{"id":3632,"date":"1963-04-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1963-04-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1963-vol-44-no-4-what-have-you-to-declare\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:34:37","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:34:37","slug":"april-1963-vol-44-no-4-what-have-you-to-declare","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1963-vol-44-no-4-what-have-you-to-declare\/","title":{"rendered":"April 1963 &#8211; VOL. 44, NO. 4 &#8211; What Have You to Declare?"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\"> When you arrive at the border of a strange                     country you are met by Customs men who ask: &#8220;What have you                      to declare?&#8221; You open your trunk and your suitcases, and                      there,  amid the everyday clothes and toilet articles and                      personal  trivia you come upon special things worthy of                      your ( and the  Customs men&#8217;s ) attention.<\/p>\n<p>In early summer, young people are going out from university                     and school, going out on many roads to seek what is to be.                     They are entering a strange country: they have treasures and                     useful things to declare.<\/p>\n<p>The knowledge they have stored away will help them to bring                     this new world into focus. The thoughts and feelings and emotions                     they have accumulated will control their behaviour. How they                     put together knowledge and thoughts and actions will decide                     their standard of living and their happiness.<\/p>\n<p>At this significant point in time, the future is not a novel                     that can be read at leisure, but a journey that forces itself                     upon you day after day. It is a journey on which every skill,                     every rule of behaviour, every wise thought and every ounce                     of stored up driving power will be put to use.<\/p>\n<p>Wise travellers carry a list of their valuables to facilitate                     their passage through Customs. The purpose of this <em>Letter                     <\/em>is to assist you in preparing such a list so that you                     will know with what assets you are entering upon this new                     life.<\/p>\n<p>How much knowledge have you? The sum total will surprise                     you, because it has come to you in driblets year by year,                     grade by grade. You have probably never thought of it as a                     thing in itself, but only by bits and pieces.<\/p>\n<p>Take note, now, of its richness. This is stored not only                     in factual things like dates and formulae, mathematical rules                     and biological data, economic science and the plots of plays.                     You have also stored away sensory images, discerning appraisals                     and memories of experiences. All of these have been subjected                     to your intellect and assimilated by your imagination.<\/p>\n<p>Now you will unpack, and put these things to work. If you                     keep your valuables locked up as a private possession, if                     you look upon all you have learned as something to be enjoyed                     in a cell separated from the pulsating life around you, then                     what you own is not declarable valuable property. If you put                     it in bond with the idea of opening it at some future time                     you run a great risk of losing it, and during the interval                     you will be missing a lot of interesting things.<\/p>\n<p>What, except chance, that sickly expedient of the unenlightened,                     are you to depend on if you do not use the knowledge and intuition                     you have acquired&nbsp;?<\/p>\n<h3>Add to your assets<\/h3>\n<p>This is not to say that your list of assets is complete                     and finished. The greatest foe you will meet in your effort                     to get along in profession, business, or workshop is to allow                     your mind to develop the idea that you know enough.<\/p>\n<p>Every new sight and experience widens the area of your awareness                     of what there is yet to learn. Draw a circle an inch in diameter                     to stand for the knowledge you now have. All around it are                     great spaces of the unknown. Then draw another circle having                     twice that diameter, and let the space between circles stand                     for what you will learn in the next twelve months. Notice                     that you have a new and wider area of contact. The larger                     circle touches the unknown at many more points. You have extended                     your world.<\/p>\n<p>Your acquisition of knowledge at school meant the difference                     between being in one grade or a grade higher. This law holds                     good in the post-school world too.<\/p>\n<p>To be content only with what we know is to deprive ourselves                     of the joys of discovery, but we have to exert ourselves,                     to reach out, for this new knowledge. The accumulated thought                     of mankind is ours for the effort of taking. It is our rich                     inheritance. It is the basis of our wisdom.