Pretty in the City

Melani's Fashion Store

Silk Skirt

The Magic Skirt

There was once a lady, sober in mind and sedate in manner, whose plain dress exactly represented her desire to be inconspicuous, to do good, to improve every day of her life in actions that should benefit her kind. She was a serious person, and she had a distaste for the gay society which was mainly a flutter of ribbons and talk and pretty faces; and when she meditated, as she did in her spare moments, her heart was sore over the frivolity of life and the emptiness of fashion. She longed to make the world better, and without any priggishness she set it an example of simplicity and sobriety, of cheerful acquiescence in plainness and inconspicuousness.

One day–it was in the autumn–this lady had occasion to buy a   new skirt . From a great number offered to her she selected a bright colored one with floral prints. It did not match with the rest of her apparel; it did not fit her apparent character.  What impulse led to this selection she could not explain. She was not tired of being good, but something in the texture of the skirt and the color pleased her. If it were a temptation, she did not intend to yield to it, but she thought she would take the skirt home and try it. Perhaps her nature felt the need of a little warmth. The skirt pleased her still more when she got it home and put it on and surveyed herself in the mirror. Indeed, there was a new expression in her face that corresponded to the skirt. She looked at it. There was something almost humanly winning and temptatious in it. In short, she kept it, and when she wore it abroad she was not conscious of its incongruity to herself, but of the incongruity of the rest of her apparel to the skirt, which seemed to have a sort of intelligence of its own, at least a power of changing and conforming things to itself. By degrees one article after another in the lady’s wardrobe was laid aside, and another substituted for it that answered to the demanding spirit of the skirt. In a little while this plain lady was not plain any more, but most gorgeously dressed, and possessed with the desire to be in the height of the fashion.

But this was not all. Her disposition, her ideas, her whole life, was changed. She did not any more think of going about doing good, but of amusing herself. She read nothing but stories in paper covers. In place of being sedate and sober-minded, she was frivolous to excess; she spent most of her time with women who liked to “frivol.” She kept Lent in the most expensive way, so as to make the impression upon everybody that she was better than the extremest kind of Lent. From liking the sedatest company she passed to liking the gayest society and the most fashionable method of getting rid of her time. Nothing whatever had happened to her, and she is now an ornament to society.

This story is not an invention; it is a leaf out of life. If this lady that autumn day had bought a plain skirt she would have continued on in her humble, sensible way of living. Clearly it was the skirt that made the woman, and not the woman the skirt. She had no preconception of it; it simply happened to her, like any accident–as if she had fallen and sprained her ankle. Some people may say that she had in her a concealed propensity for frivolity; but the skirt cannot escape the moral responsibility of calling it out if it really existed. The power of things to change and create character is well attested.  

Men live up to or live down to their clothes, which have a great moral influence on manner, and even on conduct. There was a man run down almost to vagabondage, owing to his increasingly shabby clothing, and he was only saved from becoming a moral and physical wreck by a remnant of good-breeding in him that kept his worn boots well polished. In time his boots brought up the rest of his apparel and set him on his feet again. Then there is the well-known example of the honest clerk on a small salary who was ruined by the gift of a repeating watch–an expensive timepiece that required at least ten thousand a year to sustain it: he is now in Canada.

Sometimes the influence of Things is good and sometimes it is bad. We need a philosophy that shall tell us why it is one or the other, and fix the responsibility where it belongs. It does no good, as people always find out by reflex action, to kick an inanimate thing that has offended, to smash a perverse watch with a hammer, to break a rocking-chair that has a habit of tipping over backward. If Things are not actually malicious, they seem to have a power of revenging themselves. We ought to try to understand them better, and to be more aware of what they can do to us. If the lady who bought the skirt could have known the hidden nature of it, could have had a vision of herself as she was transformed by it, she would as soon have taken a viper into her bosom as have tied the skirt around her waist. Her whole previous life, her feeling of the moment, show that it was not vanity that changed her, but the inconsiderate association with a Thing that happened to strike her fancy, and which seemed innocent. But no Thing is really powerless for good or evil.

