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charge me with breaking the seventh com-
mandment, but, thank Heaven and Cyprian,
you cannot accuse me of wearing a wig!"
No pains were spared to deter women from
this enormity. St. Jerome holds up the fate
of Prætexta as a warning to all ladies addicted
to the fashion of the world. Prætexta was a
very respectable lady, married to a somewhat
paganish husband, Hymetius. Their niece,
Eustochia, resided with them. At the insti-
gation of the husband, Prætexta took the shy
Eustochia in hand, attired her in a splendid
dress, and covered her fair neck with ring-
lets. Having enjoyed the sight of the modest
maiden so attired, Prætexta went to bed. To
that bed-side immediately descended an angel,
with wrath upon his brow and billows of
angry sounds roaring from his lips. "Thou
hast," said the spirit, "obeyed thy husband
rather than the Lord; and hast dared to
touch the hair of a virgin consecrated to the
service of Heaven, and hast made her look like
a daughter of earth. For this do I wither up
thy hands, and bid thee recognize the enor-
mity of thy crime in the amount of thy
anguish and bodily suffering. But five months
more shalt thou live, and then hell shall be thy
portion; and if thou art bold enough to touch
the head of Eustochia again, thy husband and
thy children shall die even before thee." St.
Jerome pledges himself for the truth of this
story, and draws a moral therefrom which is
exceedingly perplexing and utterly unintel-
ligible.

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come, not only from a criminal, but from a
very dirty head-perhaps from the head of
one already damned? This was a very hard
hit indeed, but it was not nearly so clever a
stroke at wigs as that dealt by Clemens of
Alexandria. The latter informed the as-
tounded wig-wearers that when they knelt at
church to receive the blessing, they must be
good enough to recollect that the benediction
remained on the wig, and did not pass through
to the wearer! This was a stumbling-block
to the people, many of whom, however,
retained the peruke, and took their chance as
to the transmission of the blessing. On sin-
ilarly obstinate people Tertullian rushed with
a hasty charge of ill-prepared logic:
"You
were not born with wigs," said he; "God
did not give them to you. God not giving
them, you must necessarily have received
them from the devil!" It was manifest that
so rickety a syllogism was perfectly incapable
of shaking the lightest scratch" from a rea-
soning Christian skull,

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savory to the blind monk than to worldly men content to live cleanly and do their duty in that state of life unto which it had pleased God to call them.

Indeed, the logic of Tertullian, when levelled against wigs, is singularly faulty. Men of the world he points out as being given to over-scrupulous cleanliness. Your saint is dirty from an impulse of duty. Were he otherwise, he might be too seductive to the weaker sex! This reminds me of a monk I once heard of when at Prague. He was blind, but he had so fine a nose that he boasted of being able to tell a saint from a sinner by the smell. The ichor distilled by the former The ladies were more difficult of manage-gave forth an odor of sanctity, that was more ment than the clergy. The former were not to be terrified by the assurance that breaking an ordinance of man was a worse crime than breaking one of the commandments of God. The hair of the clergy was kept straight by Not only were the Scriptures pressed into decrees of forfeiture of revenues or benefice service against those who wore false hair, or against incumbents who approached the who dyed their own, but zealous Christian altars with curls even of their natural hair. priests quoted even the heathen writers to Pommades and scented waters were denounced shame men out of the custom. It is a as damnable inventions, but anathema was remarkable thing how very well acquainted uttered against the priest guilty of wearing these well-meaning, but somewhat overstrainone single hair combed up above its fellows.ing, personages were with the erotic points Every one knows that the present worthy of heathendom. Bishop of Oxford is, in one respect, like "the curled son of Clinias." By that resemblance, however, his lordship would have been in the olden time ipso facto excommunicate, according to the decree of the Council of Lateran (Gregory II.), which says, Quicumque ex clericis comam relaxaverit, anathema sit."

