A companion piece to the popular Directions to Servants, Polite
Conversation is a witty, brilliantly conceived treatise on manners and
small talk from the master of English satire. Beginning with an "expert"
introduction to the perils of ill-educated discourse, Swift seeks to
offer a remedy for conversational disasters. His aim: to ensure one is
always equipped with the correct response, no matter the situation, and
the means with which to stoke up conversation when it lapses into
awkward silence. To prove his theses, he then proffers three mock
dialogues, citing the drawing room as the most suitable place to display
the art of elegant and polite conversation. The result is a hilarious
and deeply ironic analysis that is as relevant today as when it was
first conceived. Irish clergyman and satirist Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)
is best remembered for his philosophical parody Gulliver's Travels.