A Conversation for Writing Right with Dmitri: Last Words

The tone of the age

Post 1

minorvogonpoet

Don't you think the writer has to take into account the tone of the age?smiley - erm

So Dickins could give Sydney Carton the words "It is a far, far better thing that I do, than I have ever done; it is a far, far better rest that I go to than I have ever known."

If you did that today, readers would say smiley - grr "He must have been a politician looking for a soundbite."

Modern writers tend to be less certain, more tentative. The end of Ian McEwen's latest book 'The Children Act' is:
"They lay face to face in the semi-darkness, and while the great rain-cleansed city beyond the room settled to its softer nocturnal rhythms and their marriage uneasily resumed, she told him in a steady quiet voice of her shame, of the sweet boy's passion for life, and her part in his death."


The tone of the age

Post 2

Dmitri Gheorgheni, Post Editor

Excellent point! smiley - biggrin

Think about the way Dickens ended his books compared to, say, Hemingway.

And yeah, it's always a contest between what you want to say and what the traffic will stand, isn't it? smiley - winkeye


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