{"id":3679,"date":"1973-08-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1973-08-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/august-1973-vol-54-no-8-some-uses-of-biography\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:34:10","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:34:10","slug":"august-1973-vol-54-no-8-some-uses-of-biography","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/august-1973-vol-54-no-8-some-uses-of-biography\/","title":{"rendered":"August 1973 &#8211; VOL. 54, No. 8 &#8211; Some Uses of Biography"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\"> In Oscar Wilde&#8217;s play A Woman of No Importance,                     Lord Illingworth remarks: &#8220;The Book of Life begins with a                     man and a woman in a garden.&#8221; To this, Mrs. Allonby replies:                     &#8220;It ends with Revelations.&#8221; It is the wealth of interesting                     stories that come in between that make up biography.<\/p>\n<p> Autobiographies and biographies are increasingly helpful                     as the complexities of life multiply. How men and women faced                     up to challenges boldly and either won triumphantly or went                     down gallantly is a story pertinent to statesmen, to people                     in the professions and in business.<\/p>\n<p>Some may say that the practical concerns of people and the                     patterns of society have changed so radically that it is useless                     to read the story of a person written even twenty years ago.                     Yet the values, the principles and the practices that made                     life worth-while in the past have not really changed. Analyse                     any life-story and you will find it composed of ambition,                     learning, work, relations with people, and awareness of the                     rightness and wrongness of actions.<\/p>\n<p>Books that tell about the lives of people are the most valuable                     on one&#8217;s bookshelves. One famed bookman divided his big library                     into two parts-biography and &#8220;all the rest&#8221;. He said that                     he had never read a biography from which he had not learned                     something.<\/p>\n<p>How men and women planned their lives, faced up to difficulties,                     and attained success, gives us a yardstick by which, to measure                     the progress of humanity, including ourselves.<\/p>\n<h3>Self-improvement<\/h3>\n<p>Reading biography is not to be thought of as a sure-fire                     way to attain personal success, but the attentive reader will                     learn much about how people did jobs, won friends, and got                     ahead. As Emerson remarked: &#8220;In every man there is something                     wherein I may learn of him, and in that I am his pupil.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>A biography shows the effectiveness of self-help, of patient                     purpose, of resolute working, and of integrity. In reading                     about the life of a person you see how problems arise, are                     sharpened, project themselves into crises and conflict, and                     how they are met by action.<\/p>\n<p>Sometimes a young man will discover himself, his qualities                     and possibilities, in a biography just as Correggio felt within                     him the stirring of genius on contemplating the works of Michelangelo.<\/p>\n<p>This sort of study is quite different from reading rules                     for behaviour and prescriptions for success in a textbook.                     Example is one of the most potent of instructors, and here,                     in biographies, are examples of how to put ideas across in                     business or politics, and how to so live as to be worthy of                     remembrance. Here you see the causes of people&#8217;s victories                     and defeats, so that you can avoid the latter and imitate                     the former. Even if your achievement does not quite match                     theirs, it will at least have a touch of it.<\/p>\n<p>Reading biography is not all that is needed by an aspiring                     person. One has to get busy doing things. A well-written biography                     does not picture its subject sitting around apathetically                     while life flows past. Theodore Roosevelt, who campaigned                     for &#8220;the strenuous life&#8221;, would not allow photographers to                     snap their shutters while he had his hands in his pockets:                     he showed his vitality by gesturing with them as busily as                     a prize-fighter.<\/p>\n<p>Even to people who do not expect to get utilitarian hints                     from the experiences of others, biography is an inspiring                     study. When we read the story of a life we learn that its                     subject was not born a professional this or that, or a skilled                     craftsman or astronaut. He was born a human being and worked                     at becoming what has made him famous.