The Sense and the Sound of Sentence
The Sense and the Sound of Sentence
I have been in awe of printed word,
for as long as I can remember. Even in childhood I was never away from it for
long. In my school years, I mostly read Hindi. I read magazines, comics, and
abridged, translated versions of English classics. English books were a luxury
we could not afford freely.
(Unlike today, books were expensive. Publishers
like Penguin, Hachette, Harper Collins hadn’t come to India yet. Their books
were imported and were exorbitantly priced. Only inexpensive foreign print
media we saw were the Russian magazines like Sputnik and Russian novels of
authors like Tolstoy and Gorky in translation. These were dirt-cheap. They were
sleek. Magazines were printed on thick glossy papers with colourful pictures. I
do not remember reading these. They made excellent covers for our school text
books. Novels were bound elegantly in imitation leather with the title embossed
in gold letters. Even a small town that we lived in then, boasted of cycle-rikshaws
selling these in its bazar. Those were the golden years of India-Russia
bonhomie, in a cold-war partitioned, bipartisan world. Russians were friends
while West was viewed with suspicion.)
But I joined libraries that were
accessible—and my parents encouraged me enthusiastically.
I remember, I was then about eight
years. Schools had closed for summer vacation. My parents began to visit a new
temple. Temple had a small collection— a few shelves actually—of mythology
books. These were thin paperbacks, about hundred pages each and told religious
stories in simple language, printed in large, bold letters. Week after week, I tagged
behind my parents on their temple visit. I read books while they offered pooja.
I borrowed a few, as much as I was permitted. If I finished these before the
next scheduled visit, I trudged to the temple alone, four to five kilometres. By
the end of the vacation I had read the complete collection.
My father was posted to Bangalore
when I finished eighth level in school. In those days, more than forty years
ago, each residential hamlet in Bangalore had a public library known as City
Central Library. Library in our locality, was quartered in a four-bedroom house.
Librarian sat in the small hall at the entrance with his chest of drawers which
contained records of the borrowed books. Living room, the dining room, and the
bedrooms had tall racks lining every wall, choc-a-block full of books. There
was a reading table with a few chairs in the dining room, perhaps the dining
table of the house. Books were everywhere. Smell of old books, it felt, had
seeped into the walls of the house. Place radiated warmth of a home. It seemed
to affirm that books were a part of daily life, not remote from the
run-of-the-mill chores of living.
I took a membership and was
introduced to a vast collection of English books for the first time. I came to
know Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew stories. As with other class of books, I was a
Johnny-come-lately in this genre too. I devoured these, two to three a day. My
sister also had a membership and we could borrow two books on each card. In the
following years, I read Charles Dickens, George Eliot, Bronte Sisters, in
original. Library also had a good collection of Hindi books, as it looked to me
then. I read books by Shivani, Sharat Chandra, Bimal Kar, Rabindranath Tagore,
Premchand, Amritlal Nagar, Acharya Chatursen, and many more authors, I hadn’t
even heard before. When I remember my school years in Bangalore, they feel like
halcyon days of reading. City Central Library is an ineluctable part of these
memories.
I took note of a book’s language only
after I started reading varied mix of authors. Gradually I learnt that the charm
of a book lies also in its prose style. About fifteen years back, I veered
towards non-fiction. Soon I was reading more history, science, biography, travel,
and philosophy, than fiction. I found style of writing mattered more in
non-fiction, where plot and the natural lure of a story aren’t there to bind
reader’s attention. But I could not put my finger on the elements of good
writing these books evidently had. I had learnt to appreciate these
instinctively. I have now read a few books on writing. And have begun - much
belatedly though - to understand the components of writing that attracted me
then, and also the features that almost snubbed interest in a particular book,
however novel the subject matter may have been. I find these books as much fun,
as they are informing.
I read one such book sometime back.
Though the book is on writing, it is not in the conventional mould of writing
manuals. It gave me much joy as I read it. It also introduced me to certain novel
aspects of the written word, I had no clue about. I want to talk about the book
today.
First You Write a Sentence: The Elements of Reading,
Writing…and Life
Joe Moran
Joe Moran’s First You Write a
Sentence is not a style manual. It does not emphasise few rules which
author feels every writer should mind in their writing. It’s not prescriptive.
