English Costume Part 2
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I have noticed that it is the general custom of writers upon the dress of this early time to dwell lovingly upon the colours of the various parts of the dress as they were painted in the illuminated ma.n.u.scripts. This is a foolish waste of time, insomuch as the colours were made the means of displays of pure design on the part of the very early illuminators; and if one were to go upon such evidence as this, by the exactness of such drawings alone, then every Norman had a face the colour of which nearly resembled wet biscuit, and hair picked out in brown lines round each wave and curl.
These woollen clothes--cap, tunic, semicircular cloak, and leg coverings--have all been actually found in the tomb of a Briton of the Bronze Age. So little did the clothes alter in shape, that the early Briton and the late Norman were dressed nearly exactly alike.
When the tomb of William II. was opened in 1868, it was found, as had been suspected, that the grave had been opened and looted of what valuables it might have contained; but there were found among the dust which filled the bottom of the tomb fragments of red cloth, of gold cloth, a turquoise, a serpent's head in ivory, and a wooden spear shaft, perhaps the very spear that William carried on that fatal day in the New Forest.
Also with the dust and bones of the dead King some nutsh.e.l.ls were discovered, and examination showed that mice had been able to get into the tomb. So, if you please, you may hit upon a pretty moral.
THE WOMEN
[Ill.u.s.tration: {A woman of the time of William II.}]
And so the lady began to lace....
A moralist, a denouncer of the fair s.e.x, a satirist, would have his fling at this. What thundering epithets and avalanche of words should burst out at such a momentous point in English history!
However, the lady pleased herself.
Not that the lacing was very tight, but it commenced the habit, and the habit begat the harm, and the thing grew until it arrived finally at that buckram, square-built, cardboard-and-tissue figure which t.i.tters and totters through the Elizabethan era.
Our male eyes, trained from infancy upwards to avoid gazing into certain shop windows, nevertheless retain a vivid impression of an awesome affair therein, which we understood by hints and signs confined our mothers' figures in its deadly grip.
That the lady did not lace herself overtight is proved by the many informations we have of her household duties; that she laced tight enough for unkind comment is shown by the fact that some old monk pictured the devil in a neat-laced gown.
It was, at any rate, a distinct departure from the loosely-clothed lady of 1066 towards the neater figure of 1135.
The lacing was more to draw the wrinkles of the close-woven bodice of the gown smooth than to form a false waist and accentuated hips, the beauty of which malformation I must leave to the writers in ladies'
journals and the condemnation to health faddists.
However, the lacing was not the only matter of note. A change was coming over all feminine apparel--a change towards richness, which made itself felt in this reign more in the fabric than in the actual make of the garment.
[Ill.u.s.tration: A WOMAN OF THE TIME OF WILLIAM II. (1087-1100)
This shows the gown, which is laced behind, fitting more closely to the figure. The sleeves are wider above the wrist.]
The gown was open at the neck in the usual manner, was full in the skirt and longer than heretofore, was laced at the back, and was loose in the sleeve.
The sleeve as worn by the men--that is, the over-long sleeve hanging down over the hand--was also worn by the women, and hung down or was turned back, according to the freak of the wearer. Not only this, but a new idea began, which was to cut a hole in the long sleeve where the hand came, and, pus.h.i.+ng the hand through, to let the rest of the sleeve droop down. This developed, as we shall see later.
[Ill.u.s.tration: {A woman of the time of William II.}]
Then the cloak, which had before been fastened by a brooch on the shoulder or in the centre of the breast, was now held more tightly over the shoulders by a set of laces or bands which ran round the back from underneath the brooch where they were fastened, thus giving more definition to the shoulders.
You must remember that such fas.h.i.+ons as the hole in the sleeve and the laced cloak were not any more universal than is any modern fas.h.i.+on, and that the good dame in the country was about a century behind the times with her loose gown and heavy cloak.
There were still the short gowns, which, being tucked in at the waist by the girdle, showed the thick wool chemise below and the unlaced gown, fitting like a jersey.
The large wimple was still worn wrapped about the head, and the hair was still carefully hidden.
[Ill.u.s.tration: {A woman of the time of William II.}]
Shall we imagine that it is night, and that the lady is going to bed?
She is in her long white chemise, standing at the window looking down upon the market square of a small town.
The moon picks out every detail of carving on the church, and throws the porch into a dense gloom. Not a soul is about, not a light is to be seen, not a sound is to be heard.
The lady is about to leave the window, when she hears a sound in the street below. She peers down, and sees a man running towards the church; he goes in and out of the shadows. From her open window she can hear his heavy breathing. Now he darts into the shadow of the porch, and then out of the gloom comes a furious knocking, and a voice crying, 'Sanctuary!'
The lady at her window knows that cry well. Soon the monks in the belfry will awake and ring the Galilee-bell.
The Galilee-bell tolls, and the knocking ceases.
A few curious citizens look out. A dog barks. Then a door opens and closes with a bang.
There is silence in the square again, but the lady still stands at her window, and she follows the man in her thoughts.
Now he is admitted by the monks, and goes at once to the altar of the patron-saint of the church, where he kneels and asks for a coroner.
The coroner, an aged monk, comes to him and confesses him. He tells his crime, and renounces his rights in the kingdom; and then, in that dark church, he strips to his s.h.i.+rt and offers his clothes to the sacrist for his fee. Ragged, mud-stained clothes, torn cloak, all fall from him in a heap upon the floor of the church.
Now the sacrist gives him a large cloak with a cross upon the shoulder, and, having fed him, gives him into the charge of the under-sheriff, who will next day pa.s.s him from constable to constable towards the coast, where he will be seen on board a s.h.i.+p, and so pa.s.s away, an exile for ever.
The night is cold. The lady pulls a curtain across the window, and then, stripping herself of her chemise, she gets into bed.
HENRY THE FIRST
Reigned thirty-five years: 1100-1135.
Born 1068. Married to Matilda of Scotland, 1100; to Adela of Louvain, 1121.
THE MEN
[Ill.u.s.tration: {A man of the time of Henry I.; two types of shoe}]
The Father of Popular Literature, Gerald of Wales, says: 'It is better to be dumb than not to be understood. New times require new fas.h.i.+ons, and so I have thrown utterly aside the old and dry methods of some authors, and aimed at adopting the fas.h.i.+on of speech which is actually in vogue to-day.'
Vainly, perhaps, I have endeavoured to follow this precept laid down by Father Gerald, trying by slight pictures of the times to make the dry bones live, to make the clothes stir up and puff themselves into the shapes of men.
It is almost a necessity that one who would describe, paint, stage, or understand the costume of this reign should know the state of England at the time.
For there is in this reign a distinction without a difference in clothes; the shapes are almost identical to the shapes and patterns of the previous reigns, but everybody is a little better dressed.
The mantles worn by the few in the time of William the Red are worn now by most of the n.o.bility, fur-lined and very full.
One may see on the sides of the west door of Rochester Cathedral Henry and his first wife, and notice that the mantle he wears is very full; one may see that he wears a supertunic, which is gathered round his waist. This tunic is the usual Norman tunic reaching to the knee, but now it is worn over an under-tunic which reaches to the ground in heavy folds.
English Costume Part 2
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English Costume Part 2 summary
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- Related chapter:
- English Costume Part 1
- English Costume Part 3