<\/p>\n<p>People who have reached the peak of success in any enterprise                     have passed through discouragement and hard times, but they                     learned that there are few things a person cannot do if he                     is doggedly determined. In desperate situations they masked                     their doubts and made a display of confidence and serenity.                     They refused to call any try their last try.<\/p>\n<p>Every success biography emphasizes that the prevalent &#8220;something                     for nothing&#8221; philosophy does not stand up under examination.                     Everything has a price and must be earned.<\/p>\n<p>Biography also dispels the idea that there is no more creative                     work to be done, only copying, annotating and criticizing.                     Every life-story reveals something that its owner found new,                     something fresh. It would be ridiculous for an artist, today                     to say &#8220;All that is left for me to do is to copy the nymphs                     and the madonnas of the old masters.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Practical lessons<\/h3>\n<p>Biographies of men and women in all callings tell us how                     they sold goods or ideas, gained support for their plans,                     and earned friendships. Readers may learn their principles                     of salesmanship: that argument is not a selling device, that                     one should find out what people&#8217;s wants are, that it is not                     by showing off their own importance but by giving other people                     a sense of importance that they turn opponents into supporters.<\/p>\n<p>Benjamin Franklin was an accomplished salesman. Seeking                     to win the friendship of a man who had attacked him in a speech,                     Franklin wrote him a note expressing the desire to read a                     rare book of which the man was proud to be the possessor.                     The man sent it; Franklin wrote a note of appreciation; they                     became lifelong friends.<\/p>\n<p>LaSalle, the noted French explorer, gained the goodwill                     of hostile Indians by addressing them in their own language                     and using their style of oratory. Emil Ludwig said of Napoleon                     in the Italian campaign: &#8220;Half of what he achieves is achieved                     by the power of words.&#8221; Sometimes the general told his ragged,                     hungry army about the good food and comfortable lodging they                     would find beyond the mountains: on other occasions he pictured                     his soldiers returning as heroes to their home towns.<\/p>\n<p>These examples from biography show how leaders paid attention                     to the needs and desires of those whom they wished to influence.<\/p>\n<p>Aspiring people are not ashamed to draw upon the experience,                     thoughts and work of others for inspiration, ideas and methods.                     Thoreau had been gone half a century when his doctrine of                     civil disobedience was applied by Mahatma Gandhi in India                     and South Africa. Shakespeare drew the material for his plays                     from many biographies. It was a translation of Plutarch&#8217;s                     <em>Lives <\/em>that introduced him to the great gallery of                     Greeks and Romans.<\/p>\n<h3>Writing a biography<\/h3>\n<p>Biography reveals problems old as life itself and tells                     how people dealt with them &#8211; problems of love and passion;                     problems of ambition and the desire for money and prestige;                     problems of temptation and sin.<\/p>\n<p>Some life stories are written by professional writers, some                     by admirers seeking to perpetuate the memory and teachings                     of a person who contributed to society; the <em>Meditations                     <\/em>or <em>Thoughts <\/em>of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus are                     the writings of a king.<\/p>\n<p>Most distinguished persons dislike &#8220;incense swingers&#8221; &#8211;                     people who are forever saying &#8220;isn&#8217;t he marvellous?&#8221; A thoughtful                     and serious biography stressing a person&#8217;s personality is                     in a different class, just as a politician having his face                     made up for a televised campaign speech is a different figure                     from that presented when he is defending his position on an                     important Bill in the legislature.<\/p>\n<p>The topics for composing a eulogy upon a person have been                     set forth in the standard books of instruction for speakers                     and writers, beginning with Aristotle&#8217;s <em>Rhetoric<\/em>.                     The doctrine is explained by Hoyt Hopewell Hudson in his essay                     introducing Erasmus&#8217; <em>The Praise of Folly<\/em>. The speaker                     or writer should start with the person&#8217;s ancestry and family,                     and find something notable there; perhaps even the country                     or city of his birth would lend evidence of his merit; his                     upbringing and education would be canvassed for similar evidence;                     and then one passes on to his achievements, his virtues, his                     public honours. If a man was descended from kings or nobles,                     of course he partook of their noble and royal qualities; if                     he came of humble stock, his own virtue was the. greater for                     having climbed above the common run without the advantage                     of high birth. How many biographies one finds written strictly                     on this formula!