<\/p>\n<p>Knowledge consists of things that are known; intelligence                     relates these known things to things that are yet unknown                     and produces new ideas. It is intelligence that gives us the                     ability to discern relevant things, to put together things                     that ought to be joined and to keep distinct things that ought                     to be separated.<\/p>\n<p>Besides knowledge and intelligence, you have to list ability                     and efficiency. Ability, we are told in history books, was                     a requirement for a seat at King Arthur&#8217;s Round Table; it                     is also a requirement for any position of public or business                     responsibility today. You are not going to be taken from your                     school desk and given a seat behind an executive desk without                     showing some other ability than that of sitting.<\/p>\n<p>Ability means something more than book learning and technical                     skill. You might score one hundred per cent of marks in a                     written examination; you might have the &#8220;hang&#8221; of an operation                     at your finger tips; but unless you display ability through                     craftsmanship you are not scoring one hundred per cent in                     your new life. And what is craftsmanship? It means doing habitually                     well whatever it is you have to do.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Efficiency&#8221; is a very great word in a society which has                     more and more absorbed itself in expediency and mechanization.                     It combines the quantity of work you produce, measured by                     time, and the quality of your work, measured by its goodness.<\/p>\n<p>Have you noticed that the times when you felt most efficient                     were times when you were holding a stop watch and calipers                     yourself, not occasions when someone else was driving you                     to effort and gauging your work?<\/p>\n<p>You are; in this new world, only as good as your performance                     proves that you are. It is a world which, to paraphrase Napoleon,                     gives the implements to those who can handle them.<\/p>\n<p>Everything you do will not be a masterpiece. Even the great                     painters and sculptors had their uninspired days. But what                     you do should be workman-like, the best that you can                     do at the time you do it.<\/p>\n<h3>Qualities of mind<\/h3>\n<p>There are several qualities of mind to be included in your                     list. Consider discipline. You have learned certain fundamentals,                     like respect for others&#8217; property and rights; respect for                     the law and honesty and integrity; and respect for proper                     authority. These you learned under tutelage; now you are crossing                     the border into mature responsibility and you will be on your                     own. You have to substitute inner discipline for outer. There                     are two sorts of obedience, the second far and away the more                     important and more gratifying: obedience to others and obedience                     to your own principles.<\/p>\n<p>Have you some discretion and prudence tucked away in a corner                     of a suitcase? Discretion takes thought of consequences, and                     prudence governs actions. In an essay he wrote for the <em>Spectator                     <\/em>in 1711, the great essayist Addison said: &#8220;There are                     many more shining qualities in the mind of man, but there                     is none so useful as discretion; it is this, indeed, which                     gives a value to all the rest, which sets them at work in                     their proper times and places, and turns them to the advantage                     of the person who is possessed of them.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>To be prudent you need to know how to distinguish the character                     of troubles and problems, and to take the time to make wise                     decisions about them. This means, on occasion, seeking advice.                     To accept counsel is a common characteristic of great leaders:                     it is usually the weakling who feels himself too big to take                     advice.<\/p>\n<p>The three qualities, discipline, discretion and prudence,                     tend to give you self-mastery. There have been men who                     were capable of governing a world, but who could not rule                     their own restless minds.<\/p>\n<p>It is evidence of your increasing maturity when you gain                     poise so as to balance expectations against reality, so as                     to fit into groups harmoniously; so as to give sturdy allegiance                     to people and principles; so as to keep your balance in success                     or failure.<\/p>\n<p>Self-mastery does not mean isolation. One does not                     need to go so far as was advocated by Nietzsche&#8217;s Superman:                     &#8220;To be sick and dismiss comforters, and make friends of the                     deaf, who never hear thy requests.&#8221; It is, however, wise to                     leave the coddling to others but never to coddle yourself.                     If you ever start feeling sorry for yourself, run for the                     cover of some constructive activity.<\/p>\n<p>Patience is another attribute that is of value. It is true                     that it is not always wise to wait, but it is desirable to                     cultivate the ability to wait if it should become advisable.