The Fiction Factory by William Wallace Cook
For two years previous to this (to him) momentous event he had hearkened earnestly to the counsel that “literature is a good stick but a poor crutch,” and had cleaved to a position as paymaster for a firm of contractors solely because of the pay envelope that insured food and raiment. Spare hours alone were spent in his Fiction Factory. In the summer of 1893, however, when his evening and Sunday work brought returns that dwarfed his salary as paymaster, he had a heart to heart talk with Mrs. John Milton Edwards, and, as a result, the paymaster-crutch was dropped by the wayside. This came to pass not without many fears and anxieties, and later there arrived gray days when the literary pace became unsteady and John Milton turned wistful eyes backward in the direction of his discarded crutch. But he never returned to pick it up.
—from this book
Language |
English |
---|---|
License Type |
Premium |
Publication Type |
eBooks |
Publication Mode |
Online |
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