Contratrombone64
Admiral of Fugues
This is a snippet from an article I read in the Sydney Morning Herald ... the sentiments I fully support.
WAITERS, take note. Do not dare to remove plates, cups or glasses while I am still at table in your establishment. Do not hover, mute and eagle-eyed, anxiously awaiting a chance to surreptitiously snatch away my remaining piece of bread roll, half-finished drink, or waiting dessert, while I am engaged in conversation with my partner or friend. Well-bred folk understand that a course is only finished when cutlery is placed together on the plate - not when the diners foolishly take their eye off the contents of their table for one fleeting moment.
When did such rudeness intrude? Is there a training school for this behaviour? Is it included in your contract of employment? Is it to deter patrons from occupying the tables for too long - enjoying a chat, relaxing, or savouring the meal?
Or have you never been taught manners by your parents? In the world of the marketplace, work, pubs and clubs, manners have become a debased currency, and those who subscribe to them are seen as a subservient, or fool.
Sadly, courtesy, sensitivity, and above all, respect, has been replaced by indifference
WAITERS, take note. Do not dare to remove plates, cups or glasses while I am still at table in your establishment. Do not hover, mute and eagle-eyed, anxiously awaiting a chance to surreptitiously snatch away my remaining piece of bread roll, half-finished drink, or waiting dessert, while I am engaged in conversation with my partner or friend. Well-bred folk understand that a course is only finished when cutlery is placed together on the plate - not when the diners foolishly take their eye off the contents of their table for one fleeting moment.
When did such rudeness intrude? Is there a training school for this behaviour? Is it included in your contract of employment? Is it to deter patrons from occupying the tables for too long - enjoying a chat, relaxing, or savouring the meal?
Or have you never been taught manners by your parents? In the world of the marketplace, work, pubs and clubs, manners have become a debased currency, and those who subscribe to them are seen as a subservient, or fool.
Sadly, courtesy, sensitivity, and above all, respect, has been replaced by indifference