THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES ft* 1 / Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2007 with funding from Microsoft Corporation http://www.archive.org/details/factorsshorthandOObrowiala THE FACTORS OF Shorthand Speed; OR, HOW TO BECOME A STENOGRAPHIC EXPERT. A Book of Practical Aids and Suggestions to the Student the Teacher, and the Young Reporter. BY DAVID WOLFE BROWN, Official Reporter, U. S. House of Representatives ; Author of "The Mastery of Shorthand," "The Learner's Needless Burdens," " The Hand and Its Handicaps, 1 ' " What Has Half a Century Done for Shorthand ? " " The Rationale of Phrasing," etc. New York : Shorthand Publication Bureau, 114 West 34TH Street. "We are making in office and court and legislative hail, the reputation and the future of shorthand and reporters. If we do well, we shall be honored and well paid; if not, the reverse. Whatever adds to our skill and encourages us all, is desirable. Friendly contests in skill keep alive that 'enthusiastic perseverance which is often mistaken for genius.' I believe in all things which make us better report- ers and educate people as to what a stenographer ought to be able to do."— Fred Irland. "The race of the accomplished stenographer after, or rather with, the rapid and cultivated speaker, is one of the most Interesting spectacles which can engage the attention of the mind. There is an indescribable exhilaration in the contest. Ce n'est pas la Victoire que fait la jnie des noble caeur* : e'est le Combat."— Eugene Davis. Copyright, 1897, By David Wolfe Brown. c/> 17 INTRODUCTORY. "THE SPEED SECRET." It is a sad fact that many a student, after de- voting months to the study of an art which temptingly offers itself as a system of swift writing, finds himself unable to use the art with even the rapidity of longhand. Other students, somewhat more successful, fail after long con- tinued efforts to obtain amanuensis speed. Still others, possessing for months or years the skill K < qtt 3 of the office stenographer, find themselves con- stantly baffled in their attempts to follow some **" of the easiest of public speakers. The young ■ z shorthand writer, aspiring to "speed," and per- haps working hard to secure the much-coveted prize, feels often as if there must be some "se- 5 cret" which others have found, but which has j2 eluded his own patient search. Appealing to this eager desire for the "speed secret," there appear from time to time men who are ready "for a consideration" to com- municate some "short and easy" method of re- 448599 4 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. moving the ponderous obstacles that block the young stenographer's path. While I write, there lies on my desk a pamphlet purporting to come from an "official reporter," and attractively styled "The Speed Secret." A part of the pre- cious information which this pamphlet offers to the world for the paltry sum of fifty cents, is the following: "Good speed practice for the hand is to write the figure three as rapidly as possible. You will be surprised to find how few three's you can make the first minute, and equally surprised to find how quickly practice increases speed. The sustained precision of hand required to make a couple of hundred three's rapidly is just what is required for shorthand." But the "speed secret" is not always offered at so low a price as fifty cents. There lies before me another version of the "speed secret," which (though comprised in two typewritten pages) has been sold to many a "speed" seeker for five dollars. The author's advice in this case covers but two points: First, copy over and over again and then repeatedly write from dictation, some of the published specimens of the author's short hand; second, take care that the dictation is al- INTRODUCTORY. 5 ways about five words a minute slower than the rate at which you can write! Another author undertakes to show "how great a gain may be realized by writing short- hand with both hands simultaneously!" "It is evident," he says, "that if we can write 100 words per minute with the right hand, and 90 with the left, we can write 190 words per min- ute, provided we can unite the capacity of the two hands. That is accomplished by employing each hand to write each alternate word of a pas- sage. For example, 'To be contents his natural desire.' 'To' may be written with either hand; but we will suppose it is written with the left hand. A little in advance 'be' may be written with the right hand ; and in advance of this, 'con- tents' with the left; then 'his' with the right; •natural' with the left hand; and 'desire' with the right hand." Unfortunately this author does not state that he or any one else has ever been able to reduce this scheme, so beautiful in theory, to actual practice. Sometimes the shorthand student, disappoint- ed again and again in his efforts to write rapid- ly, says to himself, "My hand will move only so 6 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. fast, and not fast enough; I must make my head save my hand; I will learn more word-signs and other contractions." Accordingly he sets to himself the task of cramming his memory with hundreds and hundreds of arbitrary abbrevia- tions. And too often the result is only renewed disappointment and discouragement. Or he may say, "I do not phrase enough; phrases are great time-savers; I must apply myself untiringly to the studv of phrase-lists and phrasing rules." So he eagerly buys, and patiently tries to master, any collection of "lightning phrases" that may be alluringly offered to ambitious students like himself. But too frequently, after industrious weeks and months devoted to the study of phrasing, the longed-for increase of speed does not appear. At another time the student may say, "My shorthand system is not brief enough; I must discard it and learn another." Or, reduced to a still more despairing condition, he may reproach himself with the reflection, "I have no natural adaptation for learning shorthand ; stenographic success may be reached by others, but not by me. I may as well abandon the study on which I have expended so much time and effort." INTRODUCTORY. 7 In view of such difficulties and discourage- ments, is it any wonder that weary months and even years are frequently spent by the aspiring young stenographer, with very little result in the way of speed gained, although he spares in the pursuit neither study nor labor ? In attempt- ing the by-no-means-easy task of dealing with these various phases of the student's perplexity and disheartenment, I have no pretentious "speed secret" to impart as a simple and sov- ereign solution of every student's difficulties. In order to become a rapid writer, the young sten- ographer must comply with a number of condi- tions which cannot be communicated in a few sentences, or a few pages. Mistaken methods of study and practice are to be pointed out and cor- rected. Good habits are to be cultivated, bad habits to be unlearned. Tasks are to be under- taken which may involve much time and labor. There are, too, matters apparently trivial to be pressed upon the student's attention, because nothing can be trivial which contributes to his final success. If this- book shall serve its in- tended purpose, it will enable many a baffled and desponding learner to discover the "secret" of his failure, and will place his feet on the path 8 THE FACTORS or SHORTHAND SPEED. that leads to the coveted goal. It will seek to set guide-posts along his course, so that he need not go astray. It will point out prevalent mis- takes and wrong habits. It will give direction and advice for their avoidance or correction. It will seek to anticipate and fully answer every question that an eager, ambitious learner might wish to ask. In short, it will aim to teach him how to attain — not without labor, but with no wasted labor — the highest speed that his educa- tion and natural faculties fit him to reach. "CAN I EVER BECOME A SPEEDY WRITER?" I am not charlatan enough to promise to ev- ery reader of these pages a speed of 200 or 250 words a minute. In the shorthand profession, as elsewhere, Pope's words are true: "Some are, and must be, greater than the rest." Kiit every learner who will faithfully follow the methods here pointed out, may expect a de- cided increase of shorthand speed. To what speed-altitudes the pursuit of these methods may finally carry him depends partly upon his dogged perseverance as a student, and partly upon his natural adaptation for the stenographic profession. In this, as well as in other branches of study, the student's capacity can be deter- INTRODUCTORY. 9 mined only by a fair trial. Such a trial he should be willing to give, in justice to himself and the subject. And the period of this trial must not be too short. The final measure of his success cannot be judged by the progress at- tained during a few weeks or months. And even though a particular student may not have that natural adaptation which will qualify him to be- come a "shining light" in the reporting profes- sion, is it not worth his while to gain all attain- able speed by learning to do in the right way things he has been doing wrongly — by learning to practice according to the best methods, in- stead of the worst? Supposing he can write at present but 80 words a minute, is it not worth his while to attain 120, 140 or 160, even though he may never reach 200, 225 or 250? Should he not use reasonable effort to make out of himself as a shorthand writer all that can be madp? In the fruits of this effort, he may find the satisfac- tion of a reasonable ambition, as well as a de- cided increase of his wage-earning capabilities. "WHAT SHORTHAND SYSTEM SHOULD I LEARN?" The most important prerequisite for becom- ing a speedy writer is that the shorthand sys- tem selected shall be capable of high speed. 10 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. While theorists and pretenders are flooding the market with "new and easy" methods, many of which are not fit for amanuensis work, much less for reporting, the peril of a mischoice on this point overhangs every learner. In rare cases a man of extraordinary talents may do excellent reporting by means of a poor shorthand sys- tem; but this simply shows the power of genius to do its work with tools intrinsically imperfect. The ordinary stenographic student cannot af- ford to apply himself to the study of an inferior system, with the probability that his time and labor will be wasted. It is highly important that the learner should select a system which he may contentedly write without change for the remainder of his life. Many shorthand students take up one system after another, thus wasting precious time, and necessarily failing to become rapid writers; for rapid writing depends largely upon well-settled habits. The learner should choose a system that he can "tie to." The safe rule is to select a sys- tem which is written by a large number of prac- tical reporters, and the text-books of which ema- nate from practical men. In essaying a well-tried system, expounded by men who have successful- INTRODUCTORY. 11 ly used it, the learner can scarcely go astray. He should be especially on his guard against systems invented by mere theorists, who have never denionstrated by their own practical work the value of their inventions. In deciding the merits of rival §ystems, all ar- guments founded on theoretical considerations should be discarded. "By their fruits ye shall know them." The touchstone to be applied to a shorthand system is comprised in the ques- tions, Has its author successfully reported with it under difficult and exacting conditions? Have any considerable number of others ever used it in the same way? It must never be forgotten that the successful use of a shorthand system by one man or a few men, does not prove its adaptation* to successful use by the generality of students. And a wise aspirant to shorthand skill will give no weight to the certificates, however nu- merous, of persons who testify to the marvelous- ly short periods of time within which, by the practice of a particular system, they have quali- fied themselves for amanuensis work. A system brief enough for taking ordinary office dictation may be far too cumbrous for anything like rapid 13 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. reporting. I have met some unfortunate stenog- raphers who, having entered upon the practice of an amanuensis system in office work, have found themselves afterward in this sad plight: with an ambition to become reporters, they must either regretfully renounce that ambition, or they must for a considerable time give up their daily source of income, while they labori- ously forget an amanuensis system, and, begin- ning shorthand afresh, learn a system adequate for keeping pace with rapid public speaking. For a person who hopes ever to become a reporter, it is the poorest kind of economy to spend time upon any amanuensis system, however glittering its promises of speedily giving amanuensis skill. Especially should the student beware of sys- tems which are attractively offered as 'mew and easy." Their pretended novelty is generally the revamping of ideas that have been long ago tried and discarded. Their "ease" arises from the meagerness of their material and their insuffi- ciency for the work of verbatim reporting. Any shorthand system that promises to the pupil suc- cess in a remarkably short time is prima facU a fraud. No human being ever acquired with very little labor the art of stenographic reporting. PREPARATORY SHORTHAND TRAINING. A proper system having been selected, it is all-important that the student should make no mistake in his methods of study and practice. If possible, he should seek the guidance of a thor- oughly competent teacher, who will stimulate and encourage him, and save him from erroneous habits or methods. The associations and surroundings of a good school are vastly helpful. But the would-be learner of shorthand should be carefully on his guard against teachers who promise to accomplish wonderful results in a very short time. If unable to secure the services of a competent, conscientious teacher, the stu- dent should, if possible, induce some friend or friends to pursue the study along with him. In this way interest will be better maintained, and improvement more rapidly made, than by soli- tary application. 14 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. THE FOUNDATION MUST BE WELL LAID. A serious and often fatal mistake made by the majority of learners is that, in their eager- ness to reach the advanced portions of the sys- tem — "to write as reporters write" — the rudi- mentary principles are studied too hurriedly and superficially. If the fundamental abbreviating rules, in accordance with which a majority of the words of the language are always to be written, should 6e skimmed over in the "hop, skip and jump" fashion of too many learners, the result cannot but be disappointing. By dwelling upon these word-building principles until they become instinctively familiar, the learner is not delay- ing, but is hastening, his acquisition of reporting speed. A person is a good or a bad stenographic student, and ultimately a good or a bad reporter, in proportion as he masters, or fails to master, these fundamental abbreviating rules. There may be many things in his text-book that he can afford to "skip," but none of these foundation principles must be slighted. The prime qualifi- cation of a good stenographer is that, when pressed for speed, he shall be able to write read- ily, and with at least approximate correctness, any ordinary English word, though it may be of PREPARATORY SHORTHAND TRAINING. 15 difficult construction and he may never have written it before. The ability to do this arises from a thorough familiarity with those princi- ples to which the student is introduced during the first few months of his study. Startling as it may seem to some who think that the whole or the principal strength of a shorthand system lies in its "advanced reporting expedients," I affirm that when the student, by faithful elementary study, has acquired the power of promptly writ- ing new words according to principle, the most laborious and the most valuable part of his re- porting equipment has been acquired. The mat- ters that remain to be learned — a certain num- ber of logograms, a certain number of distinc- tions between words by differences of outline or position, a certain amount of phrase knowledge — these will require far less applica- tion, and, so far as not acquired, may be more safely dispensed with, than any part of the fun- damental knowledge and ability which have thus been mastered. It is this familiarity with fundamental word-building principles that en- ables the accomplished reporter to write new and strange words without loss of time and without getting "rattled." These new and 16 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. strange words he is constantly liable to meet till the last day of his reporting life. SOME THINGS "SPEED PRACTICE" CANNOT DO. Let it be remembered that misnamed "speed practice" has no magical power to fill gaps in rudimentary study. Rules never mastered sin- gly can never be applied promptly when called for in combination. Nor can "speed practice" give agility of hand so long as a hesitating and half-recollecting mind cannot promptly supply the hand with the material upon which agility might be developed. The student must be especially warned against slighting or omitting those principles of the Sys- tem which, as he may think, will be rarely called for. If called for at all, however rarely, they need to be as familiar as any other part of the system. The failure to have them at one's fin- ger's ends may at some critical moment cause a mortifying ''break-down." Teachers and pupils too often content them- selves with a superficial study of the "vowels." Misled by the fact that the "reporting style" is largely an un vocalized style, that the vowels, be- ing rarely needed by the reporter, will be at a PBEPARAlORY SHORTHAND TRAINING. 17 certain stage of practice dropped in large degree by the learner, teachers and pupils too often as- sume that a slight or hesitating knowledge of "vocalization" will suffice. There can scarcely be a more lamentable and disastrous error. The experience of every reporter in regard to "vocal- ization" is similar to that of the Texan in regard to his revolver: "he does not often want it, but when he wants it, he wants it bad." Every re- porter knows that, though he seldom inserts vowels, he must be able to insert them instan- taneously when new and strange words require them. The stenographer, however diligent, has only half mastered his task, if he has not mas- tered the art of instantaneous vowel-placing. NEAT WRITING AN IMPERATIVE NEED. It hardly need be said that the student should aim from the start to write neatlv, and especial- ly to observe the distinction between light strokes and heavy. This distinction, which is so great a help toward legibility, can be kept up even in rapid writing, if the habit of observ- ing it be established by careful practice in the beginning. However hard it may be to re- strain the premature eagerness of the pupil for 18 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. "speed," and however difficult to induce him to execute his characters slowly enough to insure their correct form, inclination and thickness, this is a requirement which cannot be waived, if, when he becomes a practicing stenographer, he is to read his notes with facility and cer- tainty. "MAKE HASTE SLOWLY," BUT DON'T DAWDLE. Yet, while undue haste is to be discouraged, especially the haste which induces superficial, instead of thorough, study of the rudiments, it is important that the student should not acquire during his early practice a sluggish habit of hand and mind. The maxim, "Make haste slow- ly," so often pressed upon beginners in short- hand, may be seriously misunderstood and mis- applied. There being in the student's early ex- ercises no pressure for speed, he feels that, with abundant leisure, he may take his own time in pondering and hesitating. Thus there may grow up a dawdling habit of mind, unless even the be- ginner is urged, not to a hasty, but a prompt de- cision. So, too, being instructed to shape his characters carefully and to "think nothing of speed," the student too often acquires, if I may TRErARATORY SHORTHAND TRAINING. 19 so express it, a drawling style of execution. Each stroke is traced or drawn with painful slowness. Thus there may be too much of leisurely deliber- ation in thinking what is to be written, and too finical or over-scrupulous care in writing it. It is therefore in many cases advisable, or even necessary, to put a live coal on the back of the tortoise — to remind even the beginner that shorthand is an instrument for writing fast, which implies mental and manual quickness. The teacher, while seeking to make accurate short- hand writers, must not allow learners to acquire a dawdling habit of mind and hand — a deliber- ateness, stiffness and preciseness of style entire- ly out of place in following a speaker. OFF-HAND WORD-WRITING. As a means of averting sluggish habits of mind and hand, and as a most important dis- cipline in other respects, nothing can be more beneficial to the student than to write off-hand from dictation, words upon which he has had no previous practice, but which can be correctly written in accordance with the principles he is learning or is supposed to have mastered. These exercises cannot be too copious, if the words be 20 THE FACTORS <>F SHORTHAND SPEED. properly chosen. The student of course should not be called upon to write any word whose proper outline is constructed according to prin- ciples yet to be acquired, or any word for which a word-sign is subsequently provided. As the learner proceeds with the study of the principles, these dictation exercises should be adapted to the successive stages of his progress. The words dictated may call into play, not one principle alone, but several principles already familiar- ized. Sometimes a single word may illustrate two or three abbreviating rules. REPORTING HABITS SHOULD BEGIN EARLY. If all the common words which may be written by the application of the given principle be introduced under that principle as practice- words, the student, besides mastering the prin- ciple, acquires a prompt command of many com- mon outlines, and thus gradually and with little effort he accumulates a "reporting vocabulary." Moreover, this species of practice, early begun and faithfully continued, cultivates the faculty of prompt decision, and prepares the student from the start for what he is finally to do — to hear and write simultaneously. It nurtures, too. tEFARATORY SHORTHAND TRAINING. 21 the spirit of self-reliance, pricelessly valuable to the stenographer, who should be so educated that when an uncommon word is to be written, he may attack it fearlessly, not stopping to in- quire hesitatingly and helplessly, "What out- line does my text-book or my shorthand diction- ary give?" This dictation practice upon each principle in its turn should be so thorough that any word calling for the application of that principle, may be written without a particle of hesitation, though it may never have been written before. Indeed, unhesitating promptitude of execution within the domain of the principle undertaken to be acquired, should from the start be the test as to whether the principle has been mastered, and whether the student is making healthy progress. Of course, in thus writing words off-hand from dictation, the student must not allow himself to be pushedf iuU> executing the shorthand charac- ters badly. At tills suige he is not to expect of himself much manual facility. The object to be sought is the prompt action of the mind, with ready (not necessarily rapid) action of the hand — the avoidance of that serious loss from which 22 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. beginners and even advanced students so com- monly suffer — the painfully-prolonged gap be- tween hearing and writing — the time-consuming pause while the hand awaits the decision of the mind. This dictation practice should by no means dispense with the more deliberate writing of words from ordinary print, or the copying of symmetrical shorthand in order to train eye and hand to correctness of form. Words previously written from dictation may be carefully written without dictation pressure, in order that errors committed in dictation practice may be corrected, and that the student may not form the habit of writing carelessly and illegibly. It is desirable that the writing of discon- nected words or any other single line of practice should not be carried to such a point as to be- come monotonous. Specially-constructed sen- tence-exercises should be introduced as early as practicable; and the memorizing of useful word- signs may proceed gradually from the start. In these preliminary stages of his shorthand education, the student should aim to acquire those correct writing habits — the proper hold- ing of the pen, the right position at the desk, etc. PREPARATORY SHORTHAND TRAINING. 23 — upon which his ultimate speed as a writer may largely depend. MEMORIZING OF WORD-SIGNS, ETC. It is highly important that, whatever the stu- dent undertakes to memorize, should be memor- ized thoroughly. From half-recollection comes hesitation; and from hesitation comes loss of speed. In order that everything undertaken in the way of memorization may be thoroughly done, the student should make it a rule not to attempt to learn more than a little at a time, and to learn that little well. Especially in the study of the word-signs, most students undertake to learn too many at once. It cannot be too often repeated that in shorthand, whatever needs to be memorized at all, needs to be so mastered that it may come instantly to the mind and fin- gers whenever wanted. If too many word-signs are undertaken at one time, the memory is con- fused, and the student's progress retarded. As the best method of learning the word-signs, Mr. Bernard De Bear, the well-known English reporter and teacher, has suggested the follow- ing: "Take a double sheet of foolscap and fold it 24 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. over into folds which will give about twelve divi- sions in all. Copy from the text-book neatly and carefully the signs you are about to learn, one on each line. Having thus filled the first col- umn, close the book, and endeavor at once from memory to transcribe into longhand in column two. The words having only just been copied, this should prove no difficult task; but any blanks should be filled in from the key and un- derlined, to denote that the signs were not re- membered. This done, fold under column one, so as to leave only the longhand words in col- umn two visible, and transcribe those into short- hand in column three, so nearly as the memory will allow. Gaps can now be filled in from col- umn one, which, however, should not be resorted to until the attempt has been made to work through the entire list. Then retran scribe the shorthand lines on column four. And so on to theend — shorthandintolonghand,and rice versa. It may be guaranteed that by the time the twelve columns have all been filled in the man- ner indicated, that particular set of words or phrases will have been almost thoroughly mas- tered. I have tried this plan with the dullest of pupils, with those whose memories seemed to be PREPARATORY SHORTHAND TRAINING. 