<\/p>\n<p>George Bernard Shaw wrote: &#8220;Do not be in a hurry to succeed.                     What would you have to live for afterwards?&#8221; Someday your                     home town may erect a statue to you, but, as Aunt Em said                     to the farm hand in <em>The Wizard of Oz<\/em>: &#8220;Don&#8217;t start                     posing for it now.&#8221; You have work to do, and probably more                     work and planning are spoiled by impatience than by any other                     fault.<\/p>\n<p>Patience is not apathy or resignation to events: it is a                     waiting for fulfilment while we work efficiently toward our                     goal, accepting every reverse and delay as something to be                     amended by new enterprise.<\/p>\n<p>Have you some modesty in your kit? It is very necessary                     when starting out in a profession or in business. In a great                     painting, every detail and every brush stroke claims permanent                     existence for its own sake, but it must surrender its individuality                     for the sake of the whole composition.<\/p>\n<h3>Raise your head for a wide view<\/h3>\n<p>People talk about &#8220;having an aim in life.&#8221; Have you one?                     It is your programme for yourself that gives direction to                     your life in this new world whose border you are crossing.                     Those get along better who form some definite idea of where                     they are going and what they are going to do. Mental pictures                     of the territory help you to find your way through it.<\/p>\n<p>You need to decide what your purpose in life shall be. It                     may be a fast dollar, or it may be to contribute to society                     so that your name and work will be remembered for centuries.                     Robert Louis Stevenson didn&#8217;t earn enough by his writing to                     keep himself until he was over 30, but his remarkable poetry,                     his tales of other lands, and his stories like <em>Dr. Jekyll                     and Mr. Hyde <\/em>are known to millions of people. On the                     other hand, some glib writers are paid thousands a year for                     fleeting paragraphs that are discarded and lost to mind when                     the newspaper has been scanned; their effective work lasts                     for mere minutes.<\/p>\n<p>It is characteristic of intelligent people that they live                     largely in the future. Planning for the future, mapping out                     the route to be taken, working toward realization of their                     aim: all this is part of their joy of living. The great thing                     is to advance, so that you feel at the end of your career                     that you have in some measure fulfilled the potentialities                     that you now believe yourself to possess.<\/p>\n<p>This is a time to raise your head so that you can see some                     distance. Only so can you give direction to your ambition                     and avoid precipices and dead ends. Leonardo da Vinci wrote                     in his notebook about the singed moth falling to the bottom                     of the candlestick. It exclaimed: &#8220;O false light! If my desire                     was to see light ought I not to have distinguished the sun                     from the false glimmer of dirty tallow?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The ambitious person will take care to acquaint himself                     with his possibilities and his limitations. He does not lose                     himself in day-dreaming about a fairy country, but finds                     out first what the country is like and then tries to make                     it fairy-like up to the extent of his ability. The ambitious                     person knows that an escalator is not just something to stand                     on to be carried upward, but also a stairway to be climbed.<\/p>\n<p>Not all men are qualified to reach the very top, but everyone                     can rise to heights where he will be making the most of his                     talents. Something to avoid is the preening of yourself on                     trivialities. To pass a thread through a hundred needles in                     two minutes; to multiply nine figures by nine in your head;                     these argue definite dexterity of body and capacity of mind,                     but nothing comes of either.<\/p>\n<h3>Your ideals count<\/h3>\n<p>Your ambition and the spirit with which you enter upon exploration                     of this new country will be modified by the ideals you have                     accumulated. Ideals are dreams of desirable things which you                     hope to make real.<\/p>\n<p>No material benefit, from a fashionable suit to a latest                     model car, will ever compensate a mature person for the sacrifice                     of his ideal. Here is an area of life wherein the team plays                     no part: everything that matters begins with an individual                     confronting his own mind and conscience in a room by himself.