I. INTRODUCTIONS
To introduce persons who are mutually
unknown is to undertake a serious responsibility,
and to certify to each the respectability of the other.
Never undertake this responsibility without in the
first place asking yourself whether the persons are
likely to be agreeable to each other; nor, in the
second place, without ascertaining whether it will
be acceptable to both parties to become acquainted.
Always introduce the gentleman to
the lady never the lady to the gentleman.
The chivalry of etiquette assumes that the lady is
invariably the superior in right of her sex, and that
the gentleman is honoured in the introduction.
This rule is to be observed even when the social rank
of the gentleman is higher than that of the lady.
Where the sexes are the same, always
present the inferior to the superior.
Never present a gentleman to a lady
without first asking her permission to do so.
When you are introduced to a lady,
never offer your hand. When introduced, persons
limit their recognition of each other to a bow.
On the Continent, ladies never shake hands with gentlemen
unless under circumstances of great intimacy.
Never introduce morning visitors who
happen to encounter each other in your rooms, unless
they are persons whom you have already obtained permission
to make known to each other. Visitors thus casually
meeting in the house of a friend should converse with
ease and freedom, as if they were acquainted.
That they are both friends of the hostess is a sufficient
guarantee of their respectability. To be silent
and stiff on such an occasion would show much ignorance
and ill-breeding.
Persons who have met at the house
of a mutual friend without being introduced should
not bow if they afterwards meet elsewhere. A bow
implies acquaintance; and persons who have not been
introduced are not acquainted.
If you are walking with one friend,
and presently meet with, or are joined by, a third,
do not commit the too frequent error of introducing
them to each other. You have even less right to
do so than if they encountered each other at your
house during a morning call.
There are some exceptions to the etiquette
of introductions At a ball, or evening party
where there is dancing, the mistress of the house
may introduce any gentleman to any lady without first
asking the lady’s permission. But she should
first ascertain whether the lady is willing to dance;
and this out of consideration for the gentleman, who
may otherwise be refused. No man likes to be refused
the hand of a lady, though it be only for a quadrille.
A brother may present his sister,
or a father his son, without any kind of preliminary;
but only when there is no inferiority on the part
of his own family to that of the acquaintance.
Friends may introduce friends at the
house of a mutual acquaintance; but, as a rule, it
is better to be introduced by the mistress of the
house. Such an introduction carries more authority
with it.
Introductions at evening parties are
now almost wholly dispensed with. Persons who
meet at a friend’s house are ostensibly upon
an equality, and pay a bad compliment to the host
by appearing suspicious and formal. Some old-fashioned
country hosts yet persevere in introducing each new
comer to all the assembled guests It is a custom
that cannot be too soon abolished, and one that places
the last unfortunate visitor in a singularly awkward
position. All that he can do is to make a semicircular
bow, like a concert singer before an audience, and
bear the general gaze with as much composure as possible.
If, when you enter a drawing-room,
your name has been wrongly announced, or has passed
unheard in the buzz of conversation, make your way
at once to the mistress of the house, if you are a
stranger, and introduce yourself by name. This
should be done with the greatest simplicity, and your
professional or titular rank made as little of as
possible.
An introduction given at a ball for
the mere purpose of conducting a lady through a dance
does not give the gentleman any right to bow to her
on a future occasion. If he commits this error,
he must remember that she is not bound to see, or
return, his salutation.
II. LETTERS OF INTRODUCTION.
Do not lightly give or promise letters
of introduction. Always remember that when you
give a letter of introduction you lay yourself under
an obligation to the friend to whom it is addressed.
If he lives in a great city, such as Paris or London,
you in a measure compel him to undergo the penalty
of escorting the stranger to some of those places
of public entertainment in which the capital abounds
In any case, you put him to the expense of inviting
the stranger to his table. We cannot be too cautious
how we tax the time and purse of a friend, or weigh
too seriously the question of mutual advantage in the
introduction. Always ask yourself whether the
person introduced will be an acceptable acquaintance
to the one to whom you present him; and whether the
pleasure of knowing him will compensate for the time
or money which it costs to entertain him. If
the stranger is in any way unsuitable in habits or
temperament, you inflict an annoyance on your friend
instead of a pleasure. In questions of introduction
never oblige one friend to the discomfort of another.
Those to whom letters of introduction
have been given should send them to the person to
whom they are addressed, and enclose a card. Never
deliver a letter of introduction in person. It
places you in the most undignified position imaginable,
and compels you to wait while it is being read, like
a footman who has been told to wait for an answer.
There is also another reason why you should not be
yourself the bearer of your introduction; i.e.,
you compel the other person to receive you, whether
he chooses or not. It may be that he is sufficiently
ill-bred to take no notice of the letter when sent,
and in such case, if you presented yourself with it,
he would most probably receive you with rudeness
It is, at all events, more polite on your part to give
him the option, and perhaps more pleasant. If
the receiver of the letter be a really well-bred person,
he will call upon you or leave his card the next day,
and you should return his attentions within the week.
If, on the other hand, a stranger
sends you a letter of introduction and his card, you
are bound by the laws of politeness and hospitality,
not only to call upon him the next day, but to follow
up that attention with others If you are in
a position to do so, the most correct proceeding is
to invite him to dine with you. Should this not
be within your power, you have probably the entree
to some private collections, clubhouses, theatres,
or reading-rooms, and could devote a few hours to
showing him these places If you are but a clerk
in a bank, remember that only to go over the Bank
of England would be interesting to a foreigner or
provincial visitor. In short, etiquette demands
that you shall exert yourself to show kindness to the
stranger, if only out of compliment to the friend who
introduced him to you.
If you invite him to dine with you,
it is a better compliment to ask some others to meet
him, than to dine with him tete-a-tete.
You are thereby giving him an opportunity of making
other acquaintances, and are assisting your friend
in still further promoting the purpose for which he
gave him the introduction to yourself.
Be careful at the same time only to ask such persons as he
will feel are at least his own social equals
A letter of introduction should be given unsealed, not alone
because your friend may wish to know what you have said of him, but also as a
guarantee of your own good faith. As you should never give such a letter unless
you can speak highly of the bearer, this rule of etiquette is easy to observe.
By requesting your friend to fasten the envelope before forwarding the letter to
its destination, you tacitly give him permission to inspect its contents
Let your note paper be of the best quality and the proper
size. Albert or Queens size is the best for these purposes
It has been well said that “attention
to the punctilios of politeness is a proof at once
of self-respect, and of respect for your friend.”
Though irksome at first, these trifles soon cease to
be matters for memory, and become things of mere habit.
To the thoroughly well-bred, they are a second nature.
Let no one neglect them who is desirous of pleasing
in society; and, above all, let no one deem them unworthy
of a wise man’s attention. They are precisely
the trifles which do most to make social intercourse
agreeable, and a knowledge of which distinguishes
the gentleman from the boor.
III. VISITING. MORNING CALLS. CARDS.
A morning visit should be paid between
the hours of two and four p.m., in winter, and two
and five in summer. By observing this rule you
avoid intruding before the luncheon is removed, and
leave in sufficient time to allow the lady of the
house an hour or two of leisure for her dinner toilette.
Be careful always to avoid luncheon
hours when you pay morning visits Some ladies
dine with their children at half-past one, and are
consequently unprepared for the early reception of
visitors When you have once ascertained this
to be the case, be careful never again to intrude
at the same hour.
A good memory for these trifles is
one of the hall-marks of good breeding.
Visits of ceremony should be short.
If even the conversation should have become animated,
beware of letting your call exceed half-an-hour’s
length. It is always better to let your friends
regret than desire your withdrawal.
On returning visits of ceremony you
may, without impoliteness, leave your card at the
door without going in. Do not fail, however, to
inquire if the family be well.
Should there be daughters or sisters
residing with the lady upon whom you call, you may
turn down a corner of your card, to signify that the
visit is paid to all. It is in better taste, however,
to leave cards for each.
Unless when returning thanks for “kind
inquiries,” or announcing your arrival in, or
departure from, town, it is not considered respectful
to send round cards by a servant.
