A
Treatise on Good Manners and Good Breeding
GOOD manners is the art of making those people easy with whom we
converse.
Whoever makes the
fewest
persons uneasy is the best bred in the company.
As the best law is
founded upon
reason, so are the best manners. And as some lawyers have introduced
unreasonable things into common law, so likewise many teachers have
introduced
absurd things into common good manners.
One principal point of
this art
is to suit our behaviour to the three several degrees of men; our
superiors, our
equals, and those below us.
For instance, to press
either
of the two former to eat or drink is a breach of manners; but a farmer
or a
tradesman must be thus treated, or else it will be difficult to
persuade them
that they are welcome.
Pride, ill nature, and
want of
sense, are the three great sources of ill manners; without some one of
these
defects, no man will behave himself ill for want of experience; or of
what, in
the language of fools, is called knowing the world.
I defy any one to
assign an
incident wherein reason will not direct us what we are to say or do in
company,
if we are not misled by pride or ill nature.
Therefore I insist
that good
sense is the principal foundation of good manners; but because the
former is a
gift which very few among mankind are possessed of, therefore all the
civilized
nations of the world have agreed upon fixing some rules for common
behaviour,
best suited to their general customs, or fancies, as a kind of
artificial good
sense, to supply the defects of reason. Without which the gentlemanly
part of
dunces would be perpetually at cuffs, as they seldom fail when they
happen to be
drunk, or engaged in squabbles about women or play. And, God be
thanked, there
hardly happens a duel in a year, which may not be imputed to one of
those three
motives. Upon which account, I should be exceedingly sorry to find the
legislature make any new laws against the practice of duelling; because
the
methods are easy and many for a wise man to avoid a quarrel with
honour, or
engage in it with innocence. And I can discover no political evil in
suffering
bullies, sharpers, and rakes, to rid the world of each other by a
method of
their own; where the law hath not been able to find an expedient.
As the common forms of
good
manners were intended for regulating the conduct of those who have weak
understandings; so they have been corrupted by the persons for whose
use they
were contrived. For these people have fallen into a needless and
endless way of
multiplying ceremonies, which have been extremely troublesome to those
who
practise them, and insupportable to everybody else: insomuch that wise
men are
often more uneasy at the over civility of these refiners, than they
could
possibly be in the conversations of peasants or mechanics.
The impertinencies of
this
ceremonial behaviour are nowhere better seen than at those tables where
ladies
preside, who value themselves upon account of their good breeding;
where a man
must reckon upon passing an hour without doing any one thing he has a
mind to;
unless he will be so hardy to break through all the settled decorum of
the
family. She determines what he loves best, and how much he shall eat;
and if the
master of the house happens to be of the same disposition, he proceeds
in the
same tryrannical manner to prescribe in the drinking part: at the same
time, you
are under the necessity of answering a thousand apologies for your
entertainment. And although a good deal of this humour is pretty well
worn off
among many people of the best fashion, yet too much of it still remains,
especially in the country; where an honest gentleman assured me, that
having
been kept four days, against his will, at a friend’s house, with all the
circumstances of hiding his boots, locking up the stable, and other
contrivances
of the like nature, he could not remember, from the moment he came into
the
house to the moment he left it, any one thing, wherein his inclination
was not
directly contradicted; as if the whole family had entered into a
combination to
torment him.
But, besides all this,
it would
be endless to recount the many foolish and ridiculous accidents I have
observed
among these unfortunate proselytes to ceremony. I have seen a duchess
fairly
knocked down, by the precipitancy of an officious coxcomb running to
save her
the trouble of opening a door. I remember, upon a birthday at court, a
great
lady was utterly desperate by a dish of sauce let fall by a page
directly upon
her head-dress and brocade, while she gave a sudden turn to her elbow
upon some
point of ceremony with the person who sat next her. Monsieur Buys, the
Dutch
envoy, whose politics and manners were much of a size, brought a son
with him,
about thirteen years old, to a great table at court. The boy and his
father,
whatever they put on their plates, they first offered round in order,
to every
person in the company; so that we could not get a minute’s quiet during
the
whole dinner. At last their two plates happened to encounter, and with
so much
violence, that, being china, they broke in twenty pieces, and stained
half the
company with wet sweetmeats and cream.