25 an altogether unknown quantity, and I have rarely known it to fail. I have since used it in other than phonographic studies, and always with equal success." In learning abbreviating principles, word- signs, or any other portions of the shorthand "system," the learner must not overlook the im- portance of constant review. However well, as he may think, his previous tasks have been mas- tered, the need of unremitting review is impera- tive. It is too often assumed blindly that what was known last week or last month must as a matter of course be well known to-day. REPEATED COPYING OF CORRECT SHORTHAND. When the principles of the system and a rea- sonable number of word-signs have been learned, an important step in preparing for "speed prac- tice" is to copy over and over again matter care- fully written or printed for the student's use in the "reporting style," and when a page or two have become fully familiarized, to write the mat- ter from dictation in exact conformity to the original and with as much rapidity as may be possible without writing illegibly. In thus copying from the shorthand original — not from 26 THE FACTORS OP SHORTHAND SPEED. ordinary print or from the student's own notes — the eye, the hand, and the memory are simul- taneously trained. The learner unconsciously imitates the symmetrical characters from which he copies. He also stores his memory with the best outlines for those common words and phrases which are to form a large proportion of his future writing. Thus he is in great measure relieved from tedious study of text-book lists of word-signs, phrases, and words of peculiar out- lines. By writing from dictation at steadily-in- creasing speed the matter thus memorized, he acquires also a constantly-growing facility of hand, which cannot be cultivated by the slow methods of manipulation ordinarily indulged before "speed practice" begins. "SPEED PRACTICE." Speed, or at least the semblance of speed, may be purchased at too high a price. The student entering upon "speed practice" should determine that he will not sacrifice in the pursuit of speed other desirable things, without which mere speed will be of little value. As has been well said by an accomplished phonographer and most in- structive writer (the late Fred Pitman), "It is a misfortune to a phonographic writer when speed is attained apart from other excellencies. Its acquisition ought to progress simultaneously with the development of other powers. A whole phalanx of excellencies should advance together. Accuracy of form; a good, smooth method of writing; facility in reading notes; the ability to transcribe notes neatly, quickly and with scrup- ulous fidelity; the capacity, when pressed beyond one's pace, to catch the sense and record it, at the possible risk of losing a few words, or possi- bly some fine phrases — these and many other at- tainments ought to advance abreast." 28 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. WHEN SHOULD "SPEED PRACTICE" BEGIN? A most serious mistake is very commonly made in entering upon "speed practice" prema- turely. Very often the student who says, "Oh, I understand the principles of the system, and all I want now is speed practice," is in such an ill-tutored condition that "speed practice" can do him no good and may do him much harm. In warning the student against premature "speed practice," I do not include in my warning every kind of writing from dictation. To write from dictation copious lists of separate words (suitably selected) as a means of mastering the rules which they illustrate, has already been strongly recommended as an exercise which should commence almost with the student's first lesson, and should be ceaselessly continued un- til each abbreviating principle can be unhesitat- ingly applied in every appropriate case. To write rapidly from dictation, sentence-matter in "the reporting style," which has been thoroughly memorized by repeated copying from correct models, has also been strongly recommended. Both these methods of practice are highly im- portant as a preparation for "speed practice," which term, for the sake of convenience and "SPEED PRACTICE." 29 clearness, I confine to dictation practice upon letters, speeches or other sentence-matter, abso lutely new and untried. In order that "speed practice," thus defined, may be beneficial, the student should in the first place understand so well, not in theory alone, but in practice, the abbreviating principles of the system, that he can write in some legible way (not necessarily the very best way), and with but slight, if any, hesitation, any word of only ordinary difficulty, though he may never have written it before. If he cannot do this, the rudimentary principles of the system have not been in the proper sense of the term mastered, and the student, instead of indulging the delus- ion that all he needs is "speed practice," should at once turn back to those abbreviating princi- ples which he has evidently gone over too slight- ingly (the principles included in what is com- monly called "the corresponding style" of short- hand), and should not leave them till he has them, not simply in his head, but literally at his fingers' ends. Irksome as this discipline may be, it is absolutely essential to the making of a rapid writer. In the second place, before beginning "speed 30 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. practice," the student should be able to write all the frequently-recurring words of the lan- guage (including all the common word-signs), with their best outlines, and absolutely without hesitation. This prompt knowledge of ordinary outlines (complete or contracted) should have been acquired, not mainly, if at all, by the tedi- ous study of repelling word-lists, but by the re- currence of these common and necessary word- forms in the well-selected "reporting style" mat- ter which we suppose the student (before enter- ing upon "speed practice") to have memorized by repeated copying, and to have written over and over from dictation. Before entering on "speed practice," the stu- dent should also be able to write with no less promptness all those everyday phrases which no reporter fails to use (whatever his abstract views on the question of phrasing) — such phrases as "you are," "it is," "I am," "it may be," etc. These common phrase-forms the learner should have acquired from the copying and dic- tation practice just mentioned, not by the study of vastly-extended phrase-lists or by the exercise of his own inventive powers operating under the guidance of fine- "SPEED PRACTICE." 31 drawn and over-elaborated phrasing rules. The student's preparation ought to be such as to enable him to begin "speed practice" with a speed of at least sixty or seventy words a min- ute. Usually, if he undertakes "speed practice" at a lower rate than this, (as, for instance, as is very commonly done, at thirty or forty words a minute), he is attempting to learn from "speed practice" things that he should have learned be- fore entering upon such practice — things that can be far better learned in other ways, and that indeed mere "speed practice" can never teach. If there are those who doubt the possibility of acquiring a speed of sixty or seventy words a minute without dictation practice, let them turn to the Phonographic Magazine for March 1, 1896, where they will find Mr. A. J. Weeks testi- fying: "I took my first position without ever having had a word dictated to me save when I applied for the position, having gained my speed by copying and recopying [the shorthand] from the Phonographic Magazine." REPETITION PRACTICE MUST NOT BE GIVEN UP. Even after dictation upon new matter has be- gun (and of course much practice upon new 32 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. matter is needed by the student, for it is new matter which he will be required to take fear- lessly when he enters upon actual work — not matter previously memorized or on which he has been previously "coached"), repetition prac- tice upon memorized matter should be persist- ently continued. The benefits of such practice, in training the eye and the hand of the learner to correctness of form, in giving him large con- tributions to his "reporting vocabulary," and es- pecially in cultivating that facile movement of the fingers, hand and arm. without which the highest speed can never be attained, have al- ready been pointed out. In writing from dicta- tion, matter already memorized, he can "get up speed," as he cannot upon matter written for the first time; for so long as there is constant and anxious thought as to word-forms, phrase- forms, etc., the hand lags and lingers at a pace far slower than it is capable of attaining. Agil- ity of hand can only be attained when the mind by prompt conceptions urges the hand to do its best. Moreover (and this is a most important consideration), when the writer is able to with- draw a large part of his attention from the mat- ter written, he can watch his own writing hab- "SPEED PRACTICE." 33 its, and can thus observe and correct his faults of manipulation, which otherwise must escape his attention. "THE FINGERS MOVE MECHANICALLY TO THE SOUND." One of the older stenographic authors, Sam- uel Nelson — who published his "Parliamentary and Forensic Shorthand Writer" in 1836, just one year before Isaac Pitman issued the first edition of Phonography under the title "Sound- Hand" — has aptly remarked that, in acquiring shorthand, "the fingers are learning a new lan- guage;" and for this reason, he says, the stu- dent should "never omit repeating or rewriting what has been previously written, until the fin- gers move mechanically to the sound." This lan- guage most happily expresses the goal for which the young shorthand 'writer is to strive. Until his "fingers move mechanically to the sound," he must inevitably write laboriously and slowly. That prolific and acute shorthand author, the late Andrew J. Graham, has recommended in one of his early works that the student commit some exercise to memory and write it speedily hundreds of times. "This practice," he says, 34 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. "will give ease and celerity of movement to the hand." "TEACH THE HAND HOW TO MOVE ALONG." Another most accomplished stenographer and shorthand author, already referred to — Mr. Fred Pitman — in emphasizing the same idea, has gone so far as to say, "The speed realized in writing one sentence at a tolerably rapid pace will grad- ually influence the pace of all that the student writes; the speed thus gained gives the mind the right idea, and teaches the hand how to move along." The fact that dictation practice upon matter previously memorized "teaches the hand how to move along" is one of the strongest rea- sons for urging it upon the aspirant for speed. Expressing in still another form the same thought — the value of indefinite repetition as applied to dictation practice — -that eminent Con- gressional reporter, Mr. Fred Irland, has re- marked: "There is forever the plain, straight road which will lead to success: write and re- write a correctly-expressed exercise, say, one thousand words (like the testimony of a witness or an extract from a political speech), until the patient friend who reads it is a fit candidate for "SPEED PRACTICE." 35 the lunatic asylum. Repeat it five hundred times, if need be; and the general speed will be found to increase." Mr. Irland further says: "We write too many different exercises at first. Get the hand in the way of writing some exercise in shorthand as readily as longhand is written; then try something else; and soon one will find that he has become familiar with all the com- mon words of English speech, and that he can write them with no more effort than is required in the lifting of the pen." A DISTINGUISHED CONGRESSMAN TESTIFIES. Similar testimony is given by Hon. R. R. Hitt, now a distinguished Member of Congress, but in earlier life eminent as a reporter, having re- ported before the late war the famous debate between Stephen A. Douglas and Abraham Lin- coln. After telling how he acquired his first knowledge of Pitman's Phonography, how it helped him at college, and how it secured him a very attractive offer of employment from a New Orleans newspaper, Mr. Hitt says: "Having leisure at the time, I at once gave systematic at- tention to practice, aiming chiefly to attain ac curacy and the perfection of every character; 36 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. writing from dictation an hour at a time without any pause or hurry; repeating the same dicta- tion until every character was familiarized by a hundred repetitions — leaving speed to come when it would." Many a zealous shorthand student would much earlier become a rapid writer, if he were content, while pursuing right methods, to "leave speed to come when it would." Where- ever remarkable shorthand speed has been at tained, it will generally be found to be due to some such practice as Mr. Hitt and Mr. Irland have so well described. HOW A HIGH-SPEED CERTIFICATE WAS WON. Take, for instance, the case of Mr. George W. Bunbury, of England, the young man who holds the Isaac Pitman certificate for a speed of 250 words a minute. Having first secured a certifi- cate for 230 words a minute, Mr. Bunbury as- pired to still higher speed; and he tells us how he attained it. Here is his language: "When I had won the 230 words certificate, I set about practicing again, my object being to obtain a 250 words certificate. From the end of April to the "SPEED PRACTICE." 37 end of August, I practiced steadily without re- gard to speed, in order to form the characters regularly. The matter I had then dictated to me consisted of the Strand Magazine, books of adventure, etc. At the beginning of September I began working for the 250 certificate; and the method I employed, with successful results, was as follows: Having taken a leading article or speech from a paper or book, I counted out ten minutes or perhaps more at the rate required ; I then had it read to me in the time, after which I proceeded to transcribe or read what I had written, circling each outline or phrase which I had formed badly or which looked shaky. These outlines and phrases I carefully noted in a small book which I carried about with me for that purpose ; and, when an opportunity presented it- self, I wrote and re-wrote them until I acquired the greatest possible facility in forming them. The next night I was able to take the same piece with much greater ease, and to make my notes much better. The following night I increased the speed slightly, bearing in mind, of course, the advice not to sacrifice legibility for speed. I had the same piece dictated night after night for a week, and sometimes two weeks, if the 448599 38 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. matter was of more than average difficulty; for I am confident there is nothing like repetition for increasing speed. With regard to reading my notes, I have always made it a rule to read everything I write, and have adopted the follow- ing plan: When a fresh piece was dictated to me at a certain speed, I read it through first, and I read it over again each time the speed was increased. I continued practicing, never miss ing a night (except Sundays), and sat for exam- ination on the 8th of December, 1893, but failed, having more than the maximum percentage of errors in my transcript. This failure did not discourage me in the least; in fact, it gave me more energy and a stronger determination to ac- complish my object. I still kept practicing as hard as I could, and on the 30th of December again presented myself for examination. This time, however, the passage selected for the test was read at the rate of 260 words per minute, owing to a hitch in the timing, and therefore I did not attempt to transcribe my notes. This might be considered another failure, but still 1 was undaunted. I once more set to work, but not so hard, as I found I was losing my retentive powers from over-practice and brain exertion. I "SPEED PRACTICE." 39 again sat for examination on the 10th of Janu- uary, and was then successful." SELECTION OP DICTATION MATTER. In selecting matter for dictation practice (which, as already implied, should alternate be- tween old matter and new), the first aim of the student should be to familiarize himself with the commonplace words and phrases which con- stitute the stock of everyday converse. Later the dictation should cover a variety of subjects. Narrow dictation practice — that practice which confines itself constantly to the same class of matter — is to be especially avoided. Nothing but practice upon a variety of topics will give the student that invigorating training which he needs as preparation for actual work. Nor should the student forget to give preference always to matter which, while affording good shorthand practice, will increase his stock of useful, up-to- date information. For instance, a freshly-deliv- ered Congressional speech on currency, or bank- ruptcy, or the Pacific railroad system, gives bet- ter practice (other things being equal) than a musty Parliamentary oration on "the Nabob of Arcot's debts," or "the abolition of the benefit of clergy." 40 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. HOW FAST SHOULD THE DICTATION BE? It scarcely need be said that the dictation should be carefully accommodated to the skill of the writer, growing more and more rapid as his mental and manual facility increases. Mr. Graham has aptly described the proper dictation speed when he says that "it should be such as to require considerable effort to keep up, but not so fast as to require illegible or incorrect writ- ing or to induce a confused and hesitating move- ment of the hand." "KEEP ON." In writing from dictation, it should be an in- variable rule never to allow one's self to pause when a difficult or doubtful word or phrase is encountered. It should be understood that when- ever the rate of dictation (whatever it may be) has been settled, the reader shall mercilessly pro- ceed at that rate, and shall be no more indulgent of the writer's occasional slowness than an ac- tual speaker would be. Nothing can more sure- ly lead to "a sluggish mental process" or more surely delay the acquisition of speed, than for the writer to indulge the habit of pausing and pondering upon every uncommon word, or what "SPEED PRACTICE." 41 is still worse, suspending the dictation in order that his doubts as to an outline may be settled by reference to a dictionary or a text-book. "Keep on" should be the inflexible rule for writer and reader. If the preparatory discipline rec- ommended in previous pages has been followed, the writer should be able to get down the diffi- cult words somehow, without "making a break;" and if not, better a hundred times that there should be an absolute hiatus in his notes than that he should be humored by allowing him to pause and ponder — a habit which, if indulged, must disappoint the hope of ever becoming a rapid writer. How the difficulties connected with the off-hand writing of hard words may be mastered will be fully treated of in a subsequent chapter. Suffice it to say here that pausing and pondering upon hard words, while the dictation is accommodatingly retarded or suspended, will never teach one how to write such words when the speaking goes right on. THE WORD-CARRYING FACULTY. Unless the regular rate of dictation is some- what retarded (as it should not be) when a hard word is encountered, the young writer, while 42 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. "tackling" the difficulty, will necessarily fall somewhat behind, as even the accomplished re- porter will often do in a similar situation. It is desirable, then, that "speed practice" should train the young stenographer to write, when necessary, a number of words behind the speaker. A prominent business educator (Mr. S. S. Packard) has said: "There is one practice which we enforce in the study of shorthand that would be valuable to anybody; and that is the fixing of long sentences in the mind, so as to re- call them automatically. A reporter who can do this has almost any speaker at his command; for while the speaker stops for breath or to col- lect his thoughts for a new start, the pen of the ready writer, through the aid of a trained mem- ory, is bringing up the rear." For the purpose of cultivating in the young stenographer the faculty of carrying a number of words in his mind while engaged in the act of writing, a portion of each day's dictation should be given in clauses of at least twelve or fifteen words at a time. As the writer's mem- ory gains in word-holding power, the length of the clauses may and should reach twenty or ' twenty-five words, without causing confusion of "SPEED PRACTICE." 43 mind or hand. Each separate clause should be read without any pause; but after each clause there should be a sufficient pause to allow the writer to "catch up," or what is better, almost "catch up." An ordinary reader, in accommo- dating himself to a slow writer, usually punctu- ates the reading thus: "In the few minutes that remain [pause] be- fore this bill is voted upon [pause] I wish to make [pause] as briefly and concisely as I can [pause] an explanation of its principal provisions [pause] in order to satisfy the House [pause] that it should be passed [pause] in its present form [pause] without any modification or amend- ment." Clauses as short as these are too short even for a writer just beginning dictation practice. They do not call for any vigorous action of what may be called the word-carrying faculty. This faculty would be much better cultivated by al- lowing even to the Inexperienced note-taker more sparsely distributed pauses, as indicated in the following: "In the few minutes that remain before this bill is voted upon [pause] I wish to make as brief- ly and concisely as I can [pause] an explanation 44 THE FACTORS OP SHORTHAND SPEED. of its principal provisions in order to satisfy the House [pause] that it should be passed in its present form, without any modification or amendment." The writer who will steadily practice, day af- ter day and week after week, from the sort of dictation here recommended, the clauses gradu- ally lengthening till they reach twenty or twen- ty-five words each, will soon be surprised at the growth of his word-carrying capacity, and will ultimately acquire the priceless art of writing composedly, without hurry or flurry (and there- fore making uniformly well-written notes), al- though the speaker may indulge in speedy "spurts" and "jerks" most vexatious to the writer not thus trained. WHO ARE THE BEST DICTATORS? In order to receive the full benefit of this ex- ercise, it is highly desirable that the dictation be done by a shorthand writer, who, watching the writer's pen, can after each pause, resume dictation before the clause just dictated has been entirely written. In other words, while there must be pauses in the reading (and in the be- ginning of the practice, long pauses, varying "SPEED PRACTICE." 45 with the ability of the writer), it is highly desir- able that the writing shall proceed without pause ; that the pen shall never come to a stand- still ; that the writer shall never "catch up" with the reader, but be constantly on a chase after him. When, as often happens in speed classes, a number of stenographers whose rates of speed vary are following the same reader, who gener- ally accommodates the rate of dictation to the slowest of the class, the more rapid writers are of course missing one of the main advantages which "speed practice" should furnish — the con- stant pressure upon the writer to do his best. The greatest improvement from dictation prac- tice is obtained when the writer constitutes "a class of one," and the reading is accommodated to him alone. To enjoy the advantages of such dictation, no better plan can be adopted than for two stenographers to seek mutual improve- ment by reading to each other. As intimated in a previous paragraph, a reader who is himself a stenographer, able by watching the writer, to tell how far the writing is behind the reading, can be far more useful than a reader ignorant of shorthand, who usually pauses between the 46 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. clauses until he sees the writer's pen stop. Tim constant pausing of the pen is what should be especially avoided. A writer is getting the best training for speed when the reader never, or very rarely, allows him to "catch up." In this way the reader, as it were, pulls the writer along. No chance is given for lagging or loitering. MORE ABOUT "SPEED PRAC- TICE." FATIGUE AS A SCHOOLMASTER. There seems to be particular benefit to the young stenographer from writing up to and past the point of muscular fatigue. Shorthand writ- ing long continued at a single sitting, with no let-up when the writer has become thoroughly weary, appears to limber the writing machinery as nothing else will. There are reasons why this should be so. Whatever people undertake to do involving muscular exertion — walking, swimming, bicycle riding, etc. — is at first per- formed with an excess of effort. In this excess of effort, there is needless expenditure of mind and muscle. The surplus beyond what the act re- quires is wasted. Where rapidity is an object, this waste of effort and strength holds us back. Almost every shorthand writer in his early prac- tice throws, into his work too much muscular effort — much more than the act of writing re- quires. He works under intense mental strain, with eager determination to keep up if he can; 48 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. and this mental strain engenders by sympathy a muscular strain. This can be seen in the set ex- pression of the face, and the tightness with which pen or pencil is grasped. From this over- straining, this surplus of effort, there comes generally such a stiffening of the muscles as forbids the best work. For surplus of effort, the writer needs to substitute economy of effort; and for muscular tension, muscular relaxation. Fatigue is a grand school to teach a person to do anything in the easiest way. Mind or body, when required to continue effort past the fatigue point, works along the lines of least re- sistance. The easy, swinging gait with which the veteran soldier accomplishes long marches at the cost of but little weariness, contrasts strikingly with the stiff, self -conscious move- ment of the holiday soldier, who has not learned in the school of fatigue to economize muscular effort. The young stenographer must learn from tiresome practice to get the maximum of re- sult from the minimum of effort. This idea has been compressed by Mr. Irland into a single sen- tence: "Write from dictation until your arms are ready to fall off — until your friends (whom MOKE ABOUT "SPEED PRACTICE." 