The Tatler
Saturday, June 6, 1710
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�A stage-coach sets out exactly at six from Nando�s coffee-house to Mr. Tiptoe�s dancing-school. And returns at eleven every evening, for one shilling and four-pence.
�N.B. Dancing shoes not exceeding four inches in height in the heels, and periwigs not exceeding three feet in length, are carried in the coach-box gratis.�
As Shakespeare didn�t, but undoubtedly meant, to say, �If all the world�s a stage, then let�s dress like it.� At the end of the day, how do you dress if you live in a hierarchical society bulging at the seams? Some say out�panniers, wires or swords, and some say up--heels and wigs or hats (?). Steele�s� acidic advertisement in 1710 points to the foibles men will go to impress themselves and everyone else. Well, as Tripping Knob, a famous, but undocumented dancer of the 1710s put it, �I may not have the power of the Monarch, a Duke, a General or Councillor of State, but by g-d I can be taller than all of them combined. If all these persons of rank want land and space here and abroad, shouldn�t I be able to colonize some space at home?�
Men's Mules circa 1710, Bata Museum https://www.flickr.com/photos/suddenly_susan/2898003324/ |
Admiral George Churchill, by Godfrey Kneller http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:GeorgeChurchill.jpg Jeff Hopper is an author, editor and manager of the Warner House |
Perhaps this will be a summer of looking at wigs and heels and things that make your space, my space � la the 18th C.
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