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"All personal disguise," says Tertullian, "is adultery before God; all perukes, paint and powder are such disguises, and inventions of the devil: ergo," &c. This zealous individual appeals to personal as often as to religious feeling. If you will not fling away your false hair, says he, as hateful to Heaven, cannot I make it hateful to yourselves by reminding you that the false hair you wear may have

English ladies do not appear to have adopted the fashion of wearing wigs until about the year 1550. Junius, in his Commentarium de Conâ, says that false hair came into use here about that time, and that such use had never before been adopted hy English matrons. Some three hundred years before this the Benedictine monks at Canterbury, who were canons of the cathedral, very pathetically represented to Pope Innocent IV. that they were subject to catch very bad colds from serving in the wide and chilly cathedral bareheaded. The pontiff gave them solemn permission to guard against catarrh, rheum, bronchitis, and phthisis, by covering their heads with the hood common to their order, having especial

care, however, to fling back the hood at the reading of the Gospel and at the elevation of the Host. Zealous churchmen have been very indignant at the attempts made to prove that the permission of Innocent IV. might be construed as a concession to priests for wearing wigs, if they were so minded. The question was settled at the great Council of England held in London in 1268. That council refused to sanction the wearing by clerics of "quas vulgo coifas vocant," except when they were travelling. In church and in presence of their bishop they were ordered to appear bareheaded. If a coif even was profane, a wig to this council would have taken the guise of the unpardonable sin. It is, however, well known, that though Rome forbade a priest to officiate with covered head, permission to do so was purchasable. In fact, the rule of Rome was not founded, as it was declared to be, on Scripture. Permission was readily granted to the Romish priests in China to officiate with covered heads, as being more agreeable to the native idea there of what was seemly. Native sentiment nearer home was much less regarded. Thus, when the Bulgarians complained to Pope Nicholas that their priests would not permit them to wear during church-time those head-wrappers or turbans which it was their habit never to throw off, the pontiff returned an answer which almost took the brief and popular form of "Serve you right!" and the Bulgarians took nothing by their motion.

Our Anselm of Canterbury was as little conceding to the young and long-haired nobles of his day as was Pope Nicholas to the Bulgarians. Eadmer, a monk of Canterbury, relates that on one occasion (Ash Wednesday) the primate soundly rebuked the hirsute aristocracy, put them in penance, and refused them absolution until they had submitted to be close-shorn. The prelate in question would allow none to enter his cathedral who wore either long or false hair. Against both, the objection remained for a lengthened period insuperable. When Henry I. of England was in France, Serron, Bishop of Seez, told him that Heaven was disgusted at the aspect of Christians in long hair, or wearing on manly heads locks that had perhaps come from women's brows; they were as sons of Belial for so offending: "Pervicaces filii Belial capita sua comis mulierum ornant. The king looked grave. The prelate insinuatingly in vited the father of his people, who wore long if not false locks, to set a worthy example. "We'll think of it," said the sovereign. "No time like the present," rejoined the prelate, who produced a pair of scissors from his episcopal sleeve, and advanced towards Henry, prepared to sweep off those honors which the monarch would fain have preserved. But what was the sceptre of the prince to the forceps of the priest? The former meekly sat VOL. I. 35

CCCCLXXI. LIVING AGE.

down at the entrance to his tent, while Bishop Serron clipped him with the skilful alacrity of a Figaro. Noble after noble submitted to the same operation; and while these were being docked by the more dignified clergy, a host of inferior ecclesiastics passed through the ranks of the grinning soldiers, and cut off hair enough to have made the fortunes of all the perriwig-builders who rolled in gilded chariots during the palmy days of the Grand Monarque.'

