Chapter
VII
Dress as an Expression
of the Pecuniary Culture
It will in place, by way of illustration,
to show in some detail how the economic principles so far set forth
apply to everyday facts in some one direction of the life process. For
this purpose no line of consumption affords a more apt illustration
than expenditure on dress. It is especially the rule of the conspicuous
waste of goods that finds expression in dress, although the other, related
principles of pecuniary repute are also exemplified in the same contrivances.
Other methods of putting one's pecuniary standing in evidence serve
their end effectually, and other methods are in vogue always and everywhere;
but expenditure on dress has this advantage over most other methods,
that our apparel is always in evidence and affords an indication of
our pecuniary standing to all observers at the first glance. It is also
true that admitted expenditure for display is more obviously present,
and is, perhaps, more universally practiced in the matter of dress than
in any other line of consumption. No one finds difficulty in assenting
to the commonplace that the greater part of the expenditure incurred
by all classes for apparel is incurred for the sake of a respectable
appearance rather than for the protection of the person. And probably
at no other point is the sense of shabbiness so keenly felt as it is
if we fall short of the standard set by social usage in this matter
of dress. It is true of dress in even a higher degree than of most other
items of consumption, that people will undergo a very considerable degree
of privation in the comforts or the neCessaries of life in order to
afford what is considered a decent amount of wasteful consumption; so
that it is by no means an uncommon occurrence, in an inclement climate,
for people to go ill clad in order to appear well dressed. And the commercial
value of the goods used for clotting in any modern community is made
up to a much larger extent of the fashionableness, the reputability
of the goods than of the mechanical service which they render in clothing
the person of the wearer. The need of dress is eminently a "higher"
or spiritual need.
This spiritual need of dress is
not wholly, nor even chiefly, a naive propensity for display of expenditure.
The law of conspicuous waste guides consumption in apparel, as in other
things, chiefly at the second remove, by shaping the canons of taste
and decency. In the common run of cases the conscious motive of the
wearer or purchaser of conspicuously wasteful apparel is the need of
conforming to established usage, and of living up to the accredited
standard of taste and reputability. It is not only that one must be
guided by the code of proprieties in dress in order to avoid the mortification
that comes of unfavorable notice and comment, though that motive in
itself counts for a great deal; but besides that, the requirement of
expensiveness is so ingrained into our habits of thought in matters
of dress that any other than expensive apparel is instinctively odious
to us. Without reflection or analysis, we feel that what is inexpensive
is unworthy. "A cheap coat makes a cheap man." "Cheap and nasty" is
recognized to hold true in dress with even less mitigation than in other
lines of consumption. On the ground both of taste and of serviceability,
an inexpensive article of apparel is held to be inferior, under the
maxim "cheap and nasty." We find things beautiful, as well as serviceable,
somewhat in proportion as they are costly. With few and inconsequential
exceptions, we all find a costly hand-wrought article of apparel much
preferable, in point of beauty and of serviceability, to a less expensive
imitation of it, however cleverly the spurious article may imitate the
costly original; and what offends our sensibilities in the spurious
article is not that it falls short in form or color, or, indeed, in
visual effect in any way. The offensive object may be so close an imitation
as to defy any but the closest scrutiny; and yet so soon as the counterfeit
is detected, its aesthetic value, and its commercial value as well,
declines precipitately. Not only that, but it may be asserted with but
small risk of contradiction that the aesthetic value of a detected counterfeit
in dress declines somewhat in the same proportion as the counterfeit
is cheaper than its original. It loses caste aesthetically because it
falls to a lower pecuniary grade.
But the function of dress as an
evidence of ability to pay does not end with simply showing that the
wearer consumes valuable goods in excess of what is required for physical
comfort. Simple conspicuous waste of goods is effective and gratifying
as far as it goes; it is good prima facie evidence of pecuniary success,
and consequently prima facie evidence of social worth. But dress has
subtler and more far-reaching possibilities than this crude, first-hand
evidence of wasteful consumption only. If, in addition to showing that
the wearer can afford to consume freely and uneconomically, it can also
be shown in the same stroke that he or she is not under the necessity
of earning a livelihood, the evidence of social worth is enhanced in
a very considerable degree. Our dress, therefore, in order to serve
its purpose effectually, should not only he expensive, but it should
also make plain to all observers that the wearer is not engaged in any
kind of productive labor. In the evolutionary process by which our system
of dress has been elaborated into its present admirably perfect adaptation
to its purpose, this subsidiary line of evidence has received due attention.
