I don’t know
how people who don’t read can write. There’s no such thing as spontaneous
generation. Words spawn words. Literature spawns literature, and it’s not just
a matter of having models. Writing is a private itch having less to do with
self-expression than with the human compulsion to absorb, imitate and best
other humans. In
a 1953 interview with the BBC, when asked if he was conveying a “message” in
his work, Evelyn Waugh replied: “No, I wish to make a pleasant object, I think
any work of art is something exterior to oneself, it is the making of
something, whether it’s a bed table or a book.”
“I don’t know
why it is that things become more precious with the awareness that someone else
has looked at them, thought about them, written about them. But so I find it to
be. There is less originality than we think.”
Originality
is a seductively destructive myth. Setting out to be original seems like a
prescription for unreadability. Charles Olson and William Burroughs wished to
be original and ended up merely incoherent, shallow and tedious.
“It’s not
the command of knowledge that matters finally, but the company. It’s the
predecessors. As a writer I don’t know where I’d be without them.”
[The quoted
passages are taken from the title essay in Amy Clampitt’s Predecessors, Et Cetera (University of Michigan Press, 1991).]
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