William Faulkner
VIA Emily Temple
William Faulkner is one of the best writers America has ever produced, with a distinctive voice and a relentless intelligence that earned him a Nobel Prize in literature at age 52—not to mention two Pulitzer prizes, two National Book Awards, and the undying love of many readers. He’s one of those writers you can read again and again without really understanding how he’s done what he’s done; he has that magic. But that doesn’t keep anyone from trying to learn from him. Though he didn’t much care for interviews, he has shared his expertise in a few; he also served as the Writer-in-Residence at the University of Virginia in 1957 and 1958, and some of his pedagogical conversations with students there have since been made public. Faulkner was born 120 years ago today in New Albany, Mississippi; to celebrate his birthday and to better learn from his work, find below some of his best advice on craft, character, and the writer’s life.
On “being a writer” / Não seja um escritor: Escreva:
“Don’t be ‘a writer’ but instead be writing.
Being ‘a writer’ means being stagnant. The act of writing shows
movement, activity, life. When you stop moving, you’re dead. It’s never
too soon to start writing, as soon as you learn to read.” (from an interview excerpted in The Daily Princetonian, 1958)
“Keep it amateur. You’re not writing for
money but for pleasure. It should be fun. And it should be exciting.
Maybe not as you write, but after it’s done you should feel an
excitement, a passion. That doesn’t mean feeling proud, sitting there
gloating over what you’ve done. It means you know you’ve done your best.
Next time it’s going to be better.” (from an interview excerpted in The Daily Princetonian, 1958)
“Let the writer take up surgery or
bricklaying if he is interested in technique. There is no mechanical way
to get the writing done, no shortcut. The young writer would be a fool
to follow a theory. Teach yourself by your own mistakes; people learn
only by error. The good artist believes that nobody is good enough to
give him advice. He has supreme vanity. No matter how much he admires
the old writer, he wants to beat him.” (from a 1956 interview with The Paris Review)
“I would say to get the character in your
mind. Once he is in your mind, and he is right, and he’s true, then he
does the work himself. All you need to do then is to trot along behind
him and put down what he does and what he says. It’s the ingestion and
then the gestation. You’ve got to know the character. You’ve got to
believe in him. You’ve got to feel that he is alive, and then, of
course, you will have to do a certain amount of picking and choosing
among the possibilities of his action, so that his actions fit the
character which you believe in. After that, the business of putting him
down on paper is mechanical. Most of the the writing has got to take
place up here before you ever put the pencil to the paper. But the
character’s got to be true by your conception and by your experience,
and that would include, as we’ve just said, what you’ve read, what
you’ve imagined, what you’ve heard, all that going to giving you the
gauge to measure this imaginary character by, and once he comes alive
and true to you, and he’s important and moving, then it’s not too much
trouble to put him down.” (from a 1958 q&a with University of Virginia graduate students)
“Ninety-nine percent talent . . .
ninety-nine percent discipline . . . ninety-nine percent work. [A good
novelist] must never be satisfied with what he does. It never is as good
as it can be done. Always dream and shoot higher than you know you can
do. Don’t bother just to be better than your contemporaries or
predecessors. Try to be better than yourself. An artist is a creature
driven by demons. He don’t know why they choose him and he’s usually too
busy to wonder why. He is completely amoral in that he will rob,
borrow, beg, or steal from anybody and everybody to get the work done. .
. . The writer’s only responsibility is to his art. He will be
completely ruthless if he is a good one. He has a dream. It anguishes
him so much he must get rid of it. He has no peace until then.
Everything goes by the board: honor, pride, decency, security,
happiness, all, to get the book written. If a writer has to rob his
mother, he will not hesitate; the “Ode on a Grecian Urn” is worth any
number of old ladies.” (from a 1956 interview with The Paris Review)
“The only rule I have is to quit while
it’s still hot. Never write yourself out. Always quit when it’s going
good. Then it’s easier to take it up again. If you exhaust yourself,
then you’ll get into a dead spell, and you have trouble with it.
It’s—what’s the saying—leave them while you’re looking good.” (from a 1957 q&a with University of Virginia writing students)
“I think best to use as little dialect as
possible because it confuses people who are not familiar with it. That
nobody should let the character speak completely in his own vernacular.
It’s best indicated by a few simple, sparse but recognizable
touches.” (from a 1958 interview for “What’s the Good Word”)
“The real truths come from human hearts.
Don’t try to present your ideas to the reader. Instead, try to describe
your characters as you see them. Take something from one person you
know, something from another, and you yourself create a third person
that people can look at and see something they understand. (from an interview excerpted in The Daily Princetonian, 1958)
“For fiction the best age is from
thirty-five to forty-five. Your fire is not all used up and you know
more. Fiction is slower. For poetry the best age is from seventeen to
twenty-six. Poetry writing is more like a skyrocket with all your fire
condensed into one rocket.” (from a 1947 interview with The Western Review)
“I did not develop [my style]. I think
style is one of the tools of the craft, and I think anyone that spends
too much of his time about his style, developing a style, or following a
style, probably hasn’t got much to say and knows it and is afraid of
it, and so he writes a style, a marvelous trove. He becomes Walter
Pater, which is beautiful, but there ain’t too much in it. I think style
is simply one of the tools of the craft. That the story you’re telling
commands its style, that one style is good for now and another style
will be good for tomorrow. And like the good carpenter, one should be
able to—well, you might say almost imitate . . . but the style is
incidental, I think.” (from a 1957 q&a with University of Virginia writing students)
“Our tragedy today is a general and
universal physical fear so long sustained by now that we can even bear
it. There are no longer problems of the spirit. There is only the
question: When will I be blown up? Because of this, the young man or
woman writing today has forgotten the problems of the human heart in
conflict with itself which alone can make good writing because only that
is worth writing about, worth the agony and the sweat.