A detailed examination of what passes in popular apprehension for elegant
apparel will show that it is contrived at every point to convey the
impression that the wearer does not habitually put forth any useful
effort. It goes without saying that no apparel can be considered elegant,
or even decent, if it shows the effect of manual labor on the part of
the wearer, in the way of soil or wear. The pleasing effect of neat
and spotless garments is chiefly, if not altogether, due to their carrying
the suggestion of leisure-exemption from personal contact with industrial
processes of any kind. Much of the charm that invests the patent-leather
shoe, the stainless linen, the lustrous cylindrical hat, and the walking-stick,
which so greatly enhance the native dignity of a gentleman, comes of
their pointedly suggesting that the wearer cannot when so attired bear
a hand in any employment that is directly and immediately of any human
use. Elegant dress serves its purpose of elegance not only in that it
is expensive, but also because it is the insignia of leisure. It not
only shows that the wearer is able to consume a relatively large value,
but it argues at the same time that he consumes without producing.
The dress of women goes even farther
than that of men in the way of demonstrating the wearer's abstinence
from productive employment. It needs no argument to enforce the generalization
that the more elegant styLes of feminine bonnets go even farther towards
making work impossible than does the man's high hat. The woman's shoe
adds the so-called French heel to the evidence of enforced leisure afforded
by its polish; because this high heel obviously makes any, even the
simplest and most necessary manual work extremely difficult. The like
is true even in a higher degree of the skirt and the rest of the drapery
which characterizes woman's dress. The substantial reason for our tenacious
attachment to the skirt is just this; it is expensive and it hampers
the wearer at every turn and incapacitates her for all useful exertion.
The like is true of the feminine custom of wearing the hair excessively
long.
But the woman's apparel not only
goes beyond that of the modern man in the degree in which it argues
exemption from labor; it also adds a peculiar and highly characteristic
feature which differs in kind from anything habitually practiced by
the men. This feature is the class of contrivances of which the corset
is the typical example. The corset is, in economic theory, substantially
a mutilation, undergone for the purpose of lowering the subject's vitality
and rendering her permanently and obviously unfit for work. It is true,
the corset impairs the personal attractions of the wearer, but the loss
suffered on that score is offset by the gain in reputability which comes
of her visibly increased expensiveness and infirmity. It may broadly
be set down that the womanliness of woman's apparel resolves itself,
in point of substantial fact, into the more effective hindrance to useful
exertion offered by the garments peculiar to women. This difference
between masculine and feminine apparel is here simply pointed out as
a characteristic feature. The ground of its occurrence will be discussed
presently.
So far, then, we have, as the great
and dominant norm of dress, the broad principle of conspicuous waste.
Subsidiary to this principle, and as a corollary under it, we get as
a second norm the principle of conspicuous leisure. In dress construction
this norm works out in the shape of divers contrivances going to show
that the wearer does not and, as far as it may conveniently be shown,
can not engage in productive labor. Beyond these two principles there
is a third of scarcely less constraining force, which will occur to
any one who reflects at all on the subject. Dress must not only be conspicuously
expensive and inconvenient, it must at the same time be up to date.
No explanation at all satisfactory has hitherto been offered of the
phenomenon of changing fashions. The imperative requirement of dressing
in the latest accredited manner, as well as the fact that this accredited
fashion constantly changes from season to season, is sufficiently familiar
to every one, but the theory of this flux and change has not been worked
out. We may of course say, with perfect consistency and truthfulness,
that this principle of novelty is another corollary under the law of
conspicuous waste. Obviously, if each garment is permitted to serve
for but a brief term, and if none of last season's apparel is carried
over and made further use of during the present season, the wasteful
expenditure on dress is greatly increased. This is good as far as it
goes, but it is negative only. Pretty much all that this consideration
warrants us in saying is that the norm of conspicuous waste exercises
a controlling surveillance in all matters of dress, so that any change
in the fashions must conspicuous waste exercises a controlling surveillance
in all matters of dress, so that any change in the fashions must conform
to the requirement of wastefulness; it leaves unanswered the question
as to the motive for making and accepting a change in the prevailing
styles, and it also fails to explain why conformity to a given style
at a given time is so imperatively necessary as we know it to be.
For a creative principle, capable
of serving as motive to invention and innovation in fashions, we shall
have to go back to the primitive, non-economic motive with which apparel
originated - the motive of adornment. Without going into an extended
discussion of how and why this motive asserts itself under the guidance
of the law of expensiveness, it may be stated broadly that each successive
innovation in the fashions is an effort to reach some form of display
which shall be more acceptable to our sense of form and color or of
effectiveness, than that which it displaces. The changing styles are
the expression of a restless search for something which shall commend
itself to our aesthetic sense; but as each innovation is subject to
the selective action of the norm of conspicuous waste, the range within
which innovation can take place is somewhat restricted. The innovation
must not only be more beautiful, or perhaps oftener less offensive,
than that which it displaces, but it must also come up to the accepted
standard of expensiveness.
It would seem at first sight that
the result of such an unremitting struggle to attain the beautiful in
dress should be a gradual approach to artistic perfection. We might
naturally expect that the fashions should show a well-marked trend in
the direction of some one or more types of apparel eminently becoming
to the human form; and we might even feel that ge have substantial ground
for the hope that today, after all the ingenuity and effort which have
been spent on dress these many years, the fashions should have achieved
a relative perfection and a relative stability, closely approximating
to a permanently tenable artistic ideal. But such is not the case. It
would be very hazardous indeed to assert that the styles of today are
intrinsically more becoming than those of ten years ago, or than those
of twenty, or fifty, or one hundred years ago. On the other hand, the
assertion freely goes uncontradicted that styles in vogue two thousand
years ago are more becoming than the most elaborate and painstaking
constructions of today.
The explanation of the fashions
just offered, then, does not fully explain, and we shall have to look
farther. It is well known that certain relatively stable styles and
types of costume have been worked out in various parts of the world;
as, for instance, among the Japanese, Chinese, and other Oriental nations;
likewise among the Greeks, Romans, and other Eastern peoples of antiquity
so also, in later times, among the, peasants of nearly every country
of Europe. These national or popular costumes are in most cases adjudged
by competent critics to be more becoming, more artistic, than the fluctuating
styles of modern civilized apparel. At the same time they are also,
at least usually, less obviously wasteful; that is to say, other elements
than that of a display of expense are more readily detected in their
structure.
These relatively stable costumes
are, commonly, pretty strictly and narrowly localized, and they vary
by slight and systematic gradations from place to place. They have in
every case been worked out by peoples or classes which are poorer than
we, and especially they belong in countries and localities and times
where the population, or at least the class to which the costume in
question belongs, is relatively homogeneous, stable, and immobile. That
is to say, stable costumes which will bear the test of time and perspective
are worked out under circumstances where the norm of conspicuous waste
asserts itself less imperatively than it does in the large modern civilized
cities, whose relatively mobile wealthy population today sets the pace
in matters of fashion. The countries and classes which have in this
way worked out stable and artistic costumes have been so placed that
the pecuniary emulation among them has taken the direction of a competition
in conspicuous leisure rather than in conspicuous consumption of goods.
So that it will hold true in a general way that fashions are least stable
and least becoming in those communities where the principle of a conspicuous
waste of goods asserts itself most imperatively, as among ourselves.
All this points to an antagonism between expensiveness and artistic
apparel. In point of practical fact, the norm of conspicuous waste is
incompatible with the requirement that dress should be beautiful or
becoming. And this antagonism offers an explanation of that restless
change in fashion which neither the canon of expensiveness nor that
of beauty alone can account for.
The standard of reputability requires
that dress should show wasteful expenditure; but all wastefulness is
offensive to native taste. The psychological law has already been pointed
out that all men - and women perhaps even in a higher degree abhor
futility, whether of effort or of expenditure - much as Nature was
once said to abhor a vacuum. But the principle of conspicuous waste
requires an obviously futile expenditure; and the resulting conspicuous
expensiveness of dress is therefore intrinsically ugly. Hence we find
that in all innovations in dress, each added or altered detail strives
to avoid condemnation by showing some ostensible purpose, at the same
time that the requirement of conspicuous waste prevents the purposefulness
of these innovations from becoming anything more than a somewhat transparent
pretense. Even in its freest flights, fashion rarely if ever gets away
from a simulation of some ostensible use. The ostensible usefulness
of the fashionable details of dress, however, is always so transparent
a make-believe, and their substantial futility presently forces itself
so baldly upon our attention as to become unbearable, and then we take
refuge in a new style. But the new style must conform to the requirement
of reputable wastefulness and futility. Its futility presently becomes
as odious as that of its predecessor; and the only remedy which the
law of waste allows us is to seek relief in some new construction, equally
futile and equally untenable. Hence the essential ugliness and the unceasing
change of fashionable attire.
