THE ALPHABET OF A DIPLOMAT
| Ambassador | A man, just a little below God. |
| Attaché | The lowest rung of the ladder. |
| Blunder | How absurd! Why, never!... |
| Chancellery | The barn-yard where he is plucked. |
| Chief | The cock of the walk. |
| Colleagues | A question merely of time and place. |
| Court | Where one learns to make courtesies. |
| Decorations | The balm for all woes. |
| Dinners | The surest road to success. |
| Disponsibility | The Styx, whence no one returns. |
| Esprit (de corps) | The corps is there, but where is the esprit? |
| Etiquette | The Ten Commandments. |
| Finesse | A narrow lane where two can walk abreast. |
| Friendships | Ships that pass in the night. |
| Gotha (almanack) | The Bible of a Diplomat. |
| Highness | His, Her, make a deep courtesy. |
| Ignoramus | A person who does not agree with you. |
| Innuendo | An obscure side-light of truth. |
| Joke | Something beneath the dignity of a diplomat to notice. |
| Knowledge (private) | News which every one already knows. |
| Legation | Apartments to let. |
| Letters (de créance) | The first impression. |
| Letters (de rappel) | The last illusion. |
| Majesté (lèse) | Too awful to think of. |
| Majesties | Human beings with royal faults. |
| Nobodies | People to be avoided like poison. |
| Opulence | When in service. |
| Pension | Too small to be seen with the naked eye. |
| Poverty | When out of service. |
| Quo (status) | Diplomatic expression, meaning in French, Une jambe en l'air. |
| Ruse | A carefully disguised thought as transparent as a soap-bubble. |
| Secretary | Furniture easily moved. |
| Traditions | A door always open for refuge. |
| Traités (de paix) | A series of dinners paid for by a lavish government. |
| Uniform | A bestarred and beribboned livery. |
| Visits | The most important duty of a diplomat. |
| Wisdom | Good to have, but easily dispensed with. |
| Xpectations | A tree which seldom bears fruit. |
| Yawn | What a diplomat does over his rapports. |
| Zeal | Something a diplomat ought never to have too much of. |
The Sunny Side of Diplomatic Life