< Page:Selections from the writings of Kierkegaard.djvu
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98 University of Texas Bulletin

lady who just passed by noticed it; because, for whose ben- efit does she dress, if not for other ladies!

Even in my shop where she comes to be fitted out a la mode, even there she is in fashion. Just as there is a spe- cial bathing costume and a special riding habit, likewise there is a particular kind of dress which it is the fashion to wear to the dressmaker's shop. That costume is not insouciant in the same sense as is the negligee a lady is pleased to be surprised in, earlier in the forenoon, where the point is her belonging to the fair sex and the coquetry lies in her letting herself be surprised. The dressmaker costume, on the other hand, is calculated to be nonchalant and a bit careless without her being embarrassed thereby; because a dressmaker stands in a different relation to her from a cavalier. The coquetry here consists in thus show- ing herself to a man who, by reason of his station, does not presume to ask for the lady's womanly recognition, but must be content with the perquisites which fall abundantly to his share, without her ever thinking of it ; or without it even so much as entering her mind to play the lady before a dressm.aker. The point is, therefore, that her being of the opposite sex is, in a certain sense, left out of consideration, and her coquetry invalidated, by the superciliousness of the noble lady who would smile if any one alluded to any re- lation existing between her and her dressmaker. When visited in her negligee she conceals herself, thus displaying her charms by this very concealment. In my shop she ex- poses her charms with the utmost nonchalance, for he is only a dresmaker — and she is a woman. Now, her shawl slips down and bares some part of her body, and if I did not know what that means, and what she expects, my repu- tation would be gone to the winds. Now, she draws her- self up, a priori fashion, now she gesticulates a posteriori; now, she sways to and fro in her hips; now, she looks at herself in the mirror and sees my admiring phiz behind her in the glass ; now, she minces her words ; now, she trips along with short steps; now, she hovers; now, she draws her foot after her in a slovenly fashion ; now, she lets her- self sink softly into an arm-chair, whilst I with humble de-

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