Leave-taking cards have P.P.C. (pour
prendre conge) written in the corner. Some
use P.D.A. (pour dire adieu).
It is not the fashion on the Continent
for gentlemen to affix Monsieur to their cards,
Jules Achard, or Paolo Beni, looks more
simple and elegant than if preceded by Monsieur,
or Monsieur le Comte. Some English gentlemen
have adopted this good custom, and it would be well
if it became general.
Autographic facsimiles for visiting
cards are affectations in any persons but those who
are personally remarkable for talent and whose autographs,
or facsimiles of them, would be prized as curiosities A card bearing the
autographic signature of Charles Dickens or George Cruikshank, though only a
lithographic facsimile, would have a certain interest; whereas the signature of
John Smith would be not only valueless, but would make the owner ridiculous
The visiting cards of gentlemen are half the size of those
used by ladies
Visits of condolence are paid within the week after the event
which occasions them. Personal visits of this kind are made by relations and
very intimate friends only. Acquaintances should leave cards with narrow
mourning borders
On the first occasion when you are
received by the family after the death of one of its
members, it is etiquette to wear slight mourning.
When a gentleman makes a morning call,
he should never leave his hat or riding-whip in the
hall, but should take both into the room. To do
otherwise would be to make himself too much at home.
The hat, however, must never be laid on a table, piano,
or any article of furniture; it should be held gracefully
in the hand. If you are compelled to lay it aside,
put it on the floor.
Umbrellas should invariably be left in the hall.
Never take favourite dogs into a drawing-room
when you make a morning call. Their feet may
be dusty, or they may bark at the sight of strangers,
or, being of too friendly a disposition, may take the
liberty of lying on a lady’s gown, or jumping
on the sofas and easy chairs Where your friend
has a favourite cat already established before the
fire, a battle may ensue, and one or other of the pets
be seriously hurt. Besides, many persons have
a constitutional antipathy to dogs, and others never
allow their own to be seen in the sitting-rooms
For all or any of these reasons, a visitor has no
right to inflict upon his friend the society of his
dog as well as of himself.
If, when you call upon a lady, you
meet a lady visitor in her drawing-room, you should
rise when that lady takes her leave, and escort her
to her carriage, taking care, however, to return again
to the drawing-room, though it be only for a few minutes,
before taking your own leave. Not to do this
would give you the appearance of accompanying the
lady visitor; or might, at all events, look as if the
society of your hostess were insufficient to entertain
you when her friend had departed.
If other visitors are announced, and
you have already remained as long as courtesy requires,
wait till they are seated, and then rise from your
chair, take leave of your hostess, and bow politely
to the newly arrived guests You will, perhaps,
be urged to remain, but, having once risen, it is
always best to go. There is always a certain air
of gaucherie in resuming your seat and repeating
the ceremony of leave-taking.
If you have occasion to look at your watch during a call, ask
permission to do so, and apologise for it on the plea of other appointments
IV. CONVERSATION.
Let your conversation be adapted as skilfully as may be to
your company. Some men make a point of talking commonplaces to all ladies alike,
as if a woman could only be a trifler. Others, on the contrary, seem to forget
in what respects the education of a lady differs from that of a gentleman, and
commit the opposite error of conversing on topics with which ladies are seldom
acquainted. A woman of sense has as much right to be annoyed by the one, as a
lady of ordinary education by the other. You cannot pay a finer compliment to a
woman of refinement and esprit than by leading the conversation into such a
channel as may mark your appreciation of her superior attainments
In talking with ladies of ordinary
education, avoid political, scientific, or commercial
topics, and choose only such subjects as are likely
to be of interest to them.
Remember that people take more interest
in their own affairs than in anything else which you
can name. If you wish your conversation to be
thoroughly agreeable, lead a mother to talk of her
children, a young lady of her last ball, an author
of his forthcoming book, or an artist of his exhibition
picture. Having furnished the topic, you need
only listen; and you are sure to be thought not only
agreeable, but thoroughly sensible and well-informed.
Be careful, however, on the other
hand, not always to make a point of talking to persons
upon general matters relating to their professions To show an interest in their
immediate concerns is flattering; but to converse with them too much about their
own arts looks as if you thought them ignorant of other topics
Do not use a classical quotation in
the presence of ladies without apologising for, or
translating it. Even this should only be done
when no other phrase would so aptly express your meaning.
Whether in the presence of ladies or gentlemen, much
display of learning is pedantic and out of place.
There is a certain distinct but subdued
tone of voice which is peculiar to only well-bred
persons A loud voice is both disagreeable and
vulgar. It is better to err by the use of too
low than too loud a tone.
Remember that all “slang”
is vulgar. It has become of late unfortunately
prevalent, and we have known even ladies pride themselves
on the saucy chique with which they adopt certain
Americanisms, and other cant phrases of the day.
Such habits cannot be too severely
reprehended. They lower the tone of society and
the standard of thought. It is a great mistake
to suppose that slang is in any way a substitute for
wit.
The use of proverbs is equally vulgar
in conversation; and puns, unless they rise to the
rank of witticisms, are to be scrupulously avoided.
There is no greater nuisance in society than a dull
and persevering punster.
Long arguments in general company,
however entertaining to the disputants, are tiresome
to the last degree to all others You should
always endeavour to prevent the conversation from dwelling
too long upon one topic.
Religion is a topic which should never
be introduced in society. It is the one subject
on which persons are most likely to differ, and least
able to preserve temper.
Never interrupt a person who is speaking.
It has been aptly said that “if you interrupt
a speaker in the middle of his sentence, you act almost
as rudely as if, when walking with a companion, you
were to thrust yourself before him, and stop his progress
To listen well, is almost as great an art as to talk well. It
is not enough only to listen. You must endeavour to seem interested in the
conversation of others
It is considered extremely ill-bred
when two persons whisper in society, or converse in
a language with which all present are not familiar.
If you have private matters to discuss, you should
appoint a proper time and place to do so, without
paying others the ill compliment of excluding them
from your conversation.
If a foreigner be one of the guests
at a small party, and does not understand English
sufficiently to follow what is said, good-breeding
demands that conversation shall be carried on in his
own language. If at a dinner-party, the same
rule applies to those at his end of the table.
If upon the entrance of a visitor
you carry on the thread of a previous conversation,
you should briefly recapitulate to him what has been
said before he arrived.
Do not be always witty, even
though you should be so happily gifted as to need
the caution. To outshine others on every occasion
is the surest road to unpopularity.
Always look, but never stare, at those
with whom you converse.
In order to meet the general needs of conversation in
society, it is necessary that a man should be well acquainted with the current
news and historical events of at least the last few years
Never talk upon subjects of which
you know nothing, unless it be for the purpose of
acquiring information. Many young men imagine
that because they frequent exhibitions and operas
they are qualified judges of art. No mistake
is more egregious or universal.
Those who introduce anecdotes into
their conversation are warned that these should invariably
be “short, witty, eloquent, new, and not far-fetched.”
Scandal is the least excusable of all conversational
vulgarities
In conversing with a man of rank,
do not too frequently give him his title. Only
a servant interlards every sentence with “my
Lord,” or “my Lady.” It is,
however, well to show that you remember his station
by now and then introducing some such phrase as “I
think I have already mentioned to your Lordship” or,
“I believe your Grace was observing"...
In general, however, you should address a nobleman
as you would any other gentleman. The Prince
of Wales himself is only addressed as “Sir,”
in conversation, and the Queen as “Madam.”
V. NOTES OF INVITATION, &c.
Notes of invitation and acceptance are written in the third
person and the simplest style. The old-fashioned preliminary of presenting
compliments is discontinued by the most elegant letter-writers
All notes of invitation are now issued
in the name of the mistress of the house only, as
follows;
“Mrs Norman requests the honour
of Sir George and Lady Thurlow’s company at
an evening party, on Monday, 14th of June.”
Others prefer the subjoined form,
which is purchaseable ready printed upon either cards
or note-paper, with blanks for names or dates:
“Mrs Norman,
“At home,
“Monday evening, June 14th inst.”
