At a later date, when the people of the
Ululer the Great Kiug.
Revolutionary Period and the First Empire arrayed themselves in Greek and Roman fashion, public buildings and houses did the same. From 1840 to 1860, a period of transition and expectation, both fashions and buikliDgs were absolutely commonplace, and destitute of any style wliatsoever.
Lastly, in our own time, a period of archaeological research and general rummage, of experiments and reconstitution, a period of imitation rather than imagination and creation, we again observe architecture and fashion keeping step, grojjing together in the clothes-chests of the past, trying-on all styles, one after another, falling in love with each period in succession, and adopting its forms only to throw them aside immediately. Let us then do as our time does, let us too ransack the clothes-chests of the past in our search for the pretty things and the oddities of long long ago.
Beyond a certain period authentic documents are scarce, and we have to be satisfied with suppositions. Who shall tell us truly what were the costumes, the fashions, and the general aspect of life as presented by them, in tlie Merovingian and Carlovingian days, when—
Four harness'd oxen, heavy-hoofed and slow, Through Paris dragged the King, a lazy show. '
Who shall depict for us the finery of those obscure periods ? Finery there was, in spite of their rudeness and barbarism, for we find the old chroniclers in their writings already denouncing the unbounded extravagance of women.
Who shall paint for us the ladies of the time of Charlemagne, and instruct us in the modish ways of the tenth century ? The few statues which have come down to us, more or less mutilated, constitute our only documents ; we must content ourselves with them, and with the vague indications contained in the rude illustrations of the manuscripts of that period, so much earlier than the superb illuminations with which the artists of the Middle Ages enriched the world in a later day.
Our first Fashion-plate, then, will be some cathedral door, or statue from a tomb, that has Quatre hœufs attelés, d'un pas tranquille et lent, Promenaient dans Paris le monarque indolent.
YESTER-YEAR.
miraculously escaped the ravages of time and the hammer of the iconoclasts, whether of ' the Religion ' or the Revolution.
Uuder Louis (^>uiuze.
At a later period, miniatures, painted wimlows, and tapestries, will furnish us with more complete and certain information, an(i far more precise figures ; ' documents ' will abound.
Besides, in the fourteenth century the actual fashion-plate existed. It had not adopted the ' gazette ' shape (that has been in use for a hundred years only), but it was a journal of fashion nevertheless. Instruction in tho mode travelled, under the form of dolls Avearing model costumes, from one country to another, esi^ecially from Paris.
Paris already held the sceptre, and ruled over fashion, although not as she now rules from pole to pole, from the frozen shores of America to Australia—where bits of bone passed through the nasal cartilage were the only homage paid to vanity little more than fifty years ago—from the courts of the Rajahs of India to the seraglio of the Grand Turk, and the palace of Her Majesty the Empress of the Flowery Land.
In the middle ages, certain great ladies of our dear little corner of Europe, used to present each other with small dolls, dressed in the latest fashion by ' cutters/ dressmakers and tailors whose names have not come down to posterity.
Thus, on great occasions, the duchess in her distant château on the Breton ' Landes,' or the Margravine perched upon her rock on the Rhine border, would learn more or less rapidly what was the latest feat of fashion in great centres of luxury and elegance, such as the Court of Paris or the Court of Burgundy. These were rivals in novelty and display, as we learn from the accounts of expenditure that have been brought to light, with the details of the sumptuous doings which dazzled contemporaries, and are recorded by all the chroniclers of the time.
Certain important towns also received the decrees of fashion by similar means. For centuries, Venice, another centre of the sumptuary arts, and a connecting link between Eastern commerce and Western luxury, annually imported a Parisian doll. It was of imme-morial custom to exhibit the waxen image cf a Parisian lady, attired in the last fashion, on Ascension Day, under the arcades of tlic ' Merceria,' at the end of the Piazza of St. Mark, as " the toilette of the year," for the edification of the noble Venetian dames who eagerly flocked to the show.
Uudcr Louis XII.
Escofiioii.
III.
THE MIDDLE AGES.