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  • Jan. 1, 1877
  • Page 49
  • VULGARITY.
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The Masonic Magazine, Jan. 1, 1877: Page 49

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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Vulgarity.

VULGARITY .

Is a very Avell written , article in the fcnvple Bar , for December , which we commend to the perusal of our readers , " Vulgarity" is divided into three categories , practically : " vulgar itas in se , " " vulgaritas prohibita , " and " vulgaritas

permissa . " The ingenious Avriter defines " vulgaritas in se " to be " things in speech , manners , and personal surroundings , Avhich the general code of good taste does not alloAv ;'' " vulgaritas prohibita , " actually all that

"the \ Aucondemtittd by those laws are specially forbidden by what we call good form ; " and vulgaritas permissa " to consist in other eccentric acts which a perverse taste would justify , or vitiated sympathies would condone . Very amusing and true are the following remarks on this fault : —

" No law can make stealing a virtue , or justify forgery , but what was considered at one time as ' vulgaritas in se ' can be be stripped of its repulsive character and made ' quite the thing , my dear , by bills of indemnity which are passed from time to time iu the Vehmgericht of Fashion . It

is thus very difficult to tell what is the ' vulgaritas in se , ' unless you are well posted up in the decrees of that mysterious tribunal . Thus , in the days of my youth , I was taught that it was vulgar to pick one ' s teeth in public . In the literature of

that period , when it Avas desirable to impress upon the reader the vulgarity of a character , he Avas made to pick his teeth . And yet I can remember the time when a young gentleman ' s afternoon toilet Avas not considered complete unless he had a

tooth pick in his mouth . Punch took it up , and John Leech gave us three golden youths in Noah ' s Ark coats thus provided , with an explanation that they were not smoking nasty cigarettes , but engaged in the new and elegant pursuit of chewing tooth

picks . But they did not mind . The habit was idle and nasty , but it had ceased to be vulgar . Again , it used to be considered that any arrangement or derangement of robes which Avould indicate tta lower portion of the female form < bvnie as bifurcate was a vulgarity . If he accidental position of a book or a parasol

on a lady ' s lap tended to demonstrate this fact , the demonstrator was hastily removed , and draperies readjusted Avith a blush . The vulgarity of the immortal Mrs . Gamp beamed out of her knees , both on paper and on the stage . We have changed all

that . Ladies deliberately adopt arrangements for relieving the imagination of trouble in conjecturing anatomical details . Knees are worn—and I should not wonder

if eating peas Avith one s knife should some day come into fashion and be pronounced ' ever so nice !'" We quite agree , also , Avith the subsequent able and happy delineation of things as they are ;—"It is curious to observe that good

society admires in art ( which is supposed to hold the mirror up to nature ) what it Avill not tolerate , and declines to adopt , in every-day life . It applauds emotions of joy , mirth , or sorrow , properly rendered on the stageor fixed on canvas or on

, marble by a master hand . If Mrs . Bancroft , playing the ' ingenue , ' had to say such a phrase as , ' Oh ! wouldn't it be nice ! ' and did say it in the old Marie Wilton form , with clasped hands and glittering eyesand a smile of joy breaking

, like a sun-lit Avave all over , and lifting her on tip-toe—then a flutter of approval would agitate even the demure domain of the stalls . But if Miss-in-her-Teens were

guilty of a similar overt act of pleasure in a draAving-room , a tap on the shoulder with mamma's fan and a reproof would be the reAvard . Miss-in-her-T wen ties would wink and yaAvn 'jolly—rather , ' and to t / tat there could be no objection . To be natural is to ' gush' and to ' gush' is vulgar—at

, present . As a test of my other proposition , let me ask how many persons , readers of fashion , male or female , could afford to have their portraits taken in the clothes they usually wear , and in the positions Avhich they habitually assume ? I shall be

told that it won ' t do to paint a portrait in the height of any fashion , because in a few years it will look' so odd , ' ancl this I grant ; but inelegance and—I must write

it—indelicacy must ahvays be something worse than * odd , ' and that which will not bear representation on canvas is surely to be condemned in * the round . ' " A bygone generation considered it a vulgarity to be in good bodily health . It