<\/p>\n<p>Light years above such stories is the account written by                     John Gunther of the spirited fight for life by his son, stricken                     by an incurable disease at the age of sixteen. It is a story                     full of urgent sincerity, entitled <em>Death Be Not Proud<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>So how does one judge a biography? It is true that the story                     of a person&#8217;s life is concerned with basic facts: birth and                     death, love and jealousy, conflict, social experience, triumph                     and defeat. More is needed than merely to record these. In                     a good biography the determining incident is made vital, the                     decisive turning point is highlighted, the abstract thought                     is humanized. The biography must recreate its central character                     so as to give the reader a sense of rounded reality showing                     how this person discharged his obligations to himself, to                     his family, to his community, and to the human race.<\/p>\n<p>Reading such a biography is to associate with someone who                     meant something to society. The ideal biography will give                     you a feeling of fellowship with the person you have been                     reading about, and a longing to have just such another as                     he was for your friend.<\/p>\n<h3>Some great biographies<\/h3>\n<p>The biographer discovers and reveals essential greatness.                     &#8220;Had Boswell never existed,&#8221; wrote Clifton Fadiman in <em>The                     Lifetime Reading Plan<\/em>, &#8220;Johnson would still have been                     a great personality. But we might never have known it.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Plutarch was the first notable biographer in the world&#8217;s                     history. He grouped forty-six lives in pairs, a Greek and                     a Roman, for the sake of the similarity of their work or circumstances.                     His excellent rule was to epitomize the most celebrated parts                     of their story rather than to insist upon every particular                     circumstance of it.<\/p>\n<p>Queen Victoria left, in her letters and journals, one of                     the most astonishing autobiographical monuments ever achieved.                     She displayed total, disconcerting candour. Her biography                     by Elizabeth Longford tells about Disraeli&#8217;s flattery by which                     he coaxed The Widow of Windsor back into society; about the                     putting of John Brown in his place; about the Queen&#8217;s obsessive                     interest in royal matchmaking &#8211; &#8220;I do wish one could                     find some more black-eyed princes or princesses for our children.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Women have been biographers with deep penetration. It was                     Mrs. Elizabeth Gaskell&#8217;s sympathetic understanding of Charlotte                     Bront\ufffd that enabled her to produce a haunting, vividly human,                     portrait. Miss Bront\ufffd wrote to Tennyson about one of her books:                     &#8220;In the space of a year the publisher has disposed of but                     two copies; and by what painful efforts he succeeded in getting                     rid of these two himself only knows.&#8221; But four months later                     her <em>Jane Eyre <\/em>came off the press, and it was an instant                     success.<\/p>\n<p>Not many women entered the book publishing arena, where                     they were treated slightingly. The lives of Jane Austen and                     Emily Dickinson, whose poems were published only after her                     death, indicate the timidity with which they wrote and show                     the gap between their period and that of the present.<\/p>\n<p>Queen Victoria summed up the prejudice against her sex in                     a letter to the Princess Royal. Her husband, Prince Albert,                     she said, shared with all &#8220;clever men&#8221; the tendency to despise                     &#8220;our poor degraded sex.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Agnes Strickland was author (in collaboration with her sister                     Elizabeth, who forbade use of her name on the title page)                     of the successful <em>Lives of the Queens of England<\/em>,                     published in five volumes in 1839.<\/p>\n<p>Lady Dufferin, wife of Lord Dufferin, who was Governor-General                     of Canada from 1872 to 1878, wrote a delightful autobiography                     in the form of letters to her mother. They report with shrewdness,                     humour, and candour the incidents that made up the private                     and public lives of the Dufferins in Canada. (<em>My Canadian                     Journal<\/em>, Longmans Canada, Ltd., 1969).