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Title: How to Write Letters (Formerly The Book of Letters)
       A Complete Guide to Correct Business and Personal Correspondence

Author: Mary Owens  Crowther

Release Date: August 2, 2007 [EBook #22222]
[Last updated on August 7, 2007]

Language: English


*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOW TO WRITE LETTERS ***




Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Jacqueline Jeremy and the
Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net






A STAR BOOK

HOW TO WRITE
LETTERS

(Formerly the book of letters)


A Complete Guide
to Correct Business and Personal
Correspondence


BY

Mary Owens Crowther

GARDEN CITY PUBLISHING COMPANY, INC.
NEW YORK

CL
COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY
DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED


PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES
AT
THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY, N. Y.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The forms for engraved invitations, announcements, and the like, and the styles of notepapers, addresses, monograms, and crests are by courtesy of the Bailey, Banks and Biddle Company, Brentano's, and The Gorham Company. The Western Union Telegraph Company has been very helpful in the chapter on telegrams.

CONTENTS Page CHAPTER I WHAT IS A LETTER? 1
CHAPTER II THE PURPOSE OF THE LETTER 6
CHAPTER III

THE PARTS OF A LETTER

1. The Heading 10
2. The Inside Address 12
3. The Salutation 16
4. The Body of the Letter 22
5. The Complimentary Close 26
6. The Signature 29
7. The Superscription 33
CHAPTER IV

BEING APPROPRIATE—WHAT TO AVOID

Common Offenses 36
Stock Phrases in Business Letters 38
CHAPTER V

PERSONAL LETTERS—SOCIAL AND FRIENDLY

Invitations and Acknowledgments 44
The Letter of Condolence 91
Letters of Sympathy in Case of Illness 95
Letters of Congratulation 101
Letters of Introduction 107
Letters of Thanks 110
Letters Between Friends 118
CHAPTER VI PERSONAL BUSINESS LETTERS 124
CHAPTER VII THE BUSINESS LETTER 135
Sales and Announcement Letters 146
Keeping the Customer 160
Selling Real Estate 163
Bank Letters 173
Letters of Order and Acknowledgment 182
Letters of Complaint and Adjustment 186
Credit and Collection Letters 193
Letters of Application 211
Letters of Reference 217
Letters of Introduction 220
Letters of Inquiry 223
CHAPTER VIII THE USE OF FORM PARAGRAPHS 227
CHAPTER IX CHILDREN'S LETTERS 230
CHAPTER X TELEGRAMS 236
CHAPTER XI THE LAW OF LETTERS 247
CHAPTER XII THE COST OF A LETTER 252
CHAPTER XIII STATIONERY, CRESTS AND MONOGRAMS 258
LIST OF TEXT ILLUSTRATIONS Page In the business letterhead appear the name of the firm, its address, and the kind of business engaged in 11 Letterheads used by a life insurance company, a law firm, and three associations 13 In the case of widely known firms, or where the name of the firm itself indicates it, reference to the nature of the business is often omitted from letterheads 14 Specimens of letterheads used for official stationery 27 As to the use of the symbol "&" and the abbreviation of the word "Company," the safest plan in writing to a company is to spell its name exactly as it appears on its letterhead 42 Specimen of formal wedding invitation 48 Specimens of formal invitations to a wedding reception 51 Specimen of wedding announcement 54 Specimens of formal dinner invitations 60 Specimens of formal invitations "to meet" 63 Specimens of formal invitations to a dance 68 Specimens of business letterheads 140 Arrangement of a business letter (block form) 144 Arrangement of a business letter (indented form) 145 Specimens of business letterheads used by English firms 207 Specimens of addressed social stationery 259 Specimens of addressed social stationery 260 The monograms in the best taste are the small round ones, but many pleasing designs may be had in the diamond, square, and oblong shapes 262 Specimens of crested letter and notepaper 263 Specimens of monogrammed stationery 266 Specimens of business letterheads 267 Department stores and firms that write many letters to women often employ a notepaper size 270 Specimens of stationery used by men for personal business letters 271 HOW TO WRITE LETTERS CHAPTER I WHAT IS A LETTER?

It is not so long since most personal letters, after an extremely formal salutation, began "I take my pen in hand." We do not see that so much nowadays, but the spirit lingers. Pick up the average letter and you cannot fail to discover that the writer has grimly taken his pen in hand and, filled with one thought, has attacked the paper. That one thought is to get the thing over with.

