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- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Path: sparky!uunet!srg!spica!dpipes
- From: dpipes@spica.srg (Dave Pipes x4552)
- Subject: Re: It, as a subject.
- Organization: just me
- Date: Thu, 15 Oct 92 18:15:39 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Oct15.181539.4496@srg.srg.af.mil>
- Followup-To: misc.writing
- References: <92287.091501KVJLC@ASUACAD.BITNET> <Bw2v5v.4tn@unx.sas.com> <Bw4745.BuH@unx.sas.com>
- Sender: news@srg.srg.af.mil (Usenet news user)
- Lines: 53
-
- In article <Bw4745.BuH@unx.sas.com> sasbck@spain.unx.sas.com (Brenda Kalt) writes:
- >
- >In article <Bw2v5v.4tn@unx.sas.com>, sasafw@dobo.unx.sas.com (Fred Welden) writes:
- >|>
- >|> In article <92287.091501KVJLC@ASUACAD.BITNET>, Jon L. Campbell <KVJLC@ASUACAD.BITNET> writes:
- >|> |[additional crticism of Stephen King's writing in NEEDFUL THINGS,
- >|> |including the fact that King starts sentences with "It" and makes
- >|> |grammatical mistakes.]
- > [........]
- >|> Second, there is no reason a sentence may not begin with the word "It"
- >|> as a subject. Sentences may begin with "I," "You," "He," "She," "We,"
- >|> and "They." Why should the neuter singular pronoun (not a modifier, as
- >|> you imply) be singled out as an exception?
- > [........]
- >|> In conclusion, my response is no, fiction need not be held to the common
- >|> rules of grammar, spelling, and punctuation. All these rules may be
- >|> broken to great and desirable effect. It is annoying in the extreme to
- >|> read the work of a writer too ignorant or lazy to know or follow the
- >|> rules, but not the work of a writer who knows the rules and breaks them
- >|> deliberately, with good reason. That, as the saying goes, is jazz.
- >
- >|> --Fred, or another blind 8th-century BC | sasafw@dobo.unx.sas.com
- >|> Hellenic poet of the same name. |
- >
- >
- >"It was the best of times, it was the worst of times..." C. Dickens
- >
- >"It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession
- >of a good fortune must be in want of a wife." J. Austen
- >
- >Brenda Kalt
- >
-
- "It was a dark and stormy night..." (Some early Victorian novelist whose
- name scrambled right out of my eye sockets.)
-
- "It was early spring in Michigan and the ponds were barely covered with
- cellophane-thin coats of ice." Warren Murphy and William Sapir, The
- Last Alchemist, pg 26
-
- It looks to me as if both good and bad writing contains important
- sentences which begin with it and are clearly not referring to some
- specific antecedent. I leave it as an exercise for the reader to
- establish which of the above 4 cited works are good and which are
- bilious dreck :-).
-
- David Pipes
- robear@digex.com
- (For those who are wondering, WM and WS write the Destroyer series, of
- which the above-mentioned book is #64. It was the first book to hand
- at my work desk, which should tell you something about my job, if not my
- taste in fine literature. However I am sure that I can dig up "it"
- citations from Huxley's Vanity Fair - that's at home.)
-