An “At home” is, however,
considered somewhat less stately than an evening party,
and partakes more of the character of a conversazione.
The reply to a note of invitation
should be couched as follows:
“Mr. Berkeley has much pleasure
in accepting Mrs Norman’s polite invitation
for Monday evening, June the 14th inst.”
Never “avail” yourself
of an invitation. Above all, never speak or write
of an invitation as “an invite.” It
is neither good breeding nor good English.
Notes of invitation and reply should
be written on small paper of the best quality, and
enclosed in envelopes to correspond.
A gentleman should never use sealing-wax
of any colour but red, nor paper of any hue but white.
Fancy papers, fantastic borders, dainty coloured wax,
and the like elegant follies, are only admissible in
the desk of a lady.
Never omit the address and date from
any letter, whether of business, friendship, or ceremony.
Letters in the first person, addressed
to strangers, should begin with “Sir,”
or “Madam,” and end with “I have
the honour to be your very obedient servant.”
Some object to this form of words from a mistaken
sense of pride; but it is merely a form, and, rightly
apprehended, evinces a “proud humility,”
which implies more condescension than a less formal
phrase.
At the end of your letter, at some
little distance below your signature, and in the left
corner of your paper, write the name of the person
to whom your letter is addressed; as “Sir James
Dalhousie,” or “Edward Munroe, Esquire.”
It is more polite to write Esquire
at full length than to curtail it to Esq.
In writing to persons much your superior
or inferior, use as few words as possible. In
the former case, to take up much of a great man’s
time is to take a liberty; in the latter to be diffuse
is to be too familiar. It is only in familiar
correspondence that long letters are permissible.
In writing to a tradesman, begin your
letter by addressing him by name, as
“Mr. Jones, Sir.”
A letter thus begun may, with propriety, be ended
with
“Sir, yours truly.”
Letters to persons whom you meet frequently
in society, without having arrived at intimacy, may
commence with “Dear Sir,” and end with
“I am, dear Sir, yours very truly.”
Letters commencing “My dear
Sir,” addressed to persons whom you appreciate,
and with whom you are on friendly terms, may end with
“I am, my dear Sir, yours very faithfully,”
or “yours very sincerely.”
To be prompt in replying to a letter is to be polite.
VI. THE PROMENADE.
A well-bred man must entertain no
respect for the brim of his hat. “A bow,”
says La Fontaine, “is a note drawn at sight.”
You are bound to acknowledge it immediately, and to
the full amount. The two most elegant men of
their day, Charles the Second and George the Fourth,
never failed to take off their hats to the meanest
of their subjects Always bear this example in
mind; and remember that to nod, or merely to touch
the brim of the hat, is far from courteous True
politeness demands that the hat should be quite lifted
from the head.
On meeting friends with whom you are
likely to shake hands, remove your hat with the left
hand in order to leave the right hand free.
If you meet a lady in the street whom
you are sufficiently intimate to address, do not stop
her, but turn round and walk beside her in whichever
direction she is going. When you have said all
that you wish to say, you can take your leave.
If you meet a lady with whom you are
not particularly well acquainted, wait for her recognition
before you venture to bow to her.
In bowing to a lady whom you are not
going to address, lift your hat with that hand which
is farthest from her. For instance, if you pass
her on the right side, use your left hand; if on the
left, use your right.
If you are on horseback and wish to
converse with a lady who is on foot, you must dismount
and lead your horse, so as not to give her the fatigue
of looking up to your level. Neither should you
subject her to the impropriety of carrying on a conversation
in a tone necessarily louder than is sanctioned in
public by the laws of good breeding.
When you meet friends or acquaintances
in the streets, the exhibitions, or any public places,
take care not to pronounce their names so loudly as
to attract the attention of the passers-by. Never
call across the street: and never carry on a dialogue
in a public vehicle, unless your interlocutor occupies
the seat beside your own.
In walking with a lady, take charge
of any small parcel, parasol, or book with which she
may be encumbered.
If you so far forget what is elegant
as to smoke in the street, at least never omit to
fling away your cigar if you speak to a lady.
VII. DRESS
A great French writer has said, with
as much grace as philosophy, that the artist and man
of letters needs only a black coat and the absence
of all pretension to place him on the level of the
best society. It must be observed, however, that
this remark applies only to the intellectual workers,
who, if they do occasionally commit a minor solecism
in dress or manners, are forgiven on account of their
fame and talents Other individuals are compelled
to study what we have elsewhere called the “by-laws
of society;” and it would be well if artists
and men of letters would more frequently do the same.
It is not enough that a man should be clever, or well
educated, or well born; to take his place in society
he must be acquainted with all that this little book
proposes to teach. He must, above all else, know
how to enter the room, how to bow, and how to dress
Of these three indispensable qualifications, the most
important, because the most observed, is the latter.
A gentleman should always be so well
dressed that his dress shall never be observed at
all. Does this sound like an enigma? It is
not meant for one. It only implies that perfect
simplicity is perfect elegance, and that the true
test of taste in the toilette of a gentleman is its
entire harmony, unobtrusiveness and becomingness
If any friend should say to you, “What a handsome
waistcoat you have on!” you may depend that
a less handsome waistcoat would be in better taste.
If you hear it said that Mr. So-and-So wears superb
jewellery, you may conclude beforehand that he wears
too much. Display, in short, is ever to be avoided,
especially in matters of dress The toilette
is the domain of the fair sex. Let a wise man
leave its graces and luxuries to his wife, daughters
or sisters, and seek to be himself appreciated for
something of higher worth than the embroidery upon
his shirt front, or the trinkets on his chain.
To be too much in the fashion is as
vulgar as to be too far behind it. No really
well-bred man follows every new cut that he sees in
his tailor’s fashion-book. Only very young
men, and those not of the most aristocratic circles,
are guilty of this folly.
The author of Pelham has aptly said that a gentlemans coat
should not fit too well. There is great truth and subtlety in this observation.
To be fitted too well is to look like a tailors assistant. This is the great
fault which we have to find in the style of even the best bred Frenchmen. They
look as if they had just stepped out of a fashion-book, and lack the careless
ease which makes an English gentleman look as if his clothes belonged to him,
and not he to his clothes
In the morning wear frock coats, double-breasted
waistcoats, and trousers of light or dark colours,
according to the season.
In the evening, though only in the
bosom of your own family, wear only black, and be
as scrupulous to put on a dress coat as if you expected
visitors If you have sons, bring them up to do
the same. It is the observance of these minor
trifles in domestic etiquette which marks the true
gentleman.
For evening parties, dinner parties,
and balls, wear a black dress coat, black trousers,
black silk or cloth waistcoat, white cravat, white
or grey kid gloves, and thin patent leather boots
A black cravat may be worn in full dress, but is not
so elegant as a white one. A black velvet waistcoat
should only be worn at a dinner party.
Let your jewellery be of the best,
but the least gaudy description, and wear it very
sparingly. A set of good studs, a gold watch and
guard, and one handsome ring, are as many ornaments
as a gentleman can wear with propriety. In the
morning let your ring be a seal ring, with your crest
or arms engraved upon it. In the evening it may
be a diamond. Your studs, however valuable, should
be small.
It is well to remember in the choice
of jewellery that mere costliness is not always the
test of value; and that an exquisite work of art,
such as a fine cameo, or a natural rarity, such as
a black pearl, is a more distingue possession
than a large brilliant which any rich and tasteless
vulgarian can buy as easily as yourself. For a
ring, the gentleman of fine taste would prefer a precious
antique intaglio to the handsomest diamond
or ruby that could be brought at Hunt and Roskell’s
The most elegant gentleman with whom the author was
ever acquainted a man familiar with all
the Courts of Europe never wore any other
shirt-studs in full dress than three valuable black
pearls, each about the size of a pea, and by no means
beautiful to look at.
Of all precious stones, the opal is
one of the most lovely and the least common-place.
No vulgar man purchases an opal. He invariably
prefers the more showy diamond, ruby, sapphire, or
emerald.
Unless you are a snuff-taker, never
carry any but a white pocket-handkerchief.