There is a pedantry in
manners,
as in all arts and sciences; and sometimes in trades. Pedantry is
properly the
overrating any kind of knowledge we pretend to. And if that kind of
knowledge be
a trifle in itself, the pedantry is the greater. For which reason I
look upon
fiddlers, dancing-masters, heralds, masters of the ceremony, &c. to
be
greater pedants than Lipsius, or the elder Scaliger. With these kind of
pedants,
the court, while I knew it, was always plentifully stocked; I mean from
the
gentleman usher (at least) inclusive, downward to the gentleman porter;
who are,
generally speaking, the most insignificant race of people that this
island can
afford, and with the smallest tincture of good manners, which is the
only trade
they profess. For being wholly illiterate, and conversing chiefly with
each
other, they reduce the whole system of breeding within the forms and
circles of
their several offices; and as they are below the notice of ministers,
they live
and die in court under all revolutions with great obsequiousness to
those who
are in any degree of favour or credit, and with rudeness or insolence to
everybody else. Whence I have long concluded, that good manners are not
a plant
of the court growth; for if they were, those people who have
understandings
directly of a level for such acquirements, and who have served such long
apprenticeships to nothing else, would certainly have picked them up.
For as to
the great officers, who attend the prince’s person or councils, or
preside in
his family, they are a transient body, who have no better a title to
good
manners than their neighbours, nor will probably have recourse to
gentlemen
ushers for instruction. So that I know little to be learnt at court
upon this
head, except in the material circumstance of dress; wherein the
authority of the
maids of honour must indeed be allowed to be almost equal to that of a
favourite
actress.
I remember a passage
my Lord
Bolingbroke told me, that going to receive Prince Eugene of Savoy at his
landing, in order to conduct him immediately to the Queen, the prince
said, he
was much concerned that he could not see her Majesty that night; for
Monsieur
Hoffman (who was then by) had assured his Highness that he could not be
admitted
into her presence with a tied-up periwig; that his equipage was not
arrived; and
that he had endeavoured in vain to borrow a long one among all his
valets and
pages. My lord turned the matter into a jest, and brought the Prince to
her
Majesty; for which he was highly censured by the whole tribe of
gentlemen
ushers; among whom Monsieur Hoffman, an old dull resident of the
Emperor’s,
had picked up this material point of ceremony; and which, I believe,
was the
best lesson he had learned in five-and-twenty years’ residence.
I make a difference
between
good manners and good breeding; although, in order to vary my
expression, I am
sometimes forced to confound them. By the first, I only understand the
art of
remembering and applying certain settled forms of general behaviour.
But good
breeding is of a much larger extent; for besides an uncommon degree of
literature sufficient to qualify a gentleman for reading a play, or a
political
pamphlet, it takes in a great compass of knowledge; no less than that of
dancing, fighting, gaming, making the circle of Italy, riding the great
horse,
and speaking French; not to mention some other secondary, or subaltern
accomplishments, which are more easily acquired. So that the difference
between
good breeding and good manners lies in this, that the former cannot be
attained
to by the best understandings, without study and labour; whereas a
tolerable
degree of reason will instruct us in every part of good manners,
without other
assistance.
I can think of nothing
more
useful upon this subject, than to point out some particulars, wherein
the very
essentials of good manners are concerned, the neglect or perverting of
which
doth very much disturb the good commerce of the world, by introducing a
traffic
of mutual uneasiness in most companies.
First, a necessary
part of good
manners, is a punctual observance of time at our own dwellings, or
those of
others, or at third places; whether upon matter of civility, business,
or
diversion; which rule, though it be a plain dictate of common reason,
yet the
greatest minister I ever knew was the greatest trespasser against it;
by which
all his business doubled upon him, and placed him in a continual
arrear. Upon
which I often used to rally him, as deficient in point of good manners.
I have
known more than one ambassador, and secretary of state with a very
moderate
portion of intellectuals, execute their offices with good success and
applause,
by the mere force of exactness and regularity. If you duly observe time
for the
service of another, it doubles the obligation; if upon your own
account, it
would be manifest folly, as well as ingratitude, to neglect it. If both
are
concerned, to make your equal or inferior attend on you, to his own
disadvantage, is pride and injustice.
Ignorance of forms
cannot
properly be styled ill manners; because forms are subject to frequent
changes;
and consequently, being not founded upon reason, are beneath a wise
man’s
regard. Besides, they vary in every country; and after a short period
of time,
very frequently in the same; so that a man who travels, must needs be
at first a
stranger to them in every court through which he passes; and perhaps at
his
return, as much a stranger in his own; and after all, they are easier
to be
remembered or forgotten than faces or names.
Indeed, among the many
impertinences that superficial young men bring with them from abroad,
this
bigotry of forms is one of the principal, and more prominent than the
rest; who
look upon them not only as if they were matters capable of admitting of
choice,
but even as points of importance; and are therefore zealous on all
occasions to
introduce and propagate the new forms and fashions they have brought
back with
them. So that, usually speaking, the worst bred person in the company
is a young
traveller just returned from abroad.