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In what then but in profligate days could wigs have triumphed in England? Perriwigs established themselves victoriously dividing even the Church- under Louis XIV. When a boy that king had such long and beautiful hair that it became the fashion for all classes to wear at least an imitation thereof. When Louis began to lose his own, he also took to false adornment, and full-bottomed wigs bade defiance to the canons of the church. Charles II. did not bring the fashion with him to Whitehall. On the contrary he withstood it. He forbade the members of the university to wear perriwigs, smoke tobacco, or read their sermons. The members did all three, and Charles soon found himself doing the first two. On the 2d November, 1663, says Pepys "I heard the duke say that he was going to wear a perriwig; and they say the king also will. I never till this day," he adds, "observed that the king was so mighty gray.” This perhaps was the reason that Charles stooped to assume what he had before denounced. Pepys himself had ventured upon the step in the previous May; and what a business it was for the little man! Hear him: 8th. At Mr. Jervas', my old barber. I did try two or three borders and perriwigs, meaning to wear one; and yet I have no stomach for it, but that the pains of keeping my hair clean is so great. He trimmed me, and at last I parted, but my mind was almost altered from my first purpose, from the trouble that I foresee will be in wearing them also." He took some time to make up his mind, and only in October of the same year does he take poor Mrs. Pepys to "my perriwig-maker's, and there showed my wife the perriwig made for me, and she likes it very well." In April, 1665, the wig was in the hands of Jervas under repair. In the mean time our old friend took to his natural hair; but early in May we find him recording that "this day, after I had suffered my own hayre to grow long, in order to wearing it, I find the convenience of perriwiggs is so great that I have cut off all short again, and will keep to perriwiggs." In the autumn, on Sunday the 3d of September, the wicked little gallant moralizes thus on " perriwiggs" and their prospects:-"Up and put on my colored silk suit, very fine, and my new perriwigg bought a good while since, but durst not wear, because the plague was in

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Westminster, when I bought it; and it is a wonder what will be the fashion after the plague is done as to perriwiggs, for nobody will dare to buy any hayre for fear of the infection, that it had been cut off the heads of people dead of the plague.' The plague and fear thereof were clean forgotten before many months had passed, and in June, 1666, Pepys "walking in the galleries at Whitehall, I find the ladies of honor dressed in their riding garbs, with coats and doublets with deep skirts, just for all the world like mine; and buttoned their doublets up their breasts, with perriwiggs and with hats; so that, only for a long petticoat dragging under their men's coats, nobody could take them for women in any point whatever, which was an odd sight, and a sight did not please me. The moralist at Whitehall, however, could forget his mission when at "Mercer's." There, on the 14th of August, 1666, the thanksgiving day for the recent naval victory, after "hearing a piece of the Dean of Westminster's sermon,' dining merrily, enjoying the sport at the Bear Garden, and letting off fireworks, the perriwigged philosopher, with his wife, Lady Penn, Pegg, and Nan Wright, kept it up at Mrs. Mercer's after midnight" and there mighty merry, smutting one another with candlegrease and soot, until most of us were like devils. And that being done, then we broke up and to my house; and there I made them drink, and up stairs we went, and then fell into dancing, W. Battelier dancing well; and dressing him and I, and one Mr. Banister, who with my wife came over also with us, like women; and Mercer put on a suit of Tom's, like a boy-and Mr. Wright and my wife and Pegg Penn put on perriewigs; and thus we spent till three or four in the morning, mighty merry" and in little trouble with the thought whether the skull which had afforded the hair for such perriwig were lying in the pest-fields or not. By the following year our rising gentleman grows extravagant in his outlay for such adornments, and he who had been content to wear a wig at 23s., buys now a pair for 47. 10s.-"mighty fine; indeed, too fine, I thought, for me." And yet amazingly proud was the maccaroni of his purchase, recording two days afterwards that he had been" to church, and with my mourning, very handsome, and new perriwig, made a great show."