About the Author

Misha Ghosh (http://www.mishcollection.com)

DG2 Scarf Print Silk Skirt


April Cornell Duchess Blue Skirt Apron


April Cornell Duchess Blue Skirt Apron


$19.95


Peaceful patterns in soft blues and yelows create quietude in a busy world. Apron measures 19×31″. 100% cotton. We also stock matching placemat, napkin, mitt, potholder and teatowel….

Ball a Dinner Dress 1861 Photo Mugs


Ball a Dinner Dress 1861 Photo Mugs



Ball dress white silk, tulle puffings arranged spirally on the skirt, trimmed with pink roses. Dinner dress robe imperatrice in sable trimmed green silk, no waist seam…..


Costume 1844 Photo Mugs


Costume 1844 Photo Mugs



Grey dress with black trim applied in horizontal bands of increasing width on the skirt (pyramid style). Dress of blue a purple shot silk deep flounce of black lace…..


Sew Beautiful 1995-1996 Subscriber's Video IV


Sew Beautiful 1995-1996 Subscriber’s Video IV


$3.40



LSP- LD - 86103 - CHINA DOLL'S HOT SILK STOCKINGS - All Stockings (Adults Only) DVD


LSP- LD – 86103 – CHINA DOLL’S HOT SILK STOCKINGS – All Stockings (Adults Only) DVD


$19.95


SANDY’S oriental teasing & HOT TALK makes you stiff, drinking in that stacked 5’3″ body & her big 36D boobs and ass! She wants to show you how sexy an oriental girl looks in stockings so she dresses in garterbelt, beige stockings and panties. After giving us all we ask for in this outfit, she coaxes us to burst by changing into black seam stockings, gives us hot stairway thrills, the kind you’ve a…

LUAU Natural TABLE SKIRT w/ tropical Flowers


LUAU Natural TABLE SKIRT w/ tropical Flowers


$12.50


tan color simulated plastic grass table skirt
trimmed along the top with assorted color simulated silk flowers!
29″ high x 9 feet wide
wholesale-distributor party supplies!…

Hula Girl Flower Lei Hair clip (12 pack)


Hula Girl Flower Lei Hair clip (12 pack)


$4.50


Give her (or his) hair that final luau touch with a nice flower. One dozen (12) 5 1/2″ Flower Hair Clips, Simulated Silk. Assorted colors….

Child Hula Set


Child Hula Set


$10.11


Includes multi-colored fake flower lei, headband and 2 bracelets, plus a nylon hula skirt with flowers. Available in one size fits most children. Skirt will fit up to approximately a 27″ waist and is 17″ long. Available in Pink, Blue, Yellow, or Purple hula skirt. Swimsuit not included.Skirt will fit up to approximately a 27″ waist and is 17″ long….

Little Adventures Fairy Tutu Skirt Dress-up Costume, Fuchsia/Light Purple


Little Adventures Fairy Tutu Skirt Dress-up Costume, Fuchsia/Light Purple


$19.95


It’s irresistible to twirl?jump?and dance in this fun fluffy fuchsia and light purple tutu. Three layers of shimmery fuchsia fabric are accented by light purple ruffled edges. The soft elastic waist is detailed with an adorable matching light purple ribbon….

Purple Satin Pajama Set 18in Wish Style Collection Doll Outfit


Purple Satin Pajama Set 18in Wish Style Collection Doll Outfit


$13.99


Pajama set includes Wish eye mask, embroidered Wish top with green ribbon trim, pajama pants and matching slippers with green ribbon trim. The Wish Style Collection is a selection of unique, contemporary boutique style designs for 18 inch American Girl style dolls. Each outfit includes our very special Wish “no-pull” fastening: no snagging the clothes with ugly velcro and no tiny poppers little h…


Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

This entry was posted on Thursday, September 18th, 1980 at 10:51 pm and is filed under Clothing. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

Comments are closed.