<\/p>\n<h3>The biographer<\/h3>\n<p>The hallmark of a good biographer is not passion but good                     sense. He has to weed out the irrelevant and seek what is                     strong, novel and interesting. He needs a profound knowledge                     of human nature, wide sympathies, and an impersonal standpoint.<\/p>\n<p>The biographer will do well to adhere to the standards of                     a good executive: calm demeanour, judicious appraisal, reflectiveness,                     temperate language.<\/p>\n<p>Every biographer must solve the complex problem of honesty.                     A thing may be true, but its recounting may not be honourable.<\/p>\n<p>There is a temptation to paint the subject&#8217;s virtues in                     rich colour and to whitewash his vices. Aristotle told us                     how to do this discreetly: for the purpose of praise or blame,                     the writer may identify a man&#8217;s actual qualities with qualities                     bordering on them. Thus a cautious man may be represented                     as cold and designing; a simpleton as good-natured; a callous                     man as easy-going. The rash man may be described as courageous                     and the spendthrift as liberal.<\/p>\n<p>Here are two examples of writers striving for honesty. When                     Boswell was urged to omit instances of Johnson&#8217;s objectionable                     overbearing manners, he replied that he would not make his                     tiger into a cat to please anybody. Jean Jacques Rousseau                     exposed his own follies, saying: &#8220;In this book I have hidden                     nothing evil and added nothing good.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>It is necessary to chronicle some little events because                     they make inevitable or bear upon some noteworthy events,                     or show how traits of character emerge. But the little things                     must have point and purpose. It is a reprehensible fault in                     a biographer to shift the lens from the vital to the trivial.                     The significant thing about Churchill was not that he smoked                     cigars and liked to dictate his memos while lying abed, but                     that his was the voice that rallied the free world to defeat                     Naziism, Fascism, and their cruel sponsors.<\/p>\n<p>The aspiring biographer will find much of interest and value                     in the &#8220;Biography and Memoirs&#8221; chapter of H. M. Paull&#8217;s book                     <em>Literary Ethics <\/em>(Thornton Butterworth Ltd., London,                     1928).<\/p>\n<h3>Getting the facts<\/h3>\n<p>The amount of work involved in preparing to write a biography                     becomes evident when one considers the quantity of material                     that must be examined. In collecting representative letters                     of Queen Victoria, Arthur Benson and Viscount Esher found                     more than 500 volumes dealing with only the first 42 of her                     81 years. Andr\u00e9 Maurois tells us that 500 volumes had                     been written and printed about Victor Hugo, yet the unpublished                     part of his papers far exceeds the part already made public.                     Sir Arthur Conan Doyle left whole rooms full of personal papers                     and notebooks, including 1,500 letters to his mother.<\/p>\n<p>A person who does his research hastily, being content to                     examine only part of the data, is not acting honestly. His                     story will be partial and therefore unfair.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;It is easy,&#8221; said Paull, &#8220;to forgive the writer who in                     his enthusiasm over-praises the object of his admiration,                     but it is not so easy to pardon those who enjoy raking up                     scandal about celebrities.&#8221; It may take a person all of his                     allotted seventy years to complete his great achievement,                     but a biographer can lay it in the dust in an hour-long paperback.<\/p>\n<p>Socrates urged his pupils to be sensible about this: &#8220;Do                     not mind whether the teachers of philosophy are good or bad,                     but think only of Philosophy herself.&#8221; Coming nearer to our                     own day, Lord Peter Wimsey, the detective, created by Dorothy                     L. Sayers, said about a man chosen to captain a cricket eleven:                     &#8220;Provided the man can captain, I don&#8217;t care a bit if he has                     as many wives as Solomon, and is a forger and a swindler into                     the bargain.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>History records many examples of men and women of indifferent                     morals who have yet served the world well as business people,                     statesmen, artists, and soldiers. We can admire the work of                     a person as we do a fine act in a theatre without rushing                     backstage to examine the scaffolding that supports the scenery.