49 you have conscripted as your readers) fly at the sight of you." I think it will be found a rule without exception that extreme speed has never been attained by any one until he has passed through spells of note-taking continuing hour after hour and day after day — continuing when excessive weariness would have made him delighted to stop. The writer who is thus compelled to "keep his nose" to the reporting "grindstone," the grindstone turning vigorously all the time, is the writer who learns to write easily, who gains enviable speed, and who finally almost defies fatigue. WEARY WORK WINS. If a young writer has really reached a point (which so many falsely imagine themselves to have reached) where "all he needs is speed prac- tice," then, if he wishes to see his "speed prac- tice" bear fruit promptly and profusely, let him every day or night for a single week, write from dictation for one hour, absolutely without a mo- ment's pause or let-up, the reader holding him constantly at the top of his speed. During the next week let him continue the same discipline 50 THE FACTORS OP SHORTHAND SPEED. for an hour and a half daily. The following week let each day's dictation last for two hours. During each day's period of discipline, let there be absolutely no pause, no "breathing spell" of any kind. Though the writer may feel at times, in the language of Mr. Irland, as if his arm were ready to drop off, let him keep right on. If, be- cause of extreme weariness, he stops to rest be- fore his task is done, he loses the crowning bene- fit of this highly invigorating discipline. If he has the resolution to submit to this severe regimen, he will at the end of the third week (possibly much earlier) feel a gratifying con- sciousness of increased speed and will write with far greater ease than ever before. The stooping posture which caused his back to ache so much, the vise-like grip of pen or pencil which so se- verely wearied the muscles of hand and arm — these and other bad habits which helped to fatigue him, while at the same time hindering him from keeping up, will have been partially or wholly abandoned. The whole writing ma- chinery, mental and physical, will have been lim- bered and relaxed, and thereby fitted to move smoothly and rapidly. The shorthand student, if qualified by sound MORE ABOUT "SrEED PRACTICE." 51 stenographic training to enter upon such prac- tice, may reasonably expect in even so short a time as three weeks, a gain of twenty to thirty words a minute. No more helpful injunction can be given to the young stenographer than this: If time allows, keep up each spell of dictation practice till you are thoroughly weary. The longer you practice at one time, and the wearier you are when you stop, the sooner and the more surely will you become a rapid writer. The stenographer who never writes from dictation for more than ten or fifteen minutes at a stretch deludes himself if he fancies that such easy-go- ing discipline is really worthy the name of "speed practice." A veteran reporter once told me that he never knew a stenographer to amount to anything till he had passed through "a demnition grind." The persistent practice of shorthand under dictation pressure, up to and past the fatigue point, is the "demnition grind" which more than any other one thing constitutes, in my judgment, the solu- tion of the "speed" problem. If any young sten- ographer who flatters himself that he is "ambi- tious to become a reporter," regards such severe discipline as involving "too much hard work," 52 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. then he must content himself without the high speed which nothing but hard work can give him. PRACTICE MUST BE REGULAR. There ought not to be occasion to say that practice, to be in the highest degree improving, must be ceaselessly continued from day to day — a regular quantity of practice at a regular time. Some students who fancy they are "practising shorthand," give to the study, for example, half an hour one day, and fifteen minutes the next. Then comes an interval of two or three days with no practice at all; then a day when, to "make up for lost time," practice may occupy perhaps forty-five minutes or possibly an hour; then utter suspension of practice for perhaps a week or more. Such irregular or intermittent practice is of little or no value for the cultiva- tion of speed. Where shorthand practice is merely a "side issue" — where simply odds and ends of time are devoted to it — little advance- ment can be expected. HOW MUCH DAILY PRACTICE? Three or four hours daily, in some cases five or six, are not too much for the various MORE ABOUT "SPEED PRACTICE." 53 branches of shorthand practice, if the zealous student is fortunate enough to command that much time. Where a large amount of time can be daily given to the acquirement of shorthand skill, the different branches of study and prac- tice may be diversified in accordance substan- tially with the following schedule: 1. Careful copying from correct shorthand for the purpose of acquiring or preserving a sym- metrical and legible style, (which constant writ- « ing under "speed pressure" tends to impair and destroy), and for the purpose of accumulating gradually "a reporting vocabulary." This copy- ing may embrace separate words properly se- lectee' (including word-signs, contracted forms, etc.), sentence-matter, or phrases. 2. The writing of this memorized matter from dictation as rapidly as it can be done correctly. 3. The writing of new matter from dictation, it being borne in mind that the reader should not pause to enable the writer to construct or recall the outline of some difficult word. A portion of this dictation should be directed to cultivating in the manner already described the word-carry- ing faculty. 4. The reading back of considerable portions 54 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. of all dictated matter, it being remembered that this reading back should always include some matter written on a previous day. 5. Writing off-hand from dictation new and difficult words, with the least possible hesita- tion, so that the student may learn not to be staggered when called on to write a word which he has never written before. THE OFFICE STENOGRAPHER'S TERIL. Some writers expect an increase of speed be- cause they are daily using shorthand in taking office dictation. Experience shows that such practice offers but little improvement; and often, where the conditions of office dictation are easy and unexacting, the writer almost un- consciously becomes, as time goes by, less and less speedy, and less and less fitted for anything except his daily routine. In the first place, the office stenographer writes too little shorthand. All told, he has perhaps an hour or an hour and a half of daily practice — too little for rapid im- provement — too little to satisfy any ambitious writer. Besides, the dictation is in many cases so slow as .to induce loss of speed, instead of gain. And the dictation, what- MORE ABOUT "SPEED PRACTICE." 55 ever its rate, does not grow more rapid from week to week and from month to month, as genuine "speed practice" may and must. Then the topics of office dictation are of limited range, covering the routine of a single business. More than that, the writer who takes daily the dicta- tion of but one man or a few men, gets no such practice as the would-be reporter requires in fol- lowing a variety of voices and a variety of ver- bal styles. A Washington correspondent of the New York Mail and Express tells a story which emphasizes the office stenographer's peril — the peril of los- ing gradually and almost perceptibly in an of- fice position the shorthand skill with which he entered it: "I know a young man up in the Treasury Department who, until a few months since, held an $1,800 position. When he first en- tered the Department he was one of the best stenographers in the country. As ill-luck would have it, he was assigned to the private secretary- ship of one of the chiefs of the Department. This gentleman was a slow thinker and talker. For several years those two worked in harmony, and thoroughly understood each other. But uncon- sciously, the stenographer drifted backward. 56 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. Not long ago the chief was 'fired' on short notice. The man that took his place came out of the West, and was full of nervous energy. He start- ed in with a rush on his dictation, and, in the language of the profession, 'put it up the back' of his stenographer, though the speed was such as the young man would have smiled at when he entered the Department. The chief fumed and fretted at the stenographer's breaks and mis- takes; and in one week's time the latter was rel- egated to a $1,000 position." "The only trouble," the writer continues, "with the force in the Departments is that in a great many cases their work is so light that they al- most unconsciously slip backward. Then comes a time when their ability is tested, and their weakness brought out. There are hundreds in this class, and the danger of slack work has be- come a menace to the profession." PRACTICE FROM ACTUAL SPEAKING. Dictation is at best a mimicry of public speak- ing, and, because it is but mimicry, must always lack some of the essential qualities of what it imitates. The mere writing of dictated matter, however judiciously managed the dictation may MORE ABOUT "SPEED PRACTICE." 57 be, can never fully prepare any one for the ev- ery-day work of the reporter. The art of re- porting public speeches can only be effectually learned from reporting public speeches. The young stenographer, when dictation practice with its measured monotone has reached a certain point, must accustom himself to follow the cadence of natural speech, with its rises and falls, its rushes and pauses. He must ac- custom himself to follow a variety of voices, dif- ferent in their tones and articulations. He must accustom himself especially to that sort of utter- ance which does not humor his shortcomings as a writer. So, when the proper time comes, the would-be reporter must lose no opportunity to take notes from the lips of actual speakers. Ser- mons, lectures, court proceedings, business meetings, etc., are the material upon which he is to try his "prentice hand," and which are to give him practical training for his chosen pro- fession. WHEN SHOULD SPEECH PRACTICE BEGIN? When should this practice begin? As soon as the rate of a very slow speaker — say, ninety or one hundred words a minute — has been at- 58 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. tained. There are many ministers of the Gospel, and even some lawyers and rostrum orators, who do not exceed this rate of utterance. Equipped with a bona fide speed of 90 or 100 words a minute, the young practitioner will find no difficulty in discovering speakers who will not overtax his powers. Let him miss no oppor- tunity to take down these slow speakers. As the task becomes easy, let him select for practice some speaker or speakers of greater speed, but not too fast for him; for it should be borne in mind that the best practice for the increase of speed is that which keeps the writer constantly straining to keep up, but never (except in occa- sional "spurts of speed") leaves him discoura- gingly in the lurch. As he proceeds with his prac- tice, he will find that very often he can success- fully take the whole of a sermon or address, ex- cept possibly a few passages (perhaps only the peroration) in which the orator, warming with his subject, goes beyond his average pace. These losses of occasional passages must not make the young writer despond. Nor must he, as soon as the speaker becomes too fast for him, drop his pencil or close his note-book. When the more rapid passages come, let him keep cool, and re- MORE ABOUT "SPEED PRACTICE." 59 cord as many of the words as he can, in legible characters and in the form of complete sen- tences, even though these complete sentences as recorded may lack some clauses of minor im- portance. In both the earlier and the later stages of the young writer's training, he should, if possible, practice upon different speakers, rather than ex- clusively upon any one man. Practice in a court room is excellent When one has attained some- thing near the average speed of legal proceed- ings. But, unfortunately, court-rooms do not generally furnish hospitable accommodations for the amateur practitioner. Reporting a course of law lectures will afford excellent practice. Even if one's primary aim is to be "only a sten- ographer," not a lawyer, the fee demanded for attendance on such a course will be far more than repaid by the opportunities for short- hand practice and by the legal knowledge incidentally acquired, which must prove highly useful to the young reporter, whose business will of course call him frequently into the courts. AVOID SPEAKERS WHO ARE MUCH TOO PAST. The young writer should be especially warned 60 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. against practicing habitually upon speakers whose regular rate is much too fast for him. If, when such a speaker is encountered, the young practitioner can remain cool, and keep his wits about him — a hard thing for a novice to do when the speaker in the course of every sentence com- pletely outstrips him — he ma}' succeed in con densing the rapidly-uttered passages as they proceed, and thus making a readable and con- nected, though not a complete, report. Such a method of "reporting" may be invigorating as a mental exercise; it may indeed have its value as practical training for much^of the work that a newspaper reporter is often called upon to per- form. But it must not be forgotten that this species of Jiote-taking cannot count for much as "speed practice," because no person can carry on the dual operation of simultaneous condensa- tion and note-taking without falling considera- bly behind the speed he might attain if his sole attention were concentrated on his shorthand. Besides, if a young writer shows great self- possession when the speaking is too fast for him, it is sometimes a dangerous sign. If, with speed as yet undeveloped, he can coolly and with passable success substitute verbal condensation MORE ABOUT "SPEED PRACTICE." 61 for verbatim note-taking, there is danger that he may learn to content himself with taking down less than is actually said. If he yields (as there is peril he may do), to the tempt- ing and too flattering delusion that so many words as he can get down are the really important parts of the speech, and the clauses which he is compelled to omit are non- essential — if he accustoms himself to think thai something less than the words actually uttered may really pass acceptably for a "verbatim re- port," he may commit the sad error of prema- turely persuading himself that he is "a report- er." If he should ever enter the reporting pro- fession with any such delusive idea, woe to his standing as a "reporter," and woe to the speak- ers who may be committed to his audacious but unskillful hands. FRED PITMAN'S SAD EXPERIENCE. But when the "young writer habitually under- takes to follow speakers whose regular rate is much too fast for him, the mischief that most generally happens is that, yielding to the tenlp- tation to get down or try to get down a mark, however illegible, for every word, he contracts 62 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. a loose, careless, illegible habit of writing, which it may cause him much trouble ultimately to get rid of. Mr. Fred Pitman, one of that famous band of brothers, with the inventor of Phonog- raphy at their head, whose names are so closely associated with the development and dissemina- tion of phonetic shorthand, has told in the fol- lowing striking language how he was seriously delayed, and for the time being foiled, in his ef- forts to attain reporting skill, by seeking speed at the expense of accuracy : "The writer of this paper has, to use a familiar phrase, gone through it all. He can look back almost half a century, and can vividly recall the sensation of attempting laboriously to write a short passage in phonography from a newspaper or book; he can remember how at times he wor- ried over his blunders; how he chafed at his slowness, groaned under the difficulty of con- structing good outlines; and how, at a subse- quent period, he writhed at the apparent impos- sibility of overcoming the vis inertice of his pen. Looking back over the long vista, he can now perceive that speed came only too soon. Possess- ing a moderate amount of natural quickness, his study and practice enabled him in a short time MORE ABOUT "SPEED PRACTICE." 63 to write at a speed of from 100 to 130 words per minute. At this juncture he became anxious to acquire a verbatim speed that should qualify him to follow a swift speaker; and with praise- worthy assiduity, he reported the discourses he heard on a Sunday. The preacher happened to be a literary man, who composed sermons of a somewhat difficult character. He was also de- cidedly rapid in his delivery, so that the report- er's imperfect speed not only prevented him from keeping up, but he sometimes failed even to grasp the meaning of what was uttered. He, however, strove so zealously to 'get it all down/ that he soon acquired the ability to follow this fluent speaker with only an occasional loss of a word. Alas ! he was not aware of the impera- tive importance of reading over his notes; he did not attempt any regular method of testing his accuracy by writing from dictation, then transcribing, and afterwards comparing his transcript with the printed book. He did not see the desirableness of undertaking the labor of transcribing a large portion of his writing practice. He gained speed, but not a good style. Thus was laid the foundation of faults which it required much subsequent study and care to «4 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SFEED. eradicate. When afterwards he became a profes- sional reporter, he was sometimes chagrined at misreading his notes, and discovering, perhaps too late for remedial measures, that the hidden meaning of his symbols has not been detected." THE BEGINNER'S "STAGE FRIGHT." When the young writer first attempts to take notes in public, whether on the platform or at his seat amid the audience, the newness of the undertaking, his eager wish to succeed, and his fear of not succeeding — his apprehension that the eyes of the audience are fixed upon him and that the observers are making their estimate of his success or failure — all these things, crea- ting a novel and most trying environment, will doubtless embarrass him greatly, causing him in his early attempts at public note-taking to ac- complish far less than upon fair trial he is really able to accomplish. A distinguished English re- porter, looking back from the standpoint of a veteran to the boyhood period when he first at- tempted to take notes of a sermon, describes thus vividly his discomfiture: "I tried my best to conceal my emotions; but MORE ABOUT "SPEED PRACTICE." 65 my heart was beating all the way to church. As to the preliminary service, I understood as little of it as if it had been read in Cherokee. I stood when I ought to have knelt, and knelt when I should have sat or stood. I demeaned myself like a youth whose religious education had been sadly neglected. At length the clergyman en- tered the pulpit, and I took my sheets of paper from the Bible in which I had concealed them, and my pencil from my pocket. If I did not feel, like Bonaparte's soldiers, that the eyes of pos- terity were upon me, I devoutly believed that every eye in the church was directed to my note- book. The color mounted to my cheeks, and my whole frame trembled." For what Thomas Allen Reed thus suffered, and what many a stenographic novice must suf- fer, in his first attempts at public note-taking, there is no cure but to "brave it out." Let the unfledged note-taker resolve that he will mas- ter his embarrassment and self-consciousness; let him courageously repeat his public attempts at reporting as often as occasion offers. Gradu- ally, as he becomes more and more accustomed to his environment, his task will become easier and easier, until finally he will be able to take 66 THE FACTORS OP SHORTHAND SPEED. notes as well under the eyes of an audience as if he were in the seclusion of his little room at home. In getting his reporting practice, the novice must not grumble if often his accommodations for note-taking are bad. If he is obliged to write on his knee, if he is obliged sometimes to write while standing, or sometimes on a desk or table which is jarred at intervals by the pounding of the orator's fist (as often happens at political meetings or in court), let him console himself with the reflection that he is getting in good time, an essential part of his education as a re- porter; for the reporter in the practice of his vo- cation is obliged frequently to conform himself cheerfully to "rough and tumble" conditions. DICTATION PRACTICE MUST STILL GO ON. When the young writer begins to take notes of public speaking, his dictation practice is by no means to be suspended. While practice from public speaking has its advantages, of which ev- ery young practitioner must avail himself — ad- vantages which mere writing from dictation cannot supply — there is connected with dicta- MORE ABOUT "SPEED PRACTICE." 67 tion practice one peculiar advantage so valua- ble that the shorthand writer can never afford to give up such practice entirely until he has at- tained all the speed to which he aspires. The young writer, while developing his speed, finds that some speakers upon whom he experiments are too slow, others altogether too, fast, and only a comparatively few are just rapid enough to realize the ideal of speed practice as defined by Mr. Graham — "requiring considerable effort to keep upj but not so fast as to require illegible or incorrect writing, or to induce a confused and hesitating movement of the hand." In order, therefore, that the student who has begun to practice on public speakers may still secure a sufficiency of that invigorating practice which, while constantly putting him on his met- tle, never entirely baffles him, dictation at a steadily-increasing pace adapted to his steady advancement in speed, must go on from day to day and from week to week. As this dictation practice goes on, .steadily nerving the student to higher and higher attainments, the reporting of public utterances will grow easier and easier, and the difficult or impossible speakers will gradually become fewer and fewer. 68 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. HOW TO INSURE LEGIBLE NOTES. One danger of persistent speed practice — the acquirement of an illegible style of writing — must not be overlooked. The best safeguard against contracting an illegible style, or at least a sure warning when illegibility is making its encroachments, is the persistent and habitual reading of one's notes. Let it be understood that all notes are to be regarded as illegible which cannot be read with reasonable fluency. If the writer finds himself obliged to "wrestle" with his notes because the Characters are badly formed, so that perhaps several hours are re- quired to "decipher" what he has taken down in the course of twenty or thirty minutes, speed, if gained at all, is being gained at the expense of accuracy, and no real progress is being made. But it is to be remembered that practice, however industriously pursued, in reading one's own notes, has no magic power to make bad shorthand good. Reading may disclose faulty forms — faulty in conception or in execution — which speed practice has developed or is devel- oping; it may cultivate, too. a certain facility in reading shorthand thus faulty. But the faculty which the student should seek is not the faculty MORE ABOUT "SPEED PRACTICE." 69 of deciphering with effort shorthand badly writ- ten. His aim should be to acquire that facility in reading which comes from writing notes that can be read without difficulty because of their intrinsic legibility — not because the writer has habituated himself by long practice to reading with painful struggles his own misshapen short- hand forms, as unintelligible as Chinese hiero- glyphics to everybody but himself. ' There is one simple recipe for maintaining an intrinsically legible style in spite of persistent speed practice, either upon actual speaking or from dictation : let the student, without suspend- ing his speed practice, devote some portion of every day to writing, with no thought of speed, and not necessarily from the voice, a reasonable quantity of shorthand with all the symmetry and neatness that he can command. This will insure him against the dangerous tendency of speed practice (an almost unavertable danger if speed practice be exclusively pursued) to wear away habits of neat execution which may have been formed, and to bring the writer into the condition so vividly described by Mr. Fred Pit- man in the extract already quoted. One of the most noteworthy points in Mr. Bunbury's course 70 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. of training, as described by himself on a previous page, is that, even while drilling for a most ex- acting speed-test, he resolutely devoted a por- tion of this time to practising with no thought of speed, and with the object merely of making legible notes. The shorthand student should never forget that it is entirely practicable to carry into reporting work a neat, symmetrical style of writing; and to do this should be a dis tinct object of his ambition. HOW TO WRITE THE " HARD WORDS." THE STUDENT'S BEWILDERMENT. The young shorthand writer, when undertak- ing to follow dictation or public speaking, is oft- en tempted to exclaim, "If it were not for these hard words which now and then bother me and break me all up, I could get along pretty well." This vexed and bewildered state of mind has been vividly described by that widely-known re- porter, Mr. H. C. Demming, of Harrisburg, Pa.: "Just where the greatest speed is necessary — to write the consonants and then put the vow- els in their proper places — is just where the most hesitation is liable to be. First, time is lost in getting the true sound of the word; secondly, comes the quickly-to-be-disposed-of thought how to write the consonants the best way, and which vowels to put in, and how many. All this is less than a second! By that time the outline has been made with such spasmodic jerks that in- 72 THE FACTORS OF SHOkTHAND SPEED. tended full-lengths are half-lengths, and intend- ed half-lengths twice as long as they ought to be; or an intended hook has been made into a circle, or a circle into a hook. Some stenog- raphers make a desperate dash in the beginning to write the troublesome word in longhand. Then the longhand may be harder to read than if it had been in shorthand. Or, if made originally in shorthand, one of the vowels may have been thrown into the wrong position. These things are almost distracting to some stenographers of short experience."* When, after the harassing encounter with a "hard word," the difficulties thus described have been overcome, and the desperately-sought out- line has been finally fixed upon paper, the writer finds that he must make up for lost time, must strain his energies to write perhaps ten or fifteen words in the time usually required to write six or eight. The struggle with the refractory out- line has left his mind flurried and worried; and it does not easily regain its ordinary composure. *In my essay on "The Mastery of Shorthand," I attributed this language to an English author. Later. I found that it was part of an essay read by my friend Demming. some years ago, before the New York State Stenographers' Association. The English author borrowed the passage without giving due credit. HOW TO WRITE THE 'H'ARD WORDS." 