of fashions, not in generations only, but in decades
and years of a generation, as if the mass had no mind
or taste of its own, but submitted to the irresponsible
ukase of tailors and modistes, who are in alliance
with enterprising manufacturers of novelties.
In this higher civilization a costume which is artistic
and becoming has no more chance of permanence than
one which is ugly and inconvenient. It might
be inferred that this higher civilization produces
no better taste and discrimination, no more independent
judgment, in dress than it does in literature.
The vagaries in dress of the Western nations for a
thousand years past, to go back no further, are certainly
highly amusing, and would be humiliating to people
who regarded taste and art as essentials of civilization.
But when we speak of civilization, we cannot but notice
that some of the great civilizations; the longest
permanent and most notable for highest achievement
in learning, science, art, or in the graces or comforts
of life, the Egyptian, the Saracenic, the Chinese,
were subject to no such vagaries in costume, but adhered
to that which taste, climate, experience had determined
to be the most useful and appropriate. And it
is a singular comment upon our modern conceit that
we make our own vagaries and changeableness, and not
any fixed principles of art or of utility, the criterion
of judgment, on other races and other times.
The more important result of the study of past fashions,
in engravings and paintings, remains to be spoken
of. It is that in all the illustrations, from
the simplicity of Athens, through the artificiality
of Louis XIV and the monstrosities of Elizabeth, down
to the undescribed modistic inventions of the first
McKinley, there is discoverable a radical and primitive
law of beauty. We acknowledge it among the Greeks,
we encounter it in one age and another. I mean
a style of dress that is artistic as well as picturesque,
that satisfies our love of beauty, that accords with
the grace of the perfect human figure, and that gives
as perfect satisfaction to the cultivated taste as
a drawing by Raphael. While all the other illustrations
of the human ingenuity in making the human race appear
fantastic or ridiculous amuse us or offend our taste,
—except the tailor fashion-plates of the
week that is now,—these few exceptions,
classic or modern, give us permanent delight, and are
recognized as following the eternal law of beauty and
utility. And we know, notwithstanding the temporary
triumph of bad taste and the public lack of any taste,
that there is a standard, artistic and imperishable.