A week late, but, you get the idea |
It’s
so well-intentioned of people to resolve to do things differently.
Me,
I don’t make resolutions for New Year. Mostly. Except, perhaps, one. Polonius’
remark to Hamlet’s parents, is brief, and to the point. ‘…brevity is the soul
of wit…your noble son is mad....’ Little room for doubt or misunderstanding,
then.
William
Strunk. Once heard, a name not easily forgotten. He was a professor of English
at Cornell, and had a student, one E B White who enlarged his 1918 magnum opus
‘The Elements of Style’ into almost a set text for authors. If White's name
sounds familiar, he wrote ‘Stuart Little ‘ and ‘Charlotte’s Web’. I haven’t
read Dr Strunk. But, if I had, I expect he would have taught me the necessity
of brevity. He wrote, somewhat caustically: ‘Vigorous writing is concise. A
sentence should contain no unnecessary words, a paragraph no unnecessary
sentences, for the same reason that a drawing should have no unnecessary lines
and a machine no unnecessary parts. This requires not that the writer make all
his sentences short, or that he avoid all detail and treat his subjects only in
outline, but that every word tell.’ Riveting stuff. Keeps you awake till the wee small hours.
Skeletal
prose, so beloved of the well-paid writer, not counting James Joyce. Here's a
fifty-dollar word, a free gift*, if you like. Pleonasms* are a redundant
excess of words, the authors’ revenge on people who pay by the character who’d
like them to write less of them. Literature overflows with people who didn’t
follow this doubtlessly sound advice. Shakespeare again, this time from the
third act of “Julius Caesar”: ‘This was the most unkindest cut of all.’
Raymond Chandler’s “The Big Sleep": ‘Beyond the garage were some
decorative trees trimmed as carefully as poodle dogs.’ And finally,
Samuel Beckett: ‘Let me tell you this, when social workers offer you, free,
gratis and for nothing, something to hinder you from swooning, which with
them is an obsession, it is useless to recoil...’ (Molloy).
The
law, well known for ponderous prose, has its own little stylistic vices, using
little pleonasms like "null and void", "terms and
conditions", "each and every" – two-for-one words which say the
same thing.
So,
therefore, and so forth and so on. This year will see a paring, a slenderizing
of the prosaic moi. No more flowers, no more multiply-verbed sentences
in close proximity, (ha!) no burbling descent into doggerel. Instead,
the crispy meme, the mot juste. Or whatever.
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