‘If In Doubt, Cut it Out’ – Reflections on Ernest Hemingway’s Writing

The Sun Also Rises


If in Doubt Cut it Out‘ is an old writer’s slogan used to remind budding writers to get rid of unnecessary noise and clutter. Cutting words remains one of the hardest, yet necessary parts of writing. Even after all these years I consider myself a novice in abiding to this KISS (Keep It Simple, Stupid!) principle. I tend to congratulate myself prematurely on an early draft and not respect the voice of the following day, telling me ‘Actually, it’s not that great‘. When a cooler head prevails I find myself relenting and either changing or deleting the text and it’s always better for it. I feel grateful for every word I can cut.

The writing style of one of the greatest American literary figures of the 20th century Ernest Hemingway is arguably the best example of the ‘If in Doubt, Cut it out‘ and ‘KISS‘ principles in practice. Hemingway revolutionized American writing with his short, declarative sentences and tense prose. I’m currently reading one of his masterpieces The Sun Also Rises for the third time. It is my favourite Hemingway book mainly because I just find it such an enjoyable read. I needed to detach myself from the sombreness and sternness of the books I discussed here previously, as magnificent as they were. Hemingway’s sparse writing style and restrained use of description allows my reading senses to de-clutter and re-calibrate. Also, I was up for another trip to Paris, France in the 1920s with a motley crue of expatriates (the lost generation).

Wednesday’s book quotes will feature further excerpts from The Sun Also Rises and I won’t bother you with a detailed description of the book today.  Instead, I would like to use this opportunity to demonstrate the no-nonsense, short prose of Hemingway which made him such a colossal figure in modern American literature. What better way to start than from page 1, Chapter 1:

Robert Cohn was once middleweight boxing champion of Princeton. Do not think that I am very much impressed by that as a boxing title, but it meant a lot to Cohn. He cared nothing for boxing, in fact he disliked it, but he learned it painfully and thoroughly to counteract the feeling of inferiority and shyness he had felt on being treated as a Jew at Princeton. There was a certain inner comfort in knowing he could knock down anybody who was snooty to him, although, being very shy and a thoroughly nice boy, he never fought except in the gym. He was Spider Kelly’s star pupil. Spider Kelly taught all his young gentlemen to box like featherweights, no matter whether they weighed one hundred and five or two hundred and five pounds. But it seemed to fit Cohn. He was really very fast. He was so good that Spider promptly overmatched him and got his nose permanently flattened. This increased Cohn’s distaste for boxing, but it gave him a certain satisfaction of some strange sort, and it certainly improved his nose. In his last year at Princeton he read too much and took to wearing spectacles. I never met any one of his class who remembered him. They did not even remember that he was middleweight boxing champion.

I mistrust all frank and simple people, especially when their stories hold together, and I always had a suspicion that perhaps Robert Cohn had never been middleweight boxing champion, and that perhaps a horse had stepped on his face, or that maybe his mother had been frightened or seen something, or that he had, maybe, bumped into something as a young child, but I finally had somebody verify the story from Spider Kelly. Spider Kelly not only remembered Cohn. He had often wondered what had become of him.

Robert Cohn was a member, through his father, of one of the richest Jewish families in New York, and through his mother of one of the oldest. At the military school where he prepped for Princeton, and played a very good end on the football team, no one had made him race-conscious. No one had ever made him feel he was a Jew, and hence any different from anybody else, until he went to Princeton. He was a nice boy, a friendly boy, and very shy, and it made him bitter. He took it out in boxing, and he came out of Princeton with painful self-consciousness and the flattened nose, and was married by the first girl who was nice to him. He was married five years, had three children, lost most of the fifty thousand dollars his father left him, the balance of the estate having gone to his mother, hardened into a rather unattractive mould under domestic unhappiness with a rich wife; and just when he had made up his mind to leave his wife she left him and went off with a miniature-painter. As he had been thinking for months about leaving his wife and had not done it because it would be too cruel to deprive her of himself, her departure was a very healthful shock.

Tagged with: , ,
Posted in Reading, Reflections

Alexandra Leaving (2001) – Leonard Cohen

Leonard Cohen and Roshi
Leonard Cohen and Roshi

Alexandra Leaving is the third song from Leonard Cohen in the music library project and is the seventh song on his 2001 record Ten New Songs.  Alexandra Leaving is based on The God Abandons Antony, a poem by Constantine P. Cavafy. This is another one of his songs which just gets better the more you listen to it. It’s like drinking from a wellspring and each time you take another sip it becomes more blessed, more enriching for the soul.

