Read Ex Libris: Confessions of a Common Reader Online

Authors: Anne Fadiman

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Literary Criticism, #Essays, #Books & Reading, #Literary Collections, #Books and Reading, #Fadiman; Anne

Ex Libris: Confessions of a Common Reader (19 page)

1. Ecclesiastes 1:9: “The thing that hath been, it is that which shall be … and there is no new thing under the sun.” Cf. Jean de La Bruyère,
Les Caractères
(1688): “We come too late to say anything which has not been said already.” La Bruyère probably stole his line from Robert Burton’s
Anatomy of Melancholy
(1621): “We can say nothing but what hath been said.” Burton probably stole
his
line from Terence’s
Eunuchus
(161
B.C.
): “Nothing is said that has not been said before.” I stole the idea of comparing these four lines from a footnote in
Bartlett’s Familiar Quotations
.

2. Actually, I’ve never eaten anything Dan Okrent has cooked, but my friend Kathy Holub went to a dinner party at his home in 1994 and gave the pork loin high marks. I later found out that it had been cooked by Dan’s wife, Becky. However, several people have assured me that Dan
could
have cooked it.

3.
Macbeth
(1606) 1.7.59.

4. The anecdote was stolen from Dan Okrent on October 31, 1996. The idea of using it in the first paragraph of this essay was stolen from my husband, George, who conceived it on November 11, 1996, while he was filling a Tupperware bowl with leftover spaghetti. The spaghetti recipe was from Irma S. Rombauer and Marion Rombauer Becker’s
Joy of Cooking
(1972), with emendations by George’s mother.

5. I stole this line from Dan Okrent. However, I made it mine by changing “teaspoon” to “sprig.”

6. Isaiah 65:5: “I am holier than thou.”

7. I burglarized Disraeli’s quote from the intellect of Thomas Mallon
(Stolen Words
, 1989). As both Mallon and Alexander Lindey
(Plagiarism and Originality
, 1952) note, Disraeli’s highmindedness might have rung truer had he himself not plagiarized his funeral oration for the Duke of Wellington from Louis Adolphe Thiers’s funeral oration for General Saint-Cyr.

8.
The Tempest
(1611-12), 1.2.394.

9. Neal Bowers, “A Loss for Words,”
The American Scholar
(Autumn 1994). David Jones is not named in this article; he is referred to merely as “my plagiarist,” which strikes me as having a peculiar ring of proprietary intimacy, on the order of “my secretary” or “my podiatrist.” Jones is identified in Bowers’s book,
Words for the Taking
(1997).

10. Wallace Stevens, “The Motive for Metaphor” (1947), line 17. I think, though I’m not sure, that Stevens was talking about the temper of steel rather than of human beings, but one of the convenient things about pilfering someone else’s words is that you don’t have to worry about their original meaning.

11. Bowers, “A Loss for Words.”

12. Ibid.

13.
Henry IV, Part I
(1596-97), 3.1.43.

14. I plucked this pearl from Lindey, op. cit., and upgraded it by adding the phrase “sticky fingers,” which I found in
Roget’s Thesaurus
under the heading “Theft.”

15. Lindey said something similar about Shakespeare and the poets
he
plagiarized.

16. Lindey, op. cit.

17. I swiped these examples from Lindey, op. cit., because I needed to. The arithmetic was done by the eighteenth-century British scholar Edmond Malone.

18. Lindey notes that he borrowed his evidence from Voltaire.

19. Thomas Mallon, op. cit., and Lindey, op. cit. Mallon and Lindey both note that among the passages Sterne plagiarized from Burton was a vehement denunciation of plagiarism. According to Mallon, Sterne also plagiarized from himself. He thriftily recycled several love letters he had written to his wife and, years later, sent them to his mistress.

20. Peter Shaw, “Plagiary,”
The American Scholar
(Summer 1992). Shaw notes that Poe damned plagiarism as “a sickening spectacle” and falsely accused other writers of committing it.

21. Mallon, op. cit., and Shaw, op. cit. Both cite Norman Fruman’s 1971 study,
Coleridge: The Damaged Archangel
. (Fruman’s title was taken from an 1816 letter from Charles Lamb to William Wordsworth.)

22. Walter Jackson Bate,
Coleridge
(1973), quoted in Mallon, op. cit.

23. I can’t pinpoint the date, but I know it was a Thursday, because we were unloading the dishwasher just before watching
E.R
. I cite George as a witness in order to prove that although my idea turned out to be unoriginal, I truly believed I was the first to think it.

24. Alexander Lindey, Peter Shaw, K. R. St. Onge, and Thomas Mallon.

25. Cf. Robert Merton: “Anticipatory plagiarism occurs when someone steals your original idea and publishes it a hundred years before you were born.” I am unable to provide a citation because my source is a yellow Post-it handed to me by my brother in Captiva, Florida, in November 1996.

26. Everything I’ve said about Biden is from Mallon, op. cit. Among Mallon’s other examples of Chinese-box plagiarism is Jacob Epstein’s plagiarism of a description of a character’s balding head from a passage that Martin Amis had previously plagiarized from Dickens. Mallon also notes that the University of Oregon plagiarized the section on plagiarism in its student handbook from the section on plagiarism in Stanford’s teaching-assistant handbook.

27. Cf. Alexander Pope, “Couplets on Wit” (1776), v: “Now wits gain praise by copying other wits / As one Hog lives on what another shits.”

28. From a radio quiz show first aired in 1941. The reference was suggested by George on November 14, 1996, as he was doing his back exercises on our living room floor.

29. Cicero,
De Officiis
(44
B.C.
), 1.2.

30. This idea comes from Shaw, op. cit., and Harold Ogden White,
Plagiarism and Imitation During the English Renaissance
(1965).

31. Fielding,
Tom Jones
(1749), book 12, ch. 1.

32. Bowers, op. cit.

33. Charles Caleb Colton,
Lacon
(1820-22).

34. William H. Honan, “Hersey Apologizes to a Writer over an Article on Agee,”
The New York Times
(July 22, 1988).

35. Annalee Jacoby Fadiman, conversation with author, November 4, 1996.

36. John Hersey,
Men on Bataan
(1942).

37. Laurence Bergreen, conversation with author, summer 1988. We talked again on November 5, 1996.

38. Ira Gershwin, “They Can’t Take That Away from Me,”
Shall We Dance
(1937).

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