73 Thus the "hard word" not only has its own sting, but it leaves "the trail of the serpent" be- hind it. WILL THE BOTHER EVER CEASE? Smarting under such a vexatious experience, repeated far too often, the young writer is driv- en to ask, "Shall I ever reach a point where all the words will be as easy as some are now?" No, my young friend, the point will never be reached where all words will be written with equal ease. Continued practice will make many outlines easy which at first were troublesome; the "hard words," so far as ordinary matter is concerned, will become fewer and fewer. But, after writing shorthand for years, the writer will still be liable from time to time — in technical matter, possibly dozens of times a day — to jostle up suddenly against some strange word never before written, and perhaps never before heard, but which must be written on the instant, leg- ibly and briefly. To do this requires, of course, a masterly command of stenographic resources; yet it is possible for the stenographer so to edu- cate himself that this encounter with "hard 74 THE FACTORS OP SHORTHAND SPEED. words" shall lose its terror, that the ordeal shall no longer be feared, because he will have at his command the resources for meeting it suc- cessfully. WIDE VERBAL KNOWLEDGE HELPS. The difficulty will grow less and less as the reporter enlarges his familiarity with his mother tongue, and as he becomes acquainted with the terminology of the different subjects about which he is to write. When a word has been seen or heard, though never before stenograph- ically written, its outline is much more promptly fixed upon paper than when the word is strange, not only to the hand, but to the ear. If, for in- stance, anthropomorphism (a word not uncom- mon in theological and metaphysical discus- sions) should fall upon the ear of the reporter as an utterly strange term, he would probably fail to write it, however distinctly it might be spoken, because he would fail to understand it. But if the word were already somewhat familiar to eye or ear, the difficulty of writing it in short- hand would not be appalling; and even if writ- ten incorrectly, it would still be correctly read. HOW TO WRITE THE "HARD WORDS." 75 Hence, if the young reporter familiarizes him- self in advance with merely the sounds of any technical terms which he is likely to meet in re- porting, he has shorn the "hard words" of much of their terror. It is when ear and hand are both puzzled that the bother is greatest. This is well illustrated in the following incident, nar- rated by a well-known stenographer, Mr. A. O. Reser: "An eminent Bible lecturer told me the other day that he was lecturing last summer at Mount Eagle, Tenn., on the genealogy of the Bible. He started out with Adam and passed down past Nebuchadnezzar and Belshazzar. Mr. Levering, the lecturer, said that after he had commenced, he noticed that the audience was amused at something, and he did not know what it was. After the meeting was over, he asked some of the members of the audience what amused them. They told him they were laughing at the hercu- lean exertions of the reporter, who for ten min- utes tried to report, but at the end of that time threw down his pencil and gave it up. He sim- ply could not do it; not from inability to write, but largely because of inability to hear and un- derstand the words used." 76 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. COMMON OUTLINES MUST BE MEMORIZED. While it would be an impossible task to learn in advance the shorthand forms of all the "hard words." every young writer should become ac- quainted as quickly as possible with the outlines of all the common words, including all ordinary word-signs and everyday phrases; and for this purpose his reading and writing exercises, if rightly chosen, should be made thoroughly fa- miliar by continued repetition. In learning the common words, he is learning the principles upon which the uncommon words must be written. Besides, he is qualifying himself to "catch up" more quickly when a ''hard word" has thrown him back ; and then, too, because he can readily write ordinary words, he is not so far behind when a "hard word" strikes him. Thus the stenographer helps himself to write the "hard words" by thoroughly mastering the easy ones. It may here be remarked incidentally that the liability at any time to meet a "hard word" is one strong reason for cultivating the habit of writing as little behind the speaker as neces- sary. A "hard word" has the writer at a great disadvantage when it finds him already lag HOW TO WRITE THE "HARD WORDS." 77 ging, holding in his mind eight or ten words still unwritten. FUNDAMENTAL ABBREVIATING PRINCIPLES MUST BE MASTERED. To write promptly a new and complex outline requires a thorough knowledge and ready com- mand of the abbreviating principles of the short- hand system. I speak of "abbreviating princi- ples" as distinguished from word-signs and other arbitrary contractions. How and when circles, loops, hooks, half-lengths, and double- lengths, may or may not be used, is a species of knowledge which, though often despised as a part of "the corresponding style," is indispensa- ble not only to the learner but to the advanced reporter. "Reporting expedients," as they are called, can never supply the place of these sim- ple abbreviating principles. With the latter at one's lingers' ends, a new outline, however com- plex or difficult, may generally be constructed without serious delay. It does not matter for the moment if an outline which, in the midst of hurried speaking must be written hurriedly or not at all, be not the same as that given in the student's text-book or dictionary. The different 78 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. consonants, if combined somehow, with a fair regard to rudimentary principles, will form a legible outline. The one thing above all others which distinguishes the stenographic athlete from the stenographic weakling is the readiness with which the athlete, amid a torrent of lan- guage, writes a "hard word" which he has never written before. And this readiness comes large- ly from a thorough mastery, not merely intellec- tual but manual, of radical principles. Mere in- tellectual mastery of a principle counts for al- most nothing in an art like shorthand, which de- pends largely upon manual skill exercised with almost inconceivable promptness. SHOULD WE WRITE "HARD WORDS" IN LONGHAND V It has been suggested that "a reporter may take time occasionally to write a hard word in longhand." But longhand, as a makeshift sub- stitute for shorthand, is never the refuge of a thoroughly-trained stenographer. To fix beyond doubt the spelling of a proper name, to make a possibly dubious word plain to his transcribing assistant, or for some similar purpose, the ac- complished reporter may occasionally write a word in longhand, but never because he is stag- HOW TO WRITE THE "HARD WORDS." 79 gered in the application of shorthand principles, and cannot devise for an uncommon word a suitable stenographic outline. A word nervous- ly and hurriedly written in longhand, because the stenographer is staggered, involves general- ly the loss of succeeding words, and, besides, proves often undecipherable. GET IT "DOWN SOMEHOW." One of the most valuable habits for the young stenographer, and one which he should assidu- ously cultivate in taking dictation as well as in reporting, is that of attacking promptly and boldly an uncommon or difficult word and get- ting it down somehow. If the writer be well schooled, the outline thus promptly achieved will generally violate no principle, although it may not be the briefest form possible. And even though a shorthand rule be for the moment vio- lated, this is far better, if the outline be legible, than that time be lost in hesitation. Sometimes the reporter, hard pressed to keep up, must get a word down "by hook or by crook," even though the "hooks" and "crooks" may be somewhat at variance with the canons of his system. Of short- hand it is distinctly and emphatically true that 80 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. "he who hesitates is lost." An accomplished re- porter, and a phonographic author of no mean standing (Mr. George C. Thornton), has said that we should "make it a rule to write proper forms ; but we must violate this rule ruthlessly, rather than run the risk of falling farther behind than can be done with entire safety." "It is better," he says, "to write an outline in the fullest possi- ble manner, rather than hesitate for even the most trifling period of time for the purpose of recalling the text-book forms." "THE FACULTY OP KEEPING ON." The habit of coming to a standstill because a word is uncommon and somewhat difficult to write, is one of the most fatal that a young sten- ographer can acquire. Many a learner practis- ing for speed interrupts the dictation again and again so that he may settle nice questions in re- gard to dubious outlines. Occasionally time is taken to look up the doubtful word in a short- hand dictionary. Those who indulge this dan- gerous habit should ponder well the following advice of Mr. Fred Pitman: "Stopping to con- sider the form of a word while following a speaker is almost sure to result in the loss of HOW TO WRITE THE "HARD WORDS." 81 some words which follow. When the reporter meets with complex or long words, he should avoid hesitation, and exercise the faculty of keeping on. This is a faculty which must be carefully cultivated in one's writing from dicta- tion. How to deal promptly with perplexing words is a problem which must be mastered by anyone who would become a verbatim reporter. One hard word, if the writer allows himself to pause and hesitate, may cause the loss of a dozen words following it." DON'T SEEK THE BRIEFEST OUTLINE. The staggering hesitation of the young sten- ographer when called on to write a new word, arises often from an undefined notion that he must, though writing the word for the first time, get down the briefest and best outline that the system will allow. It is of vital importance that such a notion be dismissed. A long outline for a new or strange word is something that no stenographer should be afraid of. Frequently, in the hurry of note-taking, a long outline which suggests itself readily, is more quickly written than a shorter one which requires the writer to 82 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. stop and think. Indeed, many reporters prefer to write a new word very fully the first time it occurs. They believe that in such cases a full outline is more likely to be readily legible. If the word occurs again and again, the outline may gradually be more and more abbreviated. Thus a difficult technical term, newly encoun- tered, may be written one way at the top of the note-taker's page, another way at the middlf, and still another way at the bottom. ' THE BUGBEAR OF "POSITION." The task of the young writer, on meeting a new and difficult word, is made all the more per- plexing, if he has unfortunately been misled mto the belief that every outline, long or short, fre- quent or infrequent, ambiguous or unmistak- able, must be written in the position correspond- ing with its accented or leading vowel. If thus mis-schooled as to the requirements of the "re- porting style," he must not only think out the whole outline before starting to write it, but, with the outline mentally suspended, must de- cide which of perhaps half a dozen vowels (heard possibly none too distinctly) is the one HOW TO WRITE THE "HARD WORDS." 83 which should determine the "reporting position" of the outline. I pity the thousands of young writers who to-day are being educated into a habit which thus makes needlessly difficult the acquisition of speed. I meet such mis-educated young writers from time to time. I ask them to write some word, not very difficult, but which they have never written before; and they hesi- tate painfully. The pen seems unwilling or un- able to touch the paper. Mind and hand appear paralyzed. "What boggles you ?" I ask ; and they reply, "Oh, I can write the outline, but I am try- ing to think of the position !" This is often their pitiable plight after they have been writing shorthand for months and months! They de- ludedly fancy they are being educated to write "as reporters write;" but alas for any reporter (I do not personally know any such) who has ac- quired, among his "reporting habits," that of pondering about the "position" of a new and dif ficult word before putting it upon paper! "DIVIDE AND CONQUER," Whatever may be the dicta of certain teach- ers and text-books on this subject, a vast ma 84 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. jority of the practical reporters of the country do not thus understand "the reporter's rule of position." In dealing »vith a new word of con- siderable length and difficult construction, these writers (following the long-settled canons of standard text-books and recognizing no such spurious "rule of position") meet the difficulty in a simpler way than bj T first thinking out the con- sonant outline; then, with the outline mentally suspended, running over all the vowels to ascer- tain the accented or leading one; and then pla- cing the outline in such a position as that vowel is supposed to require. These writers, when they meet a long and rare word like perspicacity, ter- giversation, paradoxwalness, supererogatory, du- plicative, follow the maxim which applies often in shorthand as elsewhere, "Divide and con- quer." Thinking nothing in the first instance of the vowels — thinking nothing even of the con- sonants, except the initial stroke, simple or com- pound — these writers, as soon as the word falls upon the ear, place the pen unhesitatingly upon the paper, and, starting the word in the second or neutral position — the easiest, the natural po sition — they proceed to think out the outline, \\ need be, syllable by syllable or stroke by stroke HOW TO WRITE THE "HARD WORDS." as they write. Mind and pen do their work sim- ultaneously and in concert. In the word imper- ceptible, for instance, the different parts might be thought out, and written step by step, thus: Im-per-cept-ible,. In this way, each syllable be- comes, as it were, a separate little word; and an outline which, taken as a whole, would seem ap- pallingly long and difficult, proves comparative- ly easy when thus resolved into its several parts. The exact syllabic divisions which may be adopted in thus writing a word for the first time under speed pressure, are comparatively unimportant. Nor is it essential in the first writing of a word that the consonants of each syllable be expressed in absolutely the briefest way. Ordinarily, with a practised writer, the mind will keep pace with, if it does not outrun, the hand, so that between the syllabic parts of the word the pen need not pause. But suppose an expert writer, following this method, may occa- sionally pause, with pen upon paper, at the end of a syllable or a stroke, until the succeeding one is thought out; is not this far better than a stag- gering and possibly unsuccessful attempt to pre- construct by a single grasp of the mind, the 86 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. whole outline of a difficult word, before -even be- ginning to write it?* VOWEL "INDICATION" OFTEN A DELUSION. If it be said that this method of writing a dif- ficult word piecemeal, and without thinking in the first instance of "position," makes no pro- vision for "indicating" omitted vowels, I answer, it is far better, when a strange word is met with, that the "indication" of the omitted vowel be not attempted than that the writer, by ponder- ing hesitation, should fail to fix upon paper the consonant outline, or, while slowly determining both outline and "position," should lose essen tial words which follow. I answer further that, in many cases the prompt writing of the outline will leave time for the actual insertion of the leading vowel, which, with a new or rare word, is far better than any imperfect, and, at best, vague "indication." I venture to affirm that all practical reporters, when writing for the first * The method here described of "tackling" rare or difficult words is practiced, I believe, by the majority of experienced reporters; but I do not know that I have ever seen it described in print, except in a magazine article of Mr. A. J. Raines, the well-known author and teacher of St. Louis, Missouri, some of whose ideas and expressions I have taken the liberty of using, with this acknowledgment. HOW TO WRITE THE "HARD WORDS." 87 time any out-of-the-way word, aim to express, if possible, the characteristic and significant vow- el, rather than trust to any mere "indication" of it; for "indication" in many cases means simply that, when the word is to be deciphered, not only must one of four, five or six possible vowels be fixed upon by guess, but the syllabic place of the accented vowel in a word of perhaps five or six syllables must also be guessed at. While putting a word promptly upon paper in the manner I have described, the writer inaudi- bly, and perhaps unconsciously, pronounces each syllable *to himself; and having thus, while writ- ing the consonant outline, rehearsed incidental ly the vowels with the consonants, the essential vowel is generally clear before his mind as soon as the outline is finished, and can be instantly inserted if time allows. Thus an outline, which, ignoring artificial rules of "position, ,, is so vo- calized as to express the essential vowel, will often be written in less time than an unvocal- ized outline carefully placed in "position," which, theoretically, is supposed to "indicate" the omitted vowel, but whose "indication" is, for an unfamiliar word (such as a proper name), generally vague, unsuggestive, and practically 88 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. useless. There is a "reporter's rule of position" by which a few hundred brief and common out- lines are saved from the need of habitual vo- calization by resorting to the exceptional de- vice of three different positions, while thousands of other words of unmistakable outlines — a vast majority indeed of the words of the English language — are written in the second and easiest position, without reference to accented or lead- ing vowels, and are readily recognized by their consonant outlines alone. The genuine ''rule of position," as thus practiced, will be found fully explained in most of the standard instruction- books. It needs no further discussion here. SOME MINOR DIFFICULTIES TO BE MET. In writing a word for the first time, medial hooks or loops should be used very sparingly, because often they seriously retard the flow of the outline. If, for instance, in hurriedly writ- ing penetration, the n-hook should be introduced in the syllable "pen," the next part of the out- line, "tr," could not be written in the only prop- er way, with the r-hook. Thus an awkward, un- suggestive outline would result. Sometimes, when a hard word as uttered is THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. 89 entirely strange or unfamiliar, the writer may be in doubt whether the sounds which reach his ear constitute one word or more than one; in which case, without stopping to ponder upon the question, he may, upon the impulse of the moment, write the combination of sounds either as one word or as several. The word or words intended may often be precisely ascertained af- terward from books of reference or by personal inquiry. It ought to be added that, in writing "hard words," a thorough familiarity with the vowel- signs, so as to use them without the least hesi- tation, is often absolutely indispensable. When a word, because unfamiliar, is indistinctly un- derstood, the vowels are generally more clearly heard than the consonants, and though the con- sonant outline may be incorrect, a clearly-ex- pressed vowel may be so wonderfully suggestive as to settle beyond doubt the word intended. SPECIAL PRACTICE UPON "HARD WORDS." But "how to write the hard words" must be learned practically. The mere reading of rules on the subject can give one nothing more than theory. The student must learn how to "tackle" 90 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. a difficulty by "tackling" it. If he would learn to write "hard words" off-hand, he must from time to time practice the writing of such words off-hand. To attack "hard words" boldly, as soon as heard, and instantaneously to originate some legible outline, is something quite differ- ent from attempting to creep around the "hard word" mountain by memorizing outlines which have been constructed by some one else. If the student would acquire the art of writing "hard words" without needless loss of time, a part of his daily drill should be to write from dictation a certain number of such words — words not so rare as never to occur in practice, and not so common as to be a part of one's everyday vo- cabulary. As each difficult word is dictated to him, he should, without stopping to deliber- ate, begin at once to write it, and proceeding with as little pause as possible, he should go on and finish it. Such an exercise might be so ar- ranged that the words introduced shall gradu- ally become harder and harder.* Practice of this sort will develop in the writer what has already been spoken of as "the * Excellent books for this kind of -practice are Demlitz's Law Language and Bailey's Reporters' Word-Book. HOW TO WRITE THE "HARD WORDS." 91 faculty of keeping on," the faculty of grappling a hard word promptly and unflinchingly, and at once achieving some outline — brief and correct, if possible, but at any rate legible. Under this sort of practice, the habit of stumbling and staggering whenever a new word is met should finally disappear. If such practice, when at- tempted, should show — as in some cases it may — that the student has had insufficient drill on the abbreviating principles — if, for instance, he sometimes writes an 1-hook instead of an r-hook, or an n-hook instead of an f-hook — if he fails sometimes to make the circle, the loop, the half- length or the double-length where plain principle demands them — then he is unprepared for any- thing in the nature of "speed practice;" and if he is wise, he will turn back to those rudiment- ary rules which neither the veteran reporter nor the stenographic tyro can ever dispense with, and will never leave them until they are mas- tered. THE SPEEDY HAND. For the most rapid stenographic writing, there must of course be considerable agility of hand. The lack of this does not show itself in the beginning of the student's practice, because at that stage he cannot think out his shorthand fast enough to keep even a slow hand busy; the hand, however inexpert, awaits the slow action of the mind. Nor does this lack of manual fa- cility show itself decidedly during the amanuen- sis stage, because for the speed of the amanuen- sis very little special training of the hand is needed, if in ordinary writing a fairly easy and free command of the pen has been acquired. But for the attainment of high reporting speed much manual facility is indespensable. Where excep- tional executive power is sought, special manual discipline is as important to the student of shorthand as to the pianist. It may be true, as a writer in the National Stenographer (May, 1890) remarks that, "a nat- urally slow hand will never develop sufficient THE SPEEDY HAND. 93 speed for verbatim reporting;" but no one has a right to accuse himself of having "a naturally slow hand," while the fact may be that his hand is simply untrained or mistrained. A "natural- ly" agile hand can be so mismanaged, so handi- capped by bad habits, so held back by poorly- learned and poorly-remembered shorthand, that its natural agility cannot show itself. Many a shorthand writer who reproaches himself with slow-handedness could move his hand freely enough if he could think promptly what to write. If any slow writer of shorthand wishes to de- cide whether his slowness has its cause in the hand or in the mind, he can easily adopt a trust- worthy test. Let him have read to him a limited quantity of new matter — two or three hundred words, and let him note the exact speed with which he is able to write it. Then, after care- fully correcting his errors, let him copy the same matter in its corrected form twenty, thirty, for- ty, or fifty times. After thus familiarizing him- self with the matter so as to write it without a particle of hesitation, let him have it again dic- tated to him. He will probably find that on this last trial he can write it from dictation twice as 94 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. fast as at first. As many strokes are written, and manual motions made, in one-half the time required at first. Why? Not because the hand has developed in half an hour or an hour a doubled capacity for rapid movement. The simple explanation is that the mind no long- er hesitates; the hand is no longer held back by slow shorthand thinking; the writing nas be- come automatic. Such a trial will demonstrate to any writer the real speed. capacity of his hand at the particular time of making the trial — not necessarily the limit of its speed capacity after it shall have undergone proper discipline; for there may be unconsciously to himself bad ma- nipulative habits which need to be removed and methods of manual training which he needs faithfully to pursue. THE LONGHAND TWIST. In the shorthand writer's manual discipline the first step is to get rid of certain habits often acquired in writing longhand, and which, unless corrected, must make high stenographic speed a physical impossibility. It may be desirable, for a time at least, that longhand practice be as far THE SPEEDY HAND. 95 as possible suspended, so that a new set of man- ual habits may be the more easily acquired. One of the habits which shorthand students need especially to overcome arises from the pe- culiar slant of the longhand characters. In or- der to give these their ordinary forward inclina- tion, the fingers and the hand are usually twist- ed to the right, with the penhandle pointing to the shoulder, or sometimes to the breast. But as the shorthand characters are written in al- most every direction — probably more of them with a backward inclination or with a horizon- tal motion than with a forward slope, the hand and fingers, in being educated for shorthand writing, must be emancipated from the fixed po- sition to which they have been accustomed in longhand. For shorthand writing the penholder should generally, though not constantly, point in a line with the forearm, so that, without changing its position, a phonographic (7 or b can be readily made. AERIAL PEN TWIRLING. It scarcely need be said that the shorthand writer must absolutely discard the habit in which some longhand writers seem to take pride — a useless and ridiculous fashion of lifting the 96 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. hand an inch or two from the paper, and wig- gling or twirling it in mid-aid as a preparation for the writing of a word or a letter. These pen- pirouettes, whatever purpose they may serve in connection with longhand (and I believe the most rapid longhand writers do not indulge in them), have certainly no magic power to aid in the correct, symmetrical or rapid shaping of shorthand characters. This preparatory twirl- ing or poising of the pen (indulged in by so many longhand writers) seems to be an incident of the much-lauded "arni movement," or ''mus- cular movement,'' and is to my mind a confes- sion of the unsteadiness and inexactness of "the arm movement'' as a letter-forming movement. I do not disparage the great importance of a free arm in order to transport the hand smooth- ly and pauselessly across the page; but an movement which in longhand requires that the stroke to be written must be rehearsed and pre- pared for by a species of aerial gymnastics, while the writing is momentarily suspended, and be- fore the pen touches the paper, is evidently un- suited to shorthand writing. This preparatory poising of the pen is thus approvingly described by one of the writing masters: THE SPEEDY HAND. 97 "Practice the movement with the pen in the air; then take a good aim and fire to hit the mark. The same rules will in a measure apply to writing with 'the muscular movement' that apply to rifle practice; namely, a steady, nervy movement, a keen eye, and true aim." The aerial rehearsal of the strokes about to be written — the preparatory shaping of the characters "in the air" before the pen touches the paper — is evidently what this master of the "muscular movement" means by "taking aim." But for such "taking aim," the shorthand writer has no time. He must fire without waiting to "take aim." So long as he habitually stops to steady his rifle and deliberately "take aim," he will not bag