{"id":3842,"date":"1957-07-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1957-07-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/july-1957-vol-38-no-7-on-writing-clearly\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T13:18:29","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T13:18:29","slug":"july-1957-vol-38-no-7-on-writing-clearly","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/july-1957-vol-38-no-7-on-writing-clearly\/","title":{"rendered":"July 1957 &#8211; Vol. 38, No. 7 &#8211; On Writing Clearly"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">WHEN you write a letter you are                     trying to convey a meaning from your mind to the mind of your                     reader.<\/p>\n<p> Clearness in writing a letter consists in this: that you                     write what you wish to say in the spirit in which you wish                     it to be received, and in such a way that your reader gathers                     both the spirit and the facts without effort.<\/p>\n<p>We are not interested in this <em>Monthly Letter <\/em>with                     the mechanics of letter writing. There are already many comma                     sleuths, type addicts, and grammatical high priests engrossed                     only in the techniques. It is the message that is important.                     We need punctuation, clear type and grammatical construction                     as servants, but our purpose in using them is to write so                     that we shall be understood in the spirit in which we write.<\/p>\n<p>There is a personal benefit in writing clearly. The more                     clearly you write, the more clearly you will understand what                     you are writing about. The noted English author, Arnold Bennett,                     writer of novels and short stories that are still well read                     after forty years, went so far as to say &#8220;the exercise of                     writing is an indispensable part of any genuine effort towards                     mental efficiency.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>It is one of the good things about communicating ideas that                     we can be always improving, sharpening up our wits so as to                     do the job better. It is sad to come upon someone who has                     thoughts that are worth-while, but who is not learning                     how to express them. Still more to be pitied are those who                     think that they have conveyed their ideas when they haven&#8217;t.<\/p>\n<h3>Think of the reader<\/h3>\n<p>Some letter writers are completely absorbed in the things                     about which they are writing, about quantities and qualities,                     about dollars and delivery. To become intelligible and effective                     they need to enrich their thoughts by spreading them out so                     as to include people.<\/p>\n<p>Some persons will say that business is objective, mechanical,                     dealing with commodities and services rather than with people.                     How absurd it is to say so when every business man knows that                     every sale, every purchase, every contract, every financial                     deal, depends upon the word &#8220;yes&#8221; or &#8220;no&#8221; from some human                     being.<\/p>\n<p>In addition to getting across its point, your letter should                     make a friend of your reader, or consolidate a friendship                     already established. There should be an air of grace in it,                     raising your stature in the eyes of the reader.<\/p>\n<p>How is all this to be attained? By seeing your message through                     the eyes of your reader. What is the person like to whom you                     are writing? What will he be interested in learning from you?<\/p>\n<p>Imagine yourself talking to the reader, instead of writing.                     Almost automatically you will find yourself answering questions                     he might ask if he were sitting across the desk from you.<\/p>\n<p>This requires you to write the reader&#8217;s language. Avoid                     words he is not likely to know, or, if you have to use them,                     explain them without giving the appearance of &#8220;talking down&#8221;                     to him.<\/p>\n<p>Go farther than the bare facts demanded in a question. Find                     out what more you can do. Often there is a point of information                     that would be helpful to your reader, about which he failed                     to inquire. By giving it unasked you are using your position                     in a constructive way to raise the prestige of your firm and                     enhance your value.<\/p>\n<h3>The writer&#8217;s responsibility<\/h3>\n<p>People who write letters have an obligation to be intelligible.                     They are not writing to impress their correspondents but to                     express thoughts.<\/p>\n<p>It is unjust, it is immoral and if is unbusinesslike not                     to know what you mean, to shrug a careless shoulder and say                     that you write what you write and the reader should make his                     own interpretation.<\/p>\n<p>We are tempted to believe that when our ideas do not get                     across to someone the fault lies in his incapacity to grasp                     them. But when we shrug off our duty in that way we put ourselves                     on a level with Sancho Panza, the simple squire who accompanied                     Don Quixote on his adventures: &#8220;If you do not understand me,&#8221;                     he said, &#8220;no wonder if my sentences be thought nonsense.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>There is, of course, some responsibility laid upon the                    reader  of a letter. A writer should not be required to write                    in some  magic sort of way so that an inattentive, mind-wandering,                     careless, inefficient or foolish reader is compelled to                    understand  what is said (like forcing medicine down the                    throat of a  reluctant child).<\/p>\n<h3>Analyse and assemble<\/h3>\n<p>All hope of clearness is lost if you start to write about                     something you don&#8217;t understand, or if you write faster than                     you think. Let us keep our thinking straight and we shall                     have well-founded hope of making out writing simple.