Part 4 (1/2)

What changes, says he, do not a long course of years produce! Who now, except in the theatre, or at a carnival or masquerade (spectaculis ac rebus ludiciis), would endure garments inscribed with verses and t.i.tles, and painted with various figures? Nevertheless, it is plain that such garments were constantly used in ancient times. To say nothing of Homer, who a.s.signs to Ulysses a tunic variegated with figures of animals; to say nothing of the Ma.s.sagetae, whom Herodotus relates painted animals on their garments with the juice of herbs; we also read of these garments (though then considered very antiquated) being used under the Caesars of Rome.

They say that Alcisthenes the Sybarite had a garment of such magnificence that when he exhibited it in the Temple of Juno at Lacinium, where all Italy was congregated, it attracted universal attention. It was purchased from the Carthaginians, by Dionysius the elder, for 120 talents. It was twenty-two feet in breadth, of a purple ground, with animals wrought all over, except in the middle, where were Jupiter, Juno, Themis, Minerva, Apollo, Venus: on one sleeve it had a figure of Alcisthenes, on the other of his city Sybaris.

That this description is not exaggerated may be inferred from the following pa.s.sage from a homily on Dives and Lazarus by a Bishop of Amuasan in Pontus, given by Ciampini.

”They have here no bounds to this foolish art, for no sooner was invented the useless art of weaving in figures in a kind of picture, such as animals of all sorts, than (rich persons) procure flowered garments, and also those variegated with an infinite number of images, both for themselves, their wives, and children... ... . Whensoever thus clothed they go abroad, they go, as it were, painted all over, and pointing out to one another with the finger the pictures on their garments.

”For there are lions and panthers, and bears and bulls, and dogs and woods, and rocks and huntsmen; and, in a word, everything that can be thought of, all drawn to the life: for it was necessary, forsooth, that not only the walls of their houses should be painted, but their coats (tunica) also, and likewise the cloak (pallium) which covers it.

”The more pious of these gentry take their subjects from the Gospel history: _e.g._ Christ himself with his disciples, or one of the miracles, is depicted. In this manner you shall see the marriage of Cana and the waterpots; the paralytic carrying his bed on his shoulders; the blind man cured by clay; the woman with the issue of blood taking hold of the border (of Christ's garment); the harlot falling at the feet of Jesus; Lazarus coming from the tomb: and they fancy there is great piety in all this, and that putting on such garments must be pleasing to G.o.d.”

The palmated garment was figured with palm-leaves, and was a triumphal or festive garment. It is referred to in an epistle of Gratian to Augustus: ”I have sent thee a palmated garment, in which the name of our divine parent Constantine is interwoven.”

In allusion to these lettered garments Ausonius celebrates Sabina (textrice simul ac poetria), whose name thus lives when those of more important personages are forgotten:--

They who both webs and verses weave, The first to thee, O chaste Minerva, leave; The latter to the Muses they devote: To me, Sabina, it appears a sin To separate two things so near akin, So I have wrote thy verses on my coat.[7]

And again:

Whether the Tyrian robe your praise demand, Or the neat verse upon the edge descried, Know both proceed from the same skilful hand: In both these arts Sabina takes a pride.[8]

It is imagined that the embroidered vestments worn in Homer's time bore a strong resemblance to those now worn by the Moguls; and the custom of making presents, so discernible through his work, still prevails throughout Asia. It is not (says Sir James Forbes) so much the custom in India to present dresses ready made to the visitors as to offer the materials, especially to Europeans. In Turkey, Persia, and Arabia, it is generally the reverse. We find in Chardin that the kings of Persia had great wardrobes, where there were always many hundred habits, sorted, ready for presents, and that more than forty tailors were always employed in this service.

It is not improbable that this ancient custom of presenting a visitor with a new dress as a token of welcome, a symbol of rejoicing at his presence, may have led to many of the general customs which have prevailed, and do still, of having new clothes at any season of joy or festivity. New clothes are thought by the people of the East _requisite_ for the due solemnization of a time of rejoicing. The Turks, even the poorest of them, would submit to any privation rather than be without new clothes at the Bairam or Great Festival. There is an anecdote recorded of the Caliph Montanser Billah, that going one day to the upper roof of his palace he saw a number of clothes spread out on the flat roofs of the houses of Bagdat. He asked the reason, and was told that the inhabitants of Bagdat were drying their clothes, which they had newly washed, on account of the approach of the Bairam.

The caliph was so concerned that any should be so poor as to be obliged to wash their old clothes for want of new ones with which to celebrate this festival, that he ordered a great quant.i.ty of gold to be instantly made into bullets, proper to be shot out of crossbows, which he and his courtiers threw, by this means, upon every terrace of the city where he saw garments spread to dry.

FOOTNOTES:

[5] Book viii. chap. 48.

[6] Ciampini, Vetera Monimenta, cap. xiii.

[7] ”Licia qui texunt, et Carmina; Carmina Musis, Licia contribuunt, casta Minerva, tibi.

Ast ego rem sociam non dissociabo, Sabina, Versibus inscripsi, quae mea texta meis.”

[8] ”Sive probas Tyrio textam sub tegmine vestem, Seu placet inscripti commoditas t.i.tuli.

Ipsius haec Dominae concennat utrumque venustas: Has geminas artes una Sabina colet.”

CHAPTER VI.

THE DARK AGES.--”SHEE-SCHOOLS.”

”There was an auncient house not far away, Renown'd throughout the world for sacred lore And pure unspotted life: so well they say It govern'd was, and guided evermore Through wisedome of a matrone grave and h.o.r.e, Whose onely joy was to relieve the needes Of wretched soules, and helpe the helplesse pore: All night she spent in bidding of her bedes, And all the day in doing good and G.o.dly dedes.”

Faerie Queene.