“Do you carry a notebook around with you? Do you write things down right away.”
No, and no. I’m not that
organized. My mind operates like a car radio being tuned by a five-year-old, shifting among static, lousy music, commercials and Debussy. I need anchorage. I need
to be sitting, preferably at a desk or table, and I need to tell myself, “Now I’m
writing.” Nothing is so “inspirational” as the act of writing. I have tested
momentum and it works. Boswell quotes his friend in The Journal of a Tour of
the Hebrides (1785): “A man may write at any time, if he will set himself doggedly
to it.” True, but I’m like a dog with a favorite spot on the porch. Here is Samuel
Menashe’s “Inklings” (New and Selected Poems, 2005):
“Inklings sans ink
Cling to the dry
Point of the pen
Whose stem I mouth
Not knowing when
The truth will out”
I wondered about inkling
and whether it had anything to do with ink, and thus the act of writing. The OED
says no. It’s rooted in an older verb, inkle, defined as “to utter or
communicate in an undertone or whisper, to hint, give a hint of.” Dr. Johnson
has another theory in his Dictionary. He defines the word as “hint;
whisper.” Kay Ryan is a poet who shares much with Menashe, starting with concision. Here she is in her 2008 Paris Review interview:
“The problem for me was
that I willed my poetry at first. I had too much control. But in time the
benevolences of metaphor and rhyme sent me down their rabbit holes, in new
directions, so that my will—my intention—was sent hither and yon. And in that
mix of intention and diversion, I could get a tiny inkling of things far beyond
me.”