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    Following the Fashions - Page 2

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    rational manner. So there is this difference between us; you follow the fashions blindly, and I with judgment and discrimination!"

    "Indeed, Mary, you are too bad."

    "Do I speak anything but the truth?"

    "I should be very sorry, indeed, if your deductions were true in regard to my following the fashions so blindly, if indeed at all."

    "But don't you follow them?"

    "I never think about them."

    "If you don't, somehow or other, you manage to be always about even with the prevailing modes. I don't see any difference between your dress and that of other young men."

    "I don't care a fig for the fashions, Mary!" rejoined Henry, speaking with some warmth.

    "So you say."

    "And so I mean."

    "Then why do you wear fashionable clothes?"

    "I don't wear fashionable clothes--that is--I----"

    "You have figured silk or cut velvet buttons, on your coat, I believe. Let me see? Yes. Now, lasting buttons are more durable, and I remember very well when you wore them. But they are out of fashion! And here is your collar turned down over your black satin stock, (where, by the by, have all the white cravats gone, that were a few years ago so fashionable?) as smooth as a puritan's! Don't you remember how much trouble you used to have, sometimes, to get your collar to stand up just so? Ah, brother, you are an incorrigible follower of the fashions!"

    "But, Mary, it is a great deal less trouble to turn the collar over the stock."

    "I know it is, now that it is fashionable to do so."

    "It is, though, in fact."

    "Really?"

    "Yes, really."

    "But when it was fashionable to have the collar standing, you were very willing to take the trouble."

    "You would not have me affect singularity, sister?"

    "Me? No, indeed! I would have you continue to follow the fashions as you are now doing. I would have you dress like other people. And there is one other thing that I would like to see in you."

    "What is that."

    "I would like to see you willing to allow me the same privilege."

    "You have managed your case so ingeniously, Mary," her brother now said, "as to have beaten me in argument, though I am very sure that I am right, and you in error, in regard to the general principle. I hold it to be morally wrong to follow the fashions. They are unreasonable and arbitrary in their requirements, and it is a species of miserable folly, to be led about by them. I have conversed a good deal with old aunt Abigail on the subject, and she perfectly agrees with me. Her opinions, you can not, of course, treat with indifference?"

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