Tact
"Talk to every woman as if you loved her, and to every man
as if he loved you and... you will have the reputation of
possessing the most perfect social tact."
Oscar Wilde
Tact is a much-valued quality in British society, because it is
seen as a way of gently oiling the wheels of conversation and
unobtrusively maintaining harmonious social relations.
Tact is the delicate skill of handling a difficult situation and
coming out with everyone still smiling. Tact is the ability to
steer the rabid socialist away from the right-wing reactionary
without either of them even knowing the other one was there. It is
that quality that those of us, who come back from every party
wracked with guilt about what we said/did/danced, long to
have.
There is a hint of dishonesty in tact, but what's wrong with a
little dash of duplicity if it's to spare someone else's feelings
or amour propre? Is kindness - even if it is via tact - not the
height of good manners?
"Tact is the ability to describe others as they see themselves",
wrote Abraham Lincoln; it is an unselfish art, where the tactful
one removes himself or herself from the context to think only about
others.
By contrast, there is something selfish and thoughtless about being
tactless: at best, an inability to avoid putting one's foot in it -
at a cost to other people's feelings or sensibilities - or, at
worst, a wilful ignorance about the effect your own words can have
on others. "A tactless man is like an axe on an embroidery frame,"
says an old Malay proverb - how much better to be the one who
stitches a situation back together again.
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