which, it is well known, brought in the classic Greek
and republican simplicity, the subtle meaning of the
change being expressed in French gowns. Naturally
there was a reaction from all this towards aristocratic
privileges and exclusiveness, which went on for many
years, until in France monarchy and empire followed
the significant leadership of the French modistes.
So strong was this that it passed to other countries,
and in England the impulse outlasted even the Reform
Bill, and skirts grew more and more bulbous, until
it did not need more than three or four women to make
a good-sized assembly. This was not the result
of, a whim about clothes, but a subtle recognition
of a spirit of exclusiveness and defense abroad in
the world. Each woman became her own Bastile.
Men surrounded it and thundered against it without
the least effect. It seemed as permanent as the
Pyramids. At every male attack it expanded, and
became more aggressive and took up more room.
Women have such an exquisite sense of things—just
as they have now in regard to big obstructive hats
in the theatres. They know that most of the plays
are inferior and some of them are immoral, and they
attend the theatres with head-dresses that will prevent
as many people as possible from seeing the stage and
being corrupted by anything that takes place on it.
They object to the men seeing some of the women who
are now on the stage. It happened, as to the
private Bastiles, that the women at last recognized
a change in the sociological and political atmosphere
of the world, and without consulting any men of affairs
or caring for their opinion, down went the Bastiles.
When women attacked them, in obedience to their political
instincts, they collapsed like punctured balloons.
Natural woman was measurably (that is, a capacity
of being measured) restored to the world. And
we all remember the great political revolutionary
movements of 1848.
Now France is still the arbiter of the modes.
Say what we may about Berlin, copy their fashion plates
as we will, or about London, or New York, or Tokio,
it is indisputable that the woman in any company who
has on a Paris gown—the expression is odious,
but there is no other that in these days would be
comprehended—“takes the cake.”
It is not that the women care for this as a mere matter
of apparel. But they are sensitive to the political
atmosphere, to the philosophical significance that
it has to great impending changes. We are approaching
the centenary of the fall of the Bastile. The
French have no Bastile to lay low, nor, indeed, any
Tuileries to burn up; but perhaps they might get a
good way ahead by demolishing Notre Dame and reducing
most of Paris to ashes. Apparently they are on
the eve of doing something. The women of the world
may not know what it is, but they feel the approaching
recurrence of a period. Their movements are not
yet decisive. It is as yet only tentatively that
they adopt the mode of the Directoire. It is yet
uncertain—a sort of Boulangerism in dress.
But if we watch it carefully we shall be able to predict
with some assurance the drift in Paris. The Directoire
dress points to another period of republican simplicity,
anarchy, and the rule of a popular despot.