Ton (society)
Originally used in the context of upper class English society, ton meant the state of being fashionable, a fashionable manner or style, or something in vogue. It could also mean people of fashion, or fashionable society generally. A variant of the archaic French term bon-ton, designating good style or breeding, polite, fashionable or high society, or the fashionable world, ton
Ton was a requirement for acceptance into English high society during the English Regency. As stated by Ellen Moers, "ealth was no guarantee of admission... Birth was no guarantee... Beauty, talent, achievement, distinction—none of these meant anything unless qualified by that elusive term: ton". For example, in the early 1800s, the poor Irish poet Thomas Moore was quickly accepted, while the rich but vulgar nouveaux riches were being rejected, as were three quarters of the nobility. The word ton was widely used in fashionable publications with no precise definition, although the use of the French word for tone suggests the difficulty of "performing it". Indeed, the superiority of Beau Brummell in all things of fashion, acknowledged across the Regency England, was said to be too exquisite to copy: "his power over others derived from subtleties of manner so fine they cannot be reproduced".