Born in a cellar and living in a garret. That was how Samuel Foote summed up the lifestyle of an author. It was not unrealistic, because over the centuries, many a poet, writer and painter did spend their lives, or the better part of their lives, in a garret or comparable conditions. Not all of them became famous, but the number of those who did is large enough to induce the impression that claustrophobic living conditions do stimulate creativity.