He must learn them again. He must teach
himself that the basest of all things is to be afraid; and, teaching
himself that, forget it forever, leaving no room in his workshop for
anything but the old verities and truths of the heart, the old universal
truths lacking which any story is ephemeral and doomed—love and honor
and pity and pride and compassion and sacrifice. Until he does so, he
labors under a curse. He writes not of love but of lust, of defeats in
which nobody loses anything of value, of victories without hope and,
worst of all, without pity or compassion. His griefs grieve on no
universal bones, leaving no scars. He writes not of the heart but of the
glands.” (from Faulkner’s 1949 Nobel Prize banquet speech)
“I doubt if there can be any rule about
[long titles]. I think that anything, the shorter it’s said the better. I
think that—that stories title themselves quite often. Yes, in that
anything, the shorter it’s said the better it is.” (from a 1958 interview for “What’s the Good Word”)
“All of us failed to match our dream of
perfection. So I rate us on the basis of our splendid failure to do the
impossible. In my opinion, if I could write all my work again, I am
convinced that I would do it better, which is the healthiest condition
for an artist. That’s why he keeps on working, trying again; he believes
each time that this time he will do it, bring it off. Of course he
won’t, which is why this condition is healthy. Once he did it, once he
matched the work to the image, the dream, nothing would remain but to
cut his throat, jump off the other side of that pinnacle of perfection
into suicide. I’m a failed poet. Maybe every novelist wants to write
poetry first, finds he can’t, and then tries the short story, which is
the most demanding form after poetry. And, failing at that, only then
does he take up novel writing.” (from a 1956 interview with The Paris Review)
“You can always find time to
write. Anybody who says he can’t is living under false pretenses. To
that extent depend on inspiration. Don’t wait. When you have an
inspiration put it down. Don’t wait until later and when you have more
time and then try to recapture the mood and add flourishes. You can
never recapture the mood with the vividness of its first impression.”
(from a 1947 interview with The Western Review)
“[T]he only environment the artist needs
is whatever peace, whatever solitude, and whatever pleasure he can get
at not too high a cost. All the wrong environment will do is run his
blood pressure up; he will spend more time being frustrated or outraged.
My own experience has been that the tools I need for my trade are
paper, tobacco, food, and a little whiskey. . . . The writer doesn’t
need economic freedom. All he needs is a pencil and some paper. I’ve
never known anything good in writing to come from having accepted any
free gift of money. The good writer never applies to a foundation. He’s
too busy writing something. If he isn’t first rate he fools himself by
saying he hasn’t got time or economic freedom. Good art can come out of
thieves, bootleggers, or horse swipes. People really are afraid to find
out just how much hardship and poverty they can stand. They are afraid
to find out how tough they are. Nothing can destroy the good writer. The
only thing that can alter the good writer is death.” (from a 1956 interview with The Paris Review)
“There should be no limits to what the
writer tries to write about. He has got to tell it in terms that he does
know. That is, he can write about what is beyond his experience, but
the only terms he does know are within his experience, his observation.
But there should be no limits to what he attempts. The higher the aim,
the better. If [he wants] to be a failure, let him be a fine bust, not just a petty little one.” (from a 1957 q&a with University of Virginia writing students)
“In the heat of putting it down you might
put down some extra words. If you rework it, and the words still ring
true, leave them in.” (from a 1947 interview with The Western Review)
“Probably any story that can’t be told in
one sentence or at least one paragraph is not worth writing. The
revision, the cutting out—in my own case, I’m lazy. I don’t like to
work, and so I will do as much of it as possible in the mind, in
thinking, before I undertake the arduous, hateful job of swatting it out
on paper. I think the revision quite often follows because when the job
is down on paper at last, it still is not quite what it should be, and
so you change, you revise, you edit, you try to bring it closest to the
ideal of perfection, which, of course, you’re not going to reach either.
That is, what I’m trying to say, is that the revision is I think for
the writer more than the editor’s revision, which is for the reader.”
(from a 1957 q&a with University of Virginia writing students)
A writer needs three things, experience,
observation, and imagination—any two of which, at times any one of
which—can supply the lack of the others. With me, a story usually begins
with a single idea or memory or mental picture. The writing of the
story is simply a matter of working up to that moment, to explain why it
happened or what it caused to follow. A writer is trying to create
believable people in credible moving situations in the most moving way
he can. Obviously he must use as one of his tools the environment which
he knows. I would say that music is the easiest means in which to
express, since it came first in man’s experience and history. But since
words are my talent, I must try to express clumsily in words what the
pure music would have done better. (from a 1956 interview with The Paris Review)
“Read, read, read. Read everything—trash,
classics, good and bad; see how they do it. When a carpenter learns his
trade, he does so by observing. Read! You’ll absorb it. Write. If it’s
good, you’ll find out. If it’s not, throw it out of the window.” (from a
1947 interview with The Western Review)
“Don’t make writing your work. Get another
job so you’ll have money to buy the things you want in life. It doesn’t
matter what you do as long as you don’t count on money and a deadline
for your writing. You’ll be able to find plenty of time for writing, no
matter how much time your job takes. I’ve never met anyone who couldn’t
find enough time to write what he wanted.” (from an interview excerpted in The Daily Princetonian, 1958)
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