Ashes to Ashes: Manners and Holiness

My wife and I have a friend, a lady—and “lady” is the right word here—who is what earlier centuries, especially in England, would have called “high­born.” I suppose the term “blue-blood” might apply. There is an air about her that has occasioned several piquant conversations between my wife and me.

This “air,” be it said hastily, is at a polar extreme from what one might run into in this connection on Broadway, or in cheap novels and journalism and popular imagina­tion. Quite the contrary. Our friend arrives at the front door in a great breeze of good cheer. She is happy to see you, and finds everything you say to her over lunch to be nothing but interesting and encouraging. She quite genuinely wants to know about you and your children, and what you all are doing these days, and how everyone is getting on. You realize afterwards that not once did she seize the chance to turn the conversation to herself and her own family and concerns. Oh, to be sure, she will cheerfully fill you in (not at any great length) if you ask her about herself. But then you get, “But tell me about your two grandsons. I must hear about them.”

We have known this lady for per­haps 30 years and have been with her in all sorts of situations. Her forth­coming and cheerful approach to life seems to be unflagging. She is wholly interested in what someone has to say at a cocktail party, for example. You never hear from her any of the usual fatuities that prevail in these situations. Her random daily contacts with the grocer, say, or with the gar­dener or the gas station man, evince the same thing. But there is nothing frivolous or merely “social” about any of it. Life has brought her some great sorrows, and even though she would never volunteer a syllable touching on any of them, you find a true and sympathetic understanding of anyone else’s troubles.

She is always perfectly dressed. St. Francis de Sales would be happy with her response to his counsel to the women to whom he gave spiri­tual direction:

As to the material and style of our clothing, decency should be con­sidered in reference to the various circumstances of time, age, rank, company, and occasion…. It is a sort of contempt of those you associate with to frequent their company in unbecoming attire. At the same time avoid all affecta­tion and vanity, all extremes and frivolity. As far as possible keep always to the side of simplicity and modesty, for this is undoubt­edly beauty’s greatest ornament (Introduction to the Devout Life).

The question here that I raise while my wife and I have our morning tea: Where is the line between mere manners and sanctity? One struggles along in the Christian life, fencing forever with irritability and petulance and parsimony of spirit and pique and so forth. The lessons in the school of charity in this connection are far from easy. Really, one needs the word “warfare” here rather than “lessons,” it seems. Do the manners that seem to derive from a background of gentility, grace, and self-effacement exempt for­tunate people like our friend from the Holy Ghost’s salvific chastening?

Our friend wouldn’t think so. She happens to be a Christian now, and no one knows, of course, what goes on in her prayers and in her soul. But we knew her before her conversion, and she seemed just as wonderful back then.

Well, we mortals look on the out­ward appearance. God alone knows our hearts. The question, however, still intrigues me.

Author

  • Tom Howard

    Tom Howard is retired from 40 years of teaching English in private schools, college, and seminary in England and America.

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