7) Never “tell” when another is trying to recite. Such “telling” destroys the other person’s chance to think, and helps to make a sneak of you.
LUNCH ROOM
Cleanness of body was ever
deemed to proceed from a due reverence
of God.
—Bacon.
1) See that your hands are clean.
2) Avoid rushing into or through the Lunch Room. Walk.
3) When carrying your food to your table, pay strict attention to getting it to its destination in safety.
4) Eat in the Lunch Room,—not in the corridors, nor in the Assembly Hall, nor on the street. Give four excellent reasons for this direction.
5) Eat slowly and noiselessly; don’t “feed.” Avoid talking when your mouth is full. Take small mouthfuls, so that you may talk without giving offense. Keep your lips closed when chewing. Never use your knife to carry food to your mouth.
6) In the Lunch Room, as elsewhere, sit with your knees together and with both of your feet on the floor, not on the rounds of your chairs.
7) Don’t throw paper and refuse into the receptacles provided; drop it there.
8) Avoid boisterous talking and laughing. The tones of the voice proclaim quite accurately the social background of the boy, the girl, the man, the woman.
Her
voice was ever soft,
Gentle, and low,—an
excellent thing in woman.
—Shakespeare.
9) Keep elbows and wraps off the Lunch Room tables; furthermore, do not sit on the tables.
10) Leave your place in the Lunch Room tidy and spotless, with your chair pushed up to the table.
11) Rise when an older person enters the room; remain standing until your courtesy is acknowledged, or until the older person is seated. (Optional with the teacher in the schoolroom.)
12) Boys, when a girl or an older person drops a pencil, a book, or anything of the sort, pick it up and return it unobtrusively, but with a little bow.
13) Avoid rushing from the room when the bell rings. Walk.
14) Open the door, boys, but let the girls pass out first, whenever practicable. When many are passing in opposite directions, keep to the right.
15) Never laugh at the accidents or misfortunes of others, even if they have a ridiculous side. Nothing shows ill-breeding so surely.
He who laughs at others’
woes
Finds few friends and many
foes.
THE ASSEMBLY HALL
There is a time for some
things, and a time for all things;
a time for great things, and
a time for small things.
—Cervantes.
Actions wholly appropriate to the gymnasium or the playground may be quite out of character in the Assembly Hall. Think about it.
1) Avoid all running, romping, and making of unnecessary noise in the Assembly Hall.