<\/p>\n<p>Clear thinking is needed for wise action in every field                     of human action, but in none more so than in writing letters.                     The more we have predigested our data before starting to write,                     the more free our minds are to tackle the composition of a                     letter.<\/p>\n<p>We need adequate information. That is the basic material                     of all verbal reasoning. The information has to be exact:                     let us have no woolly ideas in the foundation of our thinking                     or we cannot avoid woolliness in the structure we erect upon                     it.<\/p>\n<p>One of the great arts in effective correspondence is to                     get down to the nub of the matter, see the essential points,                     brush away the superfluous, and express the result of our                     thinking clearly.<\/p>\n<p>Putting into practise a system like that can be the greatest                     enjoyment on earth for a writer of letters. The alert-minded                     man finds greater satisfaction in digging up the answers to                     questions than in answering them when the answers come easily.                     If a man loses this sense of enjoyment he is already beginning                     to stiffen up.<\/p>\n<p>Then, having gathered the facts, decided their priority,                     and determined the tone of our letter, let us arrange our                     material.<\/p>\n<p>A writer makes a gross mistake when he tries to cram into                     his reader&#8217;s mind a mass of unorganized ideas, facts, and                     viewpoints. Clarity begins at home. Having thoughts to convey,                     we need to survey them from end to end and to shuffle them                     into the order of their importance. We have to classify and                     conquer the elements in ourselves before we can write with                     any certainty of appealing to the intelligence of others.<\/p>\n<p>All this is not so laborious to do as the description of                     the process makes it seem. With thoughtful self-discipline                     over a period we shall find ourselves analysing and assembling                     and expressing swiftly and incisively. It will not remain                     a conscious process, but will become second nature.<\/p>\n<h3>The right words<\/h3>\n<p>A stock of good words, culled from excellent authors, is                     a precious thing. There is a feeling in words, as well as                     sense. They will laugh and sing for us, or mourn and be sad,                     if we take the care to use the words that convey the spirit                     as well as the sense of what we wish to say. As Gertrude Stein                     put it: &#8220;One of the things that is a very interesting thing                     to know is how you are feeling inside you to the words that                     are coming out to be outside of you.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Words are sounds, and written words are the musical score                     of meaningful sounds. In nature there are rustling trees,                     rushing waters, chirping birds, growling beasts. Human beings                     laugh and hum and whistle and groan and scold. From all these                     sounds, in some way, after centuries of experiment, art produces                     a Beethoven&#8217;s <em>Seventh Symphony <\/em>and a Shakespeare&#8217;s                     <em>Hamlet<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Those same symbols are given to us with which to influence                     people. All we need do is choose them wisely and use them                     imaginatively.<\/p>\n<p>The person to whom you are writing will respond to some                     words while remaining indifferent to others. How can you expect                     to energize a reader into doing what you want him to do if                     you write stale and flat words in uninspired sentences? Mark                     Twain is quoted as saying: &#8220;The difference between the right                     word and the almost right word is the difference between lightning                     and the lightning bug,&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Putting words together<\/h3>\n<p>Jonathan Swift, whose writing experience carried him all                     the way from the baby-talk of his <em>Journal to Stella                     <\/em>through the fire and thunder of his essays on religion                     and politics to the satire of his <em>Gulliver&#8217;s Travels<\/em>,                     said shrewdly that writing style is &#8220;proper words in proper                     places.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>To conquer the harshness of sense and the deadness of facts                     so often encountered in daily work needs the management and                     creative power of people who have set their sights upon true                     word artistry. This does not by any means encourage a flamboyant                     style. If the spirit of Macaulay or Carlyle or Ruskin were                     to drop in some day seeking to write a piece for our customers,                     we should certainly make way for him. But when we are left                     to ourselves we will be content with short sentences, humble                     words and clear pictures, so long as they express what we                     wish to convey in the spirit in which we wish it to be received.<\/p>\n<p>Speaking of humble words and clear Pictures, let us look                     at Shakespeare&#8217;s <em>Hamlet<\/em>. In it you will find a hundred                     homely phrases that have become part of our language, and                     there is not a difficult word among them. Here are examples,                     picked without great searching, from the first Act: Not a                     mouse stirring; The trappings and the suits of woe: Frailty,                     thy name is woman; A truant disposition; I shall not look                     upon his like again; More in sorrow than in anger; The primrose                     path; Something is rotten in the State of Denmark; Neither                     a borrower nor a lender be; To thine own self be true; To                     the manner born; The time is out of joint; I could a tale                     unfold; One may smile, and smile, and be a villain; Wild and                     whirling words.