SARATOGA, August. The nights are, more absolutely than they ever were, devoted to follies the most fascinating, and exhibitions of fashionable manners and attire so absurd, that it would seem as if the tailors and modistes had conspired together this season to play a monstrous joke upon their patrons. Perhaps the dandies are worth less notice than ever. The difference between a fop and a gentleman in the United States is happily wide enough to render it impossible that any sane person should ever confound the two. But the difference between a female popinjay and a lady is here defined by such a curious and vulgar set of peculiarities ap- pertaining to the former person, that I cannot forbear to describe them. In the first place, a toilette is affected, which of itself suffices to turn a woman in full dress into a caricature.
The body and waist of the dress are remarkable only in one respect the last is exceedingly tight, and the former rather loose at the top and exceedingly low. It is below the waist that what is monstrous in the costume first attracts and then repels the eyes of man. A hoop of moderate dimensions, overspread with an underskirt or two, and a dress of whatever fabric, are worn. Underneath the rear of this hoop, just below the waist of the person designated, is bound a coil of wire from two to three inches in diameter, which “throws out” and elevates the upper portion of the dress behind, and forms the foundation, so to speak, of an exterior protuberance called the pannier. The pannier is a bustle, more or less enormous, upon which, in successive folds or layers gathered up or confined by a band encircling the dress from the stomach of the wearer around and beneath, an extra skirt, reaching just below the posterior, hangs, or or rathe rather “wobbles” to and fro. The dress has a train from four to six feet in length.
The posture affected in order to set off this attire is called the “Grecian Bend,” a contortion of the body which, as it is highly improper in itself, I find it difficult to describe with propriety. High-heeled shoes dispose the wearer to incline forward, and dispose high-heeled gaiters are, therefore, adopted by the “belle of the season.” She is thus the more readily enabled to elevate her hips behind, enhancing the aspect of the panier, to contract her stomach, and to form an S-like curvature of her upper shape, by thrusting out her chest, drawing back her shoulders, and bending forward her head. The latter is crowned by a hideous chignon, surpassing by several inches the thickness of the shallow nether brain.
It has been confided to me by an elderly woman with whom I conversed at a recent ball, that the distortion of the shape known as the Grecian Bend” is quite painful and wearisome, and that some girls adopt artificial contrivances to aid them in preserving the posture for several consecutive hours. A belt is fastened about the waist, under the skirts. From this belt, down either side the hips, the straps furnished with buckles, descend and are attached to strong bands, made fast around the lower thighs. As the buckles of the straps are tightened the hips are drawn up and held “in position.” This, says my amiable informant, "is a relief, of course, to only one part of the frame. The constriction of the upper part has to be preserved with no other aids than the stays; and those often render it the more difficult and tiresome.
“You perhaps notice another peculiarity about some of the ladies' dresses. The bodies are not only cut very low, but are so far from clinging jealously to the figure as to seem to challenge the gaze of partners to that satisfaction in regard to the reality of certain charms, which it was formerly claimed by marriageable bachelors that they were denied. So gracious a condescension on the part of our belles,” continued the matron, in a tone tingling with irony, “commends them, you will surely admit, as a far more honest and unequivocating set than the haunts of fashion are used to boast of.”
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