Having so explained the phenomenon
of shifting fashions, the next thing is to make the explanation tally
with everyday facts. Among these everyday facts is the well-known liking
which all men have for the styles that are in vogue at any given time.
A new style comes into vogue and remains in favor for a season, and,
at least so long as it is a novelty, people very generally find the
new style attractive. The prevailing fashion is felt to be beautiful.
This is due partly to the relief it affords in being different from
what went before it, partly to its being reputable. As indicated in
the last chapter, the canon of reputability to some extent shapes our
tastes, so that under its guidance anything will be accepted as becoming
until its novelty wears off, or until the warrant of reputability is
transferred to a new and novel structure serving the same general purpose.
That the alleged beauty, or "loveliness," of the styles in vogue at
any given time is transient and spurious only is attested by the fact
that none of the many shifting fashions will bear the test of time.
When seen in the perspective of half-a-dozen years or more, the best
of our fashions strike us as grotesque, if not unsightly. Our transient
attachment to whatever happens to be the latest rests on other than
aesthetic grounds, and lasts only until our abiding aesthetic sense
has had time to assert itself and reject this latest indigestible contrivance.
The process of developing an aesthetic
nausea takes more or less time; the length of time required in any given
case being inversely as the degree of intrinsic odiousness of the style
in question. This time relation between odiousness and instability in
fashions affords ground for the inference that the more rapidly the
styles succeed and displace one another, the more offensive they are
to sound taste. The presumption, therefore, is that the farther the
community, especially the wealthy classes of the community, develop
in wealth and mobility and in the range of their human contact, the
more imperatively will the law of conspicuous waste assert itself in
matters of dress, the more will the sense of beauty tend to fall into
abeyance or be overborne by the canon of pecuniary reputability, the
more rapidly will fashions shift and change, and the more grotesque
and intolerable will be the varying styles that successively come into
vogue.
There remains at least one point
in this theory of dress yet to be discussed. Most of what has been said
applies to men's attire as well as to that of women; although in modern
times it applies at nearly all points with greater force to that of
women. But at one point the dress of women differs substantially from
that of men. In woman's dress there is obviously greater insistence
on such features as testify to the wearer's exemption from or incapacity
for all vulgarly productive employment. This characteristic of woman's
apparel is of interest, not only as completing the theory of dress,
but also as confirming what has already been said of the economic status
of women, both in the past and in the present.
As has been seen in the discussion
of woman's status under the heads of Vicarious Leisure and Vicarious
Consumption, it has in the course of economic development become the
office of the woman to consume vicariously for the head of the household;
and her apparel is contrived with this object in view. It has come about
that obviously productive labor is in a peculiar degree derogatory to
respectable women, and therefore special pains should be taken in the
construction of women's dress, to impress upon the beholder the fact
(often indeed a fiction) that the wearer does not and can not habitually
engage in useful work. Propriety requires respectable women to abstain
more consistently from useful effort and to make more of a show of leisure
than the men of the same social classes. It grates painfully on our
nerves to contemplate the necessity of any well-bred woman's earning
a livelihood by useful work. It is not "woman's sphere." Her sphere
is within the household, which she should "beautify," and of which she
should be the "chief ornament." The male head of the household is not
currently spoken of as its ornament. This feature taken in conjunction
with the other fact that propriety requires more unremitting attention
to expensive display in the dress and other paraphernalia of women,
goes to enforce the view already implied in what has gone before. By
virtue of its descent from a patriarchal past, our social system makes
it the woman's function in an especial degree to put in evidence her
household's ability to pay. According to the modern civilized scheme
of life, the good name of the household to which she belongs should
be the special care of the woman; and the system of honorific expenditure
and conspicuous leisure by which this good name is chiefly sustained
is therefore the woman's sphere. In the ideal scheme, as it tends to
realize itself in the life of the higher pecuniary classes, this attention
to conspicuous waste of substance and effort should normally be the
sole economic function of the woman.
At the stage of economic development
at which the women were still in the full sense the property of the
men, the performance of conspicuous leisure and consumption came to
be part of the services required of them. The women being not their
own masters, obvious expenditure and leisure on their part would redound
to the credit of their master rather than to their own credit; and therefore
the more expensive and the more obviously unproductive the women of
the household are, the more creditable and more effective for the purpose
of reputability of the household or its head will their life be. So
much so that the women have been required not only to afford evidence
of a life of leisure, but even to disable themselves for useful activity.
It is at this point that the dress
of men falls short of that of women, and for sufficient reason. Conspicuous
waste and conspicuous leisure are reputable because they are evidence
of pecuniary strength; pecuniary strength is reputable or honorific
because, in the last analysis, it argues success and superior force;
therefore the evidence of waste and leisure put forth by any individual
in his own behalf cannot consistently take such a form or be carried
to such a pitch as to argue incapacity or marked discomfort on his part;
as the exhibition would in that case show not superior force, but inferiority,
and so defeat its own purpose. So, then, wherever wasteful expenditure
and the show of abstention from effort is normally. or on an average,
carried to the extent of showing obvious discomfort or voluntarily induced
physical disability. there the immediate inference is that the individual
in question does not perform this wasteful expenditure and undergo this
disability for her own personal gain in pecuniary repute, but in behalf
of some one else to whom she stands in a relation of economic dependence;
a relation which in the last analysis must, in economic theory, reduce
itself to a relation of servitude.
To apply this generalization to
women's dress, and put the matter in concrete terms: the high heel,
the skirt, the impracticable bonnet, the corset, and the general disregard
of the wearer's comfort which is an obvious feature of all civilized
women's apparel, are so many items of evidence to the effect that in
the modern civilized scheme of life the woman is still, in theory, the
economic dependent of the man - that, perhaps in a highly idealized
sense, she still is the man's chattel. The homely reason for all this
conspicuous leisure and attire on the part of women lies in the fact
that they are servants to whom, in the differentiation of economic functions,
has been delegated the office of putting in evidence their master's
ability to pay. There is a marked similarity in these respects between
the apparel of women and that of domestic servants, especially liveried
servants. In both there is a very elaborate show of unnecessary expensiveness,
and in both cases there is also a notable disregard of the physical
comfort of the wearer. But the attire of the lady goes farther in its
elaborate insistence on the idleness, if not on the physical infirmity
of the wearer, than does that of the domestic. And this is as it should
be; for in theory, according to the ideal scheme of the pecuniary culture,
the lady of the house is the chief menial of the household.
Besides servants, currently recognized
as such, there is at least one other class of persons whose garb assimilates
them to the class of servants and shows many of the features that go
to make up the womanliness of woman's dress. This is the priestly class.
Priestly vestments show, in accentuated form, all the features that
have been shown to be evidence of a servile status and a vicarious life.
Even more strikingly than the everyday habit of the priest, the vestments,
properly so called, are ornate, grotesque, inconvenient, and, at least
ostensibly, comfortless to the point of distress. The priest is at the
same time expected to refrain from useful effort and, when before the
public eye, to present an impassively disconsolate countenance, very
much after the manner of a well-trained domestic servant. The shaven
face of the priest is a further item to the same effect. This assimilation
of the priestly class to the class of body servants, in demeanor and
apparel, is due to the similarity of the two classes as regards economic
function. In economic theory, the priest is a body servant, constructively
in attendance upon the person of the divinity whose livery he wears.
His livery is of a very expensive character, as it should be in order
to set forth in a beseeming manner the dignity of his exalted master;
but it is contrived to show that the wearing of it contributes little
or nothing to the physical comfort of the wearer, for it is an item
of vicarious consumption, and the repute which accrues from its consumption
is to be imputed to the absent master, not to the servant.
The line of demarcation between
the dress of women, priests, and servants, on the one hand, and of men,
on the other hand, is not always consistently observed in practice,
but it will scarcely be disputed that it is always present in a more
or less definite way in the popular habits of thought. There are of
course also free men, and not a few of them, who, in their blind zeal
for faultless reputable attire, transgress the theoretical line between
man's and woman's dress, to the extent of arraying themselves in apparel
that is obviously designed to vex the mortal frame; but everyone recognizes
without hesitation that such apparel for men is a departure from the
normal. We are in the habit of saying that such dress is "effeminate";
and one sometimes hears the remark that such or such an exquisitely
attired gentleman is as well dressed as a footman.
Certain apparent discrepancies under
this theory of dress merit a more detailed examination, especially as
they mark a more or less evident trend in the later and maturer development
of dress. The vogue of the corset offers an apparent exception from
the rule of which it has here been cited as an illustration. A closer
examination, however, will show that this apparent exception is really
a verification of the rule that the vogue of any given element or feature
in dress rests on its utility as an evidence of pecuniary standing.
