themselves created as it were for Ornament, are often
very much mistaken in this ornamental Part of Life.
It would methinks be a short Rule for Behaviour, if
every young Lady in her Dress, Words, and Actions were
only to recommend her self as a Sister, Daughter, or
Wife, and make herself the more esteemed in one of
those Characters. The Care of themselves, with
regard to the Families in which Women are born, is
the best Motive for their being courted to come into
the Alliance of other Houses. Nothing can promote
this End more than a strict Preservation of Decency.
I should be glad if a certain Equestrian Order of Ladies,
some of whom one meets in an Evening at every Outlet
of the Town, would take this Subject into their serious
Consideration; In order thereunto the following Letter
may not be wholly unworthy their Perusal. [1]
Mr. SPECTATOR,
’Going lately to take the Air in one of the most beautiful Evenings this Season has produced, as I was admiring the Serenity of the Sky, the lively Colours of the Fields, and the Variety of the Landskip every Way around me, my Eyes were suddenly called off from these inanimate Objects by a little party of Horsemen I saw passing the Road. The greater Part of them escaped my particular Observation, by reason that my whole Attention was fixed on a very fair Youth who rode in the midst of them, and seemed to have been dressed by some Description in a Romance. His Features, Complexion, and Habit had a remarkable Effeminacy, and a certain languishing Vanity appeared in his Air: His Hair, well curl’d and powder’d, hung to a considerable Length on his Shoulders, and was wantonly ty’d, as if by the Hands of his Mistress, in a Scarlet Ribbon, which played like a Streamer behind him: He had a Coat and Wastecoat of blue Camlet trimm’d and embroidered with Silver; a Cravat of the finest Lace; and wore, in a smart Cock, a little Beaver Hat edged with Silver, and made more sprightly by a Feather. His Horse too, which was a Pacer, was adorned after the same airy Manner, and seemed to share in the Vanity of the Rider. As I was pitying the Luxury of this young Person, who appeared to me to have been educated only as an Object of Sight, I perceived on my nearer Approach, and as I turned my Eyes downward, a Part of the Equipage I had not observed before, which was a Petticoat of the same with the Coat and Wastecoat. After this Discovery, I looked again on the Face of the fair Amazon who had thus deceived me, and thought those Features which had before offended me by their Softness, were now strengthened into as improper a Boldness; and tho’ her Eyes Nose and Mouth seemed to be formed with perfect Symmetry, I am not certain whether she, who in Appearance was a very handsome Youth, may not be in Reality a very indifferent Woman.
There is an Objection which naturally presents it self against these occasional Perplexities and Mixtures of Dress, which is, that they seem