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Time & Perspective Quote by Sydney Smith

"Manners are like the shadows of virtues, they are the momentary display of those qualities which our fellow creatures love and respect"

About this Quote

Manners, in Sydney Smith's formulation, aren't morality; they're morality's lighting. By calling them "the shadows of virtues", he neatly demotes politeness from saintliness to silhouette: a temporary outline cast by something sturdier behind it. The metaphor is slyly corrective in a culture that could mistake good breeding for goodness. Shadows can look impressive at sunset. They can also stretch, distort, and disappear the moment the light shifts.

Smith, an Anglican clergyman with a satirist's nose for hypocrisy, is doing two things at once. He's defending manners against the puritan impulse to sneer at etiquette as mere performance, and he's warning the well-mannered against confusing performance with character. "Momentary display" is the tell. Virtue is a habit of the soul; manners are what you can see at the doorway, at the table, in the way someone handles small frictions. They are public-facing, socially legible, and therefore dangerously easy to counterfeit. Yet Smith insists they're not nothing. Communities run on quick readings. Most of us encounter each other in passing, so we judge by the available evidence: tone, restraint, consideration.

The phrase "our fellow creatures" adds clerical bite. It's not the language of status-climbing; it's the language of moral kinship. Manners become a practical theology: the minimal charity you owe strangers, the everyday translation of humility and patience into behavior others can actually receive. Smith's context - a Britain obsessed with class markers and moral respectability - makes the point sharper. If virtue is the unseen architecture, manners are the street-level facade. You can build a fake front, but you can't live in it for long without the structure collapsing.

Quote Details

TopicRespect
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Manners as Shadows of Virtue - Sydney Smith
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About the Author

Sydney Smith

Sydney Smith (June 3, 1771 - February 22, 1845) was a Clergyman from England.

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