<\/p>\n<p>An ideal is not revealed in words or formal creeds, but                     in the things you take for granted in your habitual acts and                     in your testing of the values of things. The principles have                     been well stated at Gordonstoun, the school where Prince Charles,                     the Prince of Wales, is a pupil: &#8220;The strong must be courteous                     to the weak; mob justice is intolerable; every man can ( and                     should ( develop and expand his own interest, and should (                     if he is young ( be compelled to do so; every man must be                     taught that, in moments of hazard, discipline is essential;                     every man must, in the end, be brought to realize that service                     to others is more important than self-service.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>These are things which enter into character-building,                     the job of a lifetime. You have learned at home, in the church,                     and at school, to like and to dislike what you ought. You                     have built up habit systems. You have learned that character                     is something which shows outwardly what you are inside. It                     is not only what you are when people are watching but what                     you are in the dark.<\/p>\n<p>Honesty is a big factor in character. A man of character                     keeps his promises to everyone, regardless of the worth of                     the person to whom he made his promise. He is not honest because                     &#8220;honesty is the best policy&#8221;, but because honesty is part                     of his way of life.<\/p>\n<p>Out of these virtues you build personality, which is your                     personal identity. This is what enables you to realize yourself                     as an harmonious whole, to be truly great. It is the sum total                     of the effect you have on other people, made up of reliability,                     of natural self-expression, of thoughtfulness, of fidelity,                     of chivalry, of ability to get along peacefully and happily.                     It is the outward expression of an inner reality, not a cosmetic                     applied to the surface.<\/p>\n<p>Can you help someone, a friend or a business associate,                     to reach some goal he ardently desires? Can you raise his                     spirits in some despondent moment? Can you do him some service,                     not from a feeling that it is politically expedient, not for                     notoriety, but just as a friend? Therein you are fulfilling                     one of the highest purposes of your being here.<\/p>\n<h3>You need enterprise<\/h3>\n<p>Have you in your baggage some of that fire-cracker                     quality called &#8220;enterprise&#8221;? It is the ability to think and                     do new things. It is the aptitude for action which puts knowledge                     to work.<\/p>\n<p>There is still room for enterprise within the large patterns                     of organization which dot the world today. The secret is to                     lose no chance of putting your ideas to work. It doesn&#8217;t matter                     if your eyes see or your mind invents six or a dozen stupendous                     opportunities: if you have not the up-and-go energy                     to act on one of them you are stagnating.<\/p>\n<p>All the vision and desire in the world will not add an iota                     to your success unless you have also the energy to work. Just                     as in battle there are two component parts in victory, strategy                     and striking power, so in your daily life these translate                     into your plan of action directed toward your objective and                     your energy in performance.<\/p>\n<p>This means that you need to be heartily in earnest. Your                     studies have given you a good grounding in the virtue of concentration.                     Now you will find that dispersion of effort is a sin in business                     just as it is in school, war or government. Sometimes people                     speak disparagingly about someone who has &#8220;several irons in                     the fire at the same time.&#8221; They do not realize that he may                     know the secret of successful manipulation: to concentrate                     on one iron at a time, fending off the inclination to become                     side-tracked by things that are irrelevant and time-wasting.                     Samuel Pepys wrote in his diary: &#8220;Busy till night, pleasing                     myself mightily to see what a deal of business goes off a                     man&#8217;s hands when he stays by it.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Herein is a persuasive warning against devoting your precious                     hours to time-killing pursuits. An apt but pitiable example                     may be found at the Petit Trianon, near Versailles Palace.                     There you may see a group of little farm houses where Marie                     Antoinette and her ladies played at being shepherdesses, industriously                     churning their butter in the dairy and tending their perfumed                     sheep. Ten miles away the revolution was building up that                     would sweep them from their petty amusements to the guillotine.<\/p>\n<p>People who fritter away their time are cheating themselves                     into bogus happiness. They are stuffing into the coffers of                     their one irreplaceable lifetime a senseless accumulation                     of trash, odds and ends of sensations, experiences, fads and                     synthetic emotions.