If in the morning you wear a long
cravat fastened by a pin, be careful to avoid what
may be called alliteration of colour. We
have seen a torquoise pin worn in a violet-coloured
cravat, and the effect was frightful. Choose,
if possible, complementary colours, and their secondaries
For instance, if the stone in your pin be a torquoise,
wear it with brown, or crimson mixed with black, or
black and orange. If a ruby, contrast it with
shades of green. The same rule holds good with
regard to the mixture and contrast of colours in your
waistcoat or cravat. Thus, a buff waistcoat and
a blue tie, or brown and blue, or brown and green,
or brown and magenta, green and magenta, green and
mauve, are all good arrangements of colour.
Very light coloured cloths for morning
wear are to be avoided, even in the height of summer;
and fancy cloths of strange patterns and mixtures
are exceedingly objectionable.
Coloured shirts may be worn in the
morning; but they should be small in pattern, and
quiet in colour.
With a coloured shirt, always wear a white collar.
Never wear a cap, unless in the fields
or garden; and let your hat be always black.
For a gentleman’s wedding dress
see the “ETIQUETTE OF COURTSHIP AND MARRIAGE.”
If your sight compels you to wear
spectacles, let them be of the best and lightest make,
and mounted in gold or blue steel.
If you suffer from weak sight, and
are obliged to wear coloured glasses, let them be
of blue or smoke colour. Green are detestable.
Never be seen in the street without
gloves; and never let your gloves be of any material
that is not kid or calf. Worsted or cotton gloves
are unutterably vulgar. Your gloves should fit
to the last degree of perfection.
In these days of public baths and
universal progress, we trust that it is unnecessary
to do more than hint at the necessity of the most
fastidious personal cleanliness The hair, the
teeth, the nails, should be faultlessly kept; and
a soiled shirt, a dingy pocket-handkerchief, or a
light waistcoat that has been worn once too often,
are things to be scrupulously avoided by any man who
is ambitious of preserving the exterior of a gentleman.
VIII. RIDING AND DRIVING.
In riding, as in walking, give the lady the wall.
If you assist a lady to mount, hold
your hand at a convenient distance from the ground,
that she may place her foot in it. As she springs,
you aid her by the impetus of your hand.
In doing this, it is always better
to agree upon a signal, that her spring and your assistance
may come at the same moment.
For this purpose there is no better
form than the old duelling one of “one, two,
three.”
When the lady is in the saddle, it
is your place to find the stirrup for her, and guide
her left foot to it. When this is done, she rises
in her seat and you assist her to draw her habit straight.
Even when a groom is present, it is
more polite for the gentleman himself to perform this
office for his fair companion; as it would be more
polite for him to hand her a chair than to have it
handed by a servant.
If the lady be light, you must take
care not to give her too much impetus in mounting.
We have known a lady nearly thrown over her horse
by a misplaced zeal of this kind.
In riding with a lady, never permit her to pay the tolls
If a gate has to be opened, we need
hardly observe that it is your place to hold it open
till the lady has passed through.
In driving, a gentleman places himself with his back to the
horses, and leaves the best seat for the ladies
If you are alone in a carriage with
a lady, never sit beside her, unless you are her husband,
father, son, or brother. Even though you be her
affianced lover, you should still observe this rule
of etiquette. To do otherwise, would be to assume
the unceremonious air of a husband.
When the carriage stops, the gentleman
should alight first, in order to assist the lady.
To get in and out of a carriage gracefully
is a simple but important accomplishment. If
there is but one step, and you are going to take your
seat facing the horses, put your left foot on the step
and enter the carriage with your right in such a manner
as to drop at once into your seat. If you are
about to sit with your back to the horses, reverse
the process As you step into the carriage, be
careful to keep your back towards the seat you are
about to occupy, so as to avoid the awkwardness of
turning when you are once in.
A gentleman cannot be too careful
to avoid stepping on ladies’ dresses when he
gets in or out of a carriage. He should also beware
of shutting them in with the door.
IX. MORNING AND EVENING PARTIES
The morning party is a modern invention;
it was unknown to our fathers and mothers, and even
to ourselves, till quite lately. A morning party
is seldom given out of the season that is
to say, during any months except those of May, June,
and July. It begins about two o’clock and
ends about five, and the entertainment consists for
the most part of conversation, music, and (if there
be a garden) croquet, lawn billiards, archery, &c.
“Aunt Sally” is now out of fashion.
The refreshments are given in the form of a dejeuner
a la fourchette.
Elegant morning dress, general good
manners, and some acquaintance with the topics of
the day and the games above named, are all the qualifications
especially necessary to a gentleman at a morning party.
An evening party begins about nine
o’clock, p.m., and ends about midnight, or somewhat
later. Good breeding neither demands that you
should present yourself at the commencement, nor remain
till the close of the evening. You come and go
as may be most convenient to you, and by these means
are at liberty, during the height of the season when
evening parties are numerous, to present yourself at
two or three houses during a single evening.
Always put your gloves on before entering the drawing-room,
and be careful that there is no speck of mud upon your boots or trousers
When your name is announced, look
for the lady of the house and pay your respects to
her before you even seem to see any other of your
friends who may be in the room. At very large
and fashionable receptions, the hostess is generally
to be found near the door. Should you, however,
find yourself separated by a dense crowd of guests,
you are at liberty to recognize those who are near
you, and those whom you encounter as you make your
way slowly through the throng.
General salutations of the company are now wholly disused. In
society, a man only recognizes his own friends and acquaintances
If you are at the house of a new acquaintance
and find yourself among entire strangers, remember
that by so meeting under one roof you are all in a
certain sense made known to one another, and should
therefore converse freely, as equals To shrink
away to a side-table and affect to be absorbed in
some album or illustrated work; or, if you find one
unlucky acquaintance in the room, to fasten upon him
like a drowning man clinging to a spar, are gaucheries
which no shyness can excuse. An easy and unembarrassed
manner, and the self-possession requisite to open
a conversation with those who happen to be near you,
are the indispensable credentials of a well-bred man.
At an evening party, do not remain
too long in one spot. To be afraid to move from
one drawing-room to another is the sure sign of a
neophyte in society.
If you have occasion to use your handkerchief,
do so as noiselessly as possible. To blow your
nose as if it were a trombone, or to turn your head
aside when using your handkerchief, are vulgarities
scrupulously to be avoided.
Never stand upon the hearth-rug with
your back to the fire, either in a friend’s
house or your own. We have seen even well-bred
men at evening parties commit this selfish and vulgar
solecism.
Never offer any one the chair from
which you have just risen, unless there be no other
disengaged.
If when supper is announced no lady
has been especially placed under your care by the
hostess, offer your arm to whichever lady you may
have last conversed with.
If you possess any musical accomplishments,
do not wait to be pressed and entreated by your hostess,
but comply immediately when she pays you the compliment
of inviting you to play or sing. Remember, however,
that only the lady of the house has the right to ask
you. If others do so, you can put them off in
some polite way; but must not comply till the hostess
herself invites you.
If you sing comic songs, be careful
that they are of the most unexceptionable kind, and
likely to offend neither the tastes nor prejudices
of the society in which you find yourself. At
an evening party given expressly in honour of a distinguished
lady of colour, we once heard a thoughtless amateur
dash into the broadly comic, but terribly appropriate
nigger song of “Sally come up.” Before
he had got through the first verse, he had perceived
his mistake, and was so overwhelmed with shame that
he could scarcely preserve sufficient presence of
mind to carry him through to the end.
If the party be of a small and social
kind, and those games called by the French les
jeux innocents are proposed, do not object to join
in them when invited. It may be that they demand
some slight exercise of wit and readiness, and that
you do not feel yourself calculated to shine in them;
but it is better to seem dull than disagreeable, and
those who are obliging can always find some clever
neighbour to assist them in the moment of need.
The game of “consequences” is one which
unfortunately gives too much scope to liberty of expression.
If you join in this game, we cannot too earnestly
enjoin you never to write down one word which the
most pure-minded woman present might not read aloud
without a blush. Jests of an equivocal character
are not only vulgar, but contemptible.
