"A writer’s job is to tell the truth,"
said Hemingway in 1942. No other writer of our time had so fiercely asserted, so
pugnaciously defended or so consistently exemplified the writer’s obligation to
speak truly His standard of truth-telling remained, moreover, so high and so
rigorous that he was ordinarily unwilling to admit secondary evidence, whether
literary evidence or evidence picked up from other sources than his own
experience. "I only know what I have seen," was a statement which came often to
his lips and pen. What he had personally done, or what he knew unforgettably by
having gone through one version of it, was what he was interested in telling
about. This is not to say that he refused to invent freely. But he always made
it a sacrosanct point to invent in terms of what he actually knew from havin A. to construct a well-told story that the reader would thoroughly enjoy. B. To construct a story that would reflect truths that were not particular to a specific historical period C. To begin from reality but to allow his imagination to roam from "the way it was" to "the way it might have been" D. To report faithfully reality as Hemingway had experienced it. 更多"{{B}}TEXT D{{/B}} 'A w"的相关试题:我来回答: 提交
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