Showing posts with label Civility and Good Manners. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Civility and Good Manners. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 4, 2024

Foolish Social Advice

Was this foolish advice? No. It was merely foolish to categorize it under “Ballroom Etiquette.” This was clearly good versus bad etiquette or manners, anywhere.
 The vulgarities were numerous with Madame Olenska. She was flirting with her longtime crush and her cousin’s fiancé, Newland Archer, in the 1993, gilded age tale, “The Age of Innocence” –
“… never descend into the commonplace vulgarity of flirting with another girl’s lover- even if you are old acquaintances. Try to realize what your 
own feelings would be under similar circumstances.”

It would be interesting to know just what social experiences those amiable society editors of a certain class have enjoyed who give advice to their readers like that contained in the following quotation:

“Do not excuse or forgive too readily any undue familiarity on the part of your partner. Remember, he may be almost a stranger to you, and you may never meet again. If you are tired and prefer to miss a dance, sit it out with your partner if he suggests it, you are bound to him for the time. Never make the gross mistake of sitting it out with another man. 

“No matter how much you may prefer the society of one particular man, never let your manner show it, but be pleasant, affable and smiling to all alike. Above all, never descend into the commonplace vulgarity of flirting with another girl’s lover- even if you are old acquaintances. Try to realize what your own feelings would be under similar circumstances.”

The foregoing is run under the caption of “Ballroom Etiquette,” and it is given for what it is worth to the readers of these columns. However, we believe that every young woman who has delight in attending ballroom functions should simply realize the fact that there is no such thing as “ballroom etiquette” any more than there should be “dining-room” etiquette or bedroom etiquette, or even etiquette in the much abused hall bedroom inhabited by unfortunates whose purses are far from heavy with this world’s wealth. 

There is only one way to conduct oneself in the ballroom, and that is according to the instincts which are inherent in every rightminded person. A great deal of harm is undoubtedly done through just such advice as that which we have quoted by raising false ideals and ideas as to peculiar methods of conduct. – Humboldt Times, October 1904


  🍽Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J. Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia

Saturday, June 12, 2021

Civility and Being Agreeable

A genuine smile is always agreeable! – “The presence of an agreeable person is like a ray of sunshine that warms everything on which it falls.”


Civility has been likened to an air cushion —possessing no tangible substance, yet serving to ease the jolts we encounter in passing through life. To say that a person is civil does not imply that he is agreeable, yet civility is the next step to being agreeable. While wonders may be accomplished by being civil and agreeable, nothing can be gained by incivility. 

Manners make the man or woman. The presence of an agreeable person is like a ray of sunshine that warms everything on which it falls, while a disagreeable person will chill the pleasantest company ever assembled, and it is one of those mysteries that can never be solved why such a one is permitted to flourish. - The San Diego Daily Bee, 1887


Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia