IN DEFENSE OF THE VICTORIANS
"Manners and Morals2'-the expression is peculiarly, unrnistak- ably Victorian. Not "manners" alone: Lord Chesterfield in the 18th century was fond of discoursing to his son on the supreme irnpor- tance of manners-manners as distinct from (if necessary, in opposi- tion to) morals. And not "morals" alone: Philosophers had always taken this as their special province, had, indeed, made it so elevated a subject that it had little to do with anything so mundane as manners.
It...