It is Joe Moran’s reflections on the written word: What is the meaning of
writing? How does a sentence covey to the reader, author’s thought when he is
not around?
‘This is a book of sentences written
in praise of writing sentences.’ Moran says in introduction.
Book is Joe Moran’s ode to the art of
writing sentences, a paean sung in the praise of the beauty of sentences, his gratitude
to nature for this gift.
‘First I write a sentence. I get a
tickle of an idea for how the words might come together, like an angler feeling
a tug, on the rod’s line. Then I sound the sentence in my head…Then I tweak,
rejig, shave off a syllable, swap a word for a phrase or phrase for a word.
Then I sit it next to other sentences to see how it behaves in company. And
then I delete it all and start again.’
This is how he begins the book. Book
is replete with such meaningful ruminations on writing, crafted in perfect
sentences.
Sentence is the basic unit of all
writing. One writes to convey a chain of thoughts to the reader. Sentence are
the links in this chain. When a link is defective, chain breaks down. It is
true that a piece of writing, a small essay of few hundred words or a book of
many thousands, advances on its sentences. A writer is bound to write in
sentences, as a reader is destined to read in them.
‘A sentence is more than its meaning.
It is a line of words where logic and lyric meet—a piece of both sense and
sound, even if that sound is heard only in the head.’ Moran writes in
introduction. This theme, the sense and the sound of a sentence, runs through
the book as Moran elucidates its various aspects. A sentence has a rhythm
beyond its meaning. This rings in your ears, even when you have put the book
down. A piece of prose cannot have all its sentences of this extraordinary
beauty. But good writing has more of these. One remembers them for long.
This extract is from VS Naipaul’s A
House for Mr Biswas, where Mr Biswas is lamenting the ignominy of dying
without owning a house.
“How terrible it would have been, at this time, to be without
it [A house]; …to have lived without even attempting to lay claim to one’s
portion of the earth; to have lived and died as one had been born, unnecessary
and unaccommodated.”
Whenever I
think of the book, these words popup in my mind. They seem to contain the gist
of the novel.
Moran explains
the many facets of a sentence clearly. He offers examples—his and of other
writers—to illustrate his point. ‘The limit of a spoken sentence is the breath
capacity of our lungs. The limit of a written one is the memory capacity of our
brains…By the time it [full stop] arrives, you must still be able to recall the
sentence’s beginning. If you can’t keep it all in your head, then maybe those
words weren’t meant to be together.’ Here he is talking about writing short
sentences. He discusses such features of sentence as never occurred to me
before. His explanations are lucid and convincing. And it feels, after having
read him, that you were always aware of these properties of the sentence: They
seem so basic.
His prose has
the beauty and elegance of poetry. You pause often to enjoy its composition. It
is full of meaning and appropriate to the context he is discussing.
‘Rhythm is the
song of life. The syllabic stress patterns of speech sync up with the heartbeat
we hear in the womb, the pulses of air in the lungs, the strides of walking and
running.’ He is discussing the need of rhythm in a sentence.
“We
shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we
shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills; we
shall never surrender.”
Churchill’s wartime speech to
his countrymen has the rhythm of marching soldiers.
Even when Moran
talks about concepts of grammar like nouns and verbs, his views on their usage
is not pedantic. His explanation is not confined only to their grammatical
design. He reveals larger extent of their reach. He advises us to use less
nouns in sentence and more verbs. Because in a nouny writing ‘no one says who
did what to whom, or takes ownership or blame. Instead of saying X is not
working (verb & participle) they say that there has been a loss
of functionality (two nouns) in X. These words are not even trying
to illuminate, they are immunizing themselves against the world.’
‘How do you
breathe life into sentences choked with nouns?’ His advice is ‘Simple: use
verbs.’ Because ‘Verbs enact this universal law: everything moves.’ Because
‘Life is movement. Each day we take 23,000 breaths and our heart beats 100,000
times.’ And because ‘Nouns and verbs are the two poles of the sentence. Nouns
keep it still: verbs make it move.’
George Orwell
advised novice writers to make their prose ‘plain’. ‘Good prose is like a windowpane,’
he wrote. Like a windowpane it offers a clear view of author’s thoughts. It is
not noticeable in itself. This is considered a gospel of writing. In a chapter
Moran criticises this aphorism with insightful arguments. In this long chapter,
he offers many tips for making your prose meaningful and readable. His advice
is in a gentle, conversational voice, not exhortations.
