
“Is the perseverance you have in keeping your ideas alive.”
Original: (it) È la costanza che hai nel fare a mantenere in vita le tue idee.
Source: prevale.net
Seventy Thousand Assyrians (1934)
“Is the perseverance you have in keeping your ideas alive.”
Original: (it) È la costanza che hai nel fare a mantenere in vita le tue idee.
Source: prevale.net
(5 August 2007)
Unfit for Mass Consumption (blog entries), 2007
Context: It has been my experience that many people actually believe that writers live in a state of perpetual inspiration. Maybe this is the source of that annoying "Where do you get your ideas from?" question. Maybe the people who believe writers live in a state of perpetual inspiration are the same people who ask that question, thinking — wrongly — that there's a trick of some sort involved. And if a writer would but tell them the trick, then they too would have access to the bottomless well of ideas and live in a state of perpetual inspiration. In my case, at least, there is no bottomless fucking well of ideas, and if I only wrote when I truly felt inspired, I'd starve and live in a cardboard box at the corner of Crack and Whore (which is to say, the corner of Ponce and Piedmont). But, that said, there does have to be a spark. What people ought to be asking me is "Where do you get those tiny, little infinitesimally faint sparks that you then somehow manage to blow up into ideas?" Of course, my answer would be, "I have no inkling whatsoever."
On Mémoires de Bertrand Barère (1844)
On the living nature of stories in “The SRB Interview: Jackie Kay” https://www.scottishreviewofbooks.org/2016/03/the-srb-interview-jackie-kay/ in the Scottish Review of Books (2016 Mar 21)
“Damn, you have no idea what I have been through today."
"Actually I have a pretty good idea.”
Source: The Fiery Heart