True
to word - From -The Gentlemen's Book of Etiquette and Manual of Politeness by
Cecil B. Hartley
PARTIES.
Now, there are many different kinds of parties.
There are the evening party, the matinée, the reading, dancing, and singing
parties, the picnic, the boating, and the riding parties; and the duties for
each one are distinct, yet, in many points, similar. Our present subject is:—
THE EVENING PARTY.
These are of two kinds, large and small. For the
first, you will receive a formal card, containing the compliments of your
hostess for a certain evening, and this calls for full dress, a dress coat, and
white or very light gloves. To the small party you will probably be invited
verbally, or by a more familiar style of note than the compliment card. Here
you may wear gloves if you will, but you need not do so unless perfectly
agreeable to yourself.
If you are to act as escort to a lady, you must call
at the hour she chooses to name, and the most elegant way is to take a carriage
for her. If you wish to present a bouquet, you may do so with perfect
propriety, even if you have but a slight acquaintance with her.
When you reach the house of your hostess for the
evening, escort your companion to the dressing-room, and leave her at the door.
After you have deposited your own hat and great-coat in the gentlemen’s
dressing-room, return to the ladies’ door and wait for your companion. Offer
her your right arm, and lead her to the drawing-room, and, at once, to the
hostess, then take her to a seat, and remain with her until she has other
companions, before you seek any of your own friends in the room.
There is much more real enjoyment and sociability in
a well-arranged party, than in a ball, though many of the points of etiquette
to be observed in the latter are equally applicable to the former. There is
more time allowed for conversation, and, as there are not so many people
collected, there is also more opportunity for forming acquaintances. At a
soirée, par excellence, music, dancing, and conversation are all admissible,
and if the hostess has tact and discretion this variety is very pleasing. As
there are many times when there is no pianist or music engaged for dancing, you
will do well, if you are a performer on the piano-forte, to learn some
quadrilles, and round dances, that you may volunteer your services as
orchestra. Do not, in this case, wait to be solicited to play, but offer your
services to the hostess, or, if there is a lady at the piano, ask permission to
relieve her. To turn the leaves for another, and sometimes call figures, are
also good natured and well-bred actions.
There is one piece of rudeness very common at
parties, against which I would caution you. Young people very often form a
group, and indulge in the most boisterous merriment and loud laughter, for
jests known only to themselves. Do not join such a group. A well-bred man,
while he is cheerful and gay, will avoid any appearance of romping in society.
If dancing is to be the amusement for the evening,
your first dance should be with the lady whom you accompanied, then, invite
your hostess, and, if there are several ladies in the family you must invite
each of them once, in the course of the evening. If you go alone, invite the
ladies of the house before dancing with any of your other lady friends.
Never attempt any dance with which you are not
perfectly familiar. Nothing is more awkward and
annoying than to have one
dancer, by his ignorance of the figures, confuse all the others in the set, and
certainly no man wants to show off his ignorance of the steps of a round dance
before a room full of company.
Do not devote yourself too much to one lady. A party
is meant to promote sociability, and a man who persists in a tête-à-tête for
the evening, destroys this intention. Besides you prevent others from enjoying
the pleasure of intercourse with the lady you thus monopolize.
Avoid any affectation of great intimacy with any
lady present; and even if you really enjoy such intimacy, or she is a relative,
do not appear to have confidential conversation, or, in any other way, affect
airs of secrecy or great familiarity.
Dance easily and gracefully, keeping perfect time,
but not taking too great pains with your steps. If your whole attention is
given to your feet or carriage, you will probably be mistaken for a dancing
master.
When you conduct your partner to a seat after a
dance, you may sit or stand beside her to converse, unless you see that another
gentleman is waiting to invite her to dance.
Do not take the vacant seat next a lady unless you
are acquainted with her.
After dancing, do not offer your hand, but your arm,
to conduct your partner to her seat.
If music is called for and you are able to play or
sing, do so when first invited, or, if you refuse then, do not afterwards
comply. If you refuse, and then alter your mind you will either be considered a
vain coxcomb, who likes to be urged; or some will conclude that you refused at
first from mere caprice, for, if you had a good reason for declining, why
change your mind?
Never offer to turn the leaves of music for any one
playing, unless you can read the notes, for you run the risk of confusing them,
by turning too soon or too late.
If you sing a good second, never sing with a lady
unless she herself invites you. Her friends may wish to hear you sing together,
when she herself may not wish to sing with one to whose voice and time she is
unaccustomed.
Do not start a conversation whilst any one is either
playing or singing, and if another person commences one, speak in a tone that
will not prevent others from listening to the music.
If you play yourself, do not wait for silence in the
room before you begin. If you play well, those really fond of music will cease
to converse, and listen to you; and those who do not care for it, will not stop
talking if you wait upon the piano stool until day dawn.
Relatives should avoid each other at a party, as
they can enjoy one another’s society at home, and it is the constantly changing
intercourse, and complete sociability that make a party pleasant.
Private concerts and amateur theatricals are very
often the occasions for evening parties, and make a very pleasant variety on
the usual dancing and small talk. An English writer, speaking of them, says:
“Private concerts and amateur theatricals ought to
be very good to be successful. Professionals alone should be engaged for the
former, none but real amateurs for the latter. Both ought to be, but rarely
are, followed by a supper, since they are generally very fatiguing, if not
positively trying. In any case, refreshments and ices should be handed between
the songs and the acts. Private concerts are often given in the ‘morning,’ that
is, from two to six P. M.; in the evening their hours are from eight to eleven.
The rooms should be arranged in the same manner as for a reception, the guests
should be seated, and as music is the avowed object, a general silence
preserved while it lasts. Between the songs the conversation ebbs back again,
and the party takes the general form of a reception. For private theatricals,
however, where there is no special theatre, and where the curtain is hung, as
is most common, between the folding-doors, the audience-room must be filled
with chairs and benches in rows, and, if possible, the back rows raised higher
than the others. These are often removed when the performance is over, and the
guests then converse, or, sometimes, even dance. During the acting it is rude
to talk, except in a very low tone, and, be it good or bad, you would never
think of hissing.”
If you are alone, and obliged to retire early from
an evening party, do not take leave of your hostess, but slip away unperceived.
If you have escorted a lady, her time must be yours,
and she will tell you when she is ready to go. See whether the carriage has
arrived before she goes to the dressing-room, and return to the parlor to tell
her. If the weather was pleasant when you left home, and you walked, ascertain
whether it is still pleasant; if not, procure a carriage for your companion.
When it is at the door, join her in the drawing-room, and offer your arm to
lead her to the hostess for leave-taking, making your own parting bow at the
same time, then take your companion to the door of the ladies’ dressing-room,
get your own hat and wait in the entry until she comes out.
When you reach your companion’s house, do not accept
her invitation to enter, but ask permission to call in the morning, or the
following evening, and make that call.
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