In contrast to the intensely direct Aint No Cure For Love, Alexandra Leaving is a quietly understated poetic meandering about the ebbs and flows of romance and divine inspiration. Leonard Cohen beset to his spiritual axiom postulates when something so divine touches us we should not take it for granted nor should we try and grasp for it when it decides it’s leaving.

Even though she sleeps upon your satin
Even though she wakes you with a kiss
Do not say the moment was imagined
Do not stoop to strategies like this

And you who were bewildered by a meaning
Whose code was broken, crucifix uncrossed
Say goodbye to Alexandra leaving
Then say goodbye to Alexandra lost

 You can read more about the interpretations of the song at songmeanings.com which includes the following:

This song is based on Constantine Cavafy’s Poem ‘The God Abandons Antony’.  The same Antony from ‘Julius Caesar’ and ‘Antony and Cleopatra’. The original poem itself is based on Plutarch’s story that Antony heard a ghostly, musical procession the night before he lost the siege of Alexandria to Octavian. The procession – among other things, signified the desertion of his God protector, Bacchus. The departing procession could thus signify the loss of love, glory, fame, fortune, love….

Leonard Cohen changes Alexandria to Alexandra, making the loss more firmly that of love. The song, in Cohen’s hands, becomes about how to face the loss of a lover and all the accompanying promises and expectations. The warrior’s exhortation to face up to the loss of life on the eve of battle transforms into the lover’s counsel to be strong and accept the loss of a relationship.
thespianphryne songmeanings.com

Interestingly Ten New Songs is dedicated to Joshu Sasaki (see image above) a Buddhist monk and rōshi (venerable teacher) who Cohen regularly visited at Mount Baldy Zen Center in California. He served him as personal assistant during Cohen’s period of reclusion at Mount Baldy monastery in the 1990s. Leonard Cohen speaks about his life as a Buddhist monk here.

Tagged with: , ,
Posted in Music

27/8 – 2/9/19 Messiah, Individual Sovereignty, Diddly-Squat Auralians, Edinburgh Fringe & Thieves

news on the march

Welcome back to Monday’s News on the March – The week that was in my digital world. Wow, what a week huh?! If you’re reading this we made it through the other side or you may have just paid someone at technical support for the ‘life extension cryogenic experience’. Whichever I’m glad you are here.

techsupport.gif

Story by Intellectual Shaman:

“What will you have for your last meal?” The guard interrupted.

“Bread and wine,” Jones yawned.

“That would not be my first choice,” The guard said.

Jones nodded and opened his bible. (Read More)

You tube video from Jordan Peterson at the independent institute:

Not the greatest questions but Jordan answered all of them thoughtfully and took the conversation in interesting directions:

‘You weaken people if you say they are the passive victims of externals forces. Then they become the passive victims of externals forces. It’s not good’.

“Read something great. Write about it. Get your thoughts in order.”

Article by Bruce Goodman at Weave a Web:

The Diddly-Squat Auralians were the inhabitants of a distant exoplanet thousands of light years away from Planet Earth. Diddly-Squat Auralians was the term used by Earthlings to describe the aliens, as no one had a clue what the Diddlies called themselves.

BBC article

After scouring hundreds of venues and shows at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, the panel submitted their favourite six jokes. Without naming the comics behind each one, 2,000 members of the British public were invited to choose the funniest.

Article by Encounter Soul:

In the middle of the night it hits. With a few swift, smart, agile and adept finger clicks – my entire bank account is emptied in one fell swoop. I awaken to emails & texts from my bank telling me that I’m overdrawn. I log in to see $0.00 staring back at me.

news on the march the end
Posted in News

Ain’t That Lonely Yet – Dwight Yoakam

The next song in the music library project is Dwight Yoakam’s ‘Ain’t That Lonely Yet’. I am reblogging Badfinger’s Powerpop article about it (click image below), since that is where I first heard it. I found this country song really soothing on the ears. The lyrics won’t set anyone’s world on fire, but you could sum it up as ‘a woman hurts him and now wants him to take her back’.

His sarcasm in the early stanzas makes me chuckle:

You keep calling me on the telephone
You say you’re all alone
Well that’s real sad

And you keep leavin’
Notes stuck on my door
Guess you’re hungry for some more
Girl that’s too bad

I think it’s a little bit deeper than that; he is really tempted and the whole song is him talking to himself, telling himself that she is bad for him and he needs to forget about her.

