262 SELLING LATIN AMERICA
are, unless he knows you exceedingly well, that
he will construe your letters as brusque and far
from courteous. His letters will be filled with
the sentimental phrases of past ages. This is
his idea of politeness and should be your guide
in addressing him. You cannot be too verbose
in your communications. He comes from a
race noted for its grandiloquent declamations
and this typical characteristic, this desire to
figuratively gild refined gold, add a perfume
to the violet and a whiteness to the lily, means
much to him. It is one of his ways of estimat
ing your educational worth and of calibrating
your standing as a gentleman. I know of no
better exemplification of this than a compari
son between the flowery way Latin American
letters are terminated and our own. It is
more personal, more deferential and more im
pressive to sign yourself, “Your attentive and
secure servant who kisses your hand,” than
briefly and harshly, “Yours very truly,” yet
the former method is the one in which prac
tically all letters close coming from these
sunny lands.