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-01-01, Page 49” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01011877/page/49/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 2
FREEMASONRY IN ROME. Article 3
THE UNOPENED LETTER. Article 7
MASONIC NUMISMATICS. Article 7
THE ENCHANTED ISLE OF THE SEA. Article 10
LISTS OF OLD LODGES, No. 3. Article 13
A LIST OF THE WARRANTED LODGES Article 13
THE BIRTH OF THE ROSE. Article 17
BY THE "SAD SEA WAVES." Article 17
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 18
AN AMERICAN VINDICATION OF AMERICANS. Article 20
No. 194, UNDER THE "ANCIENTS" AND ITS RECORDS. Article 23
SONNET. Article 23
ALLHALLOWS, BREAD STREET. Article 24
GERARD MONTAGU: Article 26
FATHER FOY ON SECRET SOCIETIES. Article 29
SLEEP ON MY HEART. Article 34
PUT YOURSELF IN MY PLACE. Article 35
JOINING THE FREEMASONS. Article 37
THE PHILADELPHIA EXHIBITION. Article 39
LOVE'S UTTERANCE. Article 41
POETS' CORNER. Article 41
A PECULIAR CASE. Article 43
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 47
VULGARITY. Article 49
SONNET. Article 51
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 52
ADDRESS OF THE GRAND MASTER, J. H. GRAHAM, L.L.D., &c. Article 53
Reviews. Article 55
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 62
THE OBJECT OF A LIFE. Article 66
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Page 49

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Vulgarity.

VULGARITY .

Is a very Avell written , article in the fcnvple Bar , for December , which we commend to the perusal of our readers , " Vulgarity" is divided into three categories , practically : " vulgar itas in se , " " vulgaritas prohibita , " and " vulgaritas

permissa . " The ingenious Avriter defines " vulgaritas in se " to be " things in speech , manners , and personal surroundings , Avhich the general code of good taste does not alloAv ;'' " vulgaritas prohibita , " actually all that

"the \ Aucondemtittd by those laws are specially forbidden by what we call good form ; " and vulgaritas permissa " to consist in other eccentric acts which a perverse taste would justify , or vitiated sympathies would condone . Very amusing and true are the following remarks on this fault : —

" No law can make stealing a virtue , or justify forgery , but what was considered at one time as ' vulgaritas in se ' can be be stripped of its repulsive character and made ' quite the thing , my dear , by bills of indemnity which are passed from time to time iu the Vehmgericht of Fashion . It

is thus very difficult to tell what is the ' vulgaritas in se , ' unless you are well posted up in the decrees of that mysterious tribunal . Thus , in the days of my youth , I was taught that it was vulgar to pick one ' s teeth in public . In the literature of

that period , when it Avas desirable to impress upon the reader the vulgarity of a character , he Avas made to pick his teeth . And yet I can remember the time when a young gentleman ' s afternoon toilet Avas not considered complete unless he had a

tooth pick in his mouth . Punch took it up , and John Leech gave us three golden youths in Noah ' s Ark coats thus provided , with an explanation that they were not smoking nasty cigarettes , but engaged in the new and elegant pursuit of chewing tooth

picks . But they did not mind . The habit was idle and nasty , but it had ceased to be vulgar . Again , it used to be considered that any arrangement or derangement of robes which Avould indicate tta lower portion of the female form < bvnie as bifurcate was a vulgarity . If he accidental position of a book or a parasol

on a lady ' s lap tended to demonstrate this fact , the demonstrator was hastily removed , and draperies readjusted Avith a blush . The vulgarity of the immortal Mrs . Gamp beamed out of her knees , both on paper and on the stage . We have changed all

that . Ladies deliberately adopt arrangements for relieving the imagination of trouble in conjecturing anatomical details . Knees are worn—and I should not wonder

if eating peas Avith one s knife should some day come into fashion and be pronounced ' ever so nice !'" We quite agree , also , Avith the subsequent able and happy delineation of things as they are ;—"It is curious to observe that good

society admires in art ( which is supposed to hold the mirror up to nature ) what it Avill not tolerate , and declines to adopt , in every-day life . It applauds emotions of joy , mirth , or sorrow , properly rendered on the stageor fixed on canvas or on

, marble by a master hand . If Mrs . Bancroft , playing the ' ingenue , ' had to say such a phrase as , ' Oh ! wouldn't it be nice ! ' and did say it in the old Marie Wilton form , with clasped hands and glittering eyesand a smile of joy breaking

, like a sun-lit Avave all over , and lifting her on tip-toe—then a flutter of approval would agitate even the demure domain of the stalls . But if Miss-in-her-Teens were

guilty of a similar overt act of pleasure in a draAving-room , a tap on the shoulder with mamma's fan and a reproof would be the reAvard . Miss-in-her-T wen ties would wink and yaAvn 'jolly—rather , ' and to t / tat there could be no objection . To be natural is to ' gush' and to ' gush' is vulgar—at

, present . As a test of my other proposition , let me ask how many persons , readers of fashion , male or female , could afford to have their portraits taken in the clothes they usually wear , and in the positions Avhich they habitually assume ? I shall be

told that it won ' t do to paint a portrait in the height of any fashion , because in a few years it will look' so odd , ' ancl this I grant ; but inelegance and—I must write

it—indelicacy must ahvays be something worse than * odd , ' and that which will not bear representation on canvas is surely to be condemned in * the round . ' " A bygone generation considered it a vulgarity to be in good bodily health . It

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