True to word from The Ladies' Book Of Etiquette, And Manual
Of Politeness by FLORENCE HARTLEY
DINNER COMPANY ~ ETIQUETTE FOR THE GUEST.
When you receive an invitation to join a dinner-party,
answer it immediately, as, by leaving your hostess in doubt whether you intend
to accept or decline her hospitality, you make it impossible for her to decide
how many she must prepare for. If you accept at first, and any unforeseen event
keeps you from fulfilling your engagement, write a second note, that your
hostess may not wait dinner for you. Such a note, if circumstances render it
necessary to write it, may be sent with perfect propriety an hour before the
time appointed for dinner, though, if you are aware that you cannot attend,
earlier, you must send the information in good season.
You should enter the house of your hostess from a quarter to
half an hour earlier than the time appointed for dining. Proceed at once to the
dressing-room, and arrange your dress and hair, and then enter the
drawing-room. By going to the house too early, you may hasten or interrupt the
toilet arrangements of your hostess; while, by being late, you will establish a
most disagreeable association in the minds of all present, as "the lady
who kept dinner waiting at Mrs. L——'s."
Immediately upon entering the parlor find your hostess, and
speak to her first. It is very rude to stop to chat with other guests before
greeting the lady of the house. You may bow to any one you know, in passing,
but do not stop to speak. Having exchanged a few words with your hostess, turn
to the other guests, unless you are the first arrival. In that case, converse
with your host and hostess until others come in.
Be careful, if dinner is delayed by the tardiness of the
guests, or from any other cause, that you do not show by your manner that you
are aware of such delay. To look towards the door often, consult your watch, or
give tokens of weariness, are all marks of ill-breeding. Your hostess will
probably be sufficiently annoyed by the irregularity itself; do not add to her
discomfort by allowing her to suppose that her guests perceive the
deficiencies. Look over the books and pictures with an air of interest,
converse cheerfully, and in every way appear as if dinner were a matter of
secondary importance, (as, indeed, it should be,) compared with the pleasure of
the society around you.
When the signal for dinner is given, your hostess will probably
name your escort to the table. If he is a stranger, bow in acknowledgement of
the introduction, take his arm, and fall into your place in the stream of
guests passing from the parlor to the dining-room.
Take the seat pointed out by your hostess, or the waiter, as
soon as it is offered. Each one will do this upon entering, and it prevents the
confusion that will result if those first entering the room, remain standing
until all the other guests come in.
When you take your seat, be careful that your chair does not
stand upon the dress of the lady next you, as she may not rise at the same
instant that you do, and so you risk tearing her dress.
Sit gracefully at the table; neither so close as to make
your movements awkward, nor so far away as to drag your food over your dress
before it reaches your mouth. It is well to carry in your pocket a small
pincushion, and, having unfolded your napkin, to pin it at the belt. You may do
this quietly, without its being perceived, and you will thus really save your
dress. If the napkin is merely laid open upon your lap, it will be very apt to
slip down, if your dress is of silk or satin, and you risk the chance of
appearing again in the drawing-room with the front of your dress soiled or
greased.
If, by the carelessness or awkwardness of your neighbors or
the servants, you have a plate of soup, glass of wine, or any dish intended for
your mouth, deposited upon your dress, do not spring up, or make any
exclamation. You may wipe off the worst of the spot with your napkin, and then
let it pass without further notice. If an apology is made by the unlucky
perpetrator of the accident, try to set him at his ease by your own lady-like
composure. He will feel sorry and awkward enough, without reproach, sullenness,
or cold looks from you.
Gloves and mittens are no longer worn at table, even at the
largest dinner-parties.
To make remarks upon the guests or the dishes is excessively
rude.
If the conversation is general, speak loudly enough to be
heard by those around you, but, at the same time, avoid raising your voice too
much. If the company is very large, and you converse only with the person
immediately beside you, speak in a distinct, but low tone, that you may not
interrupt other couples, but carefully avoid whispering or a confidential air.
Both are in excessively bad taste. To laugh in a suppressed way, has the
appearance of laughing at those around you, and a loud, boisterous laugh is
always unlady-like. Converse cheerfully, laugh quietly, but freely, if you will,
and while you confine your attention entirely to your neighbor, still avoid any
air of secrecy or mystery.
Never use an eye-glass, either to look at the persons around
you or the articles upon the table.
Eat your soup quietly. To make any noise in eating it, is
simply disgusting. Do not break bread into your soup. Break off small pieces
and put into your mouth, if you will, but neither bite it from the roll nor
break it up, and eat it from your soup-plate with a spoon.