Doubtless under James II. his perriwigged pate made a still greater show, for then had wigs become stupendous in their architecture. The beaux who stood beneath them carried exquisite combs in their ample pockets, with which, whether in the Mall, at the rout, in the private box, or engaged in the laborious work of making love," they ever and anon combed their perukes, and rendered themselves irresistible. Wisdom was even then thought to be under the wig. "A full wig," says Far

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quhar in his "Love and a Bottle" (1698), is as infallible a token of wit as the laurel" - an assertion which I should never think of disputing. Tillotson is the first of our clergy represented in a wig, and that a mere substitute for the natural head of hair. "I can remember," he says in one of his sermons," since the wearing of the hair below the ears was looked upon as a sin of the first magnitude, and when ministers generally, whatever their text was, did either find or make occasion to reprove the great sin of long hair; and if they saw any one in the congregation guilty in that kind, they would point him out particularly, and let fly at him with great zeal."

The victory at Ramilies introduced the Ramilies wig, with its peculiar, gradually diminishing plaited tail, and tie consisting of a great bow at top and a smaller one at the bottom. This wig survived till the reign of George III. The maccaronis of 1729 wore a "macaw-like toupee and a portentous tail." But when the French Revolution came in contact with any system- from the Germanic empire to perukes-that system perished in the collision. So perriwigs ceased like the dynasty of the Doges of Venice; and all that remains to remind us of bygone glories in the former way is to be found in the Ramilies tie, which still clings to court coats long after wigs had fallen from the head, never again to rise.

Lady Wortley Montague makes a severe remark in her Letters, less against wigs, indeed, than their wearers. She is alluding to the alleged custom in the East of branding every convicted liar on the forehead; and adds, that if such a custom prevailed in England, the entire world of beaux here would have to pull their perriwigs down to their eyebrows.

Tillotson, as I have noticed above, makes reference to the opposition which perukes met with from the pulpit. The hostility in that quarter in England was faint compared with the fiery antagonism which blazed in France. In the latter country, the privilege of wearing long hair belonged, at one time, solely to royalty. Lombard, Bishop of Paris, in the middle of the twelfth century, induced ro;alty not to make the privilege common, but to abolish it altogether. The French monarchs wore their own hair cut short until the reign of Louis XIII., who was the first King of France that wore a wig. To the fashion set by him is owing that France ultimately became the paradise of perruquiers. In 1660 they first appeared on the heads of a few dandy abbés. As Ireland in Edward Dwyer or " Edward of the Wig," has preserved the memory of the first of her sons who took to a perriwig, so France has handed down the Abbé de la Riviere, who died Bishop of Langres, as the ecclesiastical innovator on whose head first rested a wig, with all the consequences of such guilty outrage of canonical discipline. The indignation

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of strict churchmen was extreme, and, as the | scant courtesy as Mr. Gorham or the Lord fashion began to spread among prelates, can- Primate is in the habit of experiencing at the ons, and curés, the Bishop of Toul sat himself hands of a medieval bishop. If, it was said, a down and wrote a blast" against perukes, priest must even take off his calotte in presence the wearing of which, he said, unchristianized of a king or pope, how may he dare to wear a those who adopted the fashion. It was even wig before God? Richelieu was the first solemnly announced that a man had better ecclesiastic of his rank in France who wore the not pray at all, than pray with his head so modern calotte; but I very much doubt if he covered. No profanity was intended when ever took it off in the presence of Louis XIII. zealous, close-cropped, and bare-headed eccle- It is known, however, that the French king's siastics reminded their bewigged brethren that ambassador, M. d'Oppeville, found much they were bound to imitate Christ in all things, difficulty in obtaining an audience at Rome. and then asked them if the Saviour were He wore a wig à calotte. The officials delikely to recognize a resemblance to himself in clared he could not be introduced unless he a priest under a wig! took off the calotte. He could not do this without taking off his wig also, as he showed the sticklers of court etiquette, and stood before them with clean shaven head, asking, at the same time, "Would the Pope desire to see me stand before him in such a plight as this? Whom do you take me for?" The pontiff did not yield the point without difficulty. Perhaps his Holiness, had he received the ambassador under bare poll, would have graciously served him as a predecessor had served the Irish saint Malachi put his pontifical tiara on the good man's head, to prevent him from catching cold!

