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Look, I mean to say this: When I began writing, I thought that | |
everything should be defined by the writer. For example, to say | |
“the moon” was strictly forbidden; that one had to find an | |
adjective, an epithet for the moon. (Of course, I'm simplifying | |
things. I know it because many times I have written “la luna,” | |
but this is a kind of symbol of what I was doing.) Well, I | |
thought everything had to be defined and that no common turns | |
of phrase should be used. I would never have said, “So-and-so | |
came in and sat down,” because that was far too simple and far | |
too easy. I thought I had to find out some fancy way of saying | |
it. Now I find out that those things are generally annoyances to | |
the reader. But I think the whole root of the matter lies in the | |
fact that when a writer is young he feels somehow that what he | |
is going to say is rather silly or obvious or commonplace, and | |
then he tries to hide it under baroque ornament, under words | |
taken from the seventeenth-century writers; or, if not, and he | |
sets out to be modern, then he does the contrary: He's inventing | |
words all the time, or alluding to airplanes, railway trains, or | |
the telegraph and telephone because he's doing his best to be | |
modern. Then as time goes on, one feels that one's ideas, good or | |
bad, should be plainly expressed, because if you have an idea you | |
must try to get that idea or that feeling or that mood into the | |
mind of the reader. If, at the same time, you are trying to be, | |
let's say, Sir Thomas Browne or Ezra Pound, then it can't be done. | |
So that I think a writer always begins by being too complicated: | |
He's playing at several games at the same time. He wants to convey | |
a peculiar mood; at the same time he must be a contemporary and if | |
not a contemporary, then he's a reactionary and a classic. As to | |
the vocabulary, the first thing a young writer, at least in this | |
country, sets out to do is to show his readers that he possesses a | |
dictionary, that he knows all the synonyms; so we get, for example, | |
in one line, red, then we get scarlet, then we get other different | |
words, more or less, for the same color: purple. |
Yep. Same goes for music. When I began playing I thought notes / minute was the most important thing.
It was much later that I understood B.B. King, for instance; who can say A LOT with just a single note.
BTW, Borges is a perfect writer for programmers. Full of paradoxes.
@marcioendo Oh, I wish I understood BBK.
If you're into sciences/technology and haven't read JLB, you're loosing big moments of placer. Cortázar is great too.
@mausch Qué buena página! Me preparo para leerla más tranquilo esta noche, Readability en mano. Rayuela es un libro que por algún motivo nunca me sedujo, talvez por los malabares, o no sé por qué. Talvez esto elimine mi prejuicio.
@paraseba A mí por el contrario, nunca me atrajo del todo Borges. Pero uno cambia con los años, y creo que es momento de que lo relea...
@mausch Borges es poco atractivo por alguna de sus ideas, sobre todo políticas y sociales. Pero su literatura y su genio, al menos para mí, están muy por encima de esas ideas.
Esto ya parece un chat...
I read JLB during my college years. The Aleph and The Book of Sand.
Though I should probably re-read them. I don't remember much. Only this:
'all beings are immortal because they don't think about death, except the human being. the real thing is to know you ARE immortal'
or something among those lines...
Cortázar: "Descender o bajar, la cuestión es que el personaje se largó escalera abajo y se acabó." (Rayuela) :-)