The School for Husbands
The School for Husbands
Book Excerpt
te air.
Sganarelle addresses Valère (Act ii. Scene 9), likewise as Monsieur
aux blonds cheveux. In The School for Wives (Act ii. Scene
6), Arnolphe also tells Agnès not to listen to the nonsense of these
beaux blondins. According to Juvenal (Satire VI.) Messalina put a
fair wig on to disguise herself. Louis XIV. did not begin to wear a wig
until 1673.]
those little doublets but just below the arms, and those big collars falling down to the navel; those sleeves which one sees at table trying all the sauces, and those petticoats called breeches; those tiny shoes, covered with ribbons, which make you look like feather-legged pigeons; and those large rolls wherein the legs are put every morning, as it were into the stocks, and in which we see these gallants straddle about with their legs as wide apart, as if they were the beams of a mill?
[Footnote: The original has _marcher écarquillés ainsi que des volants_. Early commentators have generally stated that volants means he
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