Monday, July 21, 2003
And now... a Vintage Reader Etiquette Tip!
From Vogue's Book of Etiquette, by Millicent Fenwick, copyright 1948:
WHAT CHILDREN UNDER TEN YEARS OLD SHOULD LEARN
WHAT CHILDREN UNDER TEN YEARS OLD SHOULD LEARN
- To say "How do you do?" and "Good-bye"; and, almost more important, to look at the one they are shaking hands with.
- To bow (for boys) and to curtsey (for girls), whenever they say, "How do you do?" or, "Good-bye," to adults.
- To say, "Yes, thank you" and "No, Mummy" and "Yes, Mrs. Smith"; not just "Yes" and "No."
- To say, "Thank you for a very nice afternoon," or, "Thank you, I had a lovely time," when they say good-bye to their hostess.
- Not to interrupt older people.
- To wait at doorways until older people have gone through. Boys should also learn to let girls precede them.
- To take hats off in the house or when talking to older people; this, of course, for boys.
- To answer when they are spoken to.
- To eat neatly, without dawdling, and without argument. (See also "Rules for Children" in the chapter, "Table Manners.") [Eek! There are MORE of them? -- ed.]
- To be scrupulously polite always to nurses, maids, waiters--to anyone who receives wages in return for service. The kind of rudeness which should never be tolerated is that which refers to the fact that these people are employed.
Labels: etiquette
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