Powerpop Dwight Yoakam

Tagged with: ,
Posted in Music

Monos (2019) – Alejandro Landes (Colombian Entry for the Best International Feature Film – Oscars)

I normally reserve my movie reviews for Friday’s-Finest, but I hastily brought this one forward since I just saw Monos at the cinema and it has been selected as the Colombian entry for the Best International Feature Film at the 92nd Academy Awards. What made me run literally 5 minutes up the road to see this today was the following article from BBC:  Ten films to watch this September:

The Guardian says that (Monos -monkeys) “This overpoweringly tense and deeply mad thriller is … something between Apocalypse Now, Lord of the Flies and Embrace of the Serpent”. If that weren’t recommendation enough, Guillermo del Toro is quoted in the trailer deeming Monos “mesmerising”, and co-writer-director, Alejandro Landes, “a powerful new voice in cinema”. Released 13 September in the US.

Plot – Wikipedia: In a remote mountaintop setting somewhere in Latin America, a rebel group of teenage commandos perform military training exercises while watching over a prisoner (Julianne Nicholson) and a conscripted milk cow for a shadowy force known only as “The Organization.” After an ambush drives the squadron into the jungle, fracturing their intricate bond, the mission begins to collapse.

Monos is a very disturbing film to watch. I found it vexatious seeing adolescents conduct themselves as they do in this movie. Some might find it sexually exploitative even though it is most likely an accurate reflection of how teenagers under the same duress might react. This is Colombia and only yesterday Ivan Marquez an ex FARC rebel issued a call to arms. Kids like these; even much younger have for years been enticed and many times coerced into forming allegiance with similar renegade groups. As much as Monos at the surface level for international viewers may seem a fantasy, believe me it isn’t.

Monos is definitely a movie to be seen in the cinema since what impressed me most was the hypnotic soundtrack and spectacular cinematography. I can’t think of another recent movie where the soundtrack has played a more pivotal role and been so effective. Regarding filming..If you enjoyed Alejandro G. IñárrituThe Revenant’s ‘stream of consciousness’ cinematography then you will certainly admire this one.

Monos is a comparatively short thriller film and when the credits rolled I was left fixated on the screen trying to process that which had occurred, but indebted all the same for this jarring movie experience.

Tagged with: , ,
Posted in Movies and TV

Dogville (2003) – Lars Von Trier (Friday’s Finest)

Dogville

This nearly 3 hour film which is set entirely on a sound stage and filmed like an intimate theatrical production would test just about anyone’s patience. I’m not going to lie. I bought the DVD brand new for about the equivalent of $2US in my local Panamericana store. I had been meaning to watch it since I had read some interesting things about it. The performances are led by Nicole Kidman and Paul Bettany with an imposing supporting cast including Lauren Bacall, James Caan and Philip Baker Hall. It’s also wonderfully narrated by John Hurt. Dogville is an art-house film and Kidman delivers an “A” class performance. She has definitely never lacked the courage to perform in experiential cinema.

Dogville 1

I was wondering if I even should have included it on Friday’s-finest since it’s  not exactly a movie I would recommend to anyone unless that any one wanted to rack their brains watching a slow parable being told set in a poverty stricken small town of America during the depression called Dogville. I mean the premise sounds interesting: Kidman plays a woman on the run from the mob and police and she is reluctantly accepted in this small town. In exchange, she agrees to work for them. As a search visits the town, she finds out that their support has a higher price to pay than she had foreseen. But who is this woman and why is she on the run?
Only you can’t see Dogville. The “town” and its streets, houses and vegetation are all represented by chalked lines on a flat studio floor the size of a football pitch, with bits and pieces of exterior and interior buildings.

It’s best to approach Dogville from the perspective of not expecting to be entertained by the story but instead challenged to interpret the symbolism of this tragic tale. If it’s taken too literally; its surface narrative could be interpreted as intriguing of sorts, but fatally cynical. However if it is viewed metaphorically like a parable of the gospels or even with a particular philosophical concept in mind like Stoicism or Nietzscheism then you should find plenty of meat on Lars Von Trier’s bone to chew on. What it doesn’t shy away from is exposing Humanism as a fatal flaw.

