Good Manners
J. C. Hill
About the Author and Text
The essay "Good Manners' is
adapted from the book An Introduction to
Good Citizenship (1941) by J.C. Hill. If our attitudes and behaviour must
change for the better as we grow up, we must be able to have a deeper
understanding of human relationships and how they work. If one is open and
willing to change one's perspective then we become better individuals. Values
that make us sensitive to other's needs results in good manners. Hill discusses
good manners in action, good manners in speech, and in general behaviour.
Good Manners
J. C. Hill
There was once a young man who
was strong and healthy and enjoyed his work. In every way he felt on top of
life, and had no sympathy for the uninteresting folk who seemed to form such a
large proportion of the population. One day he got an attack of influenza. He
had had it before and paid little attention to it, but this time he developed
pneumonia and was dangerously ill. When he recovered he could only move slowly.
He was easily tired and life became difficult for him. When he was well enough to go
to work he found the journey home very trying. He looked at the young men
sitting comfortably in the train or bus, and he was feeling tired himself, he noticed
how tired some of the older people who were standing beside him looked.
Gradually he got strong again, but when he was in a train or bus he now looked
round to see if there was any older person in need of a seat, and if there was
he gave up his. 'I've got my strength back now,' he said to himself; ‘these older
people will never have their strength again.'
When you are cycling and see an old man hesitating on a crossing, don't call him an old fool. He may not hear very well, or he may not see clearly, or he may have become tired with walking. Perhaps he was a famous soldier in the War and his wounds are still painful, or perhaps he has an artificial leg. One day you may go to a war and be severely injured. What will you think if schoolboys make fun of you because you can only move slowly?
One of the things all boys and girls are going to learn before very long is that they are fragile little things in a dangerous world. Your parents and your teachers and all older people have had some severe blows already. They get more severe blows every year. Most of them would give all the money they have to get your health and strength, your good teeth and nice hair. You have no idea how tired they are at times, but because they do not complain you think everything is all right. Well, try to make life easy for them so far as you can, and when it is your turn to suffer you will feel happier for having helped when you could.
Good manners are also important when you are with your own friends. When you speak to anyone, speak clearly and sufficiently loudly for the person to hear. It is an insult to a person to ask his attention and then speak so that he does not understand you. And remember it is your responsibility to make yourself understood. An American writer called Thoreau said, 'It takes two to speak the truth-one to speak, and another to hear.' This is a very the truth important saying, and it would save a great deal of argument and annoyance in life if people paid attention to it. “It takes two to speak the truth.' You cannot speak the truth by saying what think is the truth. You have to express it differently for different people. To some people 'socialism' means taking money from those who have money and giving it to those who have none. To other people, ‘socialism' means State control of industry and commerce. To others we cannot tell a man ‘the truth about socialism' until you know what he understands by the term to you say, 'I believe in socialism', and he understands that you mean you believe in robbery, you must not be surprised if he takes a dislike to you; and if that is not what you mean, you did not speak the truth. If a man says to a friend, ‘Good morning, Mr. A.', and the friend replies, 'It's not a good morning at all, is that the truth, even if the morning is bad?
Sometimes people ask very tiresome questions and we like to make a joke about it. Are you a Boy Scout?' said a lady to a boy wearing shorts, a jersey with badges, a Scout's hat, and carrying a Boy Scout pole. “No,' said the little fellow, I'm two eggs on toast.' The lady only meant, however, 'How nice you look in your uniform; that is the Scout uniform, isn't it?' and there was really nothing silly in her remark.
It is only stupid people who take remarks too literally, as we say; that is, who do not look for the real meaning in the statements people make. Thus, when a friend says, 'You will not be going past the post office, will you?' he may mean, 'I should be grateful if you would post a letter for me if it is not too much trouble. If you say 'No' to the question because you are not going past the post office, it means to your friend that you are not willing to go out of your way even a little to oblige him.
It is not always easy in company to speak frankly, and if you don't want to be considered a bad-mannered person, you have watch constantly for signs. It is not easy, for example, to listen to long to any one person. Try in company to take only a fair s of the conversation. If there are two of you, take half of it. W you have said a little, keep quiet, and give your friend a chance say something. If he does not talk, he probably does not want you to talk either. Many a young man or woman talks away, thinking the company is delighted to hear him or her, and everyone is really exhausted and angry.
Don't think you can say unpleasant things about someone behind his back and not be found out. It is surprising how the remarks usually find their way to the person with your name watched, so to speak. Whatever you say, always assume that the person may overhear, and adjust your remarks accordingly. All experienced people act in this way.
Now here is one of the most surprising things in life: no man really understands himself. What a lot of argument and anger we should be saved if people would only understand this! Suppose, for example, you saw a motor accident and were giving evidence about what happened. You would feel perfectly confident, perhaps, that the car which knocked the boy over was a blue car; another person would be equally confident that it was a grey car; and someone else that it was a black car.
Experiments are sometimes made by experts to find out how many errors people do make in their statements. Here is one experiment which was tried. Some students at a university were shown on a screen a picture of a bull-fight. They were then asked to write a short account of what they had seen. When this was finished they were told to put a number on every statement made—1. if they thought so; 2. if they were fairly sure about it; 3. if they were quite sure and 4. if they were prepared to swear to the statement on oath. Every student had at least ten per cent errors in the statements he was prepared to swear to an oath, and considerably more than ten per cent in all the other groups.
Now how does this happen? Here,
for example, was one mistake. A student saw the bull having its tongue out. He
was quite sure about it. Yet when he was shown the picture again, he saw that
the bull's mouth was closed, but that, because its head was turned to the side,
the ear looked like the tongue. So whenever you are arguing with someone about
a point, remember that there is quite a good chance that you are wrong, however
confident you feel about it.
Good manners come from having sympathy with others and understanding our own limitations. “The truth' is too big for any one of us to understand. “The truth' as we see it is only our truth and part of a larger truth. We should always realise that we are humble, unimportant little people on this earth and try to help the world as much as we can in our short time here. ‘I expect to pass through this world but once. Any good, therefore, that I can do, or any kindness that I can show to any fellow creature, let me do it now. Let me not defer or neglect it, for I shall not pass this way again.'
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