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coats, vests, and dresses, which interfere with respira-
tion, by contracting the expansion of the chest and ab-
domen. No wonder the wearers of such costumes pant
in distress for want of oxygen, and die of consumption
by the millions. The faces and hands of this audience
are tense and swollen, and we seek our relaxations to
pleasure in garments of fashion, that smother and dis-
comfort their wearer. Our men and women squeeze
their feet and hands in contracted and ill-fitting boots
and shoes, while our girls are pinched in steel corsets."
"Good!" cried Athothis, approvingly. "You will
presently agree with ine that modern attire is gotten up
wholly in the interest of the medical profession. Your
doctors, in fact, are molding every thing to serve their
own ends. These ladies' corsets especially cause many
feminine complaints—cancers, tumors."
" Hush !" said Paulus Androcydes. " Do not speak so
loud, lest the lady in the box below may overhear even
the spiritual observation, and become uneasy. But these
corsets are a very old invention; for even Galen decried
the use of such instruments of torture. The modern dame
of fashion merely imitates her Greek cousin, who donned
the sefosdone, and her Roman cousin, who wore the castula.
All medical writers of antiquity inveigh against the com-
pression of woman's abdomen hjfacice; but the gentler
sex ever desired to make their hips appear broader.
But, blessed be the memory of Catherine de Medicis,
the true inventor of the modern appliance known as the
whalebone stay, and praised be Bouvier, the historian of
the corset; but cursed, thrice cursed be J. J. Rosseau,
that savage critic of feminine underwear. Yet, you
must remember that the vast majority of the maids and
matrons, comprising this audience, are idle creatures, of