[The Three Clerks by Anthony Trollope]@TWC D-Link book
The Three Clerks

CHAPTER XIX
11/19

You must always begin with an incident now, and then hark back for your explanation and description; that's what the editor says is the great secret of the present day, and where we beat all the old fellows that wrote twenty years ago.' 'Oh!--yes--I see.

They used to begin at the beginning; that was very humdrum.' 'A devilish bore, you know, for a fellow who takes up a novel because he's dull.

Of course he wants his fun at once.

If you begin with a long history of who's who and all that, why he won't read three pages; but if you touch him up with a startling incident or two at the first go off, then give him a chapter of horrors, then another of fun, then a little love or a little slang, or something of that sort, why, you know, about the end of the first volume, you may describe as much as you like, and tell everything about everybody's father and mother for just as many pages as you want to fill.

At least that's what the editor says.' '_Meleager ab ovo_ may be introduced with safety when you get as far as that,' suggested Norman.
'Yes, you may bring him in too, if you like,' said Charley, who was somewhat oblivious of his classicalities.


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