any stenographic game. PEN-GRIPPING. Another of the bad habits which the stu- dent may need to get rid of, is too tight gripping of his pen or pencil. As Thomas Allen Reed says, "Some writers grasp their pen or pencil so tightly that an easy and flowing style is never acquired." This is a common fault with both longhand writers and shorthand writers. With beginners in stenog- 98 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. raphy, it may be either caused or aggravated by the concentrated mental strain attending the mastering of a new system of writing. This pen- gripping, involving as it does needless muscular effort, tends to promote an inartistic style of writing, interferes with the acquisition of speed, and induces undue and premature fatigue, say mg nothing of the ultimate danger of pen par alysis from the unnecessary, excessive and long- co'ntinued muscular strain. FINGER ACTION. The habit of pen-gripping has this further dis- advantage: it prevents the free flexing of the two writing fingers and the thumb, which should be pliable and supple in order to contribute their share to neat and rapid shorthand. This tight grasping of the pen or pencil seems to arise in many cases from a mistaken effort to write entirely "from the arm." The free action of the writing fingers is still further obstructed if (as is too common) the penhandle or pencil is al- lower to rest fixedly below the knuckle — in the crotch, as it may be called, between the knuckle and the thumb. If, avoiding this positon, the pen is held so that it may roll, as it were, upon THE SPEEDY HAND. 99 the side of the knuckle as the fingers are extend- ed or contracted, a wonderful sweep of finger action may be obtained, unspeakably useful in the shaping of many of the shorthand charac- ters. Some of the writing masters have so great a. horror of what they call the ''finger move- ment" (I do not favor a vicious finger movement any more than they do) that they give no atten- tion to cultivating the flexibility of the fingers and thumb, saying to their pupils that "the fin- gers will take care of themselves," "you are sure to use the fingers enough." Without stopping to dispute the infallibility of the writing masters within their special province' (the teaching ot longhand), I affirm, from personal observation of many a shorthand writer attempting to write rapid stenography with inflexible fingers, that in shorthand the fingers unfortunately do not "take care of themselves." I affirm further that, for the purpose of promoting ease of move- ment, for the purpose of securing an easy lift- ing of the pen (which is best accomplished by a mere extension or lifting of the fingers with- out any lifting of the hand), and for the purpose of accomplishing a facile formation of the shorthand characters, the fingers and the thumb 100 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. should be entirely flexible, ready to do their proper share in the act of writing. In these days when we hear so much about "writing from the shoulder/' about "the arm movement," "the muscular movement," etc., it should not be forgotten that those nimble, little instruments, the fingers, so highly valued in ev- ery other manual art because of their adapta- tion to quick and delicate movements, can serve as important adjuncts (I do not claim that they should be the sole machinery) in symmetrical and rapid shorthand writing. Some of the most rapid stenographic penmen, including one of whom it has been said that "in the making of shorthand notes, no human hand was ever more artistic and skillful," have been remarkable for the magnificent sweep of their deft fingers. (See remarks of Eugene Davis, in "The Missing Link in Shorthand," upon Joseph E. Lyons, deceased.) In defense of a vicious "finger movement," as described by a writing master of my acquaint- ance, I have nothing to say. "Place the hand," he says, "on the desk, resting firmly on the side of the little finger and side of the palm of the hand. Now, without the least movement of the hand, write one, two or three letters; then slide THE SPEEDY HAND. 101 or drag the hand along to a new resting place, and repeat the writing of several letters before again changing the position of the hand. This is what writing masters condemn as the finger movement." Of course there is a vast difference between a vicious finger movement, as thus de- scribed, and that free and natural play of the fingers without which shorthand writing cannot be done with artistic ease, and with no prema- ture and unnecessary fatigue. THE GLIDING MOVEMENT. The proper management, of the fingers, the hand and the arm (upon the combined action of which the best shorthand writing depends) can- not receive from the ambitious shorthand writer too much attention. While the fingers should be allowed to yield themselves flexibly and gracefully to the motions of the pen, any at- tempt to write exclusively with the fingers must result in a cramped and slow movement. The hand should learn to carry itself smoothly across the page, with as little pressure as possible, the little finger resting lightly upon the paper from the beginning to the end of the line, so that the hand, propelled by the forearm, may deftly glide 102 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. along without hitch or hesitation. With many writers, however, the hand bears so heavily upon the paper as to forbid anything like "glid- ing," so that as soon as a few characters have been executed, the hand, by a comparatively slow and laborious movement, must be restationed. When the fingers can be stretched no farther sideward, the little finger, upon which f as on a fixed prop, the hand has heavily rested, is either completely lifted, carried an inch or two for- ward, and replaced upon the paper ; or, without leaving the paper, it is dragged an inch or two toward the right, to remain in its new position until required to make another laborious little journey as soon as a few more characters have been written. During each of these hitches, of course, the writing is completely suspended un- til the hand can be restationed. In the movement which the student must seek to cultivate, the hand, resting lightly on the out- er edge of the little finger, glides (no word can better express the proper movement) steadily over the paper. Until the end of the line is reached, the little finger is not lifted; so that the writing goes on without needless interrup- tion. The wrist does not touch the paper. The THE SPEEDY HAND. 103 hand receives the slight support it needs from the little finger, whose main function, however, is not so much to support the hand as to steady it. The light, smooth, regular, continuous, glid- ing motion here described and insisted upon, seems to be absolutely necessary for the high- est shorthand speed. The wretched "stepety- step" movement, in which the hand rests heav- ily upon the paper, except when, after every few words or phrases, it is with effort lifted or dragged along, will never permit rapid writing. No reasonable effort should be spared to ac- quire this gliding movement, as it has been termed, this free lateral movement of the hand. But if, after persevering trial, it cannot be ac- quired, so that the writer still finds himself un- able, as he thinks, to carry his hand lightly across the whole breadth of a foolscap or letter page, he may compromise with his own infirmity and evade rather than overcome the difficulty by di- viding the note-taking page into two or more columns, filling, as he writes, first one column, and then another. This method has been prac- ticed and recommended by some writers of hi.?h standing, one of whom has said: "By writing in columns, the motion of the hand across the page 1U4 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. is saved, as the fingers will extend the pen across the column without moving the hand in this sideward direction; and the only motion of the hand required is down the page; and even that may be saved by sliding the paper up with the left hand." "A LIGHT TOUCH." The habit of writing with no undue straining of the muscles, with an easy grasp of the pen or pencil, with but slight pressure upon the paper, and with a graceful gliding of the hand cross the page, constitutes what is called "a light touch" — a most valuable acquisition to any one who aspires to be a rapid shorthand writer. "A man" (says Mr. Fred Pitman) "who possesses a fine touch will write smoothly with little apparent effort, even at a high rate of speed." This lightness of touch, he adds, is "so important a thing that great speed can scarcely be attained without it." More than that, it en- ables the writer to continue his work for a much longer period and with less fatigue than would be possible with a heavier hand and greater muscular strain. "Where the pen is tightly held," says Thomas Allan Reed, "a couple of THE SPEEDY HAND. 105 hours continuous writing is felt to be a toil, pro- ducing in the case of rapid note-taking a sense of considerable fatigue." On the other hand, he remarks, "a man who holds his pen lightly and is perfectly familiar with his shorthand, will write for half a day or more, without any labori- ous exertion or sense of weariness. I have my- self taken shorthand notes for ten hours con- tinuously, with an interval of only a few min- utes, filling more than two hundred closely writ- ten pages, each containing about five folios; and I could have gone on without much difficulty for an hour or two longer. I take no credit to my- self for this. Having naturally a light touch, I have simply tried to cultivate it, as many oth- ers have done with the same result." A reporter of my acquaintance who has had great experience in taking notes for many hours daily during many successive days, has told me that, being threatened with pen paralysis, and compelled to resort to every expedient to econ- omize the muscular effort of writing, he derived the greatest possible aid from cultivating ex- treme lightness of touch. This, he said, had proved in his own case an unmistakable aid to rapidity, a protection against fatigue, and a 106 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. safeguard against the greatest peril of the hard- working stenographer — penman's palsy. The cultivation of a light touch should be one main purpose of the shorthand writer from the very beginning of his practice. Unless cultivated in the beginning, its acquirement may later be very difficult, if not impossible; for it has been aptly remarked, "No habits are retained with more permanence than those pertaining to the operation of the muscles." In aiming to acquire a light pressure of the pen, it may be well for the student to bear in mind the words of Mr. Keed : "The only pressure on the pencil or the penholder which is needed is just enough to give the fingers a perfect com- mand over it, so that the forms may be traced firmly and clearly, but not stiffly. A happy and judicious combination of firmness and lightness is the goal at which every young shorthand writer should direct his efforts." An eminent American reporter, who inclines to the use of the pencil in preference to the pen, has said in one of his publications: "If you have a heavy hand use a pencil" — which seems to me equivalent to saying: "If you have any faulty method of writing, humor it, and don't seek to THE SPEEDY HAND. 107 overcome it." I would rather say to the stu- dent, "If you have a heavy hand, strive to get rid of it by using an instrument which requires you to write lightly ; get the softest pen you can find, that it may compel you to hold your natur- ally heavy hand in check." For the shorthand writer who wants a light touch — that is, who wants to write with no needless pressure — there can scarcely be such a thing as a pen which is too soft. In aiming to acquire that much-to-be-desired boon, "a light touch," the shorthand student should constantly aim to throw as little weight as possible upon the right arm. To lean for- ward, and, as it were, crouch over one's note- book, is not only an ungainly habit, but one which, by throwing extra weight upon the writ- ing arm, interferes with ease and speed. A sadly vicious habit, too often indulged, even in some schools of penmanship and short- hand (as shown in the photographs of their well- filled class rooms), is to place the right side of the body toward the desk and write with the weight of the body thrown upon the right arm. On this point, I am glad to quote with hearty concurrence the language of that well-known 108 THE FACTORS OP SHORTHAND SPEED. "speed writer," Isaac S. Dement: '"Now, we have got the weight of the movement off the arm, let us take the weight of the body off from it and throw it on the left arm. Then it is perfectly free. What have you got? Your hand is in per- fect condition to do exactly what you wish it to do. Of course, if there is no cramping, the rap- ic'.itv is assured." "THE LITTLE FOXES THAT SPOIL THE VI^ES." One of the striking characteristics of the speedy hand is that it loses no time in waste motions. An ingenious writer has estimated that the time necessarily lost during pen-lifts by the most experienced and expert stenogra- pher under the most favorable circumstances, is equal to forty per cent of the whole time occu- pied in the writing. In other words, there is sixty per cent of written product to one hundred per cent of time consumed. This estimate seems to me much exaggerated; but it is doubtless true that the ordinary writer, with whom of course the non-productive consumption of time is greater than with the expert, loses while his pen does not touch the paper — while he is passing from word to word, from phrase to phrase, from line to line, from page to page — while, strictly speaking, no writing is being done — more time than he occupies in the shaping of the shorthand characters. 110 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. A certain amount of loss during the pen-lifts is of course inevitable. But how can this loss be kept down to the lowest possible point? Doubtless with many young writers a large part of the loss occurring during pen-lifts proceeds from mental hesitation — indecision as to how the successive shorthand outlines should be written. The cause and cure of this infirmity will be the subject of a later chapter. But when mental hesitation has largely passed away, there often remain many time-wasting habits which do their fell work, unconsciously to the writer, while his pen is lifted — habits many of which, taken singly, would scarcely be worthy of notice except in connection with an art in which liter- ally every moment is precious. These time-wast- ing habits, while the writer is unaware of their existence, rob him of the speed he might attain. They are "the little foxes that spoil the vines." HOW GOOD PHRASING HELPS. When we seek to minimize the losses by or during the pen-lifts, an obvious suggestion is, reduce the number of necessary pen-lifts by good phrasing. By good phrasing. I mean, of course, phrasing which does not, while pretend- "LITTLE FOXES THAT SPOIL THE VINES." Ill ing to save time, sacrifice it by inconvenient or awkward junctions, or by an habitual, ponder- ing upon the phrasability of all the various ver- bal combinations which present themselves in following a reader or a speaker. But when good phrasing has dispensed with every unnecessary pen-lift, the pen must still be lifted again and again during the course of every line; and if at every pen-lift time is needlessly lost, the possi- bility of high speed is defeated, because the ''lit- tle foxes" are stealthily doing their work. "QUICK TRANSITIONS." Time may be lost during the pen-lifts, not only by unnecessary motions, but by performing ne- cessary motions in a sluggish way. The move- ments of the hand in passing from word to word, from line to line, from page to page, may be performed in the right way. but not with sufficient alertness. "Quick transitions" should be the watchword of every writer who aims at speed. While the pen is lifted, let all sluggishness and dawdling be avoided. Let the pen, when necessarily lifted, get back to its work with no waste motion or needless delay. Let the hand be carried from 112 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. the end of one line to the beginning of another with lightning-like celerity. Let the turning of the leaf be always properly prepared for, and then at the right moment, be done "with a whiz." Let all the movements of fingers, hand and arm, while the pen does not touch the paper, be hur- ried to the last extreme. If these movements, in which no amount of hurry can do harm, be per- formed "with a rush," time is gained for care- fulness where it is often needed — while the pen is actually making its record. Even the begin- ner (too often indulged in sluggish movements and methods) should habituate himself as soon as possible to "quick transitions." THE PEN-LIFT MUST NOT BE A HAND-LIFT. But during the pen-lifts the writer's motions are too often not merely sluggish, but superflu- ous. Time is lost in doing what need not be done and ought not to be done. Sometimes, for in- stance, the pen-lift which (except at the end of a line) should be accomplished by a mere exten- sion or lifting of the writing-fingers, becomes a hand-lift. In such cases the little finger, on which the hand should glide from the beginning to the end of the line without leaving the paper, "LITTLE FOXES THAT SPOIL THE VINES." 113 is lifted at the end of almost every word or phrase, and carried forward, to be resta- tioned a little farther on. When this happens, not only is there a loss by the needless lifting of the hand, as well as by its return and readjustment, but the hand, especially when hurried, can scarcely return to the paper, after one of these lifts, without a sort of jar, necessitating a little pause until the pen steadies itself ; or, if this steadying pause be not made, the character of the writing suffers. Sit- ting beside a writer who habitually substituted hand-lifts for pen-lifts, I have felt the jarring of the desk two or three times in the course of every line, as his hand heavily returned to the paper. This habit of hand-lifting is no doubt in many cases a legacy of longhand-teaching. The writer unconsciously clings to the notion, al- ready referred to, that the twirling of the pen "in the air" before it touches the paper — "tak- ing a good aim," as the writing master calls it — aids in the shaping of the characters. Many writers who avoid the error of making a hand-lift instead of a pen-lift, lose time by lift- ing the pen too high. Let it be remembered that a mere breaking of the contact between 114 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. pen and paper is all that is necessary, and "whatsoever is more than this cometh of evil." With some of the most rapid writers I know, the pen, except at the end of a line, can scarcely be seen to leave the paper, the lifting being often so slight as to show upon close examina- tion a faint track left by the pen or pencil upon the paper in passing from word to word or from phrase to phrase. This I have noticed particu- larly in the writing of those masterly stenog- raphers, Mr. Andrew Devine and Mr. Fred Ir- land. WASTEFUL SPACING. Another case of lost motion is when the hand, while passing from word to word, travels far- ther than it needs to do, and makes the inter- vening spaces too large. Many persons adopt so loose a style of writing as to get only five or six words on a line which might easily contain three or four times as many. In this "scatter- ing" style of shorthand, there is a loss both di- rect and indirect. The direct loss, ocasioned by the distance which the hand needlessly tra- verses between the words or phrases, entails an indirect loss by compelling the hand to pass "LITTLE FOXES THAT SPOIL TUB VINES." 115 oftener from line to line than a compact style of writing would require. From the mere substi- tution of a compact for a scattering style, I have seen in many students an almost immediate gain of speed. On this subject I take pleasure in quoting the testimony of a well-known and long-experienced teacher, Mr. Gr. S. Walworth: "I frequently tell my students to keep the pen close to the paper, to write rather small out- lines, and to leave little space between the words and phrases. Students in whom faulty habits in these respects are very pronounced, usually make a great jump in speed as soon as they rid themselves of them." PENCIL MOISTENING. What shall I say of the inexcusable habit (which I have seen practiced by both men and women) of putting the pencil to the mouth as often as it may seem to be necessary, to supply to the lead the moisture required for a clear stroke? This habit should not be tolerated for an hour. A pencil that constantly needs to be moistened is not adapted to shorthand work. Many of the wrong habits pointed out in the last few pages are practiced unconsciously, and 116 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. can scarcely be corrected except through the vigilance of some person other than the writer himself. Let the student who suspects himself of any of these habits invite the keen watching of his teacher or dictator. He should also do what he can to watch himself, when engaged in writing memorized matter which requires only a limited share of his attention. EXPEDITIOUS LEAF TURNING. To avoid one of the most serious losses of the young writer, it is important that he should, from the beginning of his practice, aim to turn the leaves of his notebook readily and quickly, and to make the doing of it so habitual as to re- quire but little attention. I have seen some otherwise accomplished writers, in turning a page, interrupt the writing while taking hold of the lower corner of the page with the right hand. Thomas Allen Reed gives a method of leaf-turning which is practiced by many English and American reporters: "While writing on the upper half of the leaf introduce the second finger of the left hand be- tween it and the next leaf, keeping the leaf on which you are writing steady by the first finger "LITTLE FOXES THAT SPOIL THE VINES." 117 and thumb. While writing on the lower part of the page, shift the- leaf by degrees till it is about half way up the book; when it is convenient, lift up the thumb, and the leaf will turn over almost by itself. * * The finger should be intro- duced at the first pause the speaker makes, or at any other convenient opportunity that presents itself." Another excellent method is, while writing on the upper half of the page, to take the lower left-hand corner between the thumb and the forefinger of the left hand, and then push the page upward, a little at a time, selecting for this purpose those intervals when the speaker pauses or while the pen is shifting from line to line. The effect of thus pushing the page up- ward is to curl it, thus giving an opening for the introduction of the finger. This curling of the page will not interfere with the writing, if one or two fingers of the left hand are used to press down the part of the page on which the writing is being done, thus keeping it flat and firm. This pushing of the page upward is not only a preparation for turning the leaf, but it makes writing on the lower part of the page much more convenient, as the supporting 118 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. fingers of the right hand are not thrown en- tirely off the book. Any writer who, after faithful practice, finds difficulty in acquiring either of these methods of turning the leaves, may profit by the suggestion of Miss Hattie A. Shinn, a most accomplished stenographer, who (writing in the "Exponent" for March, 1885) declares that it "requires nothing short of jugglery to turn the page after writing to the bottom of it, so quickly that nothing is lost by the time the top of the next page is reached." She therefore says to young writers . "Do not attempt to do fast writing in books folded at the end." Instead of these, she recom- mends side-folding books, in the use of which "the left hand, resting upon the page on which you write (and taking hold of the upper right hand corner) can readily have the page half turned by the time the bottom of it is reached. There is then nothing more to be done than to move the writing hand to the top of the next page, without the loss of a single movement." As the pages of a new note-book have a ten- dency to adhere to one another, thus increasing the difficulty of turning the leaves, the writer will find it an advantage to go through the note- "LITTLE FOXES THAT SPOIL THE VINES." 119 book page by page before using it, and carefully separate the leaves. THE SPEEDY HAND IS NOT SHOWY. In asking the student to avoid all waste mo- tions and acquire in its genuine form a speedy hand, I am asking him to forego the applause of those (and they are many) who think that the hand which appears to be dashing in wild haste across the paper, or which in other ways makes a great show of motion, is writing fast. The person who, in writing, allows his fingers their proper play, who keeps his pen, even when lifted, close to the paper, who makes small spaces between words and phrases, who avoids large and sprawling characters, who turns the leaves of his notebook deftly but quietly, will not make much show of motion even in the most rapid work, and will thus miss the plaudits which many unthinking lookers-on are ready to give to the "pen-slinger" who, with great parade and pretense of fast writing, is, in fact, losing time by wasted motions which do not help speed, but hinder it. A gentleman thoroughly versed in the reporting profession (Mr. Henry C. Demming), has shrewdly observed : "Let a per- 120 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. son go into church during service, throw him- self around wildly, slash and dash terrifically, and turn his leaves over with a snap; and nearly everybody within eye and earshot will inwardly say, 'What an excellent reporter he must be!' All this and more, while the manipulator of pen or pencil is not getting one- third of the dis- course." Such writers no doubt have the reward which they seek. But the stenographer 'who has im- bibed the prime principle of rapid writing, that to economize movement and economize space is to economize time, and who has acquired that substantial blessing, the really speedy hand, the hand that makes no false show of rapidity but simply keeps right on and "gets there," may well content himself with the celerity and ac- curacy of his note-taking, without envying the false glory of charlatans and pretenders. PEN OR PENCIL? The question whether the pen or the pencil should be preferred for stenographic writing, must naturally be of great interest to every shorthand student. This question has been among reporters a subject of much dispute. I believe that, as the result of the discussion, and more especially as the result of continued ex perience with the two instruments, a large ma- jority of the reporters of the country consider the advantages decidedly in favor of the pen; and many who from force of earl}- habit are obliged to continue the use of the pencil, do so regretfully, and look with envy upon the users of the pen. TWELVE REASONS IN FAVOR OP THE PEN. Twelve reasons may be stated, which, in my opinion, should induce every young writer to educate himself from the very beginning of his practice to do his stenographic writing with the pen, whenever circumstances will allow him to do so: 122 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. 