<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73"></SPAN></span><br/><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2><span class="smcap">Lesson XI.</span></h2>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div class='bbox'><h3>OUTLINE FOR BLACKBOARD.</h3>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/divider.png" width-obs="150" height-obs="9" alt="Divider" title="" /></div>
<div class='center'>MANNERS IN TRAVELLING.<br/>
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<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Notes for blackboard">
<tr><td align='left'><i>Politeness in the waiting-room.</i><br/>
<i>Buying a ticket.</i><br/>
<i>Getting on and off the cars.</i><br/>
<i>Obtaining and occupying seats.</i><br/>
<i>Offering seats to ladies.</i><br/>
<i>Leaving seats temporarily.</i><br/>
<i>Talking, laughing, and eating.</i><br/>
<i>Taking a seat with another.</i><br/>
<i>Courtesy toward officials.</i><br/>
<i>Courtesy toward fellow-travellers.</i><br/>
<i>Conduct if delays occur.</i><br/>
<i>Behavior at places for refreshment.</i><br/>
<i>A French boy's politeness in travelling.</i><br/></td></tr>
</table></div>
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<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>LESSON XI.</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>MANNERS IN TRAVELLING.</div>
<p><span class="smcap">Before</span> we fairly begin the journey we want to consider
what belongs to good manners at the station.</p>
<p>If the waiting-room is crowded, and there are not
seats for all, the young ought cheerfully to give place
to older people, especially to old ladies and to
mothers with little children in their arms. There is
often opportunity here to show little courtesies to
others which may brighten their whole day.</p>
<p>To amuse a fretful child for a few moments, or
bring it a glass of water when the mother cannot
leave other children to do it, or to find the baggage-master
and get a trunk checked for a nervous old
lady, is a small thing in itself, but it may be more
welcome to the receiver under the circumstances than
a far greater favor at another time. The comfort or
discomfort of a journey is made up of just such small
things.</p>
<p>When the ticket window is opened there is no
need for us to rush to it or to push aside any one
else. Time is given for all to buy their tickets comfortably.
We ought, if possible, to hand the exact
price of the ticket, and not take the ticket-seller's
time to change large bills. For the same reason we
should ask for the ticket in the briefest sentence we<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76"></SPAN></span>
can frame, and if a question is necessary, put it in
the most business-like manner, and thank him for
the information given.</p>
<p>We should not attempt to get on the cars while
others are getting off: it hinders them and ourselves,
and nothing is gained by such unbecoming
haste. The much-ridiculed American hurry is well
illustrated by a company of people crowding up the
steps while another company is crowding down.
When we leave the cars it is better to wait until they
come to a full stop before rising from our seats. We
shall be likely to get out as soon as if we went swaying
down the aisle, crowding other people, and in
danger of falling headlong when the train finally
stops.</p>
<p>What has been said about obtaining seats at places
of amusement applies to seats in cars as well. Those
who come first have the first choice; but we should
not forget good manners in the choosing. We have
no right to more room than we pay for, and, unless
there are plenty of unoccupied seats, it is rude and
selfish to spread out our parcels and wraps so as to
discourage any one from asking to sit beside us;
yet a well-dressed woman, with her possessions unconcernedly
arranged on a seat facing her, ignoring
the fact that others are standing in the aisle, is not
an uncommon spectacle.</p>
<p>Courtesy in the cars or in a coach is as binding on
us as courtesy in the parlor, and never, perhaps, is
it better appreciated than by tired travellers.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Good-breeding does not require a gentleman or a
boy to offer his seat to any lady who is standing, but
he should never fail to do it to an old lady or one
with a child in her arms, or one with an inconvenient
package; and it is pleasant to see that fine
politeness which prompts its possessor to treat every
lady as he would wish his mother or sister treated.
A lady should not accept such a civility in silence.
