In a development that has sent shockwaves through the nation's digestive systems, British etiquette experts have finally deigned to address the most pressing crisis of our times: the unequal splitting of restaurant bills. This is a matter of such grave import that it threatens to topple the very foundations of modern friendship, or at least cause an awkward silence over the tiramisu.
Let us set the scene. You are at a moderately priced Italian establishment, the kind with Chianti bottles on the windowsills and a waiter who sighs if you ask for tap water. You have ordered a sensible rocket salad and a single glass of house white, mindful of your cholesterol and your bank balance. Across the table, Barnaby has consumed a three-course bacchanal: garlic bread, a Funghi pizza the size of a manhole cover, and a panna cotta that wobbled like a jellyfish on tranquilizers. He has also, inexplicably, ordered a bottle of Barolo for himself and two limoncellos as chasers. When the bill arrives, Barnaby’s eyes glint like a cash-register display. “Let’s just split it evenly,” he says, with the casual cruelty of a tax auditor.
This, dear reader, is the modern dinner party equivalent of being asked to subsidise your friend’s mortgage. And yet, according to the newly anointed savoir-faire saviours at Debrett’s or whoever, the solution is not to brandish a calculator and quote your itemized consumption. No, that would be frightfully uncivilized. Instead, we are to navigate this fiscal minefield with the grace of a diplomat at a G7 summit.
The experts advise that if you suspect an uneven bill, you should preemptively state your intention to pay for your own meal at the ordering stage. “I’ll get this one,” you say, with a tremor in your voice, as if offering to take a bullet for the Queen. But what of the Barnabys of this world? They will simply nod, order the lobster, and then claim amnesia when the bill arrives. Alternatively, you could suggest a different payment method: “Let’s each pay by card for what we ordered.” This is met with the horror that might accompany a suggestion to use the bidet as a water fountain.
But here’s the rub, the bitter little twist that makes this entire saga a parody of British politeness. The etiquette experts are, in fact, correct. To quibble over pennies is to risk the fragile bonds of friendship. Better to swallow the injustice, pay an extra £12.50, and seethe silently on the commute home. This is the British way: to suffer in silence, to let resentment curdle like cream left out in the sun, and to never speak of it again. Until next time, of course, when the same scene will play out like a ritualised dance of passive aggression.
I have a better solution. Take a leaf from my own dog-eared book of social sabotage. Next time Barnaby suggests splitting evenly, lean in close, fix him with a gin-bleary stare, and say: “I’ll cover the bill if you cover the cost of the therapy I’ll need after watching you eat that panna cotta.” Then produce a pocket calculator, the old-school kind that goes “beep”, and begin dividing with theatrical precision. Watch as the colour drains from his face. That, my friends, is the true etiquette of the 21st century: weaponised arithmetic.
So let us raise a glass (not of the Barolo, that’s Barnaby’s) to the brave souls who dare to challenge the tyranny of equal splitting. You are the thin line between financial ruin and a free bread basket. And if all else fails, just order what Barnaby orders. That’ll learn him.