1. The pen requires less niscular exertion for its management. Hence the pen-writer works for long periods with less fatigue than the pen- cil-writer. Stating the result of years of exper- ience, and concurring with the general opinion on the subject, Mr. Geo. R. Bishop, the distin- guished author of "Exact Phonography," has said that he "can write four hours with the pen with less fatigue than one hour with the pencil." The management of the pencil is a heavy tax upon the muscles and the nerves. This muscu- lar and nervous strain, apart from the immedi- ate fatigue, tends to bring on "writer's cramp." Mr. James E. Munson some time ago suggested that pen-paralysis, so-called, is generally pencil- paralysis, resulting from muscular overstrain- ing which the pencil entails. An article in the "Shorthand Review" for August, 1891, exhibits vividly the extent of this overstraining. "We have," says this writer, "frequently examined the notes of recently-graduated stenographers, and find that the hand-pressure employed in writing leads to some very astonishing results. In many cases the pencil makes an impression through two or three pages of the note-book. It is needless to say that under such circum- PEN OR PENCIL? 123 stances fast writing is impossible. Such an un- necessary expenditure of force cannot be em ployed with the pen." The testimony of that long-experienced and widely-known reporter, Mr. A. P. Little, of Rochester, N. Y., is well worthy of recital here. Addressing his professional brethren of the New York State Stenographers' Association, Mr. Little says: "I do not believe an instance can be cited where writer's cramp has been caused by the use of a flexible-point pen in writ- ing shorthand. I believe that it is almost en- tirely produced by the use of a pencil, which, in my opinion, no first-class stenographer ought to use in court or elsewhere; or else it is caused by using a very stiff pen. The use of the pencil re- quires the use of all the muscles to so much greater extent than the use of a flexible pen that they are over-exerted and thus become over fatigued ; and in consequence of this over- exertion, one contracts writer's cramp. I do not take the ground that there are not first-class stenographers who put themselves to the extra trouble of using the pencil, or that there are not some stenographers that use a very stiff pen and 'get there' just as satisfactorily as any- 124 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. body else. It is very difficult for one unaccus- tomed to a stiff pen or pencil to use a very flex- ible pen. They are often entirely unable at first to control a flexible pen, that is, to make it go where they want it to go, and to make it do what they want it to do; but if they persevere, they can subsequently write more rapidly and easily than with a stiff pen. To sum up what I have endeavored to say, it has been, and still is, my belief that, if stenographers generally would discard the use of the pencil or stiff pen and adopt a medium coarse-pointed, flexible pen, they would never have writer's cramp." 2. The pen permits and promotes a lightness of touch which, with the pencil, is out of the question; and this lightness of touch conduces largely to speed. The pen does not allow that undue pressure which the pencil invites, if it does not cause. This undue pressure with which many persons are disposed to write is highly in- compatible with rapid note-taking. 3. The pen, with its yielding nibs, is far better adapted than the pencil to express readily and clearly the distinctions between light strokes and heavy. The writing which best preserves these distinctions is, other things being equal, PEN OR PENCIL? 125 the most legible. One of the most conspicuous advocates of the pencil, that accomplished re- porter, Mr. Geo. H. Thornton, the author of "The Modern Stenographer," has, by inventing and publishing a "light line" system of stenography, admitted in the most emphatic manner the unsuitability of his favorite instrument, the pencil, to make those distinctions between light strokes and heavy which are a fundamental fea- ture of Pitmanic phonography. Writers who have not adopted any "light line" system of pho- nography must distinguish their heavy strokes from their light ones, if they wish the writing to be legible; and for this purpose they need an instrument like the pen, suited by its peculiar construction to make these necessary distinc- tions. 4. Pen notes are better adapted for preserva- tion than pencil notes, which even ordinary handling tends to blur. Anything that is to be filed away as a record should not be written with a pencil. Mr. Thornton, in advocating some years ago the use of the pencil, made an impor- tant concession in favor of the superiority of pen-notes for record purposes. "Notes taken with a pencil," he said, "are as easily tran- 126 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. scribed in after years as those written with a pen, if they are not handled.'" (Proceedings of N. Y. State Stenographers' Association, 1882.) 5. It need scarcely be said that pen-notes are more legible, especially when they must be read at night, than pencil notes. The strain of read- ing the latter by artificial light (and much of the professional reporter's work must be done at night) is terribly trying to the best of eyes. The young stenographer, looking forward to coming years, should preserve his sight careful- ly as a part of his business equipment, and should realize that he cannot afford to abuse the only pair of eyes he will ever have. 6. Neater notes can be made with the pen than with the pencil, the latter tending to gen- erate a habit of scrawling. The scrawling writer is nearly always a pencil writer. Some of the neatest writers in our profession use the pen constantly. 7. Pencil notes, in consequence of their intrin- sic illegibility, can seldom be transcribed (as pen- notes constantly are) by other persons than the writer. Such transcription by assistants is an immense advantage to many a hard-working re- porter. PEN OR PENCIL? 127 8. The old objection, based on loss of time by pen-dipping, and on the inconvenience of card- ing round an ink-stand — an objection the force of which was always overrated — has of course been made obsolete by the introduction of the fountain pen. 9. The general opinion of almost every report- er whose early habits have not prevented hirn from giving the pen a fair trial, is decidedly in its favor. All the official reporting of the Unit- ed States Senate for forty years has been done with the pen. Of the five official reporters of the House of Representatives, four take notes with pen, two having discarded the pencil with- in a year or two past. If the pen can be used successfully in the perambulating reporting of House of Representatives, there ought to be no difficulty in using it anywhere. The Shorthand Review for August, 1891, states that "out of 65 of the best known shorthand writers in the country who were interviewed regarding their pen or pencil preference, 40 stated that they used the pen, 14 the pencil, and 11 both." 10. When, on rare occasions, the reporter's environment absolutely requires the use of pen- cil, the habitual user of the pen finds little diffi- 128 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. culty in adapting himself to the emergency. It may be remarked incidentally that a reporter, though habitually a user of the pen, should never be without one or two good well-sharp- ened pencils in his pocket, for use in case of ac- cident or emergency. 11. But the pen, if its advantages are to be en- joyed, must be held in the right way, and its proper management must have been acquired by sufficient practice. A person who has written shorthand with a pencil for months or years must not decide against the pen upon a trial of five or ten minutes. Those who say they "can't write shorthand with a pen" have never given the pen a fair trial. In most cases they have never learned to hold the pen in the peculiar po- sition which shorthand writing requires — a very different position from that which is taught in connection with longhand, and which is adapted only to strokes written in a single direction. It is important that the leaner of shorthand should use a pen from the start. When pencil-writing has become habitual, a change to the pen always requires considerable patience and self-con- quest. Many a pencil writer is unwilling or un- able to give the necessary amount of practice to PEN OR PENCIL? 129 overcome the habit he has formed. The longer the use of the pen is postponed, the harder it will be to make the change. "I GENERALLY BKEAK MY PENCIL POINT." 12. But this question must not be disposed of without noticing one consideration of over- whelming force — the liability of the pencil point to break treacherously at a most critical mo- ment. This liability is conceded by two of the most conspicuous advocates of the pencil, Mr. Dement and Mr. Thornton. Mr. Dement, while in attendance at one of the annual meetings of the New York State Stenographers' Association, to takepartin the celebrated "speed contest," made this statement: "We reporters of the West use the pencil and use the light line; and when I use a heavy line, it is generally wrong, except in the word 'defendant,' when I generally break my pencil point." (Proceedings of 1887, page 138.) How candidly Mr. Dement concedes the treacherousness of his favorite writing tool ! A t the same meeting, Mr. Thornton, referring to the notes taken in the "speed contest," said that "Mr. Dement would be very glad to now read over the notes which he 130 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. had taken of the matter dictated to him, to show that he had taken it in good faith, and that he could read it all, with the exception of one or two places where his pencil broke." (Page 94.) Many reporters who may envy Mr. Dement's speed as a shorthand writer, will yet prefer to do their work with a tool which in an emergen- cy will not thus betray them. Who can say how much better a record even Mr. Dement might have made in that contest, if he had been armed with a better weapon? WHAT PEN TO USE? If, to the satisfaction of the young writer, my case has been made out in favor of the pen, the question naturally arises, what kind of a pen should be used? This must be largely a matter of individual preference. A gold pen, which many writers prefer, others cannot become ac- customed to, especially when in a "fountain" holder. Of steel pens, Gillott's 303, Spencerian No. 1, the Moheta pen, the Falcon pen, and Per- ry's three pointed pen (with the latter almost all the note-taking in the United States Senate was done for a number of years) have their respect- ive champions. In this matter every writer PEN OR PENCIL? 131 must make experiments for himself. If he de- sires to cultivate a "light touch," a fine-pointed and very flexible pen will be chosen. He should also discover by his own experiments the pa- per and the ink which suit him. On this point no special suggestion is deemed necessary. A BEGINNER NEEDS THE BEST MATERIALS. In closing this topic, it should be remarked that there can be no greater error than to as- sume in the matter of materials that "anything is good enough for a beginner." On the contrary, a beginner is entitled to the best; for he is more subject than are experienced writers to the dis- couraging influence of little difficulties and an- noyances. Besides, he should early become ac- customed to such materials as he is finally to use, and should early learn to exercise his judg- ment in selecting them. CAUSES OF HESITATION. " Frequent hesitation as to the proper forms of words takes away very much from the facility of writing."— Andkew J. Ghaham. "Speed depends chiefly upon the ability of the writer to make the various outlines of words without hesitation." — James K Munson. TO WRITE QUICKLY, THINK QUICKLY. Hesitation is the arch enemy of shorthand speed. Thousands of young stenographers, who are longing for a "speedy hand/' mistake the cause of their trouble. Their failure to attain reasonable rapidity is because the mind, not the hand, works too slowly. He who would learn to write quickly must learn to think quickly. Would-be shorthand writers, who are wondering why they make no progress, are, in many cases, attempting to carry in their heads more short- hand than they can get promptly from their heads into their fingers. Facility of hand, nat- ural or acquired, avails nothing, unless the mind, by prompt conceptions, allows the hand a fair chance to do its work. As the words fall upon the stenographer's ear, there should be no ap- preciable pause between hearing and writing. Shorthand thinking reaches perfection when it is so promptly done as to seem automatic. If CAUSES OF HESITATION. 133 the shorthand flows freely from mind to hand, even an ordinary hand, moving not rapidly, but steadily and pauselessly (which prompt think- ing of the shorthand enables it to do), can write a good many words in a minute, even though the "system" written be not extremely brief. He who has discovered how to write shorthand without hesitation has gone far to- ward discovering the "speed secret." HESITATION MISTAKEN FOR SLOW-HANDEDNESS. „ The disease often diagnosed as slowhanded- ness is in many cases not slowhandedness, but hesitation. Many a young shorthand writer, whose average speed is but 80 or 90 words a minute, reaches, during a part of every minute, a pace of 160 or 180. This pace he could easily keep up but for the fact that two or three times or oftener during every minute, his hand is brought to a standstill, while he hesitatingly de- cides how a particular word or phrase should be written. If these deadly pauses, during which the eager hand waits upon the lagging mind, could be overcome — if the young phonographer could only write all words as promptly and rap- idly as he can write some — how smooth his path- way would be! 134 THE FACTORS OP SHORTHAND SPEED. HESITATION ENTAILS ILLEGIBILITY. This hesitating habit affects legibility as well as speed. A boggling mind causes a jerky, spas- modic movement of the hand. When an outline upon which the writer is obliged to hesitate has thrown him back eight or ten or a dozen words, there follows a scramble to catch up. The hand struggles forward with nervous, spasmodic haste. Like a railroad train belated by linger- ing too long at a particular station, it rushes on, to make up for lost time. And shorthand, thus written with hurried hand and flurried mind, proves often undecipherable. THE "REPORTING VOCABULARY"— HOW ACQUIRED. One of the most common causes of hesitation is that the writer has failed to familiarize him- self (as he should do before undertaking "speed practice") with the well-established outlines for all ordinary words. In all dictation and report- ing work, a limited number (but only a limited number) of outlines must be devised off-hand as the words are uttered. These impromptu out- lines, though they become fewer and fewer as the writer's practice becomes more and more extended, never disappear altogether; for no CAUSES OF HESITATION. 135 mind is capacious enough to master by rote- memorizing all the words that a stenographer must write. Outlines which require to be in- vented at the moment of writing are, as com- pared with familiar outlines, time-losers. If frequent, they sadly reduce the average of speed. Even with the learner just beginning "speed practice," they should be but a small percentage of the words written. If they form a large percentage, either the matter undertaken i3 of undue difficulty, or "speed practice" has be- gun too soon. Until a reasonably large "report- ing vocabulary" has been acquired, "speed prac- tice" is premature and of little benefit. The pre- acquired "reporting vocabulary," even of him who is just beginning "speed practice," should be large enough to save him from hesitation about all ordinary words. The outlines of these ordinary words are to be familiarized by writ- ing again and again the exercises under the various abbreviating rules, and also by copying over and over again correctly-written exercises in "the reporting style." By faithfully copying correct "reporting style," the student will learn, not only the fully- expressed outlines of most of the common 136 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. words, but also many common and useful word- signs, with which he should familiarize himself before beginning "speed practice." It is highly important that every word-sign he attempts to learn should be learned thoroughly. Word-signs imperfectly learned are one of the commonest causes of hesitation. Recalled hesitatingly and doubtfully, word-signs cause to many writers a far greater loss of time than could the most cumbrous outlines written promptly. In no other art is the instantaneoeus action of the memory more essential than in shorthand. Whatever a stenographic student undertakes to memorize, he must memorize more thoroughly than he ever memorized the multiplication table or the Lord's prayer. With many shorthand writers, the memory works treacherously because it is overburdened ; and this is more likely to occur in connection with word-signs than with any other part of the system. Hours and hours, day after day, are spent in conning nd re-conning, writing and re- writing, arbitrary contractions too numerous ever to be mastered. Many of the words upon whose arbitrary signs time is thus spent, occur so rarely in actual work as never to pay for CAUSES OF HESITATION. 137 their laborious acquisition, even if they be well memorized. If not well memorized, they ofteu work direct mischief just where they are ex- pected to be a benefit. When a special and ar- bitrary abbreviation representing some uncom- mon word like inclemency, misconception, un- discoverable, etc., has been, as the student sup- poses, learned, his actual practice does not call for it often enough to keep it fresh in his mem- ory. The recollection of it grows dim ; but, alas ! it does not fade out altogether. At some unex- pected moment, in the midst of hurried note-tak- ing, the out-of-the-way word is uttered, and the supposed-to-be-meniorized word-sign, if instan- taneously recalled, might be useful; but, sad to say, there comes to the mind at this critical mo- ment, not a clear, prompt recollection, but a tardy, vague, elusive, tantalizing reminiscence; and while the writer is deciding whether the ar- bitrary contraction or the full outline should be written, precious time is lost. Thus the at- tempted "cramming" of "more contractions" (often undertaken as a sovereign cure for slow- handedness) results frequently in loss of speed, instead of gain. Total ignorance of any contrac- tion is bliss compared with its uncertain or tar- 138 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. dy recollection. No writer should forget that imperfectly-learned word-signs (and they must be imperfectly learned if too many are under- taken), especially word-signs of rare occurrence, are one of the prime causes of hesitation. IMPROMPTU OUTLINES. But, however well all common outlines may have been familiarized by reading and copying, however thoroughly all ordinary word-signs may have been memorized, there must occur (as al- ready intimated), in the practice of every writer, words whose outlines require to be devised on the spur of the moment — to be built up in the midst of rapid speaking by a quick, masterly ap- plication of word-building principles. These out- lines thus constructed off-hand, will, as a mat- ter of course, be written less readily than mem- orized outlines ; yet if these impromptu outlines give the young writer very great trouble, some- thing must be wrong. If he hesitates in deter- mining on which side the I hook or the r hook should be written — if he fails to make a half length or a double length stroke where the rules require it — if he turns a medial s circle inside the angle of two adjoining letters, instead of CAUSES OF HESITATION. 139 outside — if he confuses the / hook with the n hook — if, in fact, he commits any glaring steno- graphic solecism, or if he hesitates where to place the vowels which a new outline may need in order to make it safely legible, he is not yet ripe for "speed practice." He must turn back to his elementary lessons, and by the diligent and repeated writing of numerous examples under each rule, must master those principles of the unjustly despised "corresponding style" which he, and perhaps his teacher, have been too eager to skim over for the sake of plunging with un- due haste into "the reporting style." If the young writer is ambitious to "write as reporters write," let him remember that it is by having these fundamental abbreviating principles at his finger-ends that the reporter of widest ex- perience is saved from breaking down many a time every day. INVARIABILITY OF OUTLINE. Another cause of hesitation with many a young stenographer is, that he allows himself to write a word sometimes with one outline and sometimes with another, so that often, when he is pressed for time, several conflicting outlines 140 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. suggest themselves for the same word; and among these he must make a hurried and hesi- tating choice. Invariability of outline is one prime factor of speed. The writer should not lengthen his accustomed outlines because the speaker is slow, nor try to make them unusually brief, because the speaker is fast. On the slow- est speaker the stenographer's briefest "report- ing style" should, if possible, be used, for the sake of maintaining uniform habits. On this subject, Andrew J. Graham has well said : "You should have settled forms for the more frequent and effective words. If you allow yourself to ex- press a given word by two or three different out- lines, there will always be some effort, and more or less loss of time, in deciding in each particu- lar case how you shall write." Again he says: "Writing a word in full part of the time, and part of the time by a word-sign, tends to cause hesitation." THE PHRASE-SEEKING MANIA. Another common cause of hesitation is undue anxiety to invent phrases. Any young writer who finds that his mind is consciously and con- stantly occupied during note-taking in deciding CAUSES OF HESITATION. 141 whether word-outlines can be joined, is writing more slowly than he need do. This remark does not Imply that phrases are never useful, and therefore never to be written. It means simply that facile, prompt, time-saving phrasing is the finishing accomplishment of the shorthand writer; that the mere novice (in which term I include every writer who has not attained at least a hundred words a minute) is incompetent to undertake impromptu phrase-construction. I do not mean that until a speed of 100 words a minute has been attained, each word should be written separately, but that in the student's ear- ly practice, before he has learned to write sepa- rate words unhesitatingly, he cannot profitably give any part of his attention to off-hand phrase- invention. At this stage he should confine him- self to two or three hundred common and useful phrases, which he has not invented for himself, but which he has memorized from good models — such phrases as it is, they are, may be, I am you are, shall be, will be, etc. The student, even at the beginning of his practice, should not write these common and useful phrases by separated outlines; for the habit of doing so might after- ward be hard to correct. Hence, at a stage when 142 THE FACTORS OP SHORTHAND SPEED. attempts at phrase-invention would be prema- ture and harmful, he may well spend time in memorizing from correct models a limited num- ber of common and highly useful phrases. PHRASING "RULES" OVER-RATED. There is nothing more unprofitable, and noth- ing more likely to make a slow writer, than the premature study of phrasing rules, and the pre- mature attempt to apply them in impromptu phrase-construction. The memorizing of a lim- ited number of correctly-formed and constantly- useful phrases will do more to give the. student a practical and instinctive insight into the art of phrasing than all the numerous musts and must-nots of "phrasing rules." Under the mis- guided advice of certain teachers and text-books, the premature effort to improvise phrases be- gins often before the circles, the hooks, the loops, etc., of elementary phonography have all been mastered, or even undertaken. The phrase- seeking mania, thus contracted during steno- graphic infancy, is, I sincerely believe, doing more to raise up a race of inevitably slow writers than any other single cause. The time which an immature writer may occasionally save CAUSES OF HESITATION. 143 by the invention of a properly-formed phrase (hit upon, if at all, by accident rather than good judgment), is vastly more than counterbalanced by the time lost in making, with hesitating, painful effort, awkward, clumsy, and illegible junctions, or in pondering upon junctions which, after time has been wasted in deliberating, strike the mind of even the beginner as inadmis- sible or impossible. Thus, in the case of many beginners, it is doubtful whether more time is lost upon the phrases which are not made or upon those which are. I have met many young writers who have become such pitiable victims of the phrasing disease as almost to forbid + he hope of their ever attaining the most modest and moderate speed. WHEN SHOULD IMPROMPTU PHRASING BEGIN? But it may be asked, when should the young reporter begin to form phrases for himself? Adopting in part the language of Thomas Allen Reed, I answer: When one has acquired a rea- sonable facility in writing, and a moderate degree of speed; when all the word-signs have been familiarized; when all the com- mon word-forms come readily to the hand; when 144 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. there is no longer any effort in thinking out the outlines of words; when, instead of the hand waiting for the mind, as formerly, the mind out- runs the hand; when words to be written as a group can be grasped by the mind as a group before the pen begins to write the first word of the combination; then, if the young reporter should feel a craving to get down on paper more quickly the word-forms as they crowd upon his mind, he may permit himself to do what has been well said to be a characteristic of the a<- complished reporter — "to catch words by the handful." The author of this happy expression (Mr. Fred Iiiand) has not said that any begin- ner can thus "catch words by the handful;" nor does he recommend that beginners should try to do so. At an advanced stage of shorthand study, when, by the ordinary abbreviating prin- ciples of the system, and by the use of a few hundred well-memorized word-signs and phrases, a moderate speed has been attained, the art of phrase-invention, to whatever extent desirable, can be practiced without running into ruinous channels — can be practiced in such a way as to be an aid to speed, not a hindrance. The experience which the student has by this CAUSES OP HESITATION. 