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Thurber on Writing
"I don't believe the writer should know
too much where he's going. If he does, he runs into old man blueprint."
(About first drafts)
"That draft isn't any good; it isn't supposed to be; the whole
purpose is to sketch out proportions... I rarely have a very clear
idea of where I'm going when I start. Just people and a situation.
Then I fool aroundwriting and rewriting until the stuff
gels."
"I admire the person who can write it right
off. Mencken once said that a person who thinks clearly can write
well. But I don't think too clearlytoo many thoughts bump
into one another. Trains of thought run on a track of the Centeral
Nervous Systemthe New York Central Nervous System, to make
it worse."
"Still, the act of writing is either something
the writer dreads or actually likes, and I actually like it. Even
rewriting's fun. You're getting somewhere, whether it seems to
move or not."
(About his works in
progress) "I often tell them at parties and places. And
I write them there too....I never quite know when I'm not writing.
Sometimes my wife comes up to me at a party and says, 'Dammit,
Thurber, stop writing.' She usually catches me in the middle of
a paragraph. Or my daughter will look up from the dinner table
and ask, 'Is he sick?' 'No,' my wife says, 'he's writing something.'"
(About his wife Helen's
role in his writing) "Helen is one of the greatest proofreaders,
editors, and critics I've ever known. She's often rescued things
I've thrown aside. And, if there's something she doesn't like,
she pulls no punches. When I wrote 'The Secret Life of Walter
Mitty,' I had a scene in which Mitty got between Hemingway and
an opponent in a Stork Club brawl. Helen said it had to come out,
that there should be nothing topical in the story. Well, you know
how it is when your wife is right. You grouse around the house
for a week, and then you follow her advice."
"I write humor the way a surgeon operates,
because it is a livelihood, because I have a great urge to do
it, because many interesting challenges are set up, and because
I have the hope it may do some good."
Thurber on drawing...
"My drawings have been described as pre-intentionalist, meaning
they were finished before the ideas for them had occurred to me.
I shall not argue the point."
"If all the lines of what I've drawn were
straightened out, they would reach a mile and a half. I drew just
for relaxation, in between writing."
"Some people thought my drawings were done
under water; others that they were done by moonlight. But mothers
thought that I was a little child or that my drawings were done
by my granddaughter. So they sent in their own children's drawings
to The New Yorker, and I was told to write these ladies,
and I would write them all the same letter: 'Your son can certainly
draw as well as I can. The only trouble is he hasn't been through
as much."
About the "Thurber
Dog"
"I had a friend who was on the telephone a great deal and
while he talked was always flipping the pages of his memo pad
and writing things down. I started to fill up the pad with drawings
so he'd have to work to get to a clean page. I began to draw a
bloodhound, but he was too big for the page... He had the head
and body of a bloodhound; I gave him the short legs of a basset.
When I first used him in my drawings, it was as a device for balance:
when I had a couch and two people on one side of a picture and
a standing lamp on the other, I'd put the dog in the space under
the lamp for balance... I've always loved that dog. Although at
first he was a device, I gradually worked him in as a sound creature
in a crazy world."
Thurber on humor...
"[Humor is] a kind of emotional chaos told about calmly
and quietly in retrospect."
"Well, someone once wrote a definition of
the difference between English and American humor... I thought
his definition was very good. He said that the English treat the
commonplace as if it were remarkable and the Americans treat the
remarkable as if it were commonplace. I believe that's true of
humorous writing."
Thurber on men, women,
and dogs...
"Somebody has said that Woman's place is in the wrong.
That's fine. What the wrong needs is a woman's presence and a
woman's touch. She is far better equipped than men to set it right.
The condescending male, in his pride of strength, likes to think
of the female as being 'soft, soft as snow,' but just wait till
he gets hit by the snowball. Almost any century now Woman may
lose her patience with black politics and red war and let fly.
I wish I could be on earth then to witness the saving of our self
destructive species by its greatest creative force. If I have
sometimes seemed to make fun of Woman, I assure you it has only
been for the purpose of egging her on."
"[The Thurber dog] does not want to hunt anybody
or anything. He loves serenity and heavy dinners, and wishes they
would go on forever, like the brook."
Thurber on Columbus...
"I have lived in the East for nearly thirty years now,
but many of my books prove that I am never very far away from
Ohio in my thoughts, and that the clocks that strike in my dreams
are often the clocks of Columbus."
"Columbus is a town in which almost anything
is likely to happen, and in which almost everything has."
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