th of gold. No satin, no velvet, was too
elegant for those who sat to Copley for their pictures. In Puritan days the
laws could hardly be made severe enough to prevent men from wearing
silver-lace and "broad bone-lace," and shoulder-bands of undue width, and
double ruffs and "immoderate great breeches." What seemed to the Cavaliers
the extreme of stupid sobriety in dress would pass now for the most
fantastic array. Fancy Samuel Pepys going to a wedding of to-day in his
"new colored silk suit and coat trimmed with gold buttons, and gold broad
lace round his hands, very rich and fine." It would give to the ceremony
the aspect of a fancy ball; yet how much prettier a sight is a fancy ball
than the ordinary entertainment of the period!
At intervals the rigor of masculine costume is a little relaxed; velvets
resume their picturesque sway: and, instead of the customary suit of solemn
black, gentlemen even appear in blue and gold editions at evening parties.
Let us hope that good sense and taste may yet meet each other, for both
sexes; that men may borrow for their dress some womanly taste, women some
masculine sense; and society may again witness a graceful and appropriate
costume, without being too much absorbed in "featherses."
VI
STUDY AND WORK
"Movet me ingens scientiarum admiratio, seu legis communis aequitas,
ut in nostro sexu, rarum non esse feram, id quod omnium votis
dignissimum est. Nam cum sapientia tantum generis humani ornamentum
sit, ut ad omnes et singulos (quoad quidem per sortem cujusque
liceat) extendi jure debeat, non vidi, cur virgini, in qua excolendi
sese ornandique sedulitatem admittimus, non conveniat mundus hic
omnium longe pulcherrimus."--ANNAE MARIAE A SCHURMAN EPISTOLAE.
(1638.)
"A great reverence for knowledge and the natural sense of justice
urge me to encourage in my own sex that which is most worthy the
aspirations of all. For, since wisdom is so great an ornament of the
human race that it should of right be extended (so far as
practicable) to each and every one, I have not perceived why this
fairest of ornaments should not be appropriate for the maiden, to
whom we permit all diligence in the decoration and adornment of
herself."
EXPERIMENTS
Why is it, that, whenever anything is done for women in the way of
education, it is called "an experiment,"--something that is to be long
considered, stoutly opposed,
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