Impromptu charades are frequently
organized at friendly parties Unless you have
really some talent for acting and some readiness of
speech, you should remember that you only put others
out and expose your own inability by taking part in
these entertainments Of course, if your help is really needed and you would
disoblige by refusing, you must do your best, and by doing it as quietly and
coolly as possible, avoid being awkward or ridiculous
Should an impromptu polka or quadrille
be got up after supper at a party where no dancing
was intended, be sure not to omit putting on gloves
before you stand up. It is well always to have
a pair of white gloves in your pocket in case of need;
but even black are better under these circumstances
than none.
Even though you may take no pleasure
in cards, some knowledge of the etiquette and rules
belonging to the games most in vogue is necessary
to you in society. If a fourth hand is wanted
at a rubber, or if the rest of the company sit down
to a round game, you would be deemed guilty of an
impoliteness if you refused to join.
The games most commonly played in
society are whist, loo, vingt-et-un, and speculation.
Whist requires four players A
pack of cards being spread upon the table with their
faces downwards, the four players draw for partners
Those who draw the two highest cards and those who
draw the two lowest become partners The lowest
of all claims the deal.
Married people should not play at the same table, unless
where the party is so small that it cannot be avoided. This rule supposes
nothing so disgraceful to any married couple as dishonest collusion; but persons
who play regularly together cannot fail to know so much of each others mode of
acting, under given circumstances, that the chances no longer remain perfectly
even in favour of their adversaries
Never play for higher stakes than
you can afford to lose without regret. Cards
should be resorted to for amusement only; for excitement,
never.
No well-bred person ever loses temper
at the card-table. You have no right to sit down
to the game unless you can bear a long run of ill
luck with perfect composure, and are prepared cheerfully
to pass over any blunders that your partner may chance
to make.
If you are an indifferent player,
make a point of saying so before you join a party
at whist. If the others are fine players they
will be infinitely more obliged to you for declining
than accepting their invitation. In any case
you have no right to spoil their pleasure by your
bad play.
Never let even politeness induce you
to play for very high stakes Etiquette is the
minor morality of life; but it never should be allowed
to outweigh the higher code of right and wrong.
Be scrupulous to observe silence when
any of the company are playing or singing. Remember
that they are doing this for the amusement of the
rest; and that to talk at such a time is as ill-bred
as if you were to turn your back upon a person who
was talking to you, and begin a conversation with
some one else.
If you are yourself the performer,
bear in mind that in music, as in speech, “brevity
is the soul of wit.” Two verses of a song,
or four pages of a piece, are at all times enough
to give pleasure. If your audience desire more
they will ask for more; and it is infinitely more
flattering to be encored than to receive the thanks
of your hearers, not so much in gratitude for what
you have given them, but in relief that you have left
off. You should try to suit your music, like your
conversation, to your company. A solo of Beethoven’s
would be as much out of place in some circles as a
comic song at a Quakers’ meeting. To those
who only care for the light popularities, of the season,
give Balfe and Verdi, Glover and Jullien. To
connoisseurs, if you perform well enough to venture,
give such music as will be likely to meet the exigences
of a fine taste. Above all, attempt nothing that
you cannot execute with ease and precision.
In retiring from a crowded party it
is unnecessary that you should seek out the hostess
for the purpose of bidding her a formal good night.
By doing this you would, perhaps, remind others that
it was getting late, and cause the party to break
up.
If you meet the lady of the house on your way to the
drawing-room door, take your leave of her as unobtrusively as possible, and slip
away without attracting the attention of her other guests
X. THE DINNER TABLE.
To be acquainted with every detail
of the etiquette pertaining to this subject is of
the highest importance to every gentleman. Ease,
savoir faire, and good breeding are nowhere
more indispensable than at the dinner-table, and the
absence of them are nowhere more apparent. How
to eat soup and what to do with a cherry-stone are
weighty considerations when taken as the index of
social status; and it is not too much to say, that
a man who elected to take claret with his fish, or
ate peas with his knife, would justly risk the punishment
of being banished from good society. As this
subject is one of the most important of which we have
to treat, we may be pardoned for introducing an appropriate
anecdote related by the French poet Delille:
Delille and Marmontel were dining
together in the month of April, 1786, and the conversation
happened to turn upon dinner-table customs Marmontel observed how many little
things a well-bred man was obliged to know, if he would avoid being ridiculous
at the tables of his friends
“They are, indeed, innumerable,”
said Delille; “and the most annoying fact of
all is, that not all the wit and good sense in the
world can help one to divine them untaught. A
little while ago, for instance, the Abbe Cosson, who
is Professor of Literature at the College Mazarin,
was describing to me a grand dinner to which he had
been invited at Versailles, and to which he had sat
down in the company of peers, princes, and marshals
of France.
“‘I’ll wager, now,’
said I, ’that you committed a hundred blunders
in the etiquette of the table!’
“‘How so?’ replied
the Abbe, somewhat nettled. ’What blunders
could I make? It seems to me that I did precisely
as others did.’
“’And I, on the contrary,
would stake my life that you did nothing as others
did. But let us begin at the beginning, and see
which is right. In the first place there was
your table-napkin what did you do with
that when you sat down at table?’
“’What did I do with my
table-napkin? Why, I did like the rest of the
guests: I shook it out of the folds, spread it
before me, and fastened one corner to my button-hole.’
“’Very well, mon cher;
you were the only person who did so. No one shakes,
spreads, and fastens a table-napkin in that manner.
You should have only laid it across your knees
What soup had you?’
“‘Turtle.’
“‘And how did you eat it?’
“’Like every one else,
I suppose. I took my spoon in one hand, and my
fork in the other ’
“’Your fork! Good
heavens! None but a savage eats soup with a fork.
But go on. What did you take next?’
“‘A boiled egg.’
“‘Good and what did you do with the shell?’
“‘Not eat it certainly. I left it,
of course, in the egg-cup.’
“‘Without breaking it through with your
spoon?’
“‘Without breaking it.’
“’Then, my dear fellow,
permit me to tell you that no one eats an egg without
breaking the shell and leaving the spoon standing in
it. And after your egg?’
“‘I asked for some bouilli.’
“’For boulli!
It is a term that no one uses You should have
asked for beef never for boulli.
Well, and after the bouilli?’
“‘I asked the Abbe de Radonvillais for
some fowl.’
“’Wretched man! Fowl,
indeed! You should have asked for chicken or
capon. The word “fowl” is never heard
out of the kitchen. But all this applies only
to what you ate; tell me something of what you drank,
and how you asked for it.’
“’I asked for champagne
and bordeaux from those who had the bottles before
them.’
“’Know then, my good friend,
that only a waiter, who has no time or breath to spare,
asks for champagne or bordeaux. A gentleman
asks for vin de Champagne and vin de Bordeaux.
And now inform me how you ate your bread?’
“’Undoubtedly like all
the rest of the world. I cut it up into small
square pieces with my knife.’
“’Then let me tell you
that no one cuts bread. You should always break
it. Let us go on to the coffee. How did you
drink yours?’
“’Pshaw! At least
I could make no mistake in that. It was boiling
hot, so I poured it, a little at a time, in the saucer,
and drank it as it cooled.’
“’Eh bien! then
you assuredly acted as no other gentleman in the room.
Nothing can be more vulgar than to pour tea or coffee
into a saucer. You should have waited till it
cooled, and then have drank it from the cup.
And now you see, my dear cousin, that, so far from
doing precisely as others did, you acted in no one
respect according to the laws prescribed by etiquette.’”
An invitation to dine should be replied
to immediately, and unequivocally accepted or declined.
Once accepted, nothing but an event of the last importance
should cause you to fail in your engagement.
To be exactly punctual is the strictest
politeness on these occasions If you are too
early, you are in the way; if too late, you spoil the
dinner, annoy the hostess, and are hated by the rest
of the guests Some authorities are even of opinion
that in the question of a dinner-party “never”
is better than “late;” and one author has
gone so far as to say, if you do not reach the house
till dinner is served, you had better retire to a
restaurateur’s, and thence send an apology,
and not interrupt the harmony of the courses by awkward
excuses and cold acceptance.
