We must not mock at the farthingale's circumference, for it saved France, if there be any truth in the chronicle that records how Marguerite de Valois rescued her husband Henry of Navarre from death, by hiding him under an immense farthingale, while the perpetrators of the massacre of St. Bartholomew were cutting to pieces with their halberts the unfortunate Huguenots who had been housed in the Louvre on the occasion of the wedding of the Béarnais and Margot.
The fashions became dull and sombre like the architecture and the furniture of the time, like everything indeed. This was a general law, architecture no longer displayed the overflowing luxuriance, the pagan gladness of the Renaissance, its forms became more staid. After a time of riot in tlie merriest inventions, architecture was doing penance. The furniture of the new and grim hôtels was stiff and clumsy. The square tables and chairs, without carving or any ornament, were made of rough wood covered with coarse stuff edged with big nails; in catafalque style.
The dwellers in these dull buildings, in apartments which seem to be hung with funeral trappings, were at this period personages clad in sad-coloured attire. Long gowns with high bodices were worn over wide
Under Charles IX.
farthingales, the bust was confined and compressed in a stiff busked corset, clasped at the back, worn over a bodice which was also stiffened and whaleboned.
Out of doors women wore light pattens, with cork soles, underneai-h their shoes : this had been a custom of previous times, but many were the jests passed upon ladies of short stature who perched themselves upon pattens of formidable height, or increased their inches by putting several soles to their shoes.
The head-dress of the period was either the coif with a net—the pointed front making the face heart-shaped—that we now know as ' the Mary Stuart' coif, or the black-velvet hood. The latter Avas not becoming.
It was 'bad form' for noble ladies, and indeed for the city dames also, to go out unmasked. The strange fashion of the mask was another note of gloom added to the already prevalent depression.
Masks, made of black velvet, were short, allowing the lower part of the face to be seen, or had chin-pieces ; they were fastened behind the ears, or kept on by a glass button held between the teeth, the latter was considered the more elegant method. The fashion of the mask passed on from the ladies of quality to the lower ranks of the bourgeoisie, and held its ground until the time of Louis XIII.
The mask was becoming and coquettish, not so the ' touret de nez,' a piece of black stuff attached b}»" the sides to the hood, and fixetl under the eyes, which hid all the lower part of the face. This odd invention resembled the yashmak of the Cairene women, but was more unsightly.
These nose-concealers had, it appears, a reasonable origin. Let us not lift them up. The ladies of that time painted outrageously, after a fashion which had come from Italy with Catherine de Médicis ; they simply daubed themselves like Caribs, and plastered their cheeks under the ' touret de nez ' with pigments which were very bad for the skin. The female face was covered with plasters of vermilion, or else, under pretext of preserving the freshness of the complexion, with ill-smelling pomades and drugs.
Horrible !
An " Instruction pour les jeunes dames " throws a light upon the composition of these 'ointments,' or rather deplorable messes, in which turpentine, lily-roots, honey, eggs, eggshells, camphor, etc., were mixed up, and the whole boiled in the inside of a pigeon, then mashed, and distilled together.
The ' touret de nez ' seem to have been indispensable after that.
René, the Florentine who was brought to France by Catherine, and maliciously styled " The Queen's Poisoner," supplied the fair court ladies with paints, perfumes, and cosmetics, besides concocting for the Queen-Mother the more deadly medicaments which she used for— in a manner at once discreet and refined—the suppression of troublesome persons.
What a time it was ! From one end of the kingdom to the other the strife of parties raged ; men hated, disputed with, and fought each other.
During a period of thirty years everything was confusion, the Catholic and Huguenot armies chased each other through the provinces, each in its turn sacking the towns, burning the castles, waging a merciless war in which neither women nor children were spared, a war of ambushes and massacre.
Stuff witli raised designs.
The towns were besieged, the country was ravaged by the Catholic ' argoulets ' and argue-busiers, and by the Protestant 'reiters/ castles and manors Avere carried by assault. They who were the weaker had to fly, or to perish.
It is ensy to see that in such a time as this the dress of womeu must ueccssarily assume a somewhat mascuhne chaiacter. In moments of peril the poor women were frequently forced to escape on horse or mule-back, sitting like men.