
Charles Dickens's Daily Routine: Cold Plunges, Long Walks, and Set Hours
But like many other great artists, Dickens did not stumble into his fame and success by accident. It was the result of conscious effort, discipline, and a well-balanced daily routine—combined, of course, with once-in-a-generation genius and native talent. The results were awe-inspiring and continue to captivate readers in all the 150 languages into which his work has been translated.
Inspiration Follows Discipline
Dickens treated his creative work like any other job: He was punctual and kept set hours. He didn't wait for the muse to shower him with inspiration or for the right mood to strike him like lightning from the sky before taking up his pen. Such a romantic view of the creative process would likely have hindered his work. Dickens knew that, often, inspiration comes after knuckling down to work, not before. It joins the writer as a traveling companion only after he has begun the journey of the day's writing quota.

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New York Post
a day ago
- New York Post
San Fransisco street named for Grateful Dead's Jerry Garcia during celebration of legendary band
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2 days ago
Grateful Dead guitarist Jerry Garcia has childhood street named for him in San Francisco
SAN FRANCISCO -- A few hundred people gathered Friday to name a tiny San Francisco street after legendary Grateful Dead guitarist Jerry Garcia on what would have been his 83rd birthday and as part of a citywide celebration to mark the band's 60th anniversary. Harrington Street, which is one block long, will also be called 'Jerry Garcia Street." He died in 1995, but the band's popularity has only grown as younger generations discover the Dead's improvisational music, which blended rock, blues, folk and other styles. Garcia spent part of his childhood in a modest home in the city's diverse Excelsior neighborhood. He lived with his grandparents after the death of his father, Jose Ramon 'Joe' Garcia. 'I hope that you all get a chance to enjoy the music, dance, hug, smile,' said daughter Trixie Garcia, growing emotional during her brief remarks. 'Cherish what's valuable, what's significant in life.' Tens of thousands of fans are in San Francisco to commemorate the Grateful Dead's 60th anniversary with concerts and other activities throughout the city. The latest iteration of the band, Dead & Company, with original Grateful Dead members Bob Weir and Mickey Hart, will play Golden Gate Park's Polo Field for three days starting Friday. An estimated 60,000 attendees are expected each day. Formed in 1965, the Grateful Dead played often and for free in their early years while living in a cheap Victorian home in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood. The band later became a significant part of 1967's Summer of Love, and the Grateful Dead has become synonymous with San Francisco and its bohemian counterculture. On Friday, fans in rainbow tie-dye and Grateful Dead T-shirts whooped and cheered as the sign was unveiled. Nonfans with shopping bags and some using walking canes maneuvered around the crowd on what was for them just another foggy day in the working-class neighborhood. Afterward, devotees peeled off to pose for photos in front of Garcia's childhood home. Jared Yankee, 23, got the crowd to join him in singing "Happy Birthday." Yankee said he flew in from Rhode Island for the shows. He got into the music about a decade ago.

Epoch Times
2 days ago
- Epoch Times
The Quiet Genius of Jane Austen: What Her Daily Routine Looked Like
While some writers and artists had vast realms of silence and solitude in which to let their artistic ideas foment, others weren't so fortunate. Always living in a household with others coming and going, Jane Austen (1775–1817) struggled to find long, undisturbed periods of time in which to weave her tales of genteel English society. While artists such as Charles Dickens and Ludwig van Beethoven could schedule their days and rely on rigid routines, Austen's days were less predictable. Yet she still generated a substantial literary output of the highest quality, proving that the flower of artistic achievement grows even in inhospitable environments. By hook or by crook, writers find a way to write. The things burning inside them to be expressed will scorch a hole right through their chests if they don't.