Much of my working life was spent among writers indifferent to the precision, clarity and stylishness of what they wrote. They flung words on the page (or screen) the way a bored child throws mud at the wall to see what sticks. They were abetted by editors concerned only with meeting deadlines and avoiding libel. These practices permitted a sort of reverse snobbery to thrive in the newsroom. A concern with writing good prose – not fancy, not “poetic,” just clear, accurate and cliché-free -- was judged effete. I haven’t worked fulltime as a journalist in more than twenty years, but all of this came back to me when I found this sentence on the Eric Hoffer Book Award site:
“If anybody asks me what I
have accomplished, I will say all I have accomplished is that I have written a
few good sentences.”
No source is given but it
sounds like Hoffer (1902-83). I credit him with inspiring me to become a
newspaper reporter and learn to write clearly. His “Reflections” column was
syndicated in U.S. newspapers, including The Cleveland Press, from
January 1968 to April 1970 – my high school years. I read the columns, clipped
them and pasted them in a scrapbook, then moved on to Hoffer’s books, beginning
with his first and most influential, The True Believer (1951). What
moved me and still moves me were Hoffer’s commonsensical ideas, his lack of
pretentiousness and snobbery, the clarity of his prose, his gift for aphorism,
his hatred of Communism and other tyrannies, his pro-Israel sentiments and his
working-class origins. Not that I could necessarily have identified any of those qualities
when I was sixteen.
I no longer read
newspapers but I see the same indifference to good writing and simple clarity online.
Clarity in prose implies clarity of thought. If I don’t understand something, if
I’m confused or just plain ignorant, I can orient myself by writing about it.
The simple act of arranging words sensibly contributes to understanding. If it
doesn’t, I should probably keep my mouth shut until it does.
The “longshoreman
philosopher” had a brief notoriety in the late 1960s. He worked on the docks in
San Francisco for more than 30 years. He never went to college. He credited a
volume of Montaigne’s essays, found in a second-hand bookstore, with inspiring
him to write. This is what appealed to me about Hoffer. I was the first in my
family to go to college. My father and his brothers were ironworkers. All of my
mother’s brothers were housepainters. I had no models for being a writer, a
lover of ideas, an intellectual – a term Hoffer detested. But a working-class
guy who read Montaigne and Tolstoy and formulated his thoughts in memorable words
made sense to me and he still does.