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pendant
was made of the stone and a setting
given it which turned out to
be too
trifling in
character. The consequence
was, the stone lost in value
as a Rubens'
canvas
would, if placed in an art nouveau
frame.
Whether it
is a precious stone, a valued painting or
a woman's costume--the
effect
produced
depends upon the character of
its setting.
CHAPTER
XXV
IDIOSYNCRASIES
IN COSTUME
ASHIONS
in dress as
in manners, religion, art,
literature and drama,
are
all powerful because they
seize upon the public
mind.
The
Chelsea group of revolutionary
artists in New York doubtless
see,--
perhaps
but dimly, the same star
that led Goethe and Schiller
on, in the storm and
stress
period of their time. We
smile now as we recall how
Schiller stood on the
street
corners of Leipzig, wearing a
dressing-gown by day to defy
custom; but the
youth
of Athens did the same in
the last days of Greece. In
fact then the darlings
of
the
gilded world struck
attitudes of abandon in order to look
like the Spartans.
They
refused
to cut their hair and they
would not wash their
hands, and even boasted
of
their
ragged clothes after fist
fights in the streets. Yes,
the gentlemen did
this.
In
the fifteenth and sixteenth
centuries there was a cult
that wore furs in
Summer
and
thin clothes in Winter, to
prove that love made
them strong enough to resist
the
elements!
You will recall the Euphuists of
England, the Precieuses of France
and
the
Illuminati of the eighteenth
century, as well as Les
Merveilleux and Les
Encroyables.
The rich during the
Renaissance were great and wise
collectors but
some
followed the fashion for
collecting manuscripts even
when unable to read
them.
It is interesting to find that in
the fourth and fifth
centuries it was
fashionable
to
be literary. Those with
means for existence without
labour, wrote for their
own
edification,
copying the style of the
ancient poets and
philosophers.
As
early as the fifteenth and
sixteenth centuries Venetian
women were shown
the
Paris
fashions each Ascension Day
on life-size dolls, displayed by an
enterprising
importer.
It
is true that fashions come and
go, not only in dress,
but how one should sit,
stand,
and
walk; how use the hands and
feet and eyes. To squint was once
deemed a
modest
act. Women of the fifteenth
and sixteenth centuries stood with
their
abdomens
out, and so did some in
1916! There are also
fashions in singing and
speaking.
The
poses in portraits express
much. Compare the exactly
prim Copley miss, with
a
recent
portrait by Cecilia Beaux of a
young girl seated, with
dainty satin-covered
feet
outstretched to full extent of the
limbs, in casual impertinence,--our
age!
To
return to the sixteenth
century, it is worthy of note
that some Venetian
belles
wore
patines--that is, shoes with
blocks of wood, sometimes two
feet high,
fastened
to the soles. They could not
move without a maid each
side! As it was an
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