<\/p>\n<h3>Writing your own story<\/h3>\n<p>It is the duty of upright and capable men of all ranks,                     said Benvenuto Cellini in his autobiography, who have performed                     anything noble or praiseworthy, to record the events of their                     lives.<\/p>\n<p>A person&#8217;s own story will tell about some fateful occurrence                     unnoticed by his colleagues, or a flash of illumination that                     opened new visions to him.<\/p>\n<p>A title for an autobiography might be &#8220;My Life &#8211; and                     what I have done with it&#8221;, but the writer should remember                     that he stands in court afresh at the end of every chapter,                     subject to critical examination. He may think that his frequent                     glances at himself in the mirror show him as he really is,                     but other people have different views of him.<\/p>\n<p>Writing an autobiography may be useful to the writer. It                     will serve as a survey showing him where he is and what changes                     he should make in the direction he pursues. It is also an                     exercise in composition and writing.<\/p>\n<p>The story of a life need not be left until life&#8217;s end. Professor                     William Carleton Gibson, of the University of British Columbia,                     wrote <em>Young Endeavour <\/em>(Charles C. Thomas, Springfield,                     U.S.A., 1958) in which he told interestingly about the discoveries                     made by more than sixty students of medicine in their undergraduate                     years.<\/p>\n<h3>Some autobiographies<\/h3>\n<p>Every piece of biographical writing, whether by the subject                     or some other writer, increases the reader&#8217;s self-reliance                     by demonstrating what people can be and what they can do.<\/p>\n<p>Some, like John Bunyan, have set down simply the battle                     of the emotions that tried their souls. Vicomte de Chateaubriand,                     one of the most important figures in the literary history                     of France, gives an account of his life and thought in <em>Memoirs                     from Beyond the Grave<\/em>. In <em>Out of My Life <\/em>and                     <em>Thought <\/em>Dr. Albert Schweitzer selects bits here and                     there from mind and life to illustrate the why of what happened.<\/p>\n<p>Madame de Sta\ufffd1&#8217;s <em>Memoirs <\/em>are amusing. Her portraits                     of persons are vivid and convincing. Yet, as she said in opening                     her story: &#8220;If I write the record of my life, it is not because                     it deserves attention, but in order to amuse myself by my                     recollections.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Benjamin Franklin&#8217;s is the greatest autobiography in American                     literature. He was gifted by nature with a versatility of                     genius unexampled by any figure known to history, with the                     exception, perhaps, of Leonardo da Vinci. That is the judgment                     of Sir J. A. Hammerton, expressed in his <em>Outline of Great                     Books <\/em>(Wise &amp; Co., New York, 1936).<\/p>\n<p>Sir James M. Barrie, whose dramatic fantasy <em>Peter Pan                     <\/em>is universally adored, told a story in his Rectorial                     Address at St. Andrews University in 1922 &#8211; a story which                     stands as the greatest example of courageous autobiography.                     &#8220;It is a letter to me from Captain Scott of the Antarctic,                     and was written in the tent you know of, where it was found                     long afterwards with his body and those of some other very                     gallant gentlemen, his comrades. It begins: &#8216;We are pegging                     out in a very comfortless spot&nbsp;&#8230;. We are in a desperate                     state &#8211; feet frozen, etc., no fuel, and a long way from                     food, but it would do your heart good to be in our tent, to                     hear our songs and our cheery conversation&nbsp;&#8230;. We are                     very near the end&nbsp;&#8230;. We did intend to finish ourselves                     when things proved like this, but we have decided to die naturally                     without&#8230;&#8217;.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>This story is printed in Barrie&#8217;s <em>Courage <\/em>(Charles                     Scribner&#8217;s Sons, New York, 1930).<\/p>\n<h3>Fame is not all<\/h3>\n<p>Biography has been described as the literature of superiority,                     but a person can be superior in even humble life. In fact,                     there are some people who believe that you learn most about                     the state of society by studying the lives of the little,                     typical figures in it.