Nor was this feeling confined to the Romish Church in France. The Reformed Church was fully as determined against the new and detested fashion. Bordeaux was in a state of insurrection for no other reason than that the Calvinist pastor there had refused to admit any of his flock in wigs to the sacrament. And when Rivius, Protestant professor of theology at Leyden, wrote in defence of perukes his "Libertas Christiana circa Usum Capillitii Defensa," the ultra-orthodox in both churches turned upon him. The Romanists asked what could be expected from a Protestant but rank heresy; and the Protestants disowned a brother who defended a fashion that had originated with a Romanist! Each party stood by the words of Paul to the Corinthians. In vain did some suggest that the apostolic injunction was only local. The ultras would heed no such suggestion, and would have insisted on bare heads at both poles. And yet, remarked the wigites, it is common for preachers to preach in caps. Ay, but, retorted the orthodox, that is simply because they are then speaking only in their own name. Reading the gospel, or offering up the adorable sacrifice, they are speaking or acting in the name of the universal Church. Of course, they added, there are occasions when even a priest may be covered. If a Pope invented the baret, a curé may wear a cap. Sylvester was the first pontiff who wore a mitre; but even that fashion became abused, and in the year 1000 a Pope was seen with his mitre on his head during mass a sight which startled the faithful, and a fact which artists would be none the worse for remembering. After that period, bishops took to them so pertinaciously that they hardly laid them by on going to bed. These prelates were somewhat scandalized when the popes granted to certain dukes the privilege of wearing the mitre; but when the like favor was granted to abbots of a certain class, the prelatic execration was uttered with a jealous warmth that was perfectly astounding. When the moderns brought the question back to its simple principles, and asked the sticklers for old customs if wigs were not as harmless as mitres, they were treated with as

But of all the tilters against wigs none was so serious and chivalresque as " Jean Baptiste Thiers, docteur entheologie et curé" (that is, vicar, according to our sense of the word), of Champrond. Dr. Thiers, in the year 1690, wrote a book of some six hundred pages against the wearing of wigs by ecclesiastics. He published the sameaux depens de l'auteur," and high authority pronounced it comformable in every respect to the "Roman, Catholic, and Apostolic Church." Dr. Thiers wrote a brief preface to his long work, in which he invokes an abundant visitation of divine peace and grace on those who read his volume with tranquillity of mind, and who prefer truth to fashion. The invocation, I fear, is made in vain, for the tediousness of the author slays all tranquillity of spirit on the part of the reader, who cannot, however, refrain from smiling at seeing the very existence of Christianity made to depend upon the question of perukes. The book is a dull book; but the prevailing idea in it, that it is all over with religion if perukes be not abolished, is one that might compel a cynic to inextinguishable laughter. Yes, says the doctor, the origin of the tonsure is to be found in the cutting of Peter's hair by the Gentiles to make him ridiculous-therefore, he who hides the tonsure beneath a peruke insults the prince of the apostles! species of reasoning anything comparable with which is probably not to be found in that book which Rome has honored by condemningWhateley's Logic.

The volume, however, affords evidence of the intense excitement raised in France by

city caught in the fact of kissing any of its maidens.

