There
is one question I never fail to encounter on school visits—from where do you
get ideas for your stories? I usually say from incidents in my own life, from stray
remarks, newspaper items or even random happenings on the roadside.
When
I narrate the real event that led to my short story “Fire” the excitement is
almost palpable. It’s the forest fire that is as absorbing, I can see, as the broken
friendship and the moral dilemma that resulted from it. But how many such experiences
does one have to draw on, almost like a ready-made story?
That’s
why I like to share something else, something I read about the creative spark
behind Arnold Bennett’s well-known novel The
Old Wives’ Tale—the sight of a
fat old lady with grotesque gestures he caught sight of in a Paris restaurant. He
states in his introduction that he began to reflect: "This woman was once
young, slim, perhaps beautiful; certainly free from these ridiculous
mannerisms. Very probably she is unconscious of her singularities. Her case is
a tragedy. One ought to be able to make a heartrending novel out of the history
of a woman such as she."
Arnold
Bennett is not widely read today, and I must have been around fifteen when I
read this book, but for some reason I’ve never been able to forget those words.
And marvel that the mere sighting of a ridiculous looking woman could be behind
a work considered a classic.
I
did not realise it at the time, but I sensed Bennett’s deep empathy towards
another human being. That’s what left such an indelible impression. As he says
further…“Every stout, ageing woman is not grotesque—far from it!—but there is
an extreme pathos in the mere fact that every stout ageing woman was once a young
girl with the unique charm of youth in her form and movements and in her mind.
And the fact that the change from the young girl to the stout ageing woman is
made up of an infinite number of infinitesimal changes, each unperceived by
her, only intensifies the pathos.”
There
is no dearth of ideas for fiction. We also encounter occasional moments of
drama in our lives, which possess the potential to be turned into a gripping story.
But in the end, I feel, it’s a writer’s ability to glimpse the charming young girl
in the grotesque old woman that leads to the creation of a masterpiece, her/his
sensitivity to the pathos inherent in the transformation from charming young
girl to grotesque old woman.
3 comments:
That's a lovely way to put it; plenty of thought for anyone who wishes to write on a long and sustained basis.
Thanks, Richa. I strongly believe that in order to make an impact on the reader, the writer must have complete empathy for her protagonist's predicament.
Post a Comment