FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   >>  
m to the sight; Pursues the wretch who else some joy might find, To fix her seat of empire in his mind. As desert lakes in sad illusion fly, Before the weary traveller's cheated eye So memory shows, those hopes we still would cherish. Pleased but to fade, allured us but to perish. M.B.S. * * * * * SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS. * * * * * ON COALHEAVERS. Although in this age of all but universal hypocrisy and make-believe, every man has at least two fashions of one countenance, it is in dress principally that most men are most unlike themselves. But the coalheaver always sticks close to the attire of his station; he alone wears the consistent and befitting garb of his forefathers; he alone has not discarded "the napless vesture of humility," to follow the always expensive, and often absurd fashions of his superiors. All ungalled of him is each courtier's heel or great man's kibe. Yet, is not even his every-day clothing unseemly, or his aspect unprepossessing. He casts as broad and proper a shadow in the sun as any other man. Black he is, indeed, but comely, like the daughters of Jerusalem.--To begin with the hat which he has honoured with a preference--what are your operas or your fire-shovels beside it? they must instantly (on a fair comparison) sink many degrees below zero in the scale of contempt. In a word, I would make bold to assert that it unites in perfection the two grand requisites of a head covering, beauty and comfort. Gentlemen may smile at this if they will, and take exception to my taste; but, I ask, does the modern round hat, whatever the insignificant variations of its form, possess either quality? No, not a jot of it. One would think, by our pertinacious adherence to the head-ach giving, circular conformation, that we wished to show our anger at the Almighty for not shaping our caputs like cylinders. In fine, though the parson's and the quaker's hat has each its several merits, commend me to the fan-tailed _shallow_. The flap part attached to the cap seems, at first sight, as to use, supernecessary, although so ornamental withal. It no doubt (as its name, indeed indicates) had its origin in gallantry, and was invented in the age of fans, for the purpose of cooling their mistresses' bosoms, heated--as they would necessarily be--at fair time, by their gravel-grinding walks, under a fervid sun, to the elegant r
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   >>  



Top keywords:
fashions
 

modern

 

fervid

 

variations

 

elegant

 

quality

 

insignificant

 
possess
 

contempt

 
unites

assert

 

comparison

 

degrees

 

perfection

 

exception

 
Gentlemen
 

requisites

 
covering
 

beauty

 

comfort


circular

 
supernecessary
 

ornamental

 

withal

 

attached

 

invented

 

purpose

 
cooling
 

bosoms

 

heated


gallantry
 

necessarily

 
origin
 

shallow

 

Almighty

 

shaping

 

instantly

 

wished

 

conformation

 

adherence


pertinacious

 

giving

 

mistresses

 
caputs
 
grinding
 

merits

 
commend
 

tailed

 

quaker

 

parson