The following is a Spoiler in an allegorical sense, but don’t say I didn’t warn you if you intend on seeing Dogville:

If one considers ‘Grace’ (Kidman character) to be a Christ-like figure as I did, then one can also consider her father to be like the Old Testament’s Yahweh. There is in fact a limit to God’s love, when one considers the Christian perspective on the divine judgement of souls. The final act, where Dogville gets its just desserts, can be viewed as a metaphor for this Final Judgement and God’s wrath acted upon the wicked and evil, with the mobsters acting as the heavenly host of vengeful angels. Or you could also view the whole movie and the soundstage as the temptation of Christ where Jesus fasted for 40 days in the desert and Satan appeared to him and tried to tempt him. Grace’s father appears to Grace in the final act in her Mount of Olives Gethsemane moment where she anguishes over the fate of the people who had sinned against her.

If you have read this far into my post you will have ascertained that Dogville certainly hit all my right buttons as far as being philosophically exigent. As Will Self put it in the London even Standard: ‘The viewer is regaled with more philosophising on the meaning of social responsibility, communal values and existential angst than he might reasonably hope to witness in a lifetime’s cinema- going.’

Tagged with: , ,
Posted in Movies and TV

Ain’t No Cure For Love (1988) – Leonard Cohen

Leonard Cohen 1988
Leonard Cohen 1988

I would class Ain’t No Cure for Love as a top tier Leonard Cohen song. Unlike the first song of his presented from the library, the restrained and melancholic A Thousand Kisses Deep, I would highly recommend anyone unfamiliar with Leonard’s music to try Ain’t No Cure on for size. Probably no other song of his bottles everything which he is so damn good at. Romance, poetry and devotional music – It’s is all here, but he’s at the peak of his powers doing it. You’ll note this song escalates in intensity as it progresses, until it climaxes (much like the act of making-love) and he’s all but spent.

I see you in the subway and I see you on the bus
I see you lying down with me, I see you waking up
I see your hand, I see your hair
Your bracelets and your brush
And I call to you, I call to you
But I don’t call soft enough
There ain’t no cure
There ain’t no cure
There ain’t no cure for love

Ain’t No Cure for Love is the second track on Cohen’s 1988 studio album I’m Your Man. According to Wikipedia his eight studio album was received as follows:
I’m Your Man was hailed by critics as a return to form. It was number 1 in Norway for 16 weeks. The album is silver in the UK and gold in Canada. In the original Rolling Stone review, David Browne called it “the first Cohen album that can be listened to during the daylight hours.” Tom Waits has named it one of his favourite albums. The album was also included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.

As the title suggests the theme of the song is a common and traditional one, but there isn’t much common or traditional in the output, on the contrary, I haven’t heard another song about ‘love’ like it. He mixes metaphors like pills and doctors in not finding the cure which reinforces the desperation he finds himself in not being able to escape these memories. The poetry is exquisite and full of lovely irony and his conviction and purposefulness in the vocal delivery is jarring. You can’t help but just be totally invested in it. It also has an anthemesque-theological substrate which is present in much of his work.

I walked into this empty church, I had no place else to go
When the sweetest voice I ever heard, whispered to my soul
I don’t need to be forgiven for loving you so much
It’s written in the scriptures
It’s written there in blood
I even heard the angels declare it from above
There ain’t no cure
There ain’t no cure
There ain’t no cure for love

Tagged with: , ,
Posted in Music

Take a Walk with James Joyce Along the Beach

James Joyce
James Joyce

Today in Wednesday’s book quote, we revisit A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce. If you remember in our previous encounter A morning inspiration we examined Joyce’s exceptional discourse about the spirit and unfettered freedom the instant upon his waking in the morning just prior to awakening wholly. Today we delve into what I consider to be his ‘artistic-soul’ transitioning from boyhood to adulthood.

Portrait - Beach 1
Portrait - Beach 2

What makes this section most remarkable is he contextualizes it with simply wandering on a beach. I’ve walked on beaches before and had my encounters with waves, birds and even girls which have made me swoon, but this is a walk where Joyce finds himself transfiguring all those aforementioned images into mythological wonders that symbolise his transition from his youthful artistic-soul into the honed-in dedicated adult artist. Not only that, he has written the most illuminating description about the power and beauty of the feminine upon man:

Portrait - Beach 3.jpg
Portrait - Beach 4
Portrait - Beach 6.jpg
Tagged with: , ,
Posted in Reading

Agnus Dei – Michael W Smith

Michael W Smith

Agnus Dei is a Christian theological concept of the Lamb of God and the associated liturgical text from the Roman Catholic Latin Mass. You’ll recall in a recent post about Samuel Barber’s Adagio for Strings where Barber used Agnus Dei as the lyrics for his choral arrangement. In fact Agnus Dei has been set to music by many composers. Michael W Smith’s adaptation here comprises today’s music library post.

