Eight or Nine Wise Words about Letter-Writing Quotes

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Eight or Nine Wise Words about Letter-Writing (Collected Works of Lewis Carroll) Eight or Nine Wise Words about Letter-Writing by Lewis Carroll
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Eight or Nine Wise Words about Letter-Writing Quotes Showing 1-3 of 3
“A great deal of the bad writing in the world comes simply from writing too quickly. Of course you reply, “I do it to save time”. A very good object, no doubt: but what right have you to do it at your friend’s expense? Isn’t his time as valuable as yours?”
Lewis Carroll, Eight or Nine Wise Words about Letter-Writing
“A few more Rules may fitly be given here, for correspondence that has unfortunately become controversial.

One is, don’t repeat yourself. When once you have said your say, fully and clearly, on a certain point, and have failed to convince your friend, drop that subject: to repeat your arguments, all over again, will simply lead to his doing the same; and so you will go on, like a Circulating Decimal. Did you ever know a Circulating Decimal come to an end?
Lewis Carroll, Eight or Nine Wise Words about Letter-Writing
“If, in picking a quarrel, each party declined to go more than three-eighths of the way, and if, in making friends, each was ready to go five-eighths of the way—why, there would be more reconciliations than quarrels!”
Lewis Carroll, Eight or Nine Wise Words about Letter-Writing