Many people suppose that it is the
easiest thing in the world to dine if you can get
plenty to eat. This error is the foundation of
much social misery. The world that never dines,
and fancies it has a grievance justifying anarchy
on that account, does not know how much misery it
escapes. A great deal has been written about the
art of dining. From time to time geniuses have
appeared who knew how to compose a dinner; indeed,
the art of doing it can be learned, as well as the
art of cooking and serving it. It is often possible,
also, under extraordinarily favorable conditions,
to select a company congenial and varied and harmonious
enough to dine together successfully. The tact
for getting the right people together is perhaps rarer
than the art of composing the dinner. But it
exists. And an elegant table with a handsome and
brilliant company about it is a common conjunction
in this country. Instructions are not wanting
as to the shape of the table and the size of the party;
it is universally admitted that the number must be
small. The big dinner-parties which are commonly
made to pay off social debts are generally of the
sort that one would rather contribute to in money than
in personal attendance. When the dinner is treated
as a means of discharging obligations, it loses all
character, and becomes one of the social inflictions.
While there is nothing in social intercourse so agreeable
and inspiring as a dinner of the right sort, society
has invented no infliction equal to a large dinner
that does not “go,” as the phrase is.
Why it does not go when the viands are good and the
company is bright is one of the acknowledged mysteries.
There need be no mystery about it.
The social instinct and the social habit are wanting
to a great many people of uncommon intelligence and
cultivation that sort of flexibility or
adaptability that makes agreeable society. But
this even does not account for the failure of so many
promising dinners. The secret of this failure
always is that the conversation is not general.
The sole object of the dinner is talk at
least in the United States, where “good eating”
is pretty common, however it may be in England, whence
come rumors occasionally of accomplished men who decline
to be interrupted by the frivolity of talk upon the
appearance of favorite dishes. And private talk
at a table is not the sort that saves a dinner; however
good it is, it always kills it. The chance of
arrangement is that the people who would like to talk
together are not neighbors; and if they are, they
exhaust each other to weariness in an hour, at least
of topics which can be talked about with the risk of
being overheard. A duet to be agreeable must be
to a certain extent confidential, and the dinner-table
duet admits of little except generalities, and generalities
between two have their limits of entertainment.
Then there is the awful possibility that the neighbors
at table may have nothing to say to each other; and
in the best-selected company one may sit beside a
stupid man that is, stupid for the purpose
of a ‘tete-a-tete’. But this is not
the worst of it. No one can talk well without
an audience; no one is stimulated to say bright things
except by the attention and questioning and interest
of other minds. There is little inspiration in
side talk to one or two. Nobody ought to go to
a dinner who is not a good listener, and, if possible,
an intelligent one. To listen with a show of
intelligence is a great accomplishment. It is
not absolutely essential that there should be a great
talker or a number of good talkers at a dinner if
all are good listeners, and able to “chip in”
a little to the general talk that springs up.
For the success of the dinner does not necessarily
depend upon the talk being brilliant, but it does
depend upon its being general, upon keeping the ball
rolling round the table; the old-fashioned game becomes
flat when the balls all disappear into private pockets.
There are dinners where the object seems to be to
pocket all the balls as speedily as possible.
We have learned that that is not the best game; the
best game is when you not only depend on the carom,
but in going to the cushion before you carom; that
is to say, including the whole table, and making things
lively. The hostess succeeds who is able to excite
this general play of all the forces at the table,
even using the silent but not non-elastic material
as cushions, if one may continue the figure.
Is not this, O brothers and sisters, an evil under
the sun, this dinner as it is apt to be conducted?
Think of the weary hours you have given to a rite
that should be the highest social pleasure! How
often when a topic is started that promises well, and
might come to something in a general exchange of wit
and fancy, and some one begins to speak on it, and
speak very well, too, have you not had a lady at your
side cut in and give you her views on it views
that might be amusing if thrown out into the discussion,
but which are simply impertinent as an interruption!
How often when you have tried to get a “rise”
out of somebody opposite have you not had your neighbor
cut in across you with some private depressing observation
to your next neighbor! Private talk at a dinner-table
is like private chat at a parlor musicale, only it
is more fatal to the general enjoyment. There
is a notion that the art of conversation, the ability
to talk well, has gone out. That is a great mistake.
Opportunity is all that is needed. There must
be the inspiration of the clash of minds and the encouragement
of good listening. In an evening round the fire,
when couples begin, to whisper or talk low to each
other, it is time to put out the lights. Inspiring
interest is gone. The most brilliant talker in
the world is dumb. People whose idea of a dinner
is private talk between seat-neighbors should limit
the company to two. They have no right to spoil
what can be the most agreeable social institution that
civilization has evolved.