Sylvia Plath wrote some Gregg shorthand after all! Her July
5, 1945 letter to Aurelia Plath, written from Camp Helen Storrow, includes
three shorthand characters indicated but not transcribed in the Letters vol.1. Curious, I had a look at the original letter in the Lilly Library's Plath mss. II.
Twelve-year-old Sylvia had written to her mother, “Can you tell me what-these signs in shorthand mean?” and drew three shorthand
characters. The first two are linked by “and,” and the final character is in
parentheses, followed by a period. Why these shorthand characters
and not others? Sylvia was asking what they said, so did not know. But she copied them from a grid of 154 Gregg shorthand characters pre-printed on
the back cover of the steno notebook she was using as her 1945 summer camp
diary.
Sylvia, using her thick black ink, made four checkmarks on this grid.
They mark two pairs of symbols that look near-identical. Sylvia chose one of
each pair to copy into her letter. The third symbol Sylvia asked about, the one in parentheses, is the same as the second. The first character means both “far”
and “favor.” Which of those two would depend on their context. Sylvia's second shorthand character says “got.”
The third says “got” in parentheses. So go fill in the blanks in your copy of Letters
vol. 1, page 24.
Ergo: “Can you tell me what these signs in shorthand mean? Far/favor
and got (got)."
The other two checkmarked characters in the grid that look so similar:
In Aurelia’s lighter ink and elegant hand, on this notebook’s back cover, up top, two Gregg shorthand characters say “medical texts.” Aurelia had been
hired in 1942 to teach a Medical Secretarial Procedures course at Boston
University’s College of Practical Arts and Letters (Letters Home, 28-29).
These characters are from the Anniversary Edition of Gregg, taught from 1930 to 1949. I await permission to show on this blog a photo of the notebook's back cover.
Bless us, now we know three more words Sylvia wrote.
Images of the shorthand are from gregg.angelfishy.net. The diary’s official location at the Lilly: Plath mss. II, Series: Diaries
and Calendars 1944-1957, Box 7, Folder 2, “Daily Journal at Camp Helen Storrow,
July 1-14, 1945."
New facts about Sylvia Plath's background and her mother Aurelia. By Catherine Rankovic
Aurelia Plath Biography
Showing posts with label plath shorthand transcription. Show all posts
Showing posts with label plath shorthand transcription. Show all posts
Monday, February 17, 2020
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