THE RIVAL BONNETS.
I HAVE a pleasant story to relate
of a couple of fashionables of our city, which will
serve to diversify these “Confessions,”
and amuse the reader. To the incidents, true
in the main, I have taken the liberty of adding some
slight variations of my own.
A lady of some note in society, named
Mrs. Claudine, received a very beautiful bonnet from
New York, a little in advance of others, and being
one of the rival leaders in the fashionable world,
felt some self-complacency at the thought of appearing
abroad in the elegant head-gear, and thereby getting
the reputation of leading the fashion.
Notwithstanding Mrs. Claudine’s
efforts to keep the matter a secret, and thus be able
to create a surprise when she appeared at church on
the next Sunday, the fact that she had received the
bonnet leaked out, and there was some excitement about
it. Among those who heard of the new bonnet,
was a Mrs. Ballman, who had written to a friend to
get for her the very article obtained first by Mrs.
Claudine. From some cause or other a delay had
occurred, and to her chagrin she learned that a rival
had the new fashion, and would get the eclat
that she so much coveted. The disappointment,
to one whose pleasures in life are so circumscribed
as those of a real fashionable lady, was severe indeed.
She did not sleep more than a few hours on the night
after she received the mortifying intelligence.
The year before, Mrs. Claudine had
led the fashion in some article of dress, and to see
her carry off the palm in bonnets on this occasion,
when she had striven so hard to be in advance, was
more than Mrs. Bellman could endure. The result
of a night’s thinking on the subject was a determination
to pursue a very extraordinary course, the nature
of which will be seen. By telegraph Mrs. Bellman
communicated with her friend in New York, desiring
her to send on by the evening of the next day, which
was Saturday, the bonnet she had ordered, if four
prices had to be paid as an inducement to get the
milliner to use extra exertions in getting it up.
In due time, notice came back that the bonnet would
be sent on by express on Saturday, much to the joy
of Mrs. Ballman, who from the interest she felt in
carrying out her intentions, had entirely recovered
from the painful disappointment at first experienced.
Saturday brought the bonnet, and a
beautiful one it was. A few natural sighs were
expended over the elegant affair, and then other feelings
came in to chase away regrets at not having been first
to secure the article.
On the day previous, Friday, Mrs.
Ballman called upon a fashionable milliner, and held
with her the following conversation.
“You have heard of Mrs. Claudine’s
new bonnet, I presume?”
“Yes, madam,” replied the milliner.
“Do you think it will take?” asked Mrs.
Ballman.
“I do.”
“You have not the pattern?”
“Oh, yes. I received one a week ago.”
“You did!”
“Yes. But some one must
introduce it. As Mrs. Claudine is about doing
this there is little doubt of its becoming the fashion,
for the style is striking as well as tasteful.”
Mrs. Ballman mused for some moments.
There she drew the milliner aside, and said, in a
low confidential tone.
“Do you think you could get
up a bonnet a handsome as that, and in just as good
taste?”
“I know I could. In my
last received London and Paris fashions are several
bonnets a handsome as the one that is about being adopted
in New York, and here also without doubt.”
“I am not so sure of its being
adopted here,” said the lady.
“If Mrs. Claudine introduces
it, as I understand she intends doing on Sunday, it
will certainly be approved and the style followed.”
“I very much doubt it.
But we will see. Where are the bonnets you spoke
of just now?”
The milliner brought forth a number
of pattern cards and plates, and pointed out two bonnets,
either of which, in her judgment, was more beautiful
than the one Mrs. Claudine had received.
“Far handsomer,” was the
brief remark with which Mrs. Ballman approved the
milliner’s judgment. “And now,”
she added, “can you get me up one of these by
Sunday?”
“I will try.”
“Try won’t do,”
said the lady, with some excitement in her manner.
“I must have the bonnet. Can you make it?”
“Yes.”
“Very well. Then make it.
And let it be done in your very best manner.
Why I wish to have this bonnet I need hardly explain
to you. I believed that I would have received
the bonnet, about to be adopted in New York, first.
I had written to a friend to procure it; but, by some
means, Mrs. Claudine has obtained (sic) her’s
in advance of me. Mine will be here to-morrow,
but I don’t mean to wear it. I wish to
lead.”
“If you were both to appear
in this bonnet, the fashion would be decided,”
said the milliner.
“I know. But I have no
wish to share the honor with Mrs. Claudine. Make
me the bonnet I have selected, and I will see that
it puts (sic) her’s down.”
“You will remember,” said
the milliner, “that (sic) her’s has been
already adopted in New York. This will be almost
sure to give it the preference. It would be better
that you did not attempt a rivalry, than that you
should be beaten.”
“But I don’t mean to be
beaten,” replied the lady. “I have
taken measures to prevent that. After Sunday
you will hear no more of the New York bonnet.