When the party is assembled, the mistress
or master of the house will point out to each gentleman
the lady whom he is to conduct to table. If she
be a stranger, you had better seek an introduction;
if a previous acquaintance, take care to be near her
when the dinner is announced, offer your arm, and
go down according to precedence of rank. This
order of precedence must be arranged by the host or
hostess, as the guests are probably unacquainted, and
cannot know each other’s social rank.
When the society is of a distinguished kind, the host will do
well to consult Debrett or Burke, before arranging his visitors
When rank is not in question, other
claims to precedence must be considered. The
lady who is the greatest stranger should be taken
down by the master of the house, and the gentleman
who is the greatest stranger should conduct the hostess
Married ladies take precedence of single ladies, elder
ladies of younger ones, and so forth.
When dinner is announced, the host offers his arm to the lady
of most distinction, invites the rest to follow by a few words or a bow, and
leads the way. The lady of the house should then follow with the gentleman who
is most entitled to that honour, and the visitors follow in the order that the
master of the house has previously arranged. The lady of the house frequently
remains, however, till the last, that she may see her guests go down in their
prescribed order; but the plan is not a convenient one. It is much better that
the hostess should be in her place as the guests enter the dining-room, in order
that she may indicate their seats to them as they come in, and not find them all
crowded together in uncertainty when she arrives
The number of guests at a dinner-party
should always be determined by the size of the table.
When the party is too small, conversation flags, and
a general air of desolation pervades the table.
When they are too many, every one is inconvenienced.
A space of two feet should be allowed to each person.
It is well to arrange a party in such wise that the
number of ladies and gentlemen be equal.
It requires some tact to distribute
your guests so that each shall find himself with a
neighbour to his taste; but as much of the success
of a dinner will always depend on this matter, it is
worth some consideration. If you have a wit,
or a particularly good talker, among your visitors,
it is well to place him near the centre of the table,
where he can be heard and talked to by all. It
is obviously a bad plan to place two such persons
in close proximity. They extinguish each other.
Neither is it advisable to assign two neighbouring
seats to two gentlemen of the same profession, as
they are likely to fall into exclusive conversation
and amuse no one but themselves A little consideration
of the politics, religious opinions, and tastes of
his friends, will enable a judicious host to avoid
many quicksands, and establish much pleasant intercourse
on the occasion of a dinner party.
The lady of the house takes the head
of the table. The gentleman who led her down
to dinner occupies the seat on her right hand, and
the gentleman next in order of precedence, that on
her left. The master of the house takes the foot
of the table. The lady whom he escorted sits
on his right hand, and the lady next in order of precedence
on his left.
The gentlemen who support the lady
of the house should offer to relieve her of the duties
of hostess Many ladies are well pleased thus
to delegate the difficulties of carving, and all gentlemen
who accept invitations to dinner should be prepared
to render such assistance when called upon. To
offer to carve a dish, and then perform the office
unskilfully, is an unpardonable gaucherie.
Every gentleman should carve, and carve well.
As soon as you are seated at table,
remove your gloves, place your table napkin across
your knees, and remove the roll which you find probably
within it to the left side of your plate.
The soup should be placed on the table
first. Some old-fashioned persons still place
soup and fish together; but “it is a custom more
honoured in the breach than the observance.”
Still more old-fashioned, and in still worse taste
is it to ask your guests if they will take “soup
or fish.” They are as much separate courses
as the fish and the meat; and all experienced diners
take both. In any case, it is inhospitable to
appear to force a choice upon a visitor, when that
visitor, in all probability, will prefer to take his
soup first and his fish afterwards All well-ordered
dinners begin with soup, whether in summer or winter.
The lady of the house should help it and send it round,
without asking each individual in turn. It is
as much an understood thing as the bread beside each
plate, and those who do not choose it, are always
at liberty to leave it untasted.
In eating soup, remember always to
take it from the side of the spoon, and to make no
sound in doing so.
If the servants do not go round with
wine the gentlemen should help the ladies and themselves
to sherry or sauterne immediately after the soup.
You should never ask for a second
supply of either soup or fish; it delays the next
course, and keeps the table waiting.
Never offer to “assist”
your neighbours to this or that dish. The word
is inexpressibly vulgar all the more vulgar
for its affectation of elegance. “Shall
I send you some mutton?” or “may I help
you to grouse?” is better chosen and better
bred.
As a general rule, it is better not to ask your guests if
they will partake of the dishes; but to send the plates round, and let them
accept or decline them as they please. At very large dinners it is sometimes
customary to distribute little lists of the order of the dishes at intervals
along the table. It must be confessed that this gives somewhat the air of a
dinner at an hotel; but it has the advantage of enabling the visitors to select
their fare, and, as forewarned is forearmed, to keep a corner, as the children
say, for their favourite dishes
If you are asked to take wine, it
is polite to select the same as that which your interlocutor
is drinking. If you invite a lady to take wine,
you should ask her which she will prefer, and then
take the same yourself. Should you, however,
for any reason prefer some other vintage, you can
take it by courteously requesting her permission.
As soon as you are helped, begin to
eat; or, if the viands are too hot for your palate,
take up your knife and fork and appear to begin.
To wait for others is now not only old-fashioned,
but ill-bred.
Never offer to pass on the plate to
which you have been helped. This is a still more
vulgar piece of politeness, and belongs to the manners
of a hundred years ago. The lady of the house
who sends your plate to you is the best judge of precedence
at her own table.
In helping soup, fish, or any other
dish, remember that to overfill a plate is as bad
as to supply it too scantily.
Silver fish-knives will now always
be met with at the best tables; but where there are
none, a piece of crust should be taken in the left
hand, and the fork in the right. There is no exception
to this rule in eating fish.
We presume it is scarcely necessary
to remind the reader that he is never, under any circumstances,
to convey his knife to his mouth. Peas are eaten
with the fork; tarts, curry, and puddings of all kinds
with the spoon.
Always help fish with a fish-slice,
and tart and puddings with a spoon, or, if necessary,
a spoon and fork.
Asparagus must be helped with the asparagus-tongs
In eating asparagus, it is well to
observe what others do, and act accordingly.
Some very well-bred people eat it with the fingers;
others cut off the heads, and convey them to the mouth
upon the fork. It would be difficult to say which
is the more correct.
In eating stone fruit, such as cherries,
damsons, &c., the same rule had better be observed.
Some put the stones out from the mouth into a spoon,
and so convey them to the plate. Others cover
the lips with the hand, drop them unseen into the
palm, and so deposit them on the side of the plate.
In our own opinion, the last is the better way, as
it effectually conceals the return of the stones,
which is certainly the point of highest importance.
Of one thing we may be sure, and that is, that they
must never be dropped from the mouth to the plate.
In helping sauce, always pour it on
the side of the plate.
If the servants do not go round with the wine (which is by
far the best custom), the gentlemen at a dinner-table should take upon
themselves the office of helping those ladies who sit near them. Ladies take
more wine in the present day than they did fifty years ago, and gentlemen should
remember this, and offer it frequently. Ladies cannot very well ask for wine,
but they can always decline it. At all events, they do not like to be neglected,
or to see gentlemen liberally helping themselves, without observing whether
their fair neighbours glasses are full or empty. Young ladies seldom drink more
than three glasses of wine at dinner; but married ladies, professional ladies,
and those accustomed to society, and habits of affluence, will habitually take
five or even six, whether in their own homes or at the tables of their friends
The habit of taking wine with each
other has almost wholly gone out of fashion.
A gentleman may ask the lady whom he conducted down
to dinner; or he may ask the lady of the house to
take wine with him. But even these last remnants
of the old custom are fast falling into disuse.