145 time acquired will enable him, in making phrases for himself, to proceed wisely and prof- itably. And at this stage, he will have but small need for fine-spun "phrasing rules." Having learned phrase-making from practical examples, he will have little occasion for abstract precepts. His memorized phrases will have familiarized him with every useful principle of phrasing; and the writing of good phrases will have become to him almost an instinct. He will have learned that pen-lifts are saved at too great cost where their avoidance entails an ever-present hesita- tion. He will have acquired in reference to phrasing what Mr. Reed has called "the culti- vated instinct." By a sort of intuition he will avoid unnatural and awkward joinings. He will feel none of the misinstructed tyro's eagerness to string words together in combinations of im- moderate length. His experience in writing and reading will enable him to avoid phrases which may be confounded with single word-forms. Le- gitimate, time-saving phrases will drop from his pen with easy flow and without painful seeking. And thus the much-mooted phrase-problem will have been solved in the easiest, the safest, the best, the only practicable way. HOW DO REPORTERS PHRASE? That phrasing, rightly studied and rightly practiced, is a most valuable reporting aid, conducive alike to legibility and speed, can scarcely be considered an open question. Car- ried to a wild extreme, as the phrasing pro- pensity too often is, it no doubt becomes a hindrance, not a help; yet the fact remains too plain for argument that modern shorthand sys- tems give constant opportunities for writing words without a pen-lift so as greatly to in- crease speed without loss of legibility, often with gain in legibility; and these opportunities cannot be neglected by any stenographer who aspires to be a master of his art. Though on certain aspects of the phrasing question there have been wide differences and warm disputes, and though, as a matter of fact, some expert stenographers phrase much more freely and frequently than others; yet I believe the actual work of practical men shows as close a practical agreement on this subject as can be HOW DO REPORTERS PHRASE? 147 expected where so much depends upon personal peculiarities of mind and hand. Waiving all abstract questions connected with this subject, I shall undertake to show, for the information of the shorthand student, when, how, and to what extent expert stenographers actually phrase in work demanding high speed. MEMORIZED THRASES AND EXTEMPORIZED PHRASES. It is my belief that, while expert writers differ as to the number of phrases which they employ in rapid work, they substantially agree as to the classes of phrases which thev find useful and possible. The phrases used in actual reporting by experts fall naturally into two classes, the memorized phrase and the extemporized phrase. The memorized phrase may have been learned as a set task or may have been memorized un- consciously. Its characteristic is that it is not originated during actual reporting. The re- porting notes of every rapid writer show a vast, and I believe a preponderating, proportion of phrases which have not been constructed upon the impulse of the moment. Every stenographer stores up as a part of his stock in trade a goodly number of frequently-recurring phrases, such as 148 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. "it is," "which is," "there is," "I think," "I am," "we are," "do you," "are you," "there are," "must be," "can be," "are there," "in there," "did not," "do not," "had not." These and other simple phrases which every reporter's notes dis- close, are phrases which he cannot be supposed to have originated on the spur of the moment. They are such as he must have written over and over again hundreds and thousands of times. By reason of their simplicity and frequency, they have so worked themselves into his mind and fingers that they drop from his pen without con scious thought. He may have learned them ready-made from the phrase-lists in his text- books; or he may at. some long-past period have performed for himself the very simple labor of their construction; or he may have imbibed them unconsciously from the shorthand he has read or copied. Let it be particularly observed in regard to this large class of phrases found in the work of practical reporters, that they are the phrases of common, every-day speech. They recur again and again. Because the word-groups which these sign-groups represent are pat on the popu- lar tongue, they have become pat to the report- HOW DO REPORTERS PHRASE? 149 er's pen. Other phrases which he may have memorized have been forgotten, because rarely required ; for, as says the Phonetic Journal (July, 1892;) "A phrase, however good it may be, if it be one that the writer does not have occasion to use frequently, will not come to his mind [in speedy writing] with sufficient celerity to be available." But these common, everyday phrases have been stamped upon the reporter's memory in such a way that they have become, as it were, a part of his very nature. And most fortunate it is that repetition thus makes famil- iar to the reporter's pen those words and phrases which, because frequently uttered, are rapidly uttered. But we also find, scattered through the notes of accomplished reporters, phrases which have been extemporized as the speech proceeded. The extemporized phrase defines itself. The reporter in the act of writing brings to- gether two or more words which he has never been taught to join and which he has never joined before. He has formed a new combina- tion, and has done this off-hand. The extem- porized phrases which appear in the reporting notes of an accomplished writer are often most 150 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. happy aiid apposite, indicating thorough train- ing of mind and hand. But the cold truth must be told that, as the speaking becomes more and more rapid, the invention of phrases upon the spur of the moment becomes for most writers less and less easy, and consequently the extem- porized phrase grows rarer and rarer, until, when rapidity has reached its acme, the extem- porized phrase disappears almost entirely. There are very few reporters — I do not say there are none — who can evolve from brain and hand, impromptu phrases when the spoken words are speeding on with almost lightning-like rapidity. RAPID WRITING SHOWS FEW IMPROMPTU PHRASES. The remark of the Phonetic Journal (July, 1892,) in an article already quoted (presumably from the pen of Isaac Pitman,) that "almost all the great feats of fast writing have been accomplished with a very small use of phraseography," is true in this sense: that such feats bring into play very few phrases except such as have been thoroughly memorized. These exceptional exhibitions of fast writing show no phrases, or scarcely any, invented on HOW DO REPORTERS PHRASE? 151 the spur of the moment. Many a student who is laboring hard to acquire the art of phrase-in- vention, as if the secret of swift writing con- sisted in the evolution of shorthand phrases on the spur of the moment, will be startled to learn that impromptu phrases — phrases invented as the speaking proceeds — are not the phrases that help the reporter over the hard places. With an overwhelming majority of even expert writ- ers, it is undeniably true that when high speed begins, phrase invention ends. I think I might challenge any one to show me a specimen of notes written at as high a speed as two hundred words a minute, in which any extraordinary or peculiar combination of words, meeting the writer for the first time on that particular occa- sion, has been phrased. In the stress of rapid speech the memorized phrase is the reporter's main stay. If well memorized, it comes into play as fully and free- ly as in slower utterances, demonstrating more and more its indispensable utility. It is con- stantly and pricelessly useful. It is crowned by two special merits. Representing, as it always should, a frequently-recurring word-group, it pays for its adoption over and over again, day 152 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. after day and year after year. More than that, it helps where help is especially needed, because words or word-groups which frequently recur are spoken with more than average rapidity. CATCHING UP "WITH A BOUND." In praise of phrasing, the remark has been frequently repeated that the reporter, when pressed by a rapid speaker, who threatens to leave him in the lurch, is often enabled to bring himself up "with a bound" by means of some apt and timely phraseogram. For instance, Thomas Allen Reed speaks of phrases which, "like some good fairy, have helped him over the ground when running a hard race." But mark the illustrative phrases which he mentions. They are not phrases constructed for the first time amid the stress of rapid speaking, but such phrases as "in point of fact," "as a matter of fact," "do you mean to say," which he had doubtless been writing habitually for years. The welcome relief which phrasing affords at critical moments, when the reporter is lagging behind the speaker, comes not from impromptu phrasing. I doubt whether any practical re- porter — Mr. Reed or any one else — can name a HOW DO REPORTERS PHRASE? 153 case in which he was helped over a hard place by extemporizing a phrase-sign for an un- familiar word-group, meeting him for the first time in the midst of rapid speaking. RECURRENT WORD-GROUPS. Another class of phrases written sometimes by the practical reporter should not be over- looked. Though, as already remarked, the reporter in rapid writing very rarely com- bines in a phrase a group of words which he is called upon to write for the first time, yet a word-group unfamiliar to the writer when the speaker first utters it — peculiar perhaps to a given subject matter — may, when once introduced, recur again and again; and though the reporter does not phrase it when he first hears it, yet the recurrent word-group naturally suggests, before many repetitions have occurred, an appropriate sign-group. This sort of phrase-invention is with most reporters quite common, and is not in conflict with the fact already stated, that a phrase-sign is rarely extemporized during hurried speech for a word- group newly encountered. 154 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. THE PRACTICE OF REPORTERS SUMMARIZED. The practice of reporters in general with re- spect to the subject of phrasing may be summed up in the following propositions: 1. A vast majority of the phrases which the reporter writes are memorized phrases, which, if well memorized, are as freely used during rapid as during slow speaking. 2. During moderate speaking the reporter exercises to a limited degree, in some cases to a large degree, the faculty of phrase-invention upon word-groups encountered for the first time. 3. During extremely rapid speaking, he does not invent, or very rarely invents, sign-groups for absolutely new word-groups. 4. During rapid speaking he sometimes, in- deed frequently, invents sign-groups for recur- rent word-groups. THE BOOK-MAKER'S PHRASE. Besides the classes of phrases already de- scribed, (all of which are found in the notes of practical reporters), there is a third class of phrases, never discovered in genuine re- HOW DO REPORTERS PHRASE? 155 porting notes, but found only in the carefully elaborated specimens of so-called "reporting style" appearing from time to time in certain magazines and text-books. These are phrases concocted laboriously in the mind of some theo- rist, who, sitting in the quiet of his library, wielding no reporter's pen and pressed by no reporter's exigencies, — intent only on illustrat- ing the phrasing capabilities of a particular "system" — can take all the time he chooses to invent methods of joining words which cannot come together perhaps more than once in a life- time, and which, if encountered for the first time in actual speaking, would not and could not be written by any reporter in the man- ner in which the theorizing constructor of "re- porting exercises" takes so much pride. These forced and unnatural combinations may be called "book-maker's phrases," because on the pages of text-books they shine in all their glory ; or "excogitated phrases," because in their far- fetched intricacy they are the products of a state of mind unknown to the reporter. Note the char- acteristics of the "book-maker's phrase:" first, the word-group selected for phrasing is extremely rare ; second, the method of representation is gen- 156 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. erally overstrained and unnatural, such as could not be devised off-hand amid hurried speaking. Here are some examples of such phrases — not manufactured by myself, but culled from text- books or "reporting style" exercises represent- ing various authors and systems; for alas! the mania for inventing these "fearfully and won derfully made" combinations is not confined to a single author or a single "system:" "A scientific fact that the," "A single sandwich," "Before he ventured to speak of it," "In his imperial anger," "Of sacrificing their own rank," "As his master is," "When we receive their permission," "Is said to have forced," "Let their future course decide," "Murder their own families," "How many times will you receive this no- tice," "Having observed the ebb and flow," "Can stand in Washington street," "To plow your lands," "For all you know we may receive," "From the vile mire," HOW DO REPORTERS PHRASE? 157 "Smites its victims," "I know that I am not going to be applauded," "His spirited speeches," "Is essentially distinct," "Before a system of grammar," "In one of his many passages." It scarcely need be said that phrases of this kind, representing nothing desirable or even possible in reporting work, are most dangerous models for imitation; and if the student aims to achieve in his own writing, phrases based on models so vicious, he hopelessly handicaps him- self, and speed is out of the question. Yet strange to say, such phrases seem to have for certain minds a peculiar fascination. They are accepted by thousands of students as specimens of what reporters are doing in their everyday work and what the student must learn to do if he would attain reporting speed. Inspired by such vicious and deluding examples, one zealous young writer once showed me boastfully, as a praiseworthy achievement in the art of phrasing, the wonderfully useful (!) combina- tion "cut to the exact size of the coin," which he had written without lifting the pen ("to the" and "of the" being of course implied). 158 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. The mischief done and doing by circulat- ing specimens of a spurious "reporting style" which no reporter does or can write, has spread too far and wide for any words of mine ever to reach a tithe of its deluded victims. I can only make this earnest protest against these artifi- cial, far-fetched, impracticable methods of phras- ing, and appeal to practical reporters of every "system" to sustain the protest. Such phrases as those just exhibited, when once accepted by the student as models, are not only misleading but highly discouraging. When he finds, as he must, that he is unable to achieve any such ingenious combinations under speed pressure — when he finds that the writing in which he most studiously and laboriously phrases is his slowest work — he naturally con- cludes that anything like reporting skill must for months and years be beyond his reach. And well may he so conclude, if reporting skill de- pends upon achieving in practice the outlandish, overstrained and unnatural phrases which are placed before him as examples for imitation. AN OBJECT LESSON IN PHRASING. "Young stenographers," says the Phonetic Journal, "are astonished when they come HOW DO REPORTERS PHRASE? 159 across a fac simile of notes taken at a high speed and discover that there is no such abund- ance of phrases as they expected." In verifica- tion of this remark and to show how few and simple are the phrases by means of which rapid writing is accomplished, I invite the reader's attention to the text of three extracts from speech matter, written at high speed by three English stenographers. The magazine (The Re- porter's Journal, London,) from which these ex- tracts are taken, publishes along with them fac simile reproductions of the original notes. The words phrased in the original notes, I have indicated by parentheses. Let the reader observe the character of the phrases achieved under extreme speed pressure. Let him also note the word-groups which are not stenographi- cally phrased. Let him note the fewness of the sign-groups in comparison with the number which the ambitious beginner would suppose absolutely necessary for the attainment of high speed. Let him observe, too, the utter absence of that strained and unnatural creation of theo- rists and their followers — the excogitated phrase. Let him observe that scarcely one of the sign-groups actually used can be supposod 160 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. to have been invented on the spur of the mo- ment. Practically every phrase occurring in the written notes is the product of memory, not in- vention — is such as the writer must have been thoroughly familiar with before he took up his pen to write the passage. The following, written by Frank A. Williams at the rate of 210 words a minute, contains 26 phrases in 235 words: (Mr. President), (Ladies and Gentlemen): I (very much) wish to say a few words (on this subject) of possible speed. (I do not know) (that it comes) with (very good) grace (from my- self); but (I am going) to trust myself to your kindness which you have shown to a stranger in a strange land, to bear with me who deserves (so little), because I want to say something on behalf (of some others). (I suppose) (that this) whole business (with reference) (to this) contest arose (out of) the letter that (I had) the misfor- tune to write two (years ago) (to the) secretary of the International Shorthand Writers' Asso- ciation. (In that) letter I tried to say that I thought that when certain teachers and text- book writers ridiculed the idea of high speed — (I thought) (that it was) something which all HOW DO REPORTERS PHRASE? 161 stenographers ought to pay a little more atten- tion to, because wherever (there is) a (shorthand- writer) who can get a hundred (words a minute) on paper, (he is) very apt to foster and counten- ance the idea that anything above that (does not count). (In that) letter I made use of perhaps an injudicious expression. (It was) this, — that (I believe) (there are) several men in Michigan — and I used the term Michigan merely inciden- tally — who could write 250 (words a minute) (in court) when reporting. That was taken up and discussed." The following, written by George W. Bun- bury at the rate of 220 words a minute, con- tains 50 phrases in 283 words: (Lord Salisbury), (on rising) (to reply), (was re- ceived) with prolonged cheers. Having returned thanks (for the) unanimity (with which the) re- solution was carried, he proceeded to (point out) that constituencies (such as those) of Sussex (and London) and other boroughs which he might mention, which had long been endowed l with the) franchise (and which) had always been keenly interested (in the) political facts of the country, had almost without exception re- mained conservative, whereas the constituencies 162 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. not long (exercising the) franchise were (more or less) (at the mercy) of agitators seeking opportunities (of making) political capital (for themselves) (and their) party. Continuing (he also) said : As to (what the) issue of the impend- ing election (may be) (I am not) careful (to speak) (to you). Though (I have) the firm belief that (it will) issue in a manner agreeable (to our) (own hopes), I still think (that we have) even larger issues (to regard). One of the preceding speak- ers mentioned (that the) experience of all par- liaments (since the) (reform bill) (has been) (against us). (I do not think) (that is) entirely the case. (As far as) (I remember), (there has only) been one parliament (that has) gone through six years (under the) same ministry; (and that) parliament — Lord Palmerston's Par- liament — when (it was) dissolved, issued in a strong majority (for the) Government of the day. The (Prime Minister) died immediately after- wards, but (I hope) (I am not) to consider that among necessary events. Individual ministers come and go, but the conservative cause lives. After a brief reference (to the) untroubled con- dition of foreign politics, (lie also), referring (to the) labor problem (at home), continued, (we can- HOW DO REPORTERS PHRASE? 163 not) look abroad (into the) territories (which are) occupied." The following, written by Harry Toothill at the rate of 276 words a minute, contains 41 phrases in 276 words: (Mr. Goschen) said: (I do not know) (how many) (of you) (in this) room I may address as brother electors of the Rye division of Sussex. (I am) here to-night (in my) capacity as an elector (for this) division, and (I am) here to con- gratulate (this association) on having taken an early opportunity of showing (that the) south- eastern parts of the (United Kingdom) (are not) behind the rest (in their) strong interest (in the) great controversy (which is now) being waged throughout the length and breadth of the town. (We are) sometimes told that (in the) south- eastern and southern parts of the (United King- dom) (we have not) advanced (to the) political intelligence (which is) displayed in Lancashire (and the) northern constituencies. (Let us do) what (in us) lies to disprove the charge. The south of England has lost some (of its) represen- tatives, (and the) numbers thus saved (in the) representation (have been) distributed among more populous neighborhoods. (Let us look) (to 164 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. it) (that we) make the best use of the representa- tion left (to us). (I do not know) (that there has been) any more momentous time (in the) politi- cal history (of this country) than the present. (Not only) has there been a new extension of the franchise, (but the) electoral divisions (have been) readjusted and a process (has been) going on in politics which might be likened (to the) breaking up of the regimental system (in the) army. Still we (must not) exaggerate. Much is said about a transfer of power (to the) masses. I prefer to speak of the repartition of power, be- cause power must remain and I trust will re- main." Each of the specimens of the original notes of the foregoing text is accompanied in the Re- porters' Journal with a shorthand key, which, having been prepared by the editor at his leisure, shows far more profuse phrasing than the hard-pressed reporter had time to think of. There could scarcely be a better demonstration than is thus furnished of the fact that "the mind when pushed works by the easiest methods;" and that phrase-invention cannot take place to any considerable extent under extreme speed pressure. In the language of the Phonetic HOW DO REPORTERS PHRASE? 165 Journal, "A phrase, however useful it may be, if it be one that the writer does not have occa- sion to use frequently, will not come to his mind when under examination [for speed] with suffi- cient celerity to be available. * * * In very rapid work there.is no time for thought, no time to recall useful devices, no time to do anything except to write down as mechanically as possi- ble that which is heard. Paradoxical as it may seem, it is true that the more slowly one writes, the more easy it is to use phraseography freely. The mind has more leisure to think, and the hand more time to form intricate combinations neatly and carefully." "THE MOST INFERNAL MIS- TAKE THAT WAS EVER MADE." Though, as has been shown, the impromptu invention of phrases cuts little figure in the stenographer's most rapid work, thousands of young stenographers in all English-speaking countries are toiling to acquire the art of invent- ing shorthand phrases off-hand. They arc taught to believe that this art is "the secret of rapid writing" — the indispensable accomplish- ment of every person worthy the name of a re- porter. And the student is invited to begin the study of this art almost as soon as he has mas- tered the stenographic alphabet. By one author the subject of phrase-invention is introduced in the eighth lesson of the text-book ; by another, in the fourth; by another, in the third! The student, it seems, is not to content himself with learning carefully-constructed and fully-tested phrases, as set down for him by an experienced author or teacher. With no better equipment than his own crude and immature notions, he MOST INFERNAL MISTAKE EVER MADE. 167 must plunge in and construct phrases for him- self. He must be ever on the alert lest some phrase combination admissible by the rules of phrasing may escape him. "In all his practice," says the well-known stenographic author, Mr. W. W. Osgoodby, "the student should carefully watch for and study every opportunity for useful phrasing that may be afforded by the matter he is writing." And he must not be discouraged, if he finds himself losing time in his attempt to construct for himself those supposed time-sav- ers — extemporized phrases. Says Mr. Fred Pitman: "Let him (the student) sedulously look for phrases which are of value and employ them. If it is necessary for him to write slowly in order to secure the use of phrases,. then without question it is proper that the student in a con- siderable portion of his daily practice should write slowly. * * * This will confirm him in the habit of finding phrases, of making phrases, of using phrases — a habit, we aver, which should be cultivated in the highest possi- ble degree by those who desire to write with great swiftness." Thus by bad precept is the bad example of the excogitating phraser re- inforced. 168 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. Dissenting, as I do most decidedly, from such teaching as that just quoted, I cite with pleas- ure the words of an eminent reporter of long ex- perience, Mr. A. P. Little, of Rochester, whose emphatic condemnation of phrasing is, as his language shows, directed, not against those common phrases which every reporter has, and must have, at his pen's point for constant use, but against the misguided and fruitless at- tempts to achieve high speed by impromptu phrasing: "Teachers of shorthand are urging pupils to phrase. Authors are putting in their books, 'Just as soon as you get the elementary princi- ples of this system of shorthand into your nod- dle, go to wovk and phrase.' The most infernal mistake that was ever made by authors and teachers of shorthand! * * * All the teach ers from Maine to San Francisco say, 'Just as soon as you learn the principles of shorthand, sit down and learn to phrase; you will have to, if you wish to write rapidly.' I defy any one to do it to any great extent in rapid work. There are old stereotyped phrases which almost all stenographers use, which represent words that coalesce as easily as water and whiskey; and MOST INFERNAL MISTAKE EVER MADE. 169 that is the phrasing which can be done with readiness — which does not retard speed." Let me state some of the objections to the study of the art of extemporaneous phrase-in- vention, as commonly practiced. THE LEARNEK'S INCOMPETENCE. 