It is well known that in the industrially more advanced communities
the corset is employed only within certain fairly well defined social
strata. The women of the poorer classes, especially of the rural population,
do not habitually use it, except as a holiday luxury. Among these classes
the women have to work hard, and it avails them little in the way of
a pretense of leisure to so crucify the flesh in everyday life. The
holiday use of the contrivance is due to imitation of a higher-class
canon of decency. Upwards from this low level of indigence and manual
labor, the corset was until within a generation or two nearly indispensable
to a socially blameless standing for all women, including the wealthiest
and most reputable. This rule held so long as there still was no large
class of people wealthy enough to be above the imputation of any necessity
for manual labor and at the same time large enough to form a self-sufficient,
isolated social body whose mass would afford a foundation for special
rules of conduct within the class, enforced by the current opinion of
the class alone. But now there has grown up a large enough leisure class
possessed of such wealth that any aspersion on the score of enforced
manual employment would be idle and harmless calumny; and the corset
has therefore in large measure fallen into disuse within this class.
The exceptions under this rule of exemption from the corset are more
apparent than real. They are the wealthy classes of countries with a
lower industrial structure - nearer the archaic, quasi-industrial type
- together with the later accessions of the wealthy classes in the
more advanced industrial communities. The latter have not yet had time
to divest themselves of the plebeian canons of taste and of reputability
carried over from their former, lower pecuniary grade. Such survival
of the corset is not infrequent among the higher social classes of those
American cities, for instance, which have recently and rapidly risen
into opulence. If the word be used as a technical term, without any
odious implication, it may be said that the corset persists in great
measure through the period of snobbery - the interval of uncertainty
and of transition from a lower to the upper levels of pecuniary culture.
That is to say, in all countries which have inherited the corset it
continues in use wherever and so long as it serves its purpose as an
evidence of honorific leisure by arguing physical disability in the
wearer. The same rule of course applies to other mutilations and contrivances
for decreasing the visible efficiency of the individual.
Something similar should hold true
with respect to divers items of conspicuous consumption, and indeed
something of the kind does seem to hold to a slight degree of sundry
features of dress, especially if such features involve a marked discomfort
or appearance of discomfort to the wearer. During the past one hundred
years there is a tendency perceptible, in the development of men's dress
especially, to discontinue methods of expenditure and the use of symbols
of leisure which must have been irksome, which may have served a good
purpose in their time, but the continuation of which among the upper
classes today would be a work of supererogation; as, for instance, the
use of powdered wigs and of gold lace, and the practice of constantly
shaving the face. There has of late years been some slight recrudescence
of the shaven face in polite society, but this is probably a transient
and unadvised mimicry of the fashion imposed upon body servants, and
it may fairly be expected to go the way of the powdered wig of our grandfathers.
These indices and others which resemble
them in point of the boldness with which they point out to all observers
the habitual uselessness of those persons who employ them, have been
replaced by other, more dedicate methods of expressing the same fact;
methods which are no less evident to the trained eyes of that smaller,
select circle whose good opinion is chiefly sought. The earlier and
cruder method of advertisement held its ground so long as the public
to which the exhibitor had to appeal comprised large portions of the
community who were not trained to detect delicate variations in the
evidences of wealth and leisure. The method of advertisement undergoes
a refinement when a sufficiently large wealthy class has developed,
who have the leisure for acquiring skill in interpreting the subtler
signs of expenditure. "Loud" dress becomes offensive to people of taste,
as evincing an undue desire to reach and impress the untrained sensibilities
of the vulgar. To the individual of high breeding, it is only the more
honorific esteem accorded by the cultivated sense of the members of
his own high class that is of material consequence. Since the wealthy
leisure class has grown so large, or the contact of the leisure-class
individual with members of his own class has grown so wide, as to constitute
a human environment sufficient for the honorific purpose, there arises
a tendency to exclude the baser elements of the population from the
scheme even as spectators whose applause or mortification should be
sought. The result of all this is a refinement of methods, a resort
to subtler contrivances, and a spiritualization of the scheme of symbolism
in dress. And as this upper leisure class sets the pace in all matters
of decency, the result for the rest of society also is a gradual amelioration
of the scheme of dress. As the community advances in wealth and culture,
the ability to pay is put in evidence by means which require a progressively
nicer discrimination in the beholder. This nicer discrimination between
advertising media is in fact a very large element of the higher pecuniary
culture.