<\/p>\n<p>Whatever painters of pictures may claim as their liberties                     in spreading their cubistic thoughts before the public, the                     writer cannot demand that license: he is under obligation                     to be explicit. He will fail if he fills his letters with                     affectation and conceit, if he tries to cover up lack of matter                     with splashes of novelty, if he abandons simplicity as a criterion                     of beauty.<\/p>\n<p>This is not to say that flamboyancy is always wrong. It                     is not wrong always, but it is always dangerous. There are                     rare occasions when great golden phrases are needed and fitting.                     Everyone feels at some time the urge to break into rich prose                     or poetry. The place to sow such literary wild oats is in                     a private garden, not in the field of business.<\/p>\n<h3>About simplicity<\/h3>\n<p>It is not easy to write simply; in fact it is more difficult                     to be simple than to be complex. But it is a pleasant experience,                     like getting into slippers after a day&#8217;s work or shopping.<\/p>\n<p>The <em>Editorial Manual and Style Guide <\/em>of Maclean-Hunter                     Publishing Co. Ltd., Toronto, has this to say: &#8220;The ideal                     article has been described as one written so that the words                     are for children and the meaning is for men.&#8221; That can be                     a guide for letter writing also.<\/p>\n<p>This is not a plea for an A B C sort of writing. Far from                     it. We in business, charged with writing and reading letters,                     have graduated from the primer class. If you are going to                     stand out for clearness at any price, then you are going to                     shut out yourself and your readers from many good things,                     because many good things cannot be told in primer language                     except by being put falsely.<\/p>\n<p>If we are to say anything significant about a business matter;                     if we are to sell an idea or a commodity; we have to rise                     above the level of sheer enumeration of first-order facts.<\/p>\n<p>There are some things a reader should not expect to grasp                     entire atone swift reading. To a quick and practised mind,                     understanding a factual report may be easy, but when matters                     of appraisal and opinion are involved it is expected of even                     the most accomplished reader that he will pay attention, mull                     over, and use his brains.<\/p>\n<p>As the writer of a business letter you will do your best                     to make the reader&#8217;s job easy. You stand between your firm                     and your correspondent as interpreter.<\/p>\n<p>You should not fidget around the edges of what &#8220;you have                     to say. Nothing can be more deadly in a business letter than                     faltering and fumbling, or spreading yourself over a lot of                     generalities, or wandering off into vague profundities.<\/p>\n<p>Be concise. Use short, direct, simple statements to cover                     your points, and state them in well-organized order.                     When you are inclined to use often the words &#8220;and, but, however,                     consequently&#8221; in the middle of your sentences, try putting                     in a period instead. You will find that this adds to the clearness                     of what you are saying. It dissipates the fog, and saves your                     reader from having to back-track to find the path.<\/p>\n<p>Give facts exactly and as completely as is necessary. It                     is more important for you to be sure you have given the needed                     information than it is to get all the mail into your &#8220;out&#8221;                     basket before noon.<\/p>\n<p>Be precise. Surely you have something specific to say or                     you wouldn&#8217;t be writing the letter.<\/p>\n<p>Define problems, solutions and words for yourself before                     putting them into writing. Some of the greatest disputes would                     cease in a moment if one of the parties would put into a few                     clear words what he understands the argument to be about.                     When writing your letter, you do not need to define everything,                     but only those words or thoughts that may not be as clearly                     understood by your reader as by you.<\/p>\n<p>Be meaningful. Words need to have not only meaning in themselves                     ( dictionary meaning ) but meaning in the setting in which                     they are used They should convey a message, not merely the                     symbol of a sound. It is said that certain New Guinea people                     announce important events by beating drums, passing the                    signals  from hill-top to hill-top. All that the                    signals  tell is that something has happened about which                    the listeners  had better become excited. That should not                    be, but sometimes  is, the only effect of letters. They leave                    out the intelligible  content of their message, or they deal                    in abstractions without  concrete meaning.<\/p>\n<h3>Some pitfalls<\/h3>\n<p>Be careful. There are some areas in expression where special                     care is needed. A map cannot be drawn of all these in this                     small space, but a few will be mentioned as typical of the                     sort of thing for which the writer needs to be on the alert.<\/p>\n<p>Loose or unattached pronouns can cause trouble. An airplane                     accident was traced to the fact that when the pilot ordered                     his co-pilot: &#8220;Pull &#8217;em up!&#8221; the co-pilot raised                     the flaps instead of the landing wheels. The &#8220;them&#8221;, being                     loose, attached itself to a different context in these two                     minds.