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Never take more than your share - whether of the road in driving your car, of chairs on a boat or seats on a train, or food at the table.
Emily Post
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Emily Post
Age: 87 †
Born: 1872
Born: October 27
Died: 1960
Died: September 25
Author
Novelist
Writer
Baltimore
Maryland
Emily Price
Emily Price Post
Emily Bruce Price
Train
Road
Car
Chairs
Food
Seats
Share
Boat
Whether
Table
Take
Tables
Never
Driving
More quotes by Emily Post
Manner is personality—the outward manifestation of one’s innate character and attitude toward life.
Emily Post
The joy of joys is the person of light but unmalicious humor. If you know any one who is gay, beguiling and amusing, you will, if you are wise, do everything you can to make him prefer your house and your table to any other for where he is, the successful party is also.
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The eleventh commandment, Thou shalt not be found out is despicable, but nevertheless, it is the one thing you can never get away from.
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There is a big deposit of sympathy in the bank of love, but don't draw out little sums every hour or so - so that by and by, when perhaps you need it badly, it is all drawn out and you yourself don't know how or on what it was spent.
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An overdose of praise is like 10 lumps of sugar in coffee only a very few people can swallow it.
Emily Post
If you are hurt, whether in mind or body, don't nurse your bruises. Get up, and light-heartedly, courageously, good-temperedly, get ready for the next encounter.
Emily Post
Elbows are never put on the table while one is eating.
Emily Post
Jealousy is the suspicion of one's own inferiority.
Emily Post
Nothing appeals to children more than justice, and they should be taught in the nursery to play fair in games, to respect each other's property and rights, to give credit to others, and not to take too much credit to themselves.
Emily Post
Whenever two people come together and their behavior affects one another, you have etiquette.
Emily Post
A little praise is not only merest justice but is beyond the purse of no one.
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Etiquette requires the presumption of good until the contrary is proved.
Emily Post
The most vulgar slang is scarcely worse than the attempted elegance which those unused to good society imagine to be the evidence of cultivation.
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The letter we all love to receive is one that carries so much of the writer’s personality that she seems to be sitting beside us, looking at us directly and talking just as she really would, could she have come on a magic carpet, instead of sending her proxy in ink-made characters on mere paper.
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Never think, because you cannot write a letter easily, that it is better not to write at all. The most awkward note imaginable is better than none.
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A gentleman does not boast about his junk.
Emily Post
Ideal conversation must be an exchange of thought, and not, as many of those who worry most about their shortcomings believe, an eloquent exhibition of wit or oratory.
Emily Post
To tell a lie in cowardice, to tell a lie for gain, or to avoid deserved punishment--are all the blackest of black lies.
Emily Post
Never so long as you live, write a letter to a man - no matter who he is - that you would be ashamed to see in a newspaper above your signature.
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A lady never asks a gentleman to dance, or to go to supper with her.
Emily Post