The House of The Vampire by George Sylvester Viereck Chapter 9 Page 5

“So I am,” Reginald replied. “I always work in a white heat. I am restless, nervous, feverish, and can find no peace until I have given utterance to all that clamours after birth.”

“What is it that is so engaging your mind, the epic of the French Revolution?”

“Oh, no. I should never have undertaken that. I haven’t done a stroke of work on it for several weeks. In fact, ever since Walkham called, I simply couldn’t. It seemed as if a rough hand had in some way destroyed the web of my thought. Poetry in the writing is like red hot glass before the master-blower has fashioned it into birds and trees and strange fantastic shapes. A draught, caused by the opening of a door may distort it. But at present I am engaged upon more important work.