<\/p>\n<p>After choosing what path you shall follow toward your destination,                     you need to add perseverance. Like the matriculation diploma,                     which is given only to those who finish high school honourably,                     and the gold medal for the Olympic race, the certificate for                     attainment in a profession, in business, in industry, is given                     only to those who run the full course. You must finish what                     you start. A bright pyrotechnic beginning must not be allowed                     to fizzle out. You have passed the time of life when the immediate                     moment is all that is real.<\/p>\n<h3>Profit from your losses<\/h3>\n<p>Your enterprise must be backed up by courage, and your energy                     supported by stick-to-it-iveness.<\/p>\n<p>William Bolitho, who was in the early part of this century                     a writer for <em>The Manchester Guardian<\/em>, said this:                     &#8220;The most important thing in life is not to capitalize on                     your gains. Any fool can do that. The really important thing                     is to profit from your losses.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Whining is a weakling&#8217;s escape from responsibility. It is                     a sign of inadequacy. It wastes time and antagonizes people.<\/p>\n<p>There are, of course, eventualities over which you have                     no control. These you must accept with courage and with the                     best response you have to give. Some hardy people go out of                     their way to face danger in order to find courage. This builds                     self-reliance, trust in their own judgment, practice                     in making decisions and willingness to abide by the consequences.<\/p>\n<p>Enthusiasm for living will carry you through many difficulties.                     Ralph Waldo Emerson said: &#8220;Nothing great was ever achieved                     without enthusiasm.&#8221; It is the sign of a healthy mind; it                     creates zest; it enables you to be the same in act and valour                     as you are in desire.<\/p>\n<p>But enthusiasm must be built on ideas. Every visible successful                     act is first of all an invisible thought. It is part of our                     creative urge.<\/p>\n<p>The creative person is sensitive to problems, then he works                     out ways of approaching their solution. He adopts what is                     applicable from other solutions, borrows some of the methods                     other people used, and adds a few touches of his own.<\/p>\n<h3>Be a &#8220;possibilitarian&#8221;<\/h3>\n<p>This has been a rambling listing of qualities you carry                     with you as you cross the border into a new phase of life                     ( just as haphazardly come upon as are items in your travelling                     bag. One useful thing ( something only you can do ( is to                     make an itemized inventory. By doing so you find out about                     your possessions for sure. Without such an inventory you may                     assume some things which are not so about your qualities,                     your likes and dislikes and your abilities. An inventory will                     give you enhanced respect for yourself and your array of assets.<\/p>\n<p>Among these assets you should number optimism. Any rational                     view of life which promotes optimism is better than one which,                     however logical in quality, leads to pessimism and leaves                     you resourceless, without hope.<\/p>\n<p>Be positive, not gloomy. Norman Vincent Peale told in one                     of his essays about a man who called himself a &#8220;possibilitarian.&#8221;                     &#8220;Let&#8217;s see what possibilities there are in this situation,&#8221;                     he would say while others sat on their hands taking dismal                     views.<\/p>\n<p>Optimism doesn&#8217;t mean shutting your eyes to the realities                     of life, or peering into a crystal ball looking for a rosy                     future. It means living with a sense of expectancy and doing                     what you can to make your hopes come true.<\/p>\n<p>Having counted your resources, and having zest to put them                     to use; having taken a wide view of the prospect; having decided                     to think about big matters: then step out confidently, determined                     to work with energy toward the first-rate.<\/p>\n<p>Don&#8217;t think for a moment that because there are so many                     evidences of human achievement around you the picture is complete                     and the final chapter has been written. There are many unfinished                     jobs, and there are many new jobs turning up every year, and                     there are thousands of unborn ideas that lie in the future.                     This is a time to head straight toward the appointment you                     have with success.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[43],"class_list":["post-3632","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-43"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>April 1963 - VOL. 44, NO. 4 - What Have You to Declare? - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1963-vol-44-no-4-what-have-you-to-declare\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"April 1963 - VOL. 44, NO. 4 - What Have You to Declare? - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"When you arrive at the border of a strange country you are met by Customs men who ask: &#8220;What have you to declare?&#8221; 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