I am sure we all remember the famous scene from The Wizard of Oz in which Dorothy, the
Tin Man, the Scarecrow, and the Cowardly Lion finally gain admittance to the
inner sanctum of the Great Wizard, each hoping to ask there for his or her
heart's desire. They are met by a
terrifying spectacle -- a large curtain, from behind which emanate clouds of
smoke and the loud voice of the wizard.
As they stand there, frightened and uncertain what to do, Dorothy's
Cairn Terrier, Toto, jumps out of her arms, grabs a corner of the curtain in
his teeth, and pulls it back to reveal the mountebank, Frank Morgan, cranking
levers and wheels and shouting into a big horn.
I evoked that scene last Wednesday when I was explaining to my students
the concept of demystification, so central to the opening chapters of Capital.
I did not think to tell them about a personal experience I
had almost forty years ago of which I was reminded this morning on my early
walk while musing on how to weave The
Wizard of Oz into some thoughts I have been having about the experience of
being a writer. In 1977, my first wife,
Cynthia Griffin Wolff, published A Feast of
Words, a brilliant literary biography of Edith Wharton, and was invited to
speak at a little book event [a sort of micro-mini book tour.] On the program with her was Garson Kanin, who
had just published Hollywood, a
memoir of his time as an actor, writer, and director. Kanin was married to Ruth Gordon, a very
highly regarded actor and film writer. I
had the impression that Kanin felt about Gordon the way Mel Brooks feels about
Anne Bancroft -- that she was the light of his life and that it was a blessed
miracle that she had agreed to be his wife.
I was too nervous about the affair simply to take a seat in
the audience, so I stood at the side of the room. After Cindy spoke -- quite well, of course, I
needn't have worried -- Garson Kanin was introduced. He was a dapper little man with a lively,
charming manner. He clasped his hands
behind his back casually and proceeded to tell a series of delightful stories
about Spencer Tracy, Katherine Hepburn, and all the famous movie folks he
knew. He appeared to the audience
relaxed and entirely at ease. But from
where I was standing, I could see his hands, and throughout his talk, he wrung
his hands violently, his fingers writhing like snakes in a basket. It was obvious to me, but not to the audience,
what it was costing him to project his easy, casual manner.
I take both of these stories as metaphors for my experience
as a writer and teacher. I strive to
achieve a light, easy, casual style as I expound the most complex matters,
seeming, I imagine, merely to be putting out words as they pop into my head --
a garrulous old man full of stories. The
truth is that out of sight, my hands are clasping and unclasping, my fingers
writhing, as a search for just the right phrase. Even when my writing goes well, as for the most
part it does, I am exhausted when it is done, and I turn compulsively to
solitaire games, crossword puzzles, or low-brow television to recoup my
energies.
There are some writers -- and a good many philosophers --
who do their best to show the anguish, fearing, I imagine, that they will not
be thought serious if it seems that what they are doing has cost them too little
effort. But I am not one of them. My hero is David Hume, who skewers a doctrine
or dismantles a tradition with such ease that if you are not paying very close
attention, you may fail to notice the full power of his disarmingly charming
sentences.
Now I must clasp my hands behind my back and thrash out my
preparations for next Wednesday's class.
4 comments:
Might interest you to know that Hunter Thompson's 'spontaneous,' you-are-there Gonzo style required endless tedious rewriting ...
Thank you for this, Robert-- a delightful story and terrific reflection.
Prof.
Relax. If the effect your posts have on me are any indication, you are doing well. You are clear, interesting and humorous, too.
Your students are lucky.
Thank you for sharing your writing process. One of the features of your writing, particularly in your biography, is how fearlessly you allow your readers to witness your vulnerabilities - an approach we should all emulate.
It is interesting to me, too, that both Eugene Bodin and Edouard Manet used precisely the same adjectives in describing their process: "what a 'joy,' what a 'torment'." I am assuming that apart from the torment or anxiety that you describe, when your thoughts issue in a clarity that simply sings off the page, do you not, as well, feel a certain joy?
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