<\/p>\n<p>Avoid exaggeration. It is essentially a form of ignorance,                     replacing poverty of language. Joseph Pulitzer, publisher                     of the <em>New York World<\/em>, said that every reporter ought                     to be knocked on the head and told that he does not improve                     his work or do the office any good by exaggeration.<\/p>\n<p>Keep adjectives in reserve to make your meaning more precise,                     and look with suspicion on those you use to make your language                     more emphatic. Adjectives and adverbs should only be used                     where they contribute something to the sense.<\/p>\n<p>Beware of words with two or more meanings. After fifteen                     years of research a Columbia University professor learned                     that the word &#8220;run&#8221; has 832 meanings. A little girl meeting                     for the first time the hymn &#8220;There is a green hill far away,                     Without a city wall&#8221; was rightly puzzled as to why a green                     hill should have a wall at all. The word &#8220;without&#8221; meaning                     &#8220;outside&#8221; had not yet come within her knowledge. Be sure that                     you write in such a way that the words you use will be read                     in the same sense by your reader.<\/p>\n<p>Avoid jargon. Specialists in any branch of human activity                     acquire methods of communicating ideas that set them apart                     from other specialists and from the general public. Yet even                     the most learned scientist does not order a dinner or propose                     marriage in five-syllable words, some of them manufactured                     specially for his own use.<\/p>\n<p>Many great men have written simply. Few people today have                     anything more important to say than William Harvey said about                     the circulation of the blood or Charles Darwin about the origin                     of species. If they have, then we may forgive them the use                     of longer words.<\/p>\n<h3>A creative purpose<\/h3>\n<p>Textbooks on writing can go only so far as to give examples                     that may suggest lines to follow. Letter formulas are not                     like corsets, into which thoughts are forced and laced. They                     are rather like skeletons around which we mold the flesh of                     thoughts, and then breathe into the words of our thoughts                     the breath of life.<\/p>\n<p>Writing a letter is not routine. Every letter bas some creative                     purpose, else it has no reason for being written. It is designed                     to win or increase friendship, to bring in an order, to get                     goods you want, or to perform some other function that will                     add to your personal or business well-being.<\/p>\n<p>The ambitious writer will try to get rid of sameness. The                     laws of nature and the desires of men are against it. A business                     letter should have personality. It should use variation in                     tone and manner as well as in contents.<\/p>\n<p>This means using constructive imagination. It is a mistake                     to merely copy form letters out of a book. Be original. Learn                     the principles of clear writing and set your own course. A                     horse can&#8217;t win a race by following in the steps of another                     horse, says James F. Bender in his <em>book Make Tour Business                     Letters Make Friends <\/em>(McGraw-Hill Book Co. Inc.,                     New York).<\/p>\n<h3>To sum up<\/h3>\n<p>An essay like this, whose value consists merely in its bringing                     together some known facts in brief form, is to be considered                     as nothing more than an introduction to its topic.<\/p>\n<p>The letter writer who is eager to improve his work will                     wish to read further and deeper. Take Shakespeare for the                     concrete simplicity of his word pictures. Read the parables                     and the Gettysburg address for the comprehensive way they                     convey great feelings about ordinary events. If you can make                     time to enjoy reading a book about another art whose principles                     can be adapted by you to your writing, read John Ruskin&#8217;s                     <em>The Seven Lamps of Architecture<\/em>. He tells great truths                     about composition and structure, about simplicity and the                     light and shadow of art.<\/p>\n<p>The principles that these writers used are as vital today                     as they were when written. Complexity of living has come upon                     us with out progress in science and technology. The essence                     of physical evolution is movement away from the more simple                     towards the more complex. But in our social contacts we need                     to put forward every effort to more from complexity to simplicity.                     This is as necessary in business as it is in international                     affairs.<\/p>\n<p>The man who fails to try to write so clearly as to be understandable                     to the audience he desires to reach is lazy or affected. If                     he does not know the subject about which he writes he is a                     pretender. If he does know his subject and cannot express                     his thoughts he is merely incompetent.<\/p>\n<p>The superior man writes as if he were interested in what                     he is trying to say, and as if it were vital to him that his                     readers should understand what is in his mind.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[37],"class_list":["post-3842","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-37"],"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>July 1957 - Vol. 38, No. 7 - On Writing Clearly - 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\/july-1957-vol-38-no-7-on-writing-clearly\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"July 1957 - Vol. 38, No. 7 - On Writing Clearly - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"WHEN you write a letter you are trying to convey a meaning from your mind to the mind of your reader. 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