The Drawer has never undervalued clothes.
Whatever other hérésies it may have had, however
it may have insisted that the more a woman learns,
the more she knows of books, the higher her education
is carried in all the knowledges, the more interesting
she will be, not only for an hour, but as a companion
for life, it has never said that she is less attractive
when dressed with taste and according to the season.
Love itself could scarcely be expected to survive
a winter hat worn after Easter. And the philosophy
of this is not on the surface, nor applicable to women
only. In this the highest of created things are
under a law having a much wider application.
Take as an item novels, the works of fiction, which
have become an absolute necessity in the modern world,
as necessary to divert the mind loaded with care and
under actual strain as to fill the vacancy in otherwise
idle brains. They have commonly a summer and a
winter apparel. The publishers understand this.
As certainly as the birds appear, comes the crop of
summer novels, fluttering down upon the stalls, in
procession through the railway trains, littering the
drawing-room tables, in light paper, covers, ornamental,
attractive in colors and fanciful designs, as welcome
and grateful as the girls in muslin. When the
thermometer is in the eighties, anything heavy and
formidable is distasteful. The housekeeper knows
we want few solid dishes, but salads and cooling drinks.
The publisher knows that we want our literature (or
what passes for that) in light array. In the winter
we prefer the boards and the rich heavy binding, however
light the tale may be; but in the summer, though the
fiction be as grave and tragic as wandering love and
bankruptcy, we would have it come to us lightly clad out
of stays, as it were.
It would hardly be worth while to
refer to this taste in the apparel of our fiction
did it not have deep and esoteric suggestions, and
could not the novelists themselves get a hint from
it. Is it realized how much depends upon the
clothes that are worn by the characters in the novels clothes put on not only to exhibit the
inner life of the characters, but to please the readers
who are to associate with them? It is true that
there are novels that almost do away with the necessity
of fashion magazines and fashion plates in the family,
so faithful are they in the latest millinery details,
and so fully do they satisfy the longing of all of
us to know what is chic for the moment. It is
pretty well understood, also, that women, and even
men, are made to exhibit the deepest passions and
the tenderest emotions in the crises of their lives
by the clothes they put on. How the woman in
such a crisis hesitates before her wardrobe, and at
last chooses just what will express her innermost
feeling! Does she dress for her lover as she dresses
to receive her lawyer who has come to inform her that
she is living beyond her income? Would not the
lover be spared time and pain if he knew, as the novelist
knows, whether the young lady is dressing for a rejection
or an acceptance? Why does the lady intending
suicide always throw on a waterproof when she steals
out of the house to drown herself? The novelist
knows the deep significance of every article of toilet,
and nature teaches him to array his characters for
the summer novel in the airy draperies suitable to
the season. It is only good art that the cover
of the novel and the covers of the characters shall
be in harmony. He knows, also, that the characters
in the winter novel must be adequately protected.
We speak, of course, of the season stories. Novels
that are to run through a year, or maybe many years,
and are to set forth the passions and trials of changing
age and varying circumstance, require different treatment
and wider millinery knowledge. They are naturally
more expensive. The wardrobe required in an all-round
novel would bankrupt most of us.
But to confine ourselves to the season
novel, it is strange that some one has not invented
the patent adjustable story that with a slight change
would do for summer or winter, following the broad
hint of the publishers, who hasten in May to throw
whatever fiction they have on hand into summer clothes.
The winter novel, by this invention, could be easily
fitted for summer wear. All the novelist need
do would be to change the clothes of his characters.
And in the autumn, if the novel proved popular, he
could change again, with the advantage of being in
the latest fashion. It would only be necessary
to alter a few sentences in a few of the stereotype
pages. Of course this would make necessary other
slight alterations, for no kind-hearted writer would
be cruel to his own creations, and expose them to
the vicissitudes of the seasons. He could insert
“rain” for “snow,” and “green
leaves” for “skeleton branches,”
make a few verbal changes of that sort, and regulate
the thermometer. It would cost very little to
adjust the novel in this way to any season. It
is worth thinking of.
And this leads to a remark upon the
shocking indifference of some novelists to the ordinary
comfort of their characters. In practical life
we cannot, but in his realm the novelist can, control
the weather. He can make it generally pleasant.
We do not object to a terrific thunder-shower now
and then, as the sign of despair and a lost soul, but
perpetual drizzle and grayness and inclemency are
tedious to the reader, who has enough bad weather
in his private experience. The English are greater
sinners in this respect than we are. They seem
to take a brutal delight in making it as unpleasant
as possible for their fictitious people. There
is R b rt ‘lsm r’,
for example. External trouble is piled on to the
internal. The characters are in a perpetual soak.
There is not a dry rag on any of them, from the beginning
of the book to the end. They are sent out in
all weathers, and are drenched every day. Often
their wet clothes are frozen on them; they are exposed
to cutting winds and sleet in their faces, bedrabbled
in damp grass, stood against slippery fences, with
hail and frost lowering their vitality, and expected
under these circumstances to make love and be good
Christians. Drenched and wind-blown for years,
that is what they are. It may be that this treatment
has excited the sympathy of the world, but is it legitimate?
Has a novelist the right to subject his creations
to tortures that he would not dare to inflict upon
his friends? It is no excuse to say that this
is normal English weather; it is not the office of
fiction to intensify and rub in the unavoidable evils
of life. The modern spirit of consideration for
fictitious characters that prevails with regard to
dress ought to extend in a reasonable degree to their
weather. This is not a strained corollary to
the demand for an appropriately costumed novel.