Mine will go, and this, I need not tell you, will
be a feather in your cap, and dollars in your pocket;
as I will refer to you as the only one who can get
it up. So do your best, and improve the pattern
we have selected, if it will bear improvement.”
The milliner promised to do her “prettiest,”
and Mrs. Ballman returned home in a state of considerable
elation at the prospect of carrying off the palm,
and humiliating her rival at the same time.
Mrs. Claudine, though a little vain,
and fond of excelling, was a woman of kind feelings,
and entirely superior to the petty jealousies that
annoyed Mrs. Ballman, and soured her towards all who
succeeded in rivalling her in matters of taste and
fashion. Of what was passing in the mind of the
lady who had been so troubled at her reception of
a new style of bonnet from New York, she was entirely
ignorant. She was not even aware that Mrs. Ballman
had ordered the same article, nor that she had suffered
a disappointment.
Saturday came. Mrs. Claudine
was busy over some little article of dress that was
to add to her appearance on the next day, when an
Irish girl, who had formerly lived with her, entered
her room.
“Ah! Kitty!” said
the lady pleasantly. “How do you do?”
“I’m right well, mum,
thankee,” replied Kitty, with a courtesy.
“Where do you live now, Kitty?”
inquired Mrs. Claudine.
“I’m living with Mrs. Ballman,”
said the girl.
“A very good place, I have no doubt.”
“Oh, yes, mum. It is a
good place. I hain’t much to do, barrin’
going out with the children on good days, and seein’
after them in the house; and I get good wages.”
“I’m very glad to hear
it, Kitty; and hope you will not give up so good a
home.”
“No, indeed, mum; and I won’t
do that. But Mrs. Claudine—”
Kitty’s face flushed, and she stammered in her
speech.
“What do you wish to say?”
inquired the lady, seeing that Kitty hesitated to
speak of what was on her mind.
“Indade, mum,” said Kitty,
evincing much perplexity, “I hardly know what
I ought to do. But yez were good to me, mum, when
I was sick and didn’t send me off to the poor
house like some girls are sent; and I never can forget
yez while there’s breath in me body. And
now I’ve come to ask yez, just as a favor to
me, not to wear that new bonnet from New York, to-morrow.”
It was some moments before, the surprise
occasioned by so novel and unexpected a request left
Mrs. Claudine free to make any reply.
“Why, Kitty!” she at length
exclaimed, “what on earth can you mean?”
“Indade, mum, and yez mustn’t
ask me what I mane, only don’t wear the bonnet
to church on the morrow, because—because—och,
indade, mum, dear! I can’t say any more.
It wouldn’t be right.”
Mrs. Claudine told Kitty to sit down,
an invitation which the girl, who was much agitated,
accepted. The lady then remained silent and thoughtful
for some time.
“Kitty,” she remarked,
at length, in a serious manner, “what you have
said to me sounds very strangely. How you should
know that I intended appearing in a new bonnet to-morrow,
or why you should be so much interested in the matter
is more than I can understand. As to acting as
you desire, I see no reason for that whatever.”
This reply only had the effect of
causing Kitty to urge her request more strenuously.
But she would give no reason for her singular conduct.
After the girl had gone away, Mrs. Claudine laid aside
her work—for she was not in a state of
mind to do any thing but think—–and
sat for at least an hour, musing upon the strange
incident which had occurred. All at once, it flashed
upon her mind that there must be some plot in progress
to discredit or rival her new bonnet, which Kitty
had learned at Mrs. Ballman’s. The more
she thought of this, the more fully did she become
satisfied that it must be so. She was aware that
Mrs. Ballman had been chagrined at her leading off
in new fashions once or twice before; and the fact,
evident now, that she knew of her reception of the
bonnet, and Kitty’s anxiety that she should
not wear it on Sunday, led her to the conviction that
there was some plot against her. At first, she
determined to appear in her new bonnet, disregardful
of Kitty’s warning. But subsequent reflection
brought her to a different conclusion.
The moment Mrs. Claudine settled it
in her mind that she would not appear in the new bonnet,
she began dressing herself, hurriedly, to go out.
It was as late as five o’clock in the afternoon
when she called at the store of the milliner who had
been commissioned by Mrs. Ballman to get the rival
bonnet.
“Have you the last fashions
from abroad?” enquired Mrs. Claudine.
“We have,” replied the milliner.
“Will you let me see them?”
“Certainly, ma’am.”
And the patterns were shown.
After examining them carefully, for some time, Mrs.
Claudine selected a style of bonnet that pleased her
fancy, and said—
“You must get me up this bonnet so that I can
wear it to-morrow.”
“Impossible, madam!” replied
the milliner. “This is Saturday evening.”
“I know it is; but for money
you can get one of your girls to work all night.
I don’t care what you charge; but I must have
the bonnet.”
The milliner still hesitated, and
seemed to be confused and uneasy. She asked Mrs.
