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https://www.ikonographia.com/shop/anne-harriet-fish-archive/ i The Opening of the Social Season, from High Society, pages 02-03. By Anne Fish 1920 How the Members of the Beau Monde Will Spend What Is Left of Their War-time Incomes.
Initially published in Vanity Fair, November 1917.
Page text
THE RESTAURANTS
The season in the restaurants has opened strong. And the worst of it is that the ladies will spend all their time in these blessed robbers' dens. Tell a woman that her place is in the home and — but you wouldn't do anything as rude as that, would you? There are two other discouraging things about women in a restaurant: first, that they won't ever go home, and second, that they won't ever sit down.
Here we see a tragedy illustrating both of these points. Muriel, who long ago finished her luncheon simply will not join the gentleman in the hallway (the one who looks a little like President Wilson), although the poor creature has been waiting for twenty minutes. And her charming little vis a vis, Esme by name (the one with the lap dog that looks like a three-leaved clover), has, on her side, been keeping her fiance standing at attention for a similar period of time — and, all because the two dears have such thrilling and wonderful things to talk about.
THE HORSE SHOW
Here we see the horse show in full blast. Here you will see everybody happy, everybody occupied, scandals energetically and effectually discussed, meetings arranged in whispers, society reporters calling everybody by their wrong names, and everybody paying the strictest attention to everything about them — except the horses.
THE ART SHOWS
Below we see the opening of the Vorticist Sculpture Salon, a debauch in marble that always
brings out a full quota of the artistic cognoscenti of the town. Bohemia always appears in goodly numbers at these charming little revels in stone.
The extraordinary thing about much of the new sculpture is that it looks like illustrations for those wonderful books on hygiene, in which ladies' are taking their matutinal exercises—by correspondence, of course. Take, for instance, the case of the delicate little gem entitled "Love" in this illustration. Captain De Pluyster who is viewing it in company with his fiancée, Miss Corinna Walpole, is listening to her: "Oh,
that's an easy one. I do that twenty times, every morning, just before my bath."
THE FASHION FÊTES
Perhaps the most delightful social occasion of all — at least as far as married men are concerned — is the winter Fashion Fete at Luciline's select little dressmaking establishment. In the picture, you will observe a married gentleman, accompanied by his gross tonnage. The poor man is not at all listening to Mme. Luciline; no, he is gazing wistfully and, with eyes aflame, toward the wholly divine young ladies who, every season, do so much toward making the happy modes and unmaking the unhappy marriages. "How different would have been my life," he reflects, "had I met one of those limp and sinuous sirens before I took up with my Henrietta." 0231 The Opening of the Social Season, from “High Society”, pages 02-03. By Anne Fish 1920
How the Members of the Beau Monde Will Spend What Is Left of Their War-time Incomes. ]http://ns.adobe.com/xap/1.0/ The Library of Congress has stated that this iwork is out of copyright
Check the Anne Fish Archive on Ikonographia
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Check the Anne Fish Archive on Ikonographia
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