Craftsmanship
Words are full of echoes, of memories, of associations. They
have been out and about, on people's lips, in their houses, in the streets, in
the fields, for so many centuries. And that is one of the chief difficulties in
writing them today – that they are stored with other meanings, with other
memories, and they have contracted so many famous marriages in the past. The
splendid word "incarnadine," for example – who can use that without
remembering "multitudinous seas"? In the old days, of course, when
English was a new language, writers could invent new words and use them.
Nowadays it is easy enough to invent new words – they spring to the lips
whenever we see a new sight or feel a new sensation – but we cannot use them
because the English language is old. You cannot use a brand new word in an old
language because of the very obvious yet always mysterious fact that a word is
not a single and separate entity, but part of other words. Indeed it is not a
word until it is part of a sentence. Words belong to each other, although, of
course, only a great poet knows that the word "incarnadine" belongs
to "multitudinous seas." To combine new words with old words is fatal
to the constitution of the sentence. In order to use new words properly you
would have to invent a whole new language; and that, though no doubt we shall
come to it, is not at the moment our business. Our business is to see what we
can do with the old English language as it is. How can we combine the old words
in new orders so that they survive, so that they create beauty, so that they
tell the truth? That is the question.
And the person who could answer that question would deserve
whatever crown of glory the world has to offer. Think what it would mean if you
could teach, or if you could learn the art of writing. Why, every book, every
newspaper you'd pick up, would tell the truth, or create beauty. But there is,
it would appear, some obstacle in the way, some hindrance to the teaching of
words. For though at this moment at least a hundred professors are lecturing on
the literature of the past, at least a thousand critics are reviewing the
literature of the present, and hundreds upon hundreds of young men and women
are passing examinations in English literature with the utmost credit, still –
do we write better, do we read better than we read and wrote four hundred years
ago when we were un-lectured, un-criticized, untaught? Is our modern Georgian
literature a patch on the Elizabethan? Well, where then are we to lay the
blame? Not on our professors; not on our reviewers; not on our writers; but on
words. It is words that are to blame. They are the wildest, freest, most
irresponsible, most un-teachable of all things. Of course, you can catch them
and sort them and place them in alphabetical order in dictionaries. But words
do not live in dictionaries; they live in the mind. If you want proof of this,
consider how often in moments of emotion when we most need words we find none.
Yet there is the dictionary; there at our disposal are some half-a-million words
all in alphabetical order. But can we use them? No, because words do not live
in dictionaries, they live in the mind. Look once more at the dictionary. There
beyond a doubt lie plays more splendid than Antony and Cleopatra; poems
lovelier than the Ode to a Nightingale; novels beside which Pride and Prejudice
or David Copperfield are the crude bunglings of amateurs. It is only a question
of finding the right words and putting them in the right order. But we cannot
do it because they do not live in dictionaries; they live in the mind. And how
do they live in the mind? Variously and strangely, much as human beings live,
ranging hither and thither, falling in love, and mating together. It is true
that they are much less bound by ceremony and convention than we are. Royal
words mate with commoners. English words marry French words, German words,
Indian words, Negro words, if they have a fancy. Indeed, the less we enquire
into the past of our dear Mother English the better it will be for that lady's
reputation. For she has gone a-roving, a-roving fair maid.
Thus to lay down any laws for such irreclaimable vagabonds
is worse than useless. A few trifling rules of grammar and spelling is all the
constraint we can put on them. All we can say about them, as we peer at them
over the edge of that deep, dark and only fitfully illuminated cavern in which
they live – the mind – all we can say about them is that they seem to like
people to think before they use them, and to feel before they use them, but to
think and feel not about them, but about something different. They are highly
sensitive, easily made self-conscious. They do not like to have their purity or
their impurity discussed. If you start a Society for Pure English, they will
show their resentment by starting another for impure English – hence the
unnatural violence of much modern speech; it is a protest against the puritans.
They are highly democratic, too; they believe that one word is as good as
another; uneducated words are as good as educated words, uncultivated words as
good as cultivated words, there are no ranks or titles in their society. Nor do
they like being lifted out on the point of a pen and examined separately. They
hang together, in sentences, paragraphs, sometimes for whole pages at a time.
They hate being useful; they hate making money; they hate being lectured about
in public. In short, they hate anything that stamps them with one meaning or
confines them to one attitude, for it is their nature to change.
Perhaps that is their most striking peculiarity – their need
of change. It is because the truth they try to catch is many-sided, and they
convey it by being many-sided, flashing first this way, then that. Thus they
mean one thing to one person, another thing to another person; they are unintelligible
to one generation, plain as a pikestaff to the next. And it is because of this
complexity, this power to mean different things to different people, that they
survive. Perhaps then one reason why we have no great poet, novelist or critic
writing today is that we refuse to allow words their liberty. We pin them down
to one meaning, their useful meaning, the meaning which makes us catch the
train, the meaning which makes us pass the examination.
Virginia Woolf
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