1. Fn the early stages of stenographic study, when phrase-invention is too often undertaken, the attempt to practice this art is par- ticularly mistimed, because the student has then too many other things to think of. At this point his mind is largely taxed by the effort to learn or recall the common logo- grams, and to devise proper forms for other fre- quently-recurring words. He needs to have the unconnected forms of ordinary words fixed in his mind as to both outline and position. But in phrasing, the normal position of many words is constantly varied. To the advanced stenog- rapher, this offers slight embarassment. He can phrase "you may think," "you are aware," "our rights," without disturbing in his memory the normal location of "think," "aware," and "rights" as isolated words. But such things confuse the learner. He has another trouble, 170 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. Not only accustomed position, but accustomed outline is, in phrasing, permitted to be varied. The commonly-recognized practice by which, as one author expresses it, "many words are lengthened in order that they may be joined in certain phrases," requires stringent limitations at the hands of even the advanced stenographer. But even if it be not true that "invariability of outline is one prime factor of speed" — even if it be assumed that variability of outline can safely be indulged in by the experienced writer — the mere learner cannot afford to have word- forms thus unsettled. Who can doubt, for in- stance, that the too-early writing of t-m, in a phrase for the word "time" must delay or defeat the mastering of t in the first position as a logo gram? 2. In the early stage at which phrasing is usu- ally undertaken, the student is incompetent, with all the guidance that much-vaunted rules can give him, to distinguish good phrases from bad. If encouraged or allowed to invent phrases for himself, he will invent many more bad ones than good ones. "Beginners," it has been well remarked, "take much longer time in thinking out inconvenient and illegible joinings MOST INFERNAL MISTAKE EVER MADE. 171 than would be occupied in writing the words separately;" they undertake to "join every word that is physically capable of uniting with an- other." The stenographic beginner (and in this term I include every one who has not attained a speed of 80 to 100 words a minute) is no more compe- tent to invent phrases than to invent word-signs. No one proposes to set the learner adrift to in- vent his own word-signs; yet as between the invention of phrases and the invention of word- signs, the former is much more difficult For phrase-invention many indefinite, abstruse, elab- orate rules are deemed necessary; but the whole science of word-sign invention might be com- pressed into this single sentence: Let the word for which a word-sign is sought be a common word of long and difficult outline; and let the sign adopted be brief, unambiguous and easily written. Why should not the learner, who is as- sumed to be able to undertake the difficult task of phrase-invention, be set to work with this simple rule to construct his own word-signs? What is the character of the phrasing rules which the shorthand student, with an experi- ence of a few weeks or months, is expected to 172 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. apply for himself? He is enjoined, for instance, to avoid phrases which involve awkward junc- tions; but his immature judgment is not com- petent to determine whether a particular junc- tion is awkward enough to be condemned by the rules. He is enjoined not to make phrases too long; but how many words make a phrase "too long," he can not tell. He is told not to write any phrase which might possibly be confounded with a single word-form or with another phrase; but his familiarity with other word-signs and other phrases is too limited and narrow to ena- ble him to apply this rule intelligently. In his early and misjudged attempts to make phrases for himself, the student, despite the most careful stud}' of phrasing rules, makes and tolerates phrases, whose awkwardness and necessary slowness he is incompetent to recog- nize — phrases which no reporter would or could use. Thus his judgment is so vitiated and blunted that in many cases the art of making good phrases is never acquired. That "culti- vated instinct," which later ought to enable him to distinguish intuitively between good phrases and bad, has no opportunity for healthy growth. 3. By reason of the pauses which he con- MOST INFERNAL MISTAKE EVER MADE. 173 stantly makes to decide whether given words should or should not be joined, he contracts a slow, jerky, spasmodic movement of the hand, inconsistent with that steady, pauseless motion which has been described in a previous chapter as the characteristic of the speedy writer. Says a stenographer of the widest experience and soundest judgment: "I have seen young re- porters laboriously stringing words together, not flowingly and easily, but by a series of un- comfortable jerks and twists that were painful to contemplate, and seemed to threaten an at- tack of writer's cramp." THE PHRASE-SEEKING MANIA. 4. In these early attempts at phrase-inven- tion the student is in peril of acquiring the phrase-seeking mania — that state of mind which constantly inquires, as the pen passes from character to character, whether there lurks in them some possibility of being joined. There can be no more deplorable state of mind for any would-be stenographer than a ceaseless anxiety to discover, as words are uttered, opportunities for phrasing. This habit of mind, once acquired, is extremely difficult to eradicate, and if not 174 THE FACTORS OP SHORTHAND SPEED. eradicated, is fatal to speed. It might almost be said that the question whether a person is to attain even moderate speed depends largely upon whether he acquires or escapes the habit of phrase-seeking. The loss of time which this habit entails is al- most incalculable. Word-groups which do not admit of any equivalent sign-groups are far more numerous than those which do. The phrase-seeker, as he proceeds, must give some measure of thought to each impracticable or un- desirable joining that may occur to him; he must take time in deciding, with more or less thought, that it is- impracticable or undesirable. Of course, a writer who thus loses time must write slowly. 5. The phrase-seeker, though aiming to ac- quire, is not acquiring, a correct reporting style. He is not learning to think as reporters think or to write as reporters write. Phrase- seeking is not a reporting habit. The reporter uses phrases, few or many, varying according to his personal peculiarities and education; but the successful reporter is never a phrase-seeker. 0. By the waste of time upon the study of phrase-invention, the student's final attainment MOST INFERNAL MISTAKE EVER MADE. 175 of amanuensis or reporting skill is always de- layed, often defeated. The time wastefully and fruitlessly spent by young writers in the study of phrase-invention accounts largely for the fact that so much labor in shorthand study shows generally so little result in speed acquired. Many a student, because the phrase-seeking habit fastens itself upon him, becomes for all time a slower writer than he might have been if he had never known there was such a thing as phrasing. 7. The phrase-seeking habit prevents that au- tomatic, or almost automatic, action of mind and hand which must be thoroughly established before high speed can be attained. Instead of cultivating the habit of anxiously searching for phrases, the young writer, if he would become a reporter, must aim to banish, during his attempts at speedy writing, all anxious thought or effort, remembering that the acme of stenographic success is not attained until, in the apt language of Mr. Irland, "shorthand be- comes only a swifter longhand, as plain and as effortless — when the fingers become automatic recording agents, making as perfect a record, with as little effort, as the pencil of a self-reg- istering wind-gauge." PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS ABOUT PHRASING. MEMORIZING PHRASES. 1. As the stock of phrases which the writer is to use will consist mainly of the commonplace, everyday phrases of ordinary speech, he must contract at the beginning no habits which may interfere with the ready use of such phrases. The beginner must not allow himself, nor must he be allowed, to write separately words which ultimately he should write constantly together. To this extent he not only may, but must, phrase. There are certain commonplace phrases which no reporter ever writes as separate words, and which, therefore, no student should ever thus write. If in the early stages of his shorthand education he writes "I do," "you may," "will be,'' etc., as separated words, the habit of doing so may later prove very hard to eradicate. In learning from the start to write for such common word-groups their accepted sign-groups, the student accumulates gradually that goodly stock of everyday phrases which SUGGESTIONS ABOUT PHRASING. 177 is to stand him in good stead during every fu- ture hour of his reporting experience. 2. But, instead of depending upon incidentally meeting the phrases which he is to memorize as a part of his stock in trade, he should have placed before him in special lists and in reason- able quantity, from day to day and from week to week, that limited number of phrases which ex- perience has shown it to be worth every stu- dent's while to memorize. The gradual storing of the memory with a limited number of useful phrase-signs is just as reasonable and necessary as the memorizing of useful word-signs. The phrases selected for this purpose should be those which occur most constantly in all kinds of matter, and will, therefore, be the most use- ful to the amanuensis or the reporter — "those stereotyped phrases which all reporters use, which represent words that coalesce as easily as whiskey and water." The useful phrases which are thus to be memorized I would not permit the student to invent, or even select, for himself. His imperfect stenographic education and his immature judgment disqualify him for deciding what phrases are useful enough to be worth memorizing. 178 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. The aggregate number of phrases which the student will need to memorize as a necessary part of his shorthand equipment is not formid- able; on the contrary, I believe the number will be found surprisingly small — perhaps not more than four, five or six hundred, all told. They should be such as, when learned, will be kept fresh in the writer's memory by constant recur- rence. As the editor of the Phonetic Journal has remarked in words already quoted, "A phrase, however good it may be, if it be one that the writer does not have occasion to use fre- quently, will not come to his mind [when needed] with sufficient celerity to be available." To un- dertake to memorize phrases by the thousands is a sad mistake, because such elaborate lists can never be memorized thoroughly; and as al- ready urged, the imperfect memorizing of any- thing which is to be of use in shorthand is al- ways worse than never undertaking to memorize it at all. Overloading the memory is one of the most common and most natural errors connected with the study of shorthand. Certain adver- tisements offer to the student "five thousand lightning phrases," the memorizing of which, as the author of the book alluringly promises, SUGGESTIONS ABOUT PHRASING. 179 will have an almost magical effect in making the student a reporter. The innocent purchaser of such voluminous collections of phrases does not know that no living reporter has ever mem- orized five thousand phrases. PREMATURE PHRASE-INVENTION FORBIDDEN. 3. If the tyro is to escape the dangers of the phrasing mania, he must not permit his mind to be occupied while he writes, with a straining effort to join words which come together rarely and casually. Immature writers do themselves great harm by premature attempts to originate phrases. The phrasing habit which is to be cul- tivated as a preparation for reporting is the writing of familiar phrases with the very great- est rapidity — not the invention of phrases on the spur of the moment. When the proper stage has been reached, the fortunate writer who may pos- sess the faculties requisite for successfully prac- ticing the art of off-hand phrase-invention, will find that graceful, safe, time-saving phrases will literally suggest themselves. A "cultivated in- stinct" will guide mind and hand promptly and unerringly, though abstract phrasing rules may never have been learned. 180 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. SPURIOUS "REPORTING STYLE." 4. The learner should be especially on his guard against the misleading and corrupting influence of artificially-constructed speci- mens of so-called "reporting style," abound ing in far-fetched and (in practice) im- possible phrases, gotten up at leisure by text-book makers and "system" mongers. The student, in aiming to join words which occur together only once in a lifetime, is not cultivat- ing reporting habits; he is undertaking to do what no reporter (unless an individual of very exceptional genius) does or can do in rapid writ- ing. As already pointed out, the commonest, and, in very rapid writing, almost the only phrases used by the reporter are those repre- senting the over-and-over again combinations of everyday speech. 5. The student should without ceasing strive to abandon, if he has contracted it, the habit of phrase-seeking. Throwing to the winds such advice as that already quoted, let him not, "in all his practice, carefully watch for and study every opportunity for useful phrasing that may be afforded by the matter he is writing." Let him pay no regard to the injunction, "If neces- SUGGESTIONS ABOUT PHRASING. 181 sary to write slowly in order to secure the use of phrases, then, without question, it is proper that the student, in a considerable portion of his daily practice, should write slowly." Let him avoid especially one common incident of the phrase-making mania, — voluntarily falling behind the speaker in order that phrases may be thought out. "PLAYFUL STENOGRAPHIC GYMNASTICS." 6. Nor must the student be misled by some remarkable phrases which he may occasionally discover in bona fide reporting notes, taken very slowly or at only moderate speed. Such notes, while showing (if from the hands of an expert) natural and artistic extemporized phrases, show also occasionally some outlandish, inartistic phrases, which would not be indulged in if the speaking were rapid. It sometimes hap- pens that, merely to relieve the tedium of a slowly-uttered speech, the reporter, in a spirit, as it were, of playfulness or caprice, resorts to phrasing expedients which his own deliberate judgment would not sanction and which he would be the last one to hold up as models for imitation. Speaking of the whim that some- 182 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. times tempts a reporter to indulge in these fan- tastic and abnormal phrasings, Thomas Allen Reed remarks: "I have sometimes tried my hand in actual reporting at writing these long phraseograms, not because I approve of the practice, but simply for amusement; and my note-books accordingly contain here and there some of the most appalling characters that ever met the eye. Note-taking is generally too seri- ous business to admit of indulgence in this kind of entertainment; but it is not, perhaps, surpris- ing that one occasionally endeavors to relieve the monotony of a long and dull speech by some playful stenographic gymnastics. Such phrases are anything else than aids to speed, and would not be written by any man in his senses, except as a matter of amusement." 7. While in general the student should make no attempt at phrase-invention, he should be on the alert for what have been described as recur- rent phrases. If he finds that, in any par- ticular line of work or practice, certain words occur together frequently, let him join them, if they admit of ready junction. No one should fail to make the phrases which his daily work invites him to make. It is important SUGGESTIONS ABOUT PHRASING. 188 that recurrent word-groups, which are usually spoken with more than average rapidity (the different words of the phrase being blended like the syllables of a single word) should be repre- sented by facile sign-groups. The essence of practical phrasing has been well expressed by a veteran reporter in this language: "Whenever two or more words occur in juxtaposition fre- quently and can be joined without an effort, I make a phrase." PHRASING RULES OVERVALUED. 8. The student should not expect to acquire the art of phrasing by the mere study of phras- ing rules, most of which, as already shown, are so general, or so abstruse, or so variable as to give very little practical aid. I do not believe any accomplished reporter who phrases judi- ciously and aptly, ever acquired any consider- able portion of his skill by the study of phrasing rules. Nothing but study and practice of nor- mal phrase-models, selected by practical men from practical work, can give one that "culti- vated instinct" which will almost intuitively adopt good junctions and unhesitatingly avoid bad ones. 184 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. THE LAW OF AUTOMATISM. 9. To achieve phrases by varying estab lished word-forms or elongating established word-signs, violates what I believe should be ac- cepted as a maxim, — "Invariability of outline is a prime factor of speed." To allow one's self to write a word in several different ways to gratify a momentary whim or to achieve some tempting phrase, entails, whenever the word is to be sepa- rately written, a certain degree of hesitation, which must postpone or defeat that happy condition — the most favorable condition to high speed — when mind and hand shall work, as it were, automatically. In this matter there is found a strong analogy be- tween shorthand and longhand. In the latter no one attains great speed so long as he is com- pelled to think about the spelling of the words, the distinctions between capitals and small let- ters, the proper use of punctuation-marks, etc That great desideratum, automatism — "the ab- solute disengagement of the mind, so far as con- sciousness is concerned, from the process of writing" — cannot be attained or approximated except by cherishing in every way uniformity of writing habits. Without fixity of practice, SUGGESTIONS ABOUT PHRASING. 185 there cannot be automatism; and without a large degree of automatism, there cannot be speed. Absolute automatism may not be attain- able; but the nearer the writer approaches it, (other things being equal,) the greater the rapid- ity he will reach. One of the ways in which uniformity of out- line is commonly sacrificed is by writing for phrase purposes a full outline instead of an ac- customed word-sign. For instance, the word "number," ordinarily expressed by a logogram, is by some authors elongated exceptionally, in order to make possible the phrase "this num- ber." So, too, we read in one of the standard phrase-books: "When 'belong' is joined to a pre- ceding stem, it should be written in full, because its abbreviation bl in such cases would con- flict with 'believe.' " The momentary gain, if any, by writing phrases which thus vio- late uniformity of outline, is much more than counterbalanced by the writer's ine- vitable hesitation when he undertakes to write separately, with its briefer sign, the word which for phrase-purposes has been elongated. The usual result is that he finally comes to write the longer form under all cir- 186 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. cumstances. And thus a useful word-sign is obliterated from his system. Uniformity of word-outline is, in the second place, violated when a full outline of excep- tional construction is substituted for the out- line which usage has established as the best. For instance, in order to achieve the phrase "in his letter," some authors write the last word of the phrase (contrary to the settled form of the separate word) with downward I. So, too, in order to make possible or convenient the phrase "in this life," the downward form of I is used in the word "life," in place of the accustomed upward form. One author violates the law of uniformity, and consequently the law of automatism, by giv- ing for phrase purposes three different methods of writing the frequent word "him." If we follow his authority, this very common word is to be written, according to circumstances, either with a hook, a tick, or a full consonant stroke. Here is the author's language: "If for any rea- son 'him' cannot be conveniently indicated by the m hook, it should be written with 'hay'; but where the preceding stem bears a final hook, it may sometimes be indicated by a final tick, SUGGESTIONS ABOUT PHRASING. 187 struck at an acute angle." Another author gives four different methods of expressing the very common word "to": 1. By the stem t in the third position ; 2. by halving the stem of the preceding word; 3, by changing the s circle at the end of the preceding word to a small loop; or, 4, by dropping the form of the succeeding word one-half the length of the t below the third position of the same word. It seems to me too obvious for argument that an attempt to write by variable methods common words like "him," "to," etc., must, with any ordinary writer, cause hesitation and loss of speed. Un- less one's methods of writing be reduced to set- tled and uniform laws, automatism, with the promptness, ease and rapidity which attend it, can never be attained. NEEDLESS VOCALIZATION. 10. As another means of establishing uniform habits and cultivating automatism, the student should make it a rule never to use in a phrase a form which, thus used, requires to be vocal- ized, though when standing alone it needs no vocalization. The expected gain from avoiding a pen-lift becomes utterly delusive when the 188 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. avoidance entails an extra movement, frequently a backward movement, for the insertion of a vowel. In most cases the final effect of indulg- ing in such phrases is that the word is con- stantly vocalized, even when standing alone and when vocalization is unnecessary. Thus for the sake of an occasional phrase, time is lost in per- haps hundreds of instances by needless writing of vowels. 11. If a given word-group has assigned to it a given sign-group, let that sign-group be used uniformly. To write words sometimes as a phrase and sometimes with their separated forms, interferes with uniformity of habit and nurtures hesitation. DON'T SACRIFICE SAFETY FOR SPEED. 12. Still further seeking fixity of practice, the student may wisely omit to learn or practice phrasing expedients which are recommended to be used or not used, according as the context may make them safe or unsafe. I extract from various text-books illustrations of these unde- sirable expedients: . "'Was it' may generally be written with the half-length zd in the first position, the same SUGGESTIONS ABOUT PHRASING. 189 as 'as it,' with which it does not often conflict. * * * To avoid the possibility of conflict, some reporters always write 'was it' in full, which in- terferes with fluent phrasing." " 'Other' may be added by lengthening when it would not be mistaken for 'there.' " " 'Had' and 'do' may generally with safety be written d in any part of a phrase; but if there should arise any conflict, 'do' should be dis- joined, leaving the field to 'had.' " " 'Us,' when added by a circle to verbs, will sometimes conflict with another form of the verb, as 'flrive us' with 'gives,' 'put us' with 'puts,' etc., and should, therefore, be used cautiously, and when in doubt as to its safety, the writer should employ the stem s." " 'The omission of 'to' when it precedes a stroke to which it could not properly be joined, may be intimated in the reporting style by com mencing that stroke at the line of writing, pro- vided that the word so written would not be liable to be mistaken for some other word in the third position." By such expedients as these, the young re- porter is invited to seek brevity by dubious and dangerous methods. He should firmly steel 190 THE FACTORS OF SHORTHAND SPEED. himself against the temptation. Methods of writing which are sometimes unsafe must be avoided always. Few writers can in the midst of rapid note-taking depart from their ordinary habits. And even if the writer's mind be so alert as to give the danger-signal whenever an accustomed method of writing would prove hazardous, the general habit cannot be given up in a particular case without hesitation, with loss of time which may be fatal. EXAMPLE IS BETTER THAN PRECEPT. 13. After zealous study the student may, and doubtless will, find that his efforts at speed writing show fewer phrases than similar matter in his text-book. But this should not dishearten him. It has been remarked by the most eminent of English stenographers that some of the best reporters within his acquaintance indulge in phrasing very sparingly. It is far better to phrase too little than too much; and let it never be forgotten that phonetic shorthand, though written with a limited infusion of phrases, is in apt hands capable of great speed. 14. In order that the student may deeply impress upon his mind the conservative SUGGESTIONS ABOUT PHRASING. 191 methods of accomplished reporters in respect to phrasing, and realize how far they fall short of the excessive and extreme methods of phras- ing so often exhibited in text-book specimens of "the reporting style," let him lose no opportunity to study the speedily-written notes of leading members of the reporting profession. *: factors of typewriter Spec! FOR SPEED AND ACCURATE WORK YOU MUST 1 1 f> ¥ T A Type-Bar Machine, . . A Uniform and Easy Touch Machine, ... A Machine Mechanically Correct, . . A Straight Line Key-Board, . . A Duplicate Key- Board, . . A Single Scale and Swinging Platen, . . Line Spacing and Carriage Return in One Motion. All These Points and Many Other Improvements are Factors in the Superior Construction of IMPROVE ORDER OF THE .',GE. €Ik Smith Premier typewriter Miss Katherine V. Curry, at Syracuse. N. Y., April 6, 1892, wrote 180 words in one minute on The Smith Premier, and on April 27 attained the record of 192 words. Popular with Stenographers Everywhere, Ask for New Catalogue with Half-Tone Illustrations. £be Smith Premier typewriter 0e., SYRACUSE, N. Y., U. S. A. Branch Offices in 42 Principal Cities in the U. S. and England. I I Cbe... Stenographer Devoted to the interests of £>£• the Writers of Shorthand, and Users of the Typewriter To learn Shorthand at Home, to become pro- ficient as an Amanuensis or expert as a Law Reporter, you should subscribe for "The Stenographer." Contains a LAW REPORTING DEPARTMENT. TEACHERS' DEPARTMENT. LADIES' DEPARTMENT. LEARNERS' DEPARTMENT. Shorthand Notes by the Leaders in Various Systems. Shorthand Talks by the Editor. f rands f). Remperley, 38 S. Sixth St., Philadelphia, Pa. Mr. B. De Bear. 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IAAAAAAAAAA MM MM S3 MM MM MM JUL BOSTON £» *> per Oy CENT. Others may be good but THERE CAN BE BUT ONE AAA AAA and that is the one you want. «««««««« If I were starting to learn Phonography now, I should get Benn Pitman's Manual and other books, and follow them. — Dennis F. Murphy, Official Reporter of the United States Senate. We use BENN PITMAN'S system of shorthand. Some years ago I studied Isaac Pitman's system, Graham's, Munson's, Hoyt's, and others, and from each got some useful hints: but I finally set- tled down to BENN PITMAN'S as being the simplest and most practical of all. I found it the easiest system to learn, and, when learned, the most legible.— George C. Holland, Official Reporter of the Canadian Senate. To supply the Increasing demand for stenogra- phers, schools of shorthand and typewriting have been established In various parts of the country, and, with few exceptions, all business colleges have a "department of shorthand." A number of systems are taught, but that of Benn Pitman is more generally used than any other in this country, and may be called the American Sys- tem.— Extract from tin- Repittt of the Commissioner of Education (Washington, D. C), for the year 1887-88, page 927. The system is simple in form, brief, legible, rapid and useful.— Com m itt ee nt Airards, World's Columbian Kxpoeition, CJiicayo, 1893. ««««« For Wholesale, Introduction and Exchange prices of Text-books, address THE PHONOGRAPHIC INSTITUTE COMPANY, CINCINNATI. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY Los Angeles This book is DUE on the last date stamped below. MAY 12W51 Attfr2 OREG0 Form L9-25m-9,'47(A5618)444 UNIVERSITY ot CALIFOKm* AT LOS ANGELES LIBRARY UC SOUTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY A 000 564 849 8 Z53 B8lf 1897