so important.
They are a chain of linked spirits holding on to one another through the darkness of the cyber-void.
3.) Persistence in writing is dedication for me. Vanity for you.
I jest of course. It is how we ghosts keep from going totally mad.
Why, then, do rational men and women engage in so barbarous and exhausting a vocation?
What keeps them from deserting it for trades that are less onerous, and, in the public eye, more respectable?
The answer, it seems to me, is as plain as mud.
An author is simply one in whom the normal vanity of all men is so vastly exaggerated that he finds it a sheer impossibility to hold it in.
His overpowering impulse is to dance before his fellow men,
flapping his wings and emitting his defiant yells.
It appeals to the little child in all of us creative beings.
This being forbidden by the Polizei of all civilized countries,
we take it out by putting our yells on paper or on the computer screen.
Such is the thing called self-expression. Such is the genesis of blogs.
4.) The Worth of Blogs : Education.
Education in the truest sense --
education directed toward awakening a capacity to differentiate between fact and appearance --
always will be a more or less furtive and illicit thing,
for its chief purpose is the controversion and destruction of the very ideas that the majority of men --
and particularly the majority of official and powerful men --
regard as incontrovertibly true. To the extent that I am genuinely educated.
I am suspicious of all the things that the average politician believes and the average pedagogue teaches.
Progress consists precisely in attacking and disposing of these ordinary beliefs.
5.) Why I "ghost"-wrote for an unpublished writer at the request of Samuel Clemens :
How could I not?
what a man Mark Twain is!
How he stood above and apart from the world, like Rabelais come to life again, observing the human comedy, chuckling over the fraudulence of man!
He regards all men as humbugs, but as humbugs to be dealt with gently,
as humbugs too often taken in and swindled by their own humbuggery.
Clemens is in a dark mood that Chandler's post upset some.
I tried to comfort him with the fact
that any man who afflicts the human race with ideas must be prepared to see them misunderstood.
I reminded him that the great artists of the world are never Puritans,
and seldom respectable.
No virtuous man - that is, virtuous in the Y.M.C.A. sense -
has ever painted a picture worth looking at, or written a symphony worth hearing, or a book worth reading.
*) Feel free to disagree with me. I am but a ghost.
I am often wrong. My prejudices are innumerable, and often idiotic.
My aim is not to determine facts,
but to function freely and pleasantly - as Nietzsche used to say, to dance with arms and legs.
Let me know why you write, why you continue to write despite rejections from agent or publisher, and what is your ultimate goal for your novels.
I'm truly interested.
***