And perhaps this attitude of getting the thing over with at all costs is not so bad after all. There are those who lament the passing of the ceremonious letter and others who regret that the "literary" letter—the kind of letter that can be published—is no longer with us. But the old letter of ceremony was not really more useful than a powdered wig, and as for the sort of letter that delights the heart and lightens the labor of the biographer—well, that is still being written by the kind of person who can write it. It is better that a letter should be written because the writer has something to say than as a token of culture. Some of the letters of our dead great do too often remind us that they were not forgetful of posterity.

The average writer of a letter might well forget culture and posterity and address himself to the task in hand, which, in other than the most exceptional sort of letter, is to say what he has to say in the shortest possible compass that will serve to convey the thought or the information that he wants to hand on. For a letter is a conveyance of thought; if it becomes a medium of expression it is less a letter than a diary fragment.

Most of our letters in these days relate to business affairs or to social affairs that, as far as personality is concerned, might as well be business. Our average letter has a rather narrow objective and is not designed to be literature. We may, it is true, write to cheer up a sick friend, we may write to tell about what we are doing, we may write that sort of missive which can be classified only as a love letter—but unless such letters come naturally it is better that they be not written. They are the exceptional letters. It is absurd to write them according to rule. In fact, it is absurd to write any letter according to rule. But one can learn the best usage in correspondence, and that is all that this book attempts to present.

The heyday of letter writing was in the eighteenth century in England. George Saintsbury, in his interesting "A Letter Book," says:

"By common consent of all opinion worth attention that century was, in the two European literatures which were equally free from crudity and decadence—French and English—the very palmiest day of the art. Everybody wrote letters, and a surprising number of people wrote letters well. Our own three most famous epistolers of the male sex, Horace Walpole, Gray, and Cowper—belong wholly to it; and 'Lady Mary'—our most famous she-ditto—belongs to it by all but her childhood; as does Chesterfield, whom some not bad judges would put not far if at all below the three men just mentioned. The rise of the novel in this century is hardly more remarkable than the way in which that novel almost wedded itself—certainly joined itself in the most frequent friendship—to the letter-form. But perhaps the excellence of the choicer examples in this time is not really more important than the abundance, variety, and popularity of its letters, whether good, indifferent, or bad. To use one of the informal superlatives sanctioned by familiar custom it was the 'letter-writingest' of ages from almost every point of view. In its least as in its most dignified moods it even overflowed into verse if not into poetry as a medium. Serious epistles had—of course on classical models—been written in verse for a long time. But now in England more modern patterns, and especially Anstey's New Bath Guide, started the fashion of actual correspondence in doggerel verse with no thought of print—a practice in which persons as different as Madame d'Arblay's good-natured but rather foolish father, and a poet and historian like Southey indulged; and which did not become obsolete till Victorian times, if then."

There is a wide distinction between a letter and an epistle. The letter is a substitute for a spoken conversation. It is spontaneous, private, and personal. It is non-literary and is not written for the eyes of the general public. The epistle is in the way of being a public speech—an audience is in mind. It is written with a view to permanence. The relation between an epistle and a letter has been compared to that between a Platonic dialogue and a talk between two friends. A great man's letters, on account of their value in setting forth the views of a school or a person, may, if produced after his death, become epistles. Some of these, genuine or forgeries, under some eminent name, have come down to us from the days of the early Roman Empire. Cicero, Plato, Aristotle, Demosthenes, are the principal names to which these epistles, genuine and pseudonymous, are attached.

Some of the letters of Cicero are rather epistles, as they were intended for the general reader.

The ancient world—Babylonia, Assyria, Egypt, Rome, and Greece—figures in our inheritance of letters. In Egypt have been discovered genuine letters. The papyrus discoveries contain letters of unknowns who had no thought of being read by the general public.

During the Renaissance, Cicero's letters were used as models for one of the most common forms of literary effort. There is a whole literature of epistles from Petrarch to the Epistolæ obscurorum virorum. These are, to some degree, similar to the Epistles of Martin Marprelate.

Later epistolary satires are Pascal's "Provincial Letters," Swift's "Drapier Letters," and the "Letters of Junius."

Pope, soon to be followed by Lady Mary Montagu, was the first Englishman who treated letter writing as an art upon

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