I mentioned previously that I was very fond of Christian music. That came into being around the time I was baptised in 2003 by the Mornington Baptist church in Victoria, Australia. I was introduced to a plethora of Christian artists and groups whose music I still hold very dear. Michael W Smith was one such figure who stood out. I am no longer a firm believer in any one theistic doctrine but I do hold high regard for the Judaeo-Christian concept of The Logos, moral-truths and archetypes / meta-heroes.

Michael Smith is an American musician who has had chart success in both contemporary christian music and mainstream. In his youth he gravitated towards drugs and alcohol, but suffered a breakdown in 79 that led to his recommitment to Christianity.  That obviously worked because he’s now a three-time grammy winner and has sold more than 18 million albums.
Interestingly, I just read he was good friends with both President Bush’s even singing at senior’s state funeral. He’s also friends with U2’s Bono and they collaborated on a Christmas album. Michael and Amy Grant (The Christian singer who had some big mainstream hits as well) have gone on several concert tours together. In 2018, he sang and played piano at Billy Graham’s memorial and funeral.

Agnus Dei was released by Michael on his sixth studio album Go West Young Man in 1990. According to wikipedia: This record was his first attempt at mainstream success. It was successful, as it scored a Billboard Hot 100 top ten hit with “Place in This World”, which peaked at number 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1991.

I don’t know how many times I’ve heard the following live version of Agnus Dei, but I must be closing in on a hundred. The choral singing is something to behold.

Alleluia Alleluia
For our Lord God Almighty reigns
Alleluia Alleluia
For our Load God Almighty reigns…

Tagged with: ,
Posted in Music

20/8 – 26/8/19 Manson/Epstein, Tarantino, Springsteen & Humanity’s Future

news on the march

Welcome back to Monday’s News on the March – ‘The week that was in my digital world’.

WordPress article from Badfinger at PowerPop:

Manson must have had a hell of a rabbit’s foot or someone or some organization was looking out for him. If any of us would get caught with an underage girl, stolen cars, and narcotics… a trip to jail would be in our immediate future…even in the 1960s…much less being on parole at the time.

While on the subject of underage sex controversies..

Reddit Thread:

Eric has made noise about Epstein being a “construct”. My sense is that he means that Epstein, as a financier, was “created” by some intelligence agency (domestic or foreign). Epstein had no degree, was a high school math teacher, but suddenly ended up a financial guru through means that are not clear to anyone. No one seems to know where his money came from.

Article from Alan Cerny at Vitalthrills.com:

The above review of Tarantino’s latest flick is uncannily reflective of my thoughts regarding the movie.

Where once he used his influences to build upon a story uniquely his own, now Tarantino is adrift in that sea, letting the tides of nostalgia take him away instead of steering the boat himself. That’s not to say that Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood isn’t a good movie; it is. But it’s a comfortable movie, and from a director that used to thrive on that dangerous, unpredictable nature of storytelling, it’s a bit surprising.

WordPress article from Reely Bernie:

Blend 1987, the Pakistani culture, scratched cassette tapes of Bruce Springsteen, and the nowhere town of Luton, England, and you get the best feel-good movie of the year. Kind of like Beatles-loving Yesterday, Blinded by the Light’s Bruce Springsteen-loving shuns cynicism and reminds us that good stories and good music do occur, and the big screen is the most effective filter.

WordPress article from Mike Smith at Self Aware Patterns:

If we manage to wipe ourselves out in the next century or so (by climate destruction, nuclear war, or some other means), or even in the next few millenia, virtually all evidence of human civilization would be gone in a few tens of millions of years due to the earth’s constant geological erosion, tectonic upheaval, and overall churn. A geologist one hundred million years from now might be hard pressed to identify that any civilization in our time had actually existed.

Where Humanity’s future lies leads us neatly into this confounding lecture:

You tube video – A tough talk with Brett Einstein at Bard College:

We have discovered the means by which to steal from the future in order to thrive in the present. Self-destruction would be inevitable but for another evolutionary gift, the ability to describe alternative futures and to choose amongst them. This talk will confront the tension between these two capacities and, in order to sketch the path through our looming bottleneck.

news on the march the end

Posted in Movies and TV, News, Science

Follow Blog via Email

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 753 other subscribers

← Back

Thank you for your response. ✨