قراءة كتاب Eight or Nine Wise Words about Letter-Writing
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‘it was a
29233 | /90. | |
242 | (233) Ap. 10. (Th) Page & Co. Macaulay’s Essays and “Jane (cheap edtn). |
orderg Eyre” |
(234) 2 or 3 |
do. Aunt Jemima—invitg for days after the 15th. [ |
236 |
(235) recevd & Co. |
do. Lon. and West. Bk. have £250, pd to yr Acct fm Parkins Calcutta[en |
|
234 239 |
(236) do. Aunt Jemima—can possibly come this month, will when able. |
not write [ |
228 240 |
(237) Ap. 11. Cheetham and turn letter enclosed to you. |
Co. re- [× |
245 | (238) do. Morton, Philip. Co lend me Browning’s ‘Dramati sonæ’ for a day or 2? |
uld you s Per- |
(239) ing ho ‘136, |
Ap. 14. Aunt Jemima, leav- use at end of month: address Royal Avenue, Bath.’ [ |
236 |
(240) returng |
Ap. 15. Cheetham and Co., letter as reqd, bill 6/6/8. [ |
237 244 |
29242 | /90. | |
(242) for boo |
Ap. 15. (Tu) Page & Co. bill ks, as ordered, 15/6 [ |
233 } 247 |
(243) | do. ¶ do. books | |
240 248 |
(244) do. Cheetham and Co. c derstand the 6/8—what is £6 |
an un- for? |
(245) matis |
Ap. 17. ¶ Morton, P. ‘Dra- Personæ’, as asked for. [retd |
238 249 |
221 250 |
(246) do. Wilkins and Co. w bill, 175/10/6, and ch. for do. |
ith [en |
243 | (247) do. Page and Co. bill, postal J⁄Σ107258 for 15/- and |
15/6, 6 stps. |
(248) was a |
Ap. 18. Cheetham and Co. it ‘clerical error’ (!) |
244 |
245 | (249) Ap. 19. Morton, P. retu Browning with many thanks. |
rng |
(250) bill. |
do. Wilkins and Co. receptd | 246 |
I begin each page by putting, at the top left-hand corner, the next entry-number I am going to use, in full (the last 3 digits of each entry-number are enough afterwards); and I put the date of the year, at the top, in the centre.
I begin each entry with the last 3 digits of the entry-number, enclosed in an oval (this is difficult to reproduce in print, so I have put round-parentheses here). Then, for the first entry in each page, I put the day of the month and the day of the week: afterwards, ‘do.’ is enough for the month-day, till it changes: I do not repeat the week-day.
Next, if the entry is not a letter, I put a symbol for ‘parcel’ (see Nos. 243, 245) or ‘telegram’ (see Nos. 230, 231) as the case may be.
Next, the name of the person, underlined (indicated here by italics).
If an entry needs special further attention, I put [ at the end: and, when it has been attended to, I fill in the appropriate symbol, e.g. in No. 218, it showed that the bill had to be paid; in No. 222, that an answer was really needed (the ‘×’ means ‘attended to’); in No. 234, that I owed the old lady a visit; in No. 235, that the item had to be entered in my account book; in No. 236, that I must not forget to write; in No. 239, that the address had to be entered in my address-book; in No. 245, that the book had to be returned.
I give each entry the space of 2 lines, whether it fills them or not, in order to have room for references. And, at the foot of each page I leave 2 or 3 lines blank (often useful afterwards for entering omitted Letters) and miss one or 2 numbers before I begin the next page.
At any odd moments of leisure, I ‘make up’ the entry-book, in various ways, as follows:—
(1) I draw a second line, at the right-hand end of the ‘received’ entries, and at the left-hand end of the ‘sent’ entries. This I usually do pretty well ‘up to date’. In my Register the first line is red, the second blue: here I distinguish them by making the first thin, and the second thick.
(2) Beginning with the last entry, and going backwards, I read over the names till I recognise one as having occurred already: I then link the two entries together, by giving the one, that comes first in chronological order, a ‘foot-reference’ (see Nos. 217, 225). I do not keep this ‘up-to-date’, but leave it till there are 4 or 5 pages to be done. I work back till I come among entries that are all supplied with ‘foot-references’, when I once more glance through the last few pages, to see if there are any entries not yet supplied with head-references: their predecessors may need a special search. If an entry is connected, in subject, with another under a different name, I link them by cross-references, distinguished from the head- and foot-references by being written further from the marginal line (see No. 229). When 2 consecutive entries have the same name, and are both of the same kind (i.e. both ‘received’ or both ‘sent’) I bracket them (see Nos. 242, 243); if of different kinds, I link them with the symbol used for Nos. 219, 220.
(3) Beginning at the earliest entry not yet done with, and going forwards, I cross out every entry that has got a head- and foot-reference, and is done with, by continuing the extra line through it (see Nos. 221, 223, 225).