Unless you are a total abstainer, it is extremely uncivil to
decline taking wine if you are invited to do so. In accepting, you have only to
pour a little fresh wine into your glass, look at the person who invited you,
bow slightly, and take a sip from the glass
It is particularly ill-bred to empty your glass on these
occasions
Certain wines are taken with certain
dishes, by old-established custom as sherry,
or sauterne, with soup and fish; hock and claret with
roast meat; punch with turtle; champagne with whitebait;
port with venison; port, or burgundy, with game; sparkling
wines between the roast and the confectionery; madeira
with sweets; port with cheese; and for dessert, port,
tokay, madeira, sherry, and claret. Red
wines should never be iced, even in summer. Claret
and burgundy should always be slightly warmed; claret-cup
and champagne-cup should, of course, be iced.
Instead of cooling their wines in
the ice-pail, some hosts have of late years introduced
clear ice upon the table, broken up in small lumps,
to be put inside the glasses This is an innovation
that cannot be too strictly reprehended or too soon
abolished. Melting ice can but weaken the quality
and flavour of the wine. Those who desire to drink
wine and water can asked for iced water
if they choose, but it savours too much of economy
on the part of a host to insinuate the ice inside
the glasses of his guests, when the wine could be more
effectually iced outside the bottle.
A silver knife and fork should be
placed to each guest at dessert.
If you are asked to prepare fruit for a lady, be careful to
do so, by means of the silver knife and fork only, and never to touch it with
your fingers
It is wise never to partake of any
dish without knowing of what ingredients it is composed.
You can always ask the servant who hands it to you,
and you thereby avoid all danger of having to commit
the impoliteness of leaving it, and showing that you
do not approve of it.
Never speak while you have anything in your mouth.
Be careful never to taste soups or
puddings till you are sure they are sufficiently cool;
as, by disregarding this caution, you may be compelled
to swallow what is dangerously hot, or be driven to
the unpardonable alternative of returning it to your
plate.
When eating or drinking, avoid every
kind of audible testimony to the fact.
Finger-glasses, containing water slightly warmed and
perfumed, are placed to each person at dessert. In these you may dip the tips of
your fingers, wiping them afterwards on your table-napkin. If the finger-glass
and dOyley are placed on your dessert-plate, you should immediately remove the
dOyley to the left of your plate, and place the finger-glass upon it. By these
means you leave the right for the wine-glasses
Be careful to know the shapes of the
various kinds of wine-glasses commonly in use, in
order that you may never put forward one for another.
High and narrow, and very broad and shallow glasses,
are used for champagne; large, goblet-shaped glasses
for burgundy and claret; ordinary wine-glasses for
sherry and madeira; green glasses for hock; and somewhat
large, bell-shaped glasses, for port.
Port, sherry, and madeira, are decanted.
Hocks and champagnes appear in their native bottles
Claret and burgundy are handed round in a claret-jug.
Coffee and liqueurs should be
handed round when the dessert has been about a quarter
of an hour on the table. After this, the ladies
generally retire.
Should no servant be present to do
so, the gentleman who is nearest the door should hold
it for the ladies to pass through.
When the ladies leave the dining-room,
the gentlemen all rise in their places, and do not
resume their seats till the last lady is gone.
The servants leave the room when the
dessert is on the table.
If you should unfortunately overturn or break anything, do
not apologize for it. You can show your regret in your face, but it is not
well-bred to put it into words
Should you injure a lady’s dress,
apologise amply, and assist her, if possible, to remove
all traces of the damage.
To abstain from taking the last piece
on the dish, or the last glass of wine in the decanter,
only because it is the last, is highly ill-bred.
It implies a fear that the vacancy cannot be supplied,
and almost conveys an affront to your host.
In summing up the little duties and
laws of the table, a popular author has said that “The
chief matter of consideration at the dinner-table as,
indeed, everywhere else in the life of a gentleman is
to be perfectly composed and at his ease. He speaks
deliberately; he performs the most important act of
the day as if he were performing the most ordinary.
Yet there is no appearance of trifling or want of
gravity in his manner; he maintains the dignity which
is so becoming on so vital an occasion. He performs
all the ceremonies, yet in the style of one who performs
no ceremonies at all. He goes through all the
complicated duties of the scene as if he were ‘to
the manner born.’”
To the giver of a dinner we have but
one or two remarks to offer. If he be a bachelor,
he had better give his dinner at a good hotel, or
have it sent in from Birch’s or Kuehn’s
If a married man, he will, we presume, enter into
council with his wife and his cook. In any case,
however, he should always bear in mind that it is his
duty to entertain his friends in the best manner that
his means permit; and that this is the least he can
do to recompense them for the expenditure of time
and money which they incur in accepting his invitation.
“To invite a friend to dinner,”
says Brillat Savarin, “is to become responsible
for his happiness so long as he is under your roof.”
Again: “He who receives friends at
his table, without having bestowed his personal supervision
upon the repast placed before them, is unworthy to
have friends
A dinner, to be excellent, need not
consist of a great variety of dishes; but everything
should be of the best, and the cookery should be perfect.
That which should be cool should be cool as ice; that
which should be hot should be smoking; the attendance
should be rapid and noiseless; the guests well assorted;
the wines of the best quality; the host attentive
and courteous; the room well lighted; and the time
punctual.
Every dinner should begin with soup,
be followed by fish, and include some kind of game.
“The soup is to the dinner,” we are told
by Grisnod de la Regniere, “what the portico
is to a building, or the overture to an opera.”
To this aphorism we may be permitted
to add that a châsse of cognac or curacoa at
the close of the dinner is like the epilogue at the
end of a comedy.
One more quotation and we have done: “To
perform faultlessly the honours of the table is one
of the most difficult things in society. It might
indeed he asserted without much fear of contradiction,
that no man has as yet ever reached exact propriety
in his office as host, or has hit the mean between
exerting himself too much and too little. His
great business is to put every one entirely at his
ease, to gratify all his desires, and make him, in
a word, absolutely contented with men and things
To accomplish this, he must have the genius of tact
to perceive, and the genius of finesse to execute;
ease and frankness of manner; a knowledge of the world
that nothing can surprise; a calmness of temper that
nothing can disturb; and a kindness of disposition
that can never be exhausted. When he receives
others he must be content to forget himself; he must
relinquish all desire to shine, and even all attempts
to please his guests by conversation, and rather do
all in his power to let them please one another.
He behaves to them without agitation, without affectation;
he pays attention without an air of protection; he
encourages the timid, draws out the silent, and directs
conversation without sustaining it himself. He
who does not do all this is wanting in his duty as
host he who does, is more than mortal.”
In conclusion, we may observe that
to sit long in the dining-room after the ladies have
retired is to pay a bad compliment to the hostess
and her fair visitors; and that it is a still worse
tribute to rejoin them with a flushed face and impaired
powers of thought. A refined gentleman is always
temperate.
XI. THE BALL-ROOM.
Invitations to a ball are issued at
least ten days in advance; and this term is sometimes,
in the height of the season, extended to three weeks,
or even a month.
An invitation should be accepted or
declined within a day or two of its reception.
Gentlemen who do not dance should
not accept invitations of this kind. They are
but incumbrances in the ball-room, besides which, it
looks like a breach of etiquette and courtesy to stand
or sit idly by when there are, most probably, ladies
in the room who are waiting for an invitation to dance.
A ball generally begins about half-past
nine or ten o’clock.
A man who stands up to dance without
being acquainted with the figures, makes himself ridiculous,
and places his partner in an embarrassing and unenviable
position. There is no need for him to know the
steps It is enough if he knows how to walk gracefully
through the dance, and to conduct his partner through
it like a gentleman. No man can waltz too well;
but to perform steps in a quadrille is not only unnecessary
but outre.
A gentleman cannot ask a lady to dance
without being first introduced to her by some member
of the hostess’s family.
Never enter a ball-room in other than full evening dress, and
white or light kid gloves
A gentleman cannot be too careful
not to injure a lady’s dress The young
men of the present day are inconceivably thoughtless
in this respect, and often seem to think the mischief
which they do scarcely worth an apology. Cavalry
officers should never wear spurs in a ball-room.
Bear in mind that all Casino
habits are to be scrupulously avoided in a private
ball-room. It is an affront to a highly-bred lady
to hold her hand behind you, or on your hip, when
dancing a round dance. We have seen even aristocratic
young men of the “fast” genus commit these
unpardonable offences against taste and decorum.