<\/p>\n<p>Some of the most interesting autobiographies are by people                     who are not great in an absolute sense but have a story to                     tell and tell it interestingly. And what better bequest could                     men or women leave to children than the plain story of their                     lives, their triumphs over adversity, how they picked themselves                     up after a knock-down, how they progressed from point to point                     in understanding, always striving toward something better,                     and how they rejoiced when they reached a new peak.<\/p>\n<p>The person who reads biography will not become mentally                     bankrupt. To read and to learn from what he reads is a mark                     of intelligence.<\/p>\n<p>We learn all we can from history and biography in order                     to profit by the accumulated wisdom of the race. We do not                     have to start our own lives from the ground, but from the                     shoulders of the people whose lives we read.<\/p>\n<p>Not only instruction and inspiration are to be found in                     biography, but comfort and peace of mind. This is touched                     upon by Nicolo Machiavelli, the Florentine statesman and political                     philosopher, in a letter to a friend:<\/p>\n<p><em>The evening being come, I return home and go to my study;                     at the entrance I pull off my peasant-clothes, covered with                     dust and dirt, and put on my noble court dress, and thus becomingly                     re-clothed I pass into the ancient courts of the men of old,                     where, being lovingly received by them, I am fed with that                     food which is mine alone; where I do not hesitate to speak                     with them, and to ask for the reason of their actions, and                     they in their benignity answer me; and for four hours 1 feel                     no weariness, 1 forget every trouble, poverty does not dismay,                     death does not terrify me.<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[53],"class_list":["post-3679","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-53"],"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>August 1973 - VOL. 54, No. 8 - Some Uses of Biography - 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\/august-1973-vol-54-no-8-some-uses-of-biography\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"August 1973 - VOL. 54, No. 8 - Some Uses of Biography - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"In Oscar Wilde&#8217;s play A Woman of No Importance, Lord Illingworth remarks: &#8220;The Book of Life begins with a man and a woman in a garden.&#8221; To this, Mrs. Allonby replies: &#8220;It ends with Revelations.&#8221; It is the wealth of interesting stories that come in between that make up biography. Autobiographies and biographies are increasingly [&hellip;]\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/august-1973-vol-54-no-8-some-uses-of-biography\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:modified_time\" content=\"2022-11-28T00:34:10+00:00\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:card\" content=\"summary_large_image\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:label1\" content=\"Est. reading time\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data1\" content=\"16 minutes\" \/>\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\" class=\"yoast-schema-graph\">{\"@context\":\"https:\/\/schema.org\",\"@graph\":[{\"@type\":\"WebPage\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/august-1973-vol-54-no-8-some-uses-of-biography\/\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/august-1973-vol-54-no-8-some-uses-of-biography\/\",\"name\":\"August 1973 - VOL. 54, No. 8 - Some Uses of Biography - RBC\",\"isPartOf\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/#website\"},\"datePublished\":\"1973-08-01T01:00:00+00:00\",\"dateModified\":\"2022-11-28T00:34:10+00:00\",\"inLanguage\":\"en-US\",\"potentialAction\":[{\"@type\":\"ReadAction\",\"target\":[\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/august-1973-vol-54-no-8-some-uses-of-biography\/\"]}]},{\"@type\":\"WebSite\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/#website\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/\",\"name\":\"RBC\",\"description\":\"\",\"potentialAction\":[{\"@type\":\"SearchAction\",\"target\":{\"@type\":\"EntryPoint\",\"urlTemplate\":\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/?s={search_term_string}\"},\"query-input\":{\"@type\":\"PropertyValueSpecification\",\"valueRequired\":true,\"valueName\":\"search_term_string\"}}],\"inLanguage\":\"en-US\"}]}<\/script>\n<!-- \/ Yoast SEO Premium plugin. -->","yoast_head_json":{"title":"August 1973 - VOL. 54, No. 8 - Some Uses of Biography - RBC","robots":{"index":"index","follow":"follow","max-snippet":"max-snippet:-1","max-image-preview":"max-image-preview:large","max-video-preview":"max-video-preview:-1"},"canonical":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/august-1973-vol-54-no-8-some-uses-of-biography\/","og_locale":"en_US","og_type":"article","og_title":"August 1973 - VOL. 54, No. 8 - Some Uses of Biography - RBC","og_description":"In Oscar Wilde&#8217;s play A Woman of No Importance, Lord Illingworth remarks: &#8220;The Book of Life begins with a man and a woman in a garden.&#8221; To this, Mrs. Allonby replies: &#8220;It ends with Revelations.&#8221; It is the wealth of interesting stories that come in between that make up biography. 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