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 Consider ThisBy 
LC Van Savage
 
     
 Emily And AmyThere’s a new book out now, a biography of the life of Emily Post 
who as everyone knows was the give-all and end-all of proper etiquette. If 
you wanted to set one foot out of your baronial home to mingle with the 
affluent well-heeled dudes and dudettes, you’d better have read Emily 
Post’s words of decorum first so you didn’t make an unforgivable and 
unforgettable gaffe, such as using your dinner fork in your salad.
       When we young girls arrived at the longed-for age of eighteen, we 
were all given a brand new “Emily Post Etiquette; The Blue Book of Social 
Usage” as a gift, either the 1942 or the 1947 version.  I forget.  Can you 
imagine how much we hated getting that stupid book?  Did we really care how 
to get a fishbone delicately out of our throats while wearing gloves, while 
the boys just simply hocked them out onto their plates?  Can you imagine 
how enraged we girls were by getting that dumb book when we’d made it 
plainly clear we were expecting a convertible?  Did the boys get brand new 
Emily Post books as a gift on their eighteenth birthdays? You know the 
answer. It’s no. They got far more important things like gold pen and 
pencil sets, engraved watches and trips.
       I’m sorry to say I’ve lost my Emily Post book, although one can 
easily get another. They’re actually still for sale. And yes, they really 
do have their place in the world. But I do have my “Amy Vanderbilt’s 
Complete Book of Etiquette,” given to me in the late 1950s.  I guess my 
family thought if I had two etiquette books I’d have a leg up into the 
world of high society, wherever society is highest, and would maybe get 
down out of those trees or stop bringing home slimy biting things and 
forgetting I’d left them in the bathtub.
      I doubt if Amy and Emily were friends because Emily was born in 
1872 and Amy in 1908. I suspect Emily thought Amy was a bit of an upstart 
and I wonder if Amy stole a couple of howtobeproper ideas out of Emily’s 
book.        But both women were born with platinum shovels in their mouths 
and were taught early on of such things as the disgrace and shame of 
leaving one’s spoon in one’s teacup, or casually belching at table.
  I think Emily wrote sequels to her books, maybe “The Blue Book of 
Social Usage, Part II” or something. I often wonder how she thought she 
could improve upon the perfection of the first book. Unless she lightened 
up a little. Jeezum, talk about rigid. 
 Amy V. has had a couple of revised editions too, but none of them let 
anyone off the hook much, society-wise. You shaped up, made no mistakes, or 
you were an outcast, a pariah who would be dropped off invitation lists 
like a blob of wet pancake dough onto the kitchen floor, and the loud thunk 
of your faux pas would be heard everywhere by anyone who was anyone, and 
you would never, ever be welcomed back into that rarified atmosphere again.
       My Uncle Bill used to date Amy Vanderbilt although Uncle Bill was 
a gasbag blowhard and had gargantuan delusions of adequacy, so it’s a 
little doubtful.  He did however tell us some funny stories about Amy but 
at this point, who can check and who cares anyway? Amy and Bill have 
shuffled off to that great society mansion in the sky where wrong fork 
issues likely don’t exist because I don’t think anyone eats there anyway.
       Amy’s book is incredibly funny. For example, she frowns, but only 
slightly, on the issue of men wearing frock coats for daytime use although 
allows as to how some men might prefer the less restrained cutaway unless, 
of course (of course!!) there is entirely too much length to his watch 
chain.  Now mind you, this book was written in 1952. I never saw a man 
wearing a frock coat or even a cutaway except at fancy, boring weddings or 
something, but I did see men with watch chains. I recall it always being a 
tediously annoying production to get them to tell you what time it was.
        Amy lightens up a little on the ever important issue of elbows on 
the table. She says it’s OK between courses, during conversation, but never 
ever while one eats. And she opines that one must never cut up one’s toast 
beneath one’s poached eggs with one’s fingers. Now come on Amy, who would 
do that? No one in my circle, that’s for sure. I mean really.
 So many of those old niceties would result in our being stared at and 
laughed at if we did any of them today. Do I regret that? Sure. Those old 
rules were nice. Often ridiculous, sometimes with no rhyme nor reason, but 
still old fashioned and nice. Civilized.  You knew where you stood even if 
you never did make it into the famous “Blue Book” (aka “The Social 
Register”) of the 1800s compiled by Mrs. Astor who put it together so 
everyone would know who the important people (aka the “first families”) 
were; in other words to make absolutely sure your basic parvenus, or even 
the not quite wealthy enough, didn’t muddy up their fine lives. 
 There were 400 names in that discriminatory book, because Mrs. A. could 
only fit 400 people comfortably into her ballroom and it simply wouldn’t do 
to have people of lesser stature prancing about at her famous, opulent 
galas. And yet everyone scrambled madly and kissed a whole lot of seriously 
wealthy butt to get into that little blue book, and I’ll wager their 
manners were pretty darned pristine whenever Mrs. Astor was nearby. It 
would never do for her to see one take a sip of tea without a properly 
protracted pinkie, since forgetting to extend that digit in Mrs. A’s 
presence would have ensured one’s banishment forever from those coveted 
pages.  
 Amy was a bit more loosey goosey than Emily was. For example on the 
subject of one and one-half year olds making a mess of their food; “Let 
them. To them it’s delightful.” She tells us how to handle our social 
secretaries, the cook and kitchen maid. (Aren’t they the same thing?) How 
to throw a party without a maid. (You mean that’s not how it’s done?) How 
to write a social letter. (Pre email of course.) How to be an agreeable 
wife; no coming to the breakfast table in curlers, no face cream at night, 
no tying up her chin(s) or wearing “oiled mittens” to bed, eeuuw, to always 
remember that if she shares her sleeping quarters with her husband she is 
“obliged to make herself an attractive roommate, not a banshee.”  Odd. I’ve 
searched through Amy’s whole book and can’t find a chapter on, “How to be 
an agreeable husband.”  It’s an old book; those pages probably dried up and 
fell out.
 It’s a nouveau world now folks. I wonder if there are any social books 
out there on how we should behave today. There probably are. I’ll check. 
But there’s not much point in my reading them because I think Mongo and I 
have been dropped from all extant high society lists anyway. Oh well. So it 
goes, so it goes. It’s kind of a relief though. We can let our pinkies down 
now.
 
 Click on author's byline for bio 
and list of other works published by Pencil Stubs 
Online.Email LC at lcvs@suscom-maine.net
 See her on 
incredibleMAINE, MPBN,
 10:30 AM 
Saturdays
  
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