Never forget a ball-room engagement.
It is the greatest neglect and slight that a gentleman
can offer to a lady.
At the beginning and end of a quadrille
the gentleman bows to his partner, and bows again
on handing her to a seat.
After dancing, the gentleman may offer
to conduct the lady to the refreshment-room.
Should a lady decline your hand for
a dance, and afterwards stand up with another partner,
you will do well to attribute her error to either
forgetfulness or ignorance of the laws of etiquette.
Politeness towards your host and hostess demands that
you should never make any little personal grievance
the ground of discomfort or disagreement.
A gentleman conducts his last partner
to supper; waits upon her till she has had as much
refreshment as she desires, and then re-conducts her
to the ball-room.
However much pleasure you may take
in the society of any particular lady, etiquette forbids
that you should dance with her too frequently.
Engaged persons would do well to bear this maxim in
mind.
It is customary to call upon your entertainers within a few
days after the ball.
XII. STAYING AT A FRIEND’S
HOUSE: BREAKFAST, LUNCHEON, &c.
A visitor is bound by the laws of
social intercourse to conform in all respects to the
habits of the house. In order to do this effectually,
he should inquire, or cause his personal servant to
inquire, what those habits are. To keep your
friend’s breakfast on the table till a late
hour; to delay the dinner by want of punctuality; to
accept other invitations, and treat his house as if
it were merely an hotel to be slept in; or to keep
the family up till unwonted hours, are alike evidences
of a want of good feeling and good breeding.
At breakfast and lunch absolute punctuality
is not imperative; but a visitor should avoid being
always the last to appear at table.
No order of precedence is observed
at either breakfast or luncheon. Persons take
their seats as they come in, and, having exchanged
their morning salutations, begin to eat without waiting
for the rest of the party.
If letters are delivered to you at
breakfast or luncheon, you may read them by asking
permission from the lady who presides at the urn.
Always hold yourself at the disposal
of those in whose house you are visiting. If
they propose to ride, drive, walk, or otherwise occupy
the day, you may take it for granted that these plans
are made with reference to your enjoyment. You
should, therefore, receive them with cheerfulness,
enter into them with alacrity, and do your best to
seem pleased, and be pleased, by the efforts which
your friends make to entertain you.
You should never take a book from
the library to your own room without requesting permission
to borrow it. When it is lent, you should take
every care that it sustains no injury while in your
possession, and should cover it, if necessary.
A guest should endeavour to amuse
himself as much as possible, and not be continually
dependent on his hosts for entertainment. He should
remember that, however welcome he may be, he is not
always wanted. During the morning hours a gentleman
visitor who neither shoots, reads, writes letters,
nor does anything but idle about the house and chat
with the ladies, is an intolerable nuisance. Sooner
than become the latter, he had better retire to the
billiard-room and practise cannons by himself, or
pretend an engagement and walk about the neighbourhood.
Those who receive staying visitors, as they are called,
should remember that the truest hospitality is that which places the visitor
most at his ease, and affords him the greatest opportunity for enjoyment. They
should also remember that different persons have different ideas on the subject
of enjoyment, and that the surest way of making a guest happy is to find out
what gives him pleasure; not to impose that upon him which is pleasure to
themselves
A visitor should avoid giving unnecessary trouble to the
servants of the house, and should be liberal to them when he leaves
The signal for retiring to rest is
generally given by the appearance of the servant with
wine, water, and biscuits, where a late dinner-hour
is observed and suppers are not the custom. This
is the last refreshment of the evening, and the visitor
will do well to rise and wish good-night shortly after
it has been partaken of by the family.
XIII. GENERAL HINTS
In entering a morning exhibition,
or public room, where ladies are present, the gentleman
should lift his hat.
In going upstairs the gentleman should
precede the lady; in going down, he should follow
her.
If you accompany ladies to a theatre or concert-room, precede
them to clear the way and secure their seats
Do not frequently repeat the name
of the person with whom you are conversing. It
implies either the extreme of hauteur or familiarity.
We have already cautioned you against the repetition
of titles Deference can always be better expressed in the voice, manner, and
countenance than in any forms of words
If when you are walking with a lady
in any crowded thoroughfare you are obliged to proceed
singly, always precede her.
Always give the lady the wall; by
doing so you interpose your own person between her
and the passers by, and assign her the cleanest part
of the pavement.
At public balls, theatres, &c., a gentleman should never
permit the lady to pay for refreshments, vehicles, and so forth. If she insists
on repaying him afterwards, he must of course defer to her wishes
Never speak of absent persons by only
their Christian or surnames; but always as Mr.
or Mrs . Above all, never name
anybody by the first letter of his name. Married
people are sometimes guilty of this flagrant offence
against taste.
If you are smoking and meet a lady
to whom you wish to speak, immediately throw away
your cigar.
Do not smoke shortly before entering the presence of ladies
A young man who visits frequently
at the house of a married friend may be permitted
to show his sense of the kindness which he receives
by the gift of a Christmas or New Year’s volume
to the wife or daughter of his entertainer. The
presentation of Etrennes is now carried to
a ruinous and ludicrous height among our French neighbours;
but it should be remembered that, without either ostentation
or folly, a gift ought to be worth offering.
It is better to give nothing than too little.
On the other hand, mere costliness does not constitute
the soul of a present; on the contrary, it has the
commercial and unflattering effect of repayment for
value received.
A gift should be precious for something
better than its price. It may have been brought
by the giver from some far or famous place; it may
be unique in its workmanship; it may be valuable only
from association with some great man or strange event.
Autographic papers, foreign curiosities, and the like,
are elegant gifts An author may offer his book,
or a painter a sketch, with grace and propriety.
Offerings of flowers and game are unexceptionable,
and may be made even to those whose position is superior
to that of the giver.
If you present a book to a friend,
do not write his or her name in it, unless requested.
You have no right to presume that it will be rendered
any the more valuable for that addition; and you ought
not to conclude beforehand that your gift will be
accepted.
Never refuse a present unless under
very exceptional circumstances However humble
the giver, and however poor the gift, you should appreciate
the goodwill and intention, and accept it with kindness
and thanks Never say “I fear I rob you,”
or “I am really ashamed to take it,” &c.,
&c. Such deprecatory phrases imply that you think
the bestower of the gift cannot spare or afford it.
Never undervalue the gift which you
are yourself offering; you have no business to offer
it if it is valueless Neither say that you do
not want it yourself, or that you should throw it
away if it were not accepted. Such apologies
would be insults if true, and mean nothing if false.
No compliment that bears insincerity
on the face of it is a compliment at all.
To yawn in the presence of others,
to lounge, to put your feet on a chair, to stand with
your back to the fire, to take the most comfortable
seat in the room, to do anything which shows indifference,
selfishness, or disrespect, is unequivocally vulgar
and inadmissible.
If a person of greater age or higher
rank than yourself desires you to step first into
a carriage, or through a door, it is more polite to
bow and obey than to decline.
Compliance with, and deference to,
the wishes of others is the finest breeding.
When you cannot agree with the propositions
advanced in general conversation, be silent.
If pressed for your opinion, give it with modesty.
Never defend your own views too warmly. When you
find others remain unconvinced, drop the subject,
or lead to some other topic.
Look at those who address you.
Never boast of your birth, your money,
your grand friends, or anything that is yours
If you have travelled, do not introduce that information
into your conversation at every opportunity. Any
one can travel with money and leisure. The real
distinction is to come home with enlarged views, improved
tastes, and a mind free from prejudice.
Give a foreigner his name in full,
as Monsieur de Vigny never as Monsieur
only. In speaking of him, give him his title,
if he has one. Foreign noblemen are addressed
viva voce as Monsieur. In speaking of
a foreign nobleman before his face, say Monsieur
le Comte, or Monsieur le Marquis
In his absence, say Monsieur le Comte
de Vigny.
Converse with a foreigner in his own
language. If not competent to do so, apologize,
and beg permission to speak English.