We too often see her drop into a seat which a gentleman
rises to offer as if it were her right, without a
word or even a bow of acknowledgment. Such a
person has no right to expect a similar courtesy the
second time.</p>
<p>If any one leaves his seat for a time without leaving
any piece of property in it to show that it belongs
to him, he cannot lawfully claim it on returning;
but civility should prevent any one from taking it, if
he knows it belongs to another.</p>
<p>In travelling, as everywhere in public, noisy conversation
and the "loud laugh that speaks the vacant
mind" are offensive to good taste. Constant eating
of fruit and peanuts is bad manners, and, as has been
said before, it is generally associated with loud talking
and laughing and other rude behavior.</p>
<p>On long journeys it is necessary to eat luncheons
or even regular meals, but this, done in a well-bred
way, is a very different thing from the continual
eating indulged in by a certain class of travellers.</p>
<p>We should not sit down beside another without
asking if the seat is engaged. If a person asks to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78"></SPAN></span>
sit beside us, we should assent with cordiality, not
sullenly gather up our bundles, as we often see people
do, impatient at having their selfish ease disturbed.
It is polite for a gentleman to offer a lady the seat
next the window.</p>
<p>We ought to have our ticket ready when the conductor
comes around, and not keep him waiting while
we hunt for it in bag or pocket.</p>
<p>If a brakeman raises a window or shuts a door for
us, we should thank him; and it is polite to thank the
train boy who passes us water. We need not be
ill-natured because he puts a magazine or prize
package in our lap every half-hour. It is not an
uncivil thing to do, and it is just as easy for us to
receive it civilly, and say in a pleasant tone that we
do not care for it, as to add one more snappish
answer to the many given him in the course of a
day.</p>
<p>We should be watchful of occasions to show politeness
to our fellow-travellers. There may be an
old lady not accustomed to travelling, anxious and
uneasy, to whom we can be of use. We can ask
where she is going, and take the burden off her mind
by saying, "I will tell you when we come to it."</p>
<p>A gentlemanly boy will not see a lady trying to
open or shut a window or reverse a seat without
offering to do it for her, any more than a gentleman
would.</p>
<p>We should be patient in answering questions,
especially from old people. If we are passing objects<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79"></SPAN></span>
of interest with which we are familiar, it is polite to
speak of them to a stranger sitting near. If we were
journeying in the White Mountain region and were
well acquainted with it, a stranger by our side would
like to know the names of the different peaks, and
to have the historic Willey House pointed out to
him. One cheerful, obliging person will add to the
comfort of the whole company.</p>
<p>If delays occur on the way, and long periods of
waiting, as often happen, we should be patient and
cheerful over the matter ourselves, and thus help
others to be so. Good-nature is contagious at such
times. It is of no use to tire the conductor and
brakemen with repeated questions: they are rarely
responsible for the delay, which is more vexatious to
them than to us.</p>
<p>Places for refreshment on a journey, with the brief
time usually allowed, afford opportunities to show
one's good or ill breeding. It would be better to
have no lunch than to struggle for the best place
and loudly demand attention, to the exclusion of
others. To bring a cup of tea to an old lady, or to
the mother who cannot leave her baby to get it herself,
is a slight thing for us to do, but it may be a
great favor to them.</p>
<p>In an article on the politeness of French children
as compared with boys and girls in America, the
writer illustrates what he is saying in this way:—</p>
<p>"I was travelling in a compartment with a little
French boy of twelve, the age at which American<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80"></SPAN></span>
children, as a rule, deserve killing for their rudeness
and general disagreeableness. I sat between him
and the open window, and he was eating pears. Now
most boys in our country of that age would either
have dropped the cores upon the floor or tossed them
out of the window, without regard to anybody. But
this small gentleman, every time, with a 'Permit me,
sir,' said in the most pleasant way, rose and came to
the window and dropped them out, and then with a
'Thanks, sir,' quietly took his seat. French children
do not take favors as a matter of course and unacknowledged.
And when in his seat, if an elderly
person came in, he was the very first to rise and
offer his place, if it were in the slightest degree more
comfortable than another; and the good-nature with
which he insisted on the new-comer's taking it was
delightful to see."</p>
<p>The writer goes on to say that this was not an exceptional
boy, but a fair type of the average French
child, and his conduct was a sample of what might
be seen anywhere, even among the ragged boys of
the street. The reason for this state of things is
given in the opening sentences of the article:—</p>
<p>"Politeness, with the French, is a matter of education
as well as nature. The French child is taught
that lesson from the beginning of its existence, and
it is made a part of its life. It is the one thing that
is never forgotten, and the lack of it never forgiven."</p>
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