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The Book of Good Manners; a Guide to Polite Usage for All Social Functions by Walter Cox Green
page 35 of 359 (09%)
him to some women whom he can invite to
dance.

It is an act of discourtesy for a man not to
request a dance of a woman to whom he has
been introduced.

A man escorting a woman to a ball should
agree where to meet her after they have each
left their wraps at the dressing-rooms. It
may be at the foot of the stairway or near
the ball-room door.

It is now no longer customary for the man
and woman to enter arm in arm, but for the
woman to precede the man, and together
they greet the hostess. It is for the hostess
to merely bow or to shake hands, and the
guests follow her lead.

A man should see that his companion's
chaperone is comfortably seated, and then
ask his companion for a couple of dances,
and, with her permission, introduce other
young men, who should ask her to dance.
Such permission is not usually asked if the
man is her fiance, a near relative, or an old
friend.

It is strictly the woman's prerogative to decide
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