Fashion
Whatever custom prevails amongst the great, whatever mode of dress,
particular idiom of expression, or cant word, is by them
employed, we style Fashion; and, in general, no matter how
contemptible, mischievous, or unnatural, we are eager to adopt and
practise the absurdity.
This we perceive, what a vast influence Fashion must
necessarily have over the morals of society, and how much its welfare
consequently depends on the example of the superior orders. It is
therefore to e lamented, that those to whom we look up as our
betters, should so seldom set up Virtue as a
fashion; but that, instead thereof, they should only
afford us an example of the most extravagant follies, of the rankest
debaucheries. If a Prince of Wales should delight in the most violent
excesses of the table, it is then the fashion to be eternally
drunk; if he should, on every occasion, display symptoms of
heedless and unbounded prodigality, it is then the ton to fix
no limits to our expences; or if he should take it in his head
to talk nonsense, it then becomes quite the fashion to do like the Prince,
and talk like a fool. Hence the contagion immediately pervades every
department of the community, from his Royal
Highness's Lord in waiting, down to the lowest
journeyman shopkeeper./P>
In like manner if a Duke of York, anxious to make a splendid parade of
his great military talents, should cry out for war, the whole
British noblesse re-echo the sound, and the nation breathes the same
warlike spirit, till after two or three unfortunate campaigns, the
treasury drained, commerce decayed, manufactures annihilated, the mass of
the people reduced to beggary, they begin to deplore their madness, and to
invoke the blessings of pace. Now then is arrived the season of
reflection; now is the time for Britons to deliberate on the policy or
impolicy of implicitly submitting to the doctrines, or blindly adopting
the principles, of the Great. Now is the time for them most seriously to
consider whether society owes any obligation to their virtues,
whether it ought to entertain any rational hope of improvement, or
happiness, either from their exertions or sacrifices; and
finally, it becomes necessary now to determine, how far it will be wise or
prudent, any longer to abide by those Fashions, which, for so
many ages, have been imposed on the world./P>