[The Business of Being a Woman by Ida M. Tarbell]@TWC D-Link bookThe Business of Being a Woman CHAPTER V 20/31
The very general adoption of the ugly and meaningless fashions of the last few years--peach-basket hats, hobble skirts, slippers for the street--is a case in point.
From every side this is bad--defeating its own purpose--corrupting national taste and wasting national substance. Moreover, the false standard it sets up socially is intolerable.
It sounds fantastic to say that whole bodies of women place their chief reliance for social advancement on dress, but it is true.
They are, or are not, as they are gowned! The worst of this fantasy is not only that it forces too much attention from useful women, but that it gives such poise and assurance to the ignorant and useless! If you look like the women of a set, you are as "good" as they, is the democratic standard of many a young woman.
If for any reason she is not able to produce this effect, she shrinks from contact, whatever her talent or charm! And she is often not altogether wrong in thinking she will not be welcome if her dress is not that of the circle to which she aspires.
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