Revivals—The time-piece of Fashion—RuiinaagiiiL!,' tlie milliners' boxes of the past—Which is the prettiest fashion ? — Fashion and Architecture — Precious stones and stufll's—A dressed doll the mediaeval Fashion-plate.
" There is nothing new in this world but that which has grown old ototiyJi," was said, not by a great philosopher, but by a woman, and she was dressmaker to Joséphine de Beauharnais, wife of Napoléon Bonaparte, Chief Consul of the French Republic, who was of her way of thinking, seeing that he resuscitated the Empire of Rome.
Acting upon this axiom, Josephine's dressmaker tried back into the far past, even to the days of the Greek and Roman ladies, for elegant novelties two thousand years old, which were destined to turn the heads of Parisian salons and promenades, to fascinate Parisians of both sexes, and afterwards to make the ' grand tour ' of the world, just as the bayonets and standards of the French soldiery, who were the most travelled of tourists, did at the same period.
You ask, Where are the modes of yesteryear ? said a paradoxical philosopher (he must be a married man, and harassed by dressmakers' bills), replying to my " Old song of Old Fashions," written after the method of François Villon. '•' You actually ask this question ? Why, my dear sir, those fashions are on the backs of the women of to-day, just as they will be upon the backs of the women of to-morrow and the day after ! Do you not know that nothing-changes, that every novelty was invented long ago, about the time when women first began to dress themselves, within the space of four seasons, in short in the first twelve months after the turn out from Eden, I made precisely the same remark to my wife only yesterday, à propos of three or four costumes that had struck her, forsooth, by their novelty, and which she was about to order, although she did not require them. Everything is worn, has been Avorn, or will be worn, I told her, therefore why try to change, why lay aside for a mere whim a costume or an ornament that will inevitably ' come in ' again ? " " Yes, but in three hundred years." "My dear fellow, just go to the Champs-Elysées on a sunny day, and tell me whether you do not see visions of the Court of the Valois, when you observe some of the toilettes, with their Renaissance puffed sleeves, their
Renaissance collars, their Renaissance pictorial stuffs. Or wlictlicr you do not dream dreams of Longcliamps in LSIO, with those Empire gowns about, with their puffed shoulders, skirt-draping, palm-patterns, and Greek trimmings; and then the Louis Seize style, or the Mediaeval, or the Louis Quinze ! Why, my dear sir, a woman of any epoch whatsoever in time past, no matter how far back in the darkness of the ages, might return, appear among our contem-jioraries, and be quite in the fashion with only a little modification of her antique costume. Let Agnes Sorel or Margaret of Burgundy deign to reappear in the dress of their respective periods, I should merely change their head-gear, and everybody would say, " What a charming toilette for Varnishing-Day," or " What a lovely costume for the Grand Prix."
" Stay ! stay ! are you not exaggerating a little ? "
" Not at all. I assure you the Merovingians, or even the ladies of the Stone Age, with a few little toilette arrangements to help them, would not take the women of tlio present cLay aback ; they Avoukl simply be regarded as fashionable oddities. The present fashions are merely the fashions of by-gone days resumed, and recast
16th Century.
by the taste of the passing hour. The index of Fashion continuously revolves, like the hands of a clock, within the same circle, but it is more capricious, it goes now forward, now backward, with sudden jumps from one side to the other.
What o'clock is it by tlie timepiece of fashion ? Six in the morning or eight in the evening, perhaps every hour of the twenty-four all at once, as it is at this moment. But that does not matter, it is always a charming time of day.
There is no manner of doubt, and everybody is agreed upon the point, that the present fashion is invariably the prettiest, and for the very simple reason that old fashions are only faded recollections, no sooner have they ceased to be new than their defects and absurdities become evident to our cold, severe eyes, which were indulgent during their brief reign, and the mode of the moment wins easily. What we all see in that mode, my dear sir, what charms and fascinates everybody, is the radiance of feminine grace, in fact is the woman herself! No, no, we were never better dressed than we are this very day ! In all ages, and on behalf of every fashion, each woman has said this identical thing to herself and her looking-glass with perfect sincerity, and all the men have thought the same.