Page:Marie Corelli - the writer and the woman (IA mariecorelliwrit00coat).pdf/58

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to be fairly applicable to the average girl-author, Miss Corelli denies that the writing of "A Romance of Two Worlds" ever caused her to become "æsthetically cadaverous." Her methodical habits may account for the fact that, in spite of much desk toil and hard thinking, she has always managed to keep a well-balanced mind in corpore sano.

"I write every day from ten in the morning till two in the afternoon, alone and undisturbed. . . . I generally scribble off the first rough draft of a story very rapidly in pencil; then I copy it out in pen and ink, chapter by chapter, with fastidious care, not only because I like a neat manuscript, but because I think everything that is worth doing at all is worth doing well. . . . I find, too, that in the gradual process of copying by hand, the original draft, like a painter's first sketch, gets improved and enlarged."

The "Romance," then, according to this salubrious programme, entered quietly into a state of being. Miss Corelli was doubtful whether it would ever find a publisher: her first notion was to offer it to Arrowsmith, as a railway-stall novelette. Possibly the success of "Called Back" suggested the Bristol publisher, the title she first fixed upon, "Lifted Up," being eminently suggestive of a