<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX" /><SPAN name="Page_240" id="Page_240"></SPAN><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
<h3>WOMAN IN THE VICTORIAN PERIOD</h3>
<p><span class="big"><ANTIMG src="images/illus-t.jpg" width-obs="60" height-obs="61" alt="T" /><b>HE</b></span>
first seventy years of the nineteenth century seem to us of 1917
absolutely incredible in regard to dress. How our
great-great-grandmothers ever got about on foot, in a carriage or
stage-coach, moved in a crowd or even sat in any measure of serenity at
home, is a mystery to us of an age when comfort, convenience, fitness
and chic have at last come to terms. For a vivid picture of how our
American society looked between 1800 and 1870, read Miss Elizabeth
McClellan's <i>Historic Dress in America</i>, published in 1910 by George W.
Jacobs & Co., of Philadelphia. The book is fascinating and it not only
amuses and informs, but increases one's self-respect, if a woman, for
<i>modern</i> woman dressed in accordance with her rôle.</p>
<p>We can see extravagant wives point out with glee to tyrant mates how, in
the span of years <SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242"></SPAN>between 1800 and 1870 our maternal forebears made
money fly, even in the Quaker City. Fancy paying in Philadelphia at that
time, $1500 for a lace scarf, $400 for a shawl, $100 for the average
gown of silk, and $50 for a French bonnet! Miss McClellan, quoting from
<i>Mrs. Roger Pryor's Memoirs</i>, tells how she, Mrs. Pryor, as a young girl
in Washington, was awakened at midnight by a note from the daughter of
her French milliner to say that a box of bonnets had arrived from Paris.
Mamma had not yet unpacked them and if she would come at once, she might
have her pick of the treasures, and Mamma not know until too late to
interfere. And this was only back in the 50's, we should say.</p>
<p>Then think of the hoops, and wigs and absurdly furbished head-dresses;
paper-soled shoes, some intended only to <i>sit</i> in; bonnets enormous;
laces of cobweb; shawls from India by camel and sailing craft; rouge,
too, and hair grease, patches and powder; laced waists and cramped feet;
low necks and short sleeves for children in school-rooms.</p>
<p>Man was then still decorative here and in <SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243"></SPAN>western Europe. To-day he is
not decorative, unless in sports clothes or military uniform; woman's
garments furnish all the colour. Whistler circumvented this fact when
painting Theodore Duret (Metropolitan Museum) in sombre black
broadcloth,—modern evening attire, by flinging over the arm of Duret,
the delicate pink taffeta and chiffon cloak of a woman, and in M.
Duret's hand he places a closed fan of pomegranate red.</p>
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