POLITENESS
If those who are doubtful as to the correct course to pursue in any given situation will remember that even the wrong thing is overlooked if one is but absolutely polite in the doing of 'it, their relief might be great. A gentleness of demeanor and a courteous response of question can never be out of .place. A man may wear a business suit of clothes to an evening party less noticeably than a truculent air of insolence. If he be perfectly well bred as far as beha-viour goes, it matters not so much what his outward garb, although by an unwritten law of social observance certain clothes are the correct thing for certain occasions. Politeness is never wrong. Its practice goes nearly all the way toward the goal of the right thing in the right place. We hear of polite insolence, but insolence is never polite, ,and it is never, under any circumstance's, polite to be insolent.
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New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXXVI, Issue 17, 30 April 1908, Page 38
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159POLITENESS New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXXVI, Issue 17, 30 April 1908, Page 38
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