On Penmanship
Penmanship, or, the art of writing well, is a lost art. Penmanship is not just writing legibly, where one can merely read what was written, but is instead writing with a personal style and flourish that allows the meaning of the words to flow with ease due to the full concentration of the mind bearing the meaning of the words, not deciphering the letters to spell them.
This art is lost because of the prevalence of computers, smartphones and tablets. Penmanship is no longer taught to the attention it deserves in school, and subsequently neither is cursive.
This is a terrible development, as now children will not be able to read historical documents in their original script, before there were type writers and computers. Vitally important documents, chiefly to the patriot. Documents such as The Declaration of Independence, The Constitution of the United States of America of 1788, and not to mention the letters exchanged by the early patriots of the United States, traitors to the British Crown until the war was won, are all written by cursive hand.
Penmanship is still the mark of a well-educated and thoughtful individual, more so now than ever.
So take care to practice neat and consistent hand writing and cursive, especially at your own insistence. Stay Grey, my friends.