In eating bread with meat, never dip it into the gravy on
your plate, and then bite the end off. If you wish to eat it with gravy, break
off a small piece, put it upon your plate, and then, with a fork, convey it to
your mouth.
When helped to fish, remove, with knife and fork, all the
bones, then lay down the knife, and, with a piece of bread in your left hand
and a fork in your right, eat the flakes of fish.
Need I say that the knife is to cut your food with, and must
never be used while eating? To put it in your mouth is a distinctive mark of
low-breeding.
If you have selected what you will eat, keep the plate that
is placed before you; never pass it to the persons next you, as they may have
an entirely different choice of meat or vegetables.
Never attempt to touch any dish that is upon the table, but
out of your reach, by stretching out your arms, leaning forward, or, still
worse, standing up. Ask the waiter to hand it, if you wish for it; or, if the
gentleman beside you can easily do so, you may ask him to pass it to you.
Do not press those near you to take more or other things
than are upon their plate. This is the duty of the hostess, or, if the company
is large, the servants will attend to it. For you to do so is officious and
ill-bred.
When conversing let your knife and fork rest easily upon
your plate, even if still in your hand. Avoid holding them upright. Keep your
own knife, fork, and spoon solely for the articles upon your own plate. To use
them for helping yourself to butter or salt, is rude in the extreme.
When you do not use the salt-spoon, sugar tongs, and
butter-knife, you may be sure that those around you will conclude that you have
never seen the articles, and do not know their use.
You need not fear to offend by refusing to take wine with a
gentleman, even your host. If you decline gracefully, he will appreciate the
delicacy which makes you refuse. If, however, you have no conscientious
scruples, and are invited to take wine, bow, and merely raise the glass to your
lips, then set it down again. You may thus acknowledge the courtesy, and yet
avoid actually drinking the wine.
No lady should drink wine at dinner. Even if her head is
strong enough to bear it, she will find her cheeks, soon after the indulgence,
flushed, hot, and uncomfortable; and if the room is warm, and the dinner a long
one, she will probably pay the penalty of her folly, by having a headache all
the evening.
If offered any dish of which you do not wish to partake,
decline it, but do not assign any reason. To object to the dish itself is an
insult to your entertainers, and if you assert any reason for your own dislike
it is ill-bred.
Do not bend too much forward over your food, and converse
easily. To eat fast, or appear to be so much engrossed as to be unable to
converse, is ill-bred; and it makes those around you suspect that you are so
little accustomed to dining well, that you fear to stop eating an instant, lest
you should not get enough.
It is equally ill-bred to accept every thing that is offered
to you. Never take more than two vegetables; do not take a second plate of
soup, pastry, or pudding. Indeed, it is best to accept but one plate of any
article.
Never use a spoon for anything but liquids, and never touch
anything to eat, excepting bread, celery, or fruit, with your fingers.
In the intervals which must occur between the courses, do
not appear to be conscious of the lapse of time. Wear a careless air when
waiting, conversing cheerfully and pleasantly, and avoid looking round the
room, as if wondering what the waiters are about.
Never eat every morsel that is upon your plate; and surely
no lady will ever scrape her plate, or pass the bread round it, as if to save
the servants the trouble of washing it.
Take such small mouthfulls that you can always be ready for
conversation, but avoid playing with your food, or partaking of it with an
affectation of delicate appetite. Your hostess may suppose you despise her
fare, if you appear so very choice, or eat too sparingly. If your state of
health deprives you of appetite, it is bad enough for you to decline the
invitation to dine out.
Never examine minutely the food before you. You insult your
hostess by such a proceeding, as it looks as if you feared to find something
upon the plate that should not be there.
If you find a worm on opening a nut, or in any of the fruit,
hand your plate quietly, and without remark, to the waiter, and request him to
bring you a clean one. Do not let others perceive the movement, or the cause of
it, if you can avoid so doing.
Never make a noise in eating. To munch or smack the lips are
vulgar faults.
Sit quietly at table, avoid stiffness, but, at the same
time, be careful that you do not annoy others by your restlessness.
Do not eat so fast as to be done long before others, nor so
slowly as to keep them waiting.
When the finger-glasses are passed round, dip the ends of
your fingers into them, and wipe them upon your napkin; then do not fold your
napkin, but place it beside your plate upon the table.
To carry away fruit or bonbons from the table is a sign of
low breeding.
Rise with the other ladies when your hostess gives the
signal.
After returning to the parlor, remain in the house at least
an hour after dinner is over. If you have another engagement in the evening,
you may then take your leave, but not before. You will insult your hostess by
leaving sooner, as it appears that you came only for the dinner, and that being
over, your interest in the house, for the time, has ceased. It is only beggars
who "eat and run!"
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