(Strunk and
White’s iconic style-guide, The Elements of Style, Bible of composition
in English, for a century now, is exhortative. It lays down immutable laws of
writing. I do not offer this as a criticism. The Elements of Style packs
in its anorexic slimness, a girth of mere hundred pages, wisdom of an epic.)
In another
chapter Moran discusses the need and art of writing long sentences. ‘A long
sentence can seem thrillingly out of breath, deliciously tantalizing, so long
as we feel the writer is still in charge.’ He discusses many tricks of
composing alluring, long sentences, all in his fascinating prose. ‘A long
sentence should feel like it is pushing at its edges while still keeping its
shape.’
“It was the
best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the
age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of
incredulity, it was the season of light, it was the season of darkness, it was
the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair.”
This is the opening sentence of Charles Dickens’ novel A
Tale of Two Cities. It is long, very long, seems to end with every phrase,
but then picks up again. Reader is left breathless but still pines for more.
There is repetition of the words in each phrase, but instead of rankling the
reader, it adds to a terrific rhythm.
Moran deliberates
on ways to string sentences together in a passage. Sentences are not
independent. ‘Sentence is a social animal; it feeds off its fellows to form
higher units of sense.’ He mentions few tips to bring coherence in a piece of writing.
He advises one not to use more words to link a sentence to its predecessor,
words like however, moreover, namely, notwithstanding. Writer should not
underestimate reader’s intelligence, he says. Reader sees a connection where
one exists. Too many gummy words like these do not make prose clear but make it
dull. He talks about the need for avoiding repetition of words in a piece of
prose. He counsels judicious use of pronouns, hypernyms, and synonyms. But he
cautions against resorting to the ploy of elegant variation to avoid
repetition. (Guardian calls this technique ‘popular orange vegetables’
or ‘povs’, after one of its reporters used it to avoid repeating the word
‘carrot’). Elegant variation distracts and flusters the reader. Another
trick-of-the-trade he offers is to vary the length of sentences. This gives a
rhythm and cadence to prose. A passage in this section, listing virtues of
short and long sentences is worth quoting here, to illustrate how Moran states
his opinion lyrically and clearly.
‘Short and long
sentences do different things…Short sentences give your brain a rest: long ones
give it an aerobic workout. Short sentences imply that the world is cut and
dried; long ones restore its ragged edges. Short sentences are declarative and
sure; long ones are conditional and conjectural. Vary your sentence length and
you mirror the way the mind works, veering between seductive certainty and
hard-won nuance.’
Today, linguistics
and cognitive psychology have revealed that language is an inexorable component
of human brain. It is woven in brain’s fabric quite literally. There are
specific areas and synapses in human brain involved with language formation.
Basic structure of every language, including the sign language, follows a
universal language of brain, i.e., Mentalese. Within a few months from the time
they start speaking, children learn a staggering array of words. The ease with
which toddlers learn to thread words into a meaningful sentence, betrays this
inherent ability of our brain.
Our language,
especially the usage of verbs, reflects the way our mind grasps the world.
Speech, to state metaphorically, is the greatest gift nature has bestowed on
our species. Only Homo Sapiens amongst millions of species of animals that ever
lived on earth, possess this ability. But the reach of speech is limited in
space and time. Writing is the medium that enables us to communicate our
thoughts to a world far removed, even when we are not around.
We evolved to
communicate through speech. Spoken word is thus, easiest to understand. Writing
is a contrived communication, unlike speech that is natural. Good writing must
emulate cadence of spoken words: its rhythm, its pauses, its flow, its music,
its inflections, its tonal variations. This is a tall order. Joe Moran shows us
a way of bridging the gap between speech and writing by his ingenious analysis
of the art of writing a sentence. And goads
us, ever so gently, to breathe life into our lifeless sentences.
I read the book a few weeks back. As I write these words, refer to its pages again, I realise I will have to read it again and perhaps again. To learn about sentences, of course. But also, to learn that, which has held an irresistible lure all my life: the power, the beauty, and the glory of the written word.
You should start writing your memoirs, Dr Rajeev
ReplyDeleteAt least one would not have to worry about material!
ReplyDeleteVery well written piece sir.
ReplyDelete