Robert Benchley Quotes About Writing

We have collected for you the TOP of Robert Benchley's best quotes about Writing! Here are collected all the quotes about Writing starting from the birthday of the Humorist – September 15, 1889! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 2 sayings of Robert Benchley about Writing. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • Nine-tenths of the value of a sense of humor in writing is not in the things it makes one write but in the things it keeps one from writing. It is especially valuable in this respect in serious writing, and no one without a sense of humor should ever write seriously. For without knowing what is funny, one is constantly in danger of being funny without knowing it.

    Life Magazine, March 8, 1929.
  • Great literature must spring from an upheaval in the author's soul. If that upheaval is not present then it must come from the works of any other author which happens to be handy and easily adapted.

  • If you are one of the hewers of wood and drawers of small weekly paychecks, your letters will have to contain some few items of news or they will be accounted dry stuff.... But if you happen to be of a literary turn of mind, or are, in any way, likely to become famous, you may settle down to an afternoon of letter-writing on nothing more sprightly in the way of news than the shifting of the wind from south to south-east.

  • The biggest obstacle to professional writing is the necessity for changing a typewriter ribbon.

    Chips off the old Benchley (1949) "Learn to Write"
  • The free-lance writer is a man who is paid per piece or per word or perhaps.

    Pieces  
    James Thurber, The Bermudian Magazine, November 1950.
  • If Shakespeare were alive today and writing comedy for the movies, he would be the head-liner for the Mack Sennett studios.

    Robert Benchley (1943). “Benchley beside himself”
  • It took me fifteen years to discover I had no talent for writing, but I couldn't give it up because by that time I was too famous.

    Quoted in Reader's Digest, Sept. 1949. According to Nigel Rees, Cassell's Humorous Quotations, the following appeared in Punch in 1924: " 'It took me nearly ten years to learn that I couldn't write.' 'I suppose you gave it up then?' 'Oh, no! By that time I had a reputation established.' " The issue referred to by Rees is 6 Feb., and the cartoonist is R. Curry.
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