![]() Try this out. Below is a note written by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, written to longtime friend and correspondent Charlotte von Stein a hundred years after Newton’s letter. William Briggs, written on 20 June 1682 and beginning, “I have perused very ingenious Theory of Vision.” Despite its obvious age and the spread of the ink from the quill, the lines are so straight and the words dashed off with such seeming confidence that at once you get a mental picture of this 17th-century thinker as if he’d sat at his writing desk no more than a decade ago-not 333 years. Composed along a gentler (and opposite) slant than Hemingway’s is a letter by Sir Isaac Newton to Dr. Everything travels downhill-until the very bottom of the page, where he has to sneak a few words above the edge of the paper.īut even going back centuries you can feel an intimate connection to handwritten words that’s impossible via typeset text. What’s that about? (And did he really spell “gray” two ways?) Finally, those sloping lines! I thought perhaps they were an aberration, perhaps due to having to write on a cramped surface, but I found plenty of other examples of Hemingway’s slant. By contest, note Hemingway’s straight, vertical parentheses, or parenthetical dividers, separating his aside about Uncle Wolfie, the dead gray cat. ![]() And those “t”s are crossed just barely, very high on the circular stems. ![]() In this letter on Cuban stationery dated 20 February 1948, Papa’s loopiness is so profuse that you get the idea that his pen is simply making lines of tight, close circles, from his curvy “f”s to his rounded double “t”s-check out the words “getting” and “little”-to the curls of his “g”s and “y”s. Hemingway’s handwriting is peculiar in a different way: compact, loopy, legible-and composed along a precipitous slant. Looking at her striking script, I can imagine why one of her correspondents, literary critic Thomas Wentworth Higginson, might’ve written, upon finally meeting Dickinson, that he’d never been “with any one who drained my nerve power so much. But it could also seem intense, probing, and open-ended. Although mostly unpublished in her lifetime, Dickinson’s poetry was for the period experimental and expressive and free-in keeping with her hand. Her “C,” “A,” and “W” are open and round, but the crosses on her “t”s are like sword slashes, angling viciously down. Her words are not only widely spaced but often separated further by small, peculiar dashes. The handwriting of the 19th-century poet and the 20th-century author could hardly be less similar. Dickinson, a famous introvert and recluse, wrote in a large semi-scrawl that seems almost impossibly loose and airy (a fact that’s prompted a number of handwriting analyses). Googled around a bit more and found samples of the penmanship of a couple of well-known American writers, Emily Dickinson (1830–1886) and Ernest Hemingway (1899–1961). ![]() To doodle, of course, you need a pen or pencil. They attest to his creativity, suggest that it comes pretty easy for him, and hint at a personality people have seen since the ’60s-McCartney’s playful air. What stands apart about McCartney’s note is how he closes with a couple of doodled portraits, apparently representing himself and Linda. The former Beatle’s style is a connected cursive, nothing fancy (although the double-stacked “c”s in his surname are interesting)-really, the kind of casual, modern handwriting you might see every day. As cute as his endearing “Princess,” to me, is his little cross-out of the extraneous “y” at the end of “ever.” Typewritten or sent via email, such a love note wouldn’t carry anywhere near the soul.ĭecided to hunt around and see what the handwriting of other musicians looked like, and I happened on a Christie’s auction lot, a letter by Paul McCartney to surrealist Desmond Morris, written in 1987 after McCartney’s wife Linda had purchased Morris’s painting “ The Survivors.” It’s a brief letter, written on Blossom Wood Farm stationery in a dashed-off upright hand. ![]() It seems easy to match his hand with his on-stage persona, his flair. Who knew John Cash had such stylish hand-printing, with its consistent tilt and distinctively double-looped “I”? I notice that Cash, like me, had taken to using a two-story “a,” and that the tails on his “y” and “g” tend to curve to the right. I’m thinking in particular of a letter from Johnny Cash to his wife, June Carter Cash, that appears in House of Cash (by son John Carter Cash) and has been circulated widely online. ![]()
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