the discussion of the bearing of wigs on Christianity. For a season the question in some degree resembled, in its treatment at Thiers could not see in the wig the uses least, that of baptismal regeneration as now discerned by Cumberland, who says, in his treated among ourselves. No primitively-"Choleric Man,' ," "Believe me, there is much minded prelate would license a curé who pro- good sense in old distinctions. When the law fessed neutrality on the matter of wigs. The lays down its full-bottomed perriwig, you will wearers of these were often turned out of find less wisdom in bald pates than you are their benefices, and then they were welcomed aware of." The Curé of Champrond says in other dioceses by bishops who were hetero- that the French priests, who spent their thirty doxly given to the mundane comfort of wig- or forty pistoles yearly in wigs, were so gery. Terrible scenes took place in vestries irreligious that they kept their best wig for between wigged priests ready to repair to the the world, and their oldest for God,-wearing altar, and their brethren or superiors, who the first in drawing-rooms, and the latter at sought to prevent them. Chapters suspended church. This was certainly less ingenious such priests from place and profit, Parliament than in the case of the man celebrated in the broke the suspension, and chapters renewed "Connoisseur," who, having but one peruke, the interdict. Decree was abolished by counter decree, and the whole Church was split in twain by the contending parties. Louis XIV. took the conservative side of the question so far as it regarded ecclesiastics, and the Archbishop of Rheims fondly thought he had clearly settled the dispute by decreeing that wigs might or might not be worn, according to circumstances. They were allowed to the infirm and the aged, but never at the altar. One consequence was that many priests on approaching the altar used to take off their perukes, and deposit them in the hands of notaries, under protest! Such a talk about heads had not kept a whole city in confusion since the days wherein St. Fructuarus, Bishop of Braga, decreed the penalty of entirely shaven crowns against all the monks of that

made it pass for two. "It was naturally a kind of flowing bob, but, by the occasional addition of two tails, it sometimes passed as a major."

In France, wigs ended by assuming the appearance of nature. In the reign of terror, the modish blonde perukes worn by females were made of hair purchased from the executioner, of whom old ladies bought the curls which had clustered about the young necks that had been severed by the knife of Samson. But after this the fashion ceased among women, as it had already done among men, beginning to do so with the latter when Franklin appeared in his own hair, and unpowdered, at the court of Louis XIV.-and from that period wigs have belonged only to history. JOHN DORAN.

manual referred to. We are told, that when roasted, the appearance of poultry is greatly improved by this simple operation-looking more plump on account of the sinews having lost their power of contraction.

CARVING OF POULTRY. -In Mr. Soyer's Mod- | trussing for table, is explained in the useful ern Housewife, a clever and handy work on cookery, will at length be found a solution of that formidable problem - how to carve a fowl with elegance and ease. Soyer explains the marvel in a way which no one could previously have the slightest idea of; and which, in fact, is nothing else than a piece of legerdemain. Well, STREET MUSIC.-How that simple music afthe way, he says, to carve a fowl neatly is, to fects the listener! How it recalls lost loves and have nothing to carve- for it really comes to buried friendships, moments of exquisite happithat. Yes, a fowl lies before you at table, to all ness, hours of dreary pining! Whence comes appearance requiring to be anatomized by the the wondrous power of those tones? It is a simusual desperate process, at least in all but first-ple air, one of the commonest of the common, a rate hands, of wrenching the joints and bones tune that is hacked and ground by every barrelasunder; but, lo! the thing is done by a mere organ in the kingdom. It is, that there are hidtouch of the knife. Legs, wings, breast-bones, den associations connected therewith, difficult to instead of flying about in all directions, drop trace, eluding one's search. Perchance the words becomingly into the dish. If this be not a dis-had just been spoken that joined two hearts tocovery, we do not know what is. But how is it all managed? Here comes the secret: the fowl has had all its joints cut by the cook before dressing, and that without disturbing the outer skin. To effect this properly, an instrument requires to be employed called a tendon separator, of which Soyer gives a drawing. Of course, every one who reads this will get one of these instruments, which we should think will not be more costly than an ordinary pair of scissors. The method of using the instrument, and of

gether for aye, and those notes blended with the moment of passionate silence that followed. Or the deserted one, pining in her loneliness, was indulging in a dream of faded hopes, when that artless melody rose from the little garden outside her window, and associated itself eternally with her love and her despair. Some such secret must be connected with the mighty power of those tones, more potent than that of all the scientific compositions which the master composers of any age have given to the world.

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