Claudine to sit down and wait for a little while, and
then retired to think upon what she had better do.
The fact was, Mrs. Claudine had pitched upon the very
bonnet Mrs. Ballman had ordered, and her earnestness
about having it made in time to wear on the next day,
put it almost beyond her power to say no. If she
were to tell her that Mrs. Ballman had ordered the
same bonnet, it would, she knew, settle the matter.
But, it occurred to her, that if both the ladies were
to appear at church in the same style of bonnet, the
fashion would be sure to take, and she, in consequence,
get a large run of business. This thought sent
the blood bounding through the milliner’s veins,
and decided her to keep her own counsel, and take
Mrs. Claudine’s order.
“She’s as much right to
the bonnet as Mrs. Ballman,” settled all ethical
questions that intruded themselves upon the milliner.
“I will have it ready for you,”
she said, on returning to Mrs. Claudine.
“Very well. But mind,”
said the lady, “I wish it got up in the very
best style. The hurry must not take from its beauty.
As for the price, charge what you please.”
The milliner promised every thing,
and Mrs. Claudine went home to think about the important
events of the approaching Sabbath. On Sunday
morning both bonnets were sent home, and both the ladies
fully approved the style, effect, and all things appertaining
to the elegant affairs.
At ten o’clock, Kitty, who was
a broad-faced, coarse-looking Irish girl, came into
the chamber of Mrs. Ballman, dressed up in her best,
which was not saying much for the taste and elegance
of her appearance.
“Are you all ready?” asked her mistress.
“Yes, mum.”
“Very well, Kitty, here’s
the bonnet. Now, remember, you are to go into
the pew just in front of ours. The Armburner’s
are all out of town, and there will be no one to occupy
it.”
Kitty received the elegant bonnet
which had come on express from New York, and placed
it upon her head.
“You really look charming,” said the lady.
But Kitty was not flattered by her
words, and evinced so little heart in what she was
doing that Mrs Ballman said to her, in a half threatening
tone, as she left the room—
“Mind, Kitty, I shall expect to see you at church.”
“Oh, yes, mum; I’ll be
there,” replied Kitty, courtesying awkwardly,
and retiring.
Not long after Kitty had retired,
Mrs. Ballman, after surveying, for many minutes, the
effect of her new bonnet, becoming more and more pleased
with it every moment, and more and more satisfied that
it would “take,” left her room, and was
descending the stairs for the purpose of joining the
family, who were awaiting her below. Just at
that unlucky moment, a servant, who was bringing down
a vessel of water, slipped, and a portion of the contents
came dashing over the head and shoulders of the richly
attired lady, ruining her elegant bonnet, and completely
destroying the happy frame of mind in which she was
about attending public worship. No wonder that
she cried aloud from the sudden shock and distress
so untoward an event occasioned; nor that she went
back weeping to her chamber, and refused to be comforted.
Mr. Ballman and the children proceeded
alone to church on that day. On their return
home they found the lady in a calmer frame of mind.
But Mr. Ballman looked grave and was unusually silent.
Kitty came home and gave up her elegant head-dress;
and when her mistress told her that she might keep
it, she thanked her, but declined the present.
“You went to church, of course,” she said.
“Oh, yes, mum,” replied Kitty.
“And sat in the Armburner’s pew?”
“Yes, mum.”
“Alone.”
“Yes, mum.”
“Was Mrs. Claudine there?”
“Yes, mum.”
“Did she wear her new bonnet?”
“Yes, mum.”
“It was exactly like this?”
“Oh, no, mum, it was exactly
like the new one you had sent home this morning.”
“What!” The face of the
lady flushed instantly. “Wasn’t it
like this?”
“No, mum.”
Mrs. Ballman sunk into a chair.
“You can retire, Kitty,”
she said, and the girl withdrew, leaving her to her
own feelings and reflections, which were not of the
most pleasing character.
The appearance of Kitty at church,
fully explained to Mrs. Claudine the ungenerous game
that had been played against her. Her first thought
was to retaliate. But reflection brought other
and better feelings into play. Instead of exposing
what had been done, she destroyed the bonnet received
from New York, and made an effort to keep what had
occurred a secret. But Kitty’s appearance
at church in such an elegant affair, naturally created
some talk. One surmise after another was started,
and, at last, from hints dropped by the milliner,
and admissions almost extorted from Mrs. Claudine,
the truth came out so fully, that all understood it;
nor was Mrs. Ballman long left in ignorance on this
head.
As to the fashion, Mrs. Claudine’s
bonnet became the rage; though, as might be supposed,
Mrs. Ballman refused to adopt it.
Who will be the successful rival next
season, I am unable to predict. But it is believed
that Mrs. Claudine intends giving Mrs. Ballman an
advance of two weeks, and then coming in with a different
style, and beating her in spite of the advantage.