English, asked by dipagupta280, 5 months ago

if writing is easy you are doing it wrong​

Answers

Answered by karthik4086
2

Answer:

Five simple words, yet they hit like a punch in the gut.

They’re the words of the great American author F. Scott Fitzgerald, and when I stumbled upon them in an old Brain Pickings post this week, I thought: “Yes. Finally.” Because these 76-year-old words perfectly express all the feels I’ve been feeling about writing in the digital age.

The article, “F. Scott Fitzgerald on the Secret of Great Writing“, features excerpts from Fitzgerald’s letter to an aspiring college-aged writer, as well as advice he sent to his daughter Scottie when she enrolled in high school. In both, he shares hard truths about the art of writing.

I hope u would understand my answer

Answered by Qwrome
0

Writing is easy you are doing it wrong

  • Many years ago, after being asked one too many a question, I sat down at my computer and hammered out what have henceforth been referred to as the ‘BNR Rules’.
  • Earlier, these rules were printed on a piece of paper.
  • Subsequently, we had them engraved and put on the wall of our office library.

  • Currently, the BNR Rules are four in number:

1. All work is to be done to the highest possible standards. Always.

2. There is always law. If you can’t find it, look some more.

3. Research is on a strict liability basis. You are liable for finding everything.

4. You can always out-work the opposition.

  • I mention the BNR Rules because I’m now thinking of adding a fifth rule: If you think it’s easy, you’re doing it wrong.
  • I’m thinking of adding this rule not just because my firm is blessed with associates who think practising law is a doddle.
  • I’m thinking of adding it because I need to remind myself that two decades of experience doesn’t make the practice of law easy. Easier, yes. Easy, no.

  • I’m sure that every other profession is difficult. But the type of law I practise is – or so I believe – particularly difficult.

  • I am a litigator. I argue for a living.
  • If you want to put it poetically, I’m an architect of the imagination: I make and destroy arguments for a living.

  • High-stakes litigation is difficult everywhere in the world because somebody’s life or somebody’s livelihood is often on the line.
  • But what makes it immeasurably more terrifying in Pakistan is that our advocacy is still done orally, not in writing.
  • That means that when you stand up to argue, you often have no idea what point is going to catch the judge’s fancy or what is going to disturb him: you just have to do your best and try to anticipate everything which might be flung at you.

#SPJ3

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