"The writing begins when you’ve finished. Only..." - Quote by Mark Twain
The writing begins when you’ve finished. Only then do you know what you’re trying to say.
More by Mark Twain
“...the person that had took a bull by the tail once had learnt sixty or seventy times as much as a person that hadn't, and said a person that started in to carry a cat home by the tail was getting knowledge that was always going to be useful to him, and warn't ever going to grow dim or doubtful. Chances are, he isn't likely to carry the cat that way again, either. But if he wants to, I say let him!”
“One gains at least two to three times more experience grabbing the tiger by the tail than reading about it in a book.”
“The past does not repeat itself, but it rhymes.”
More on Writing
“There will be no proof that I ever was a writer.”
“Now he would never write the things that he had saved to write until he knew enough to write them well. Well, he would not have to fail at trying to write them either. Maybe you could never write them, and that was why you put them off and delayed the starting. Well he would never know, now.”
“Sentences are not different enough to hold the attention unless they are dramatic. No ingenuity of varying structure will do. All that can save them is the speaking tone of voice somehow entangled in the words and fastened to the page for the ear of the imagination. That is all that can save poetry from sing-song, all that can save prose from itself.”
More on Creativity
“If a writer stops observing he is finished. But he does not have to observe consciously nor think how it will be useful. Perhaps that would be true at the beginning. But later everything he sees goes into the great reserve of things he knows or has seen.”
“I am a poet who composes what life proses, and who proses what life composes.”
“It takes a heap of sense to write good nonsense”