I intended to insert a dissertation on trousers, or
trunk breeches, called by the Latins braccae laxae; by the Spaniards, bragas
anchas; by the Italians, calzoni larghi; by the French, haut-de-chausses;
by the Saxons, broecce; by the Swedes, brackoe; by the Irish, bricchan;
by the Celts, brag; and by the Japanese, braak.
I could make
curious investigations, and point out the precise time when the women of
Hellas began to wear the breeches. I would have demonstrated that the cingulum
muliebre was originally nothing but the wife's wearing, at certain seasons,
the husband's trousers, as a mark of dominion transferred, pro tempore, to
the female.
I would have drawn a curious parallel between the girdle of the
Greeks and the waist-cloth worn by the black ladies of Guinea. I would have
proved that breeches were not first used for protection of the body against the
weather, inasmuch as they were first worn by the Orientals in a warm climate,
as you may read ill; "Persius."
I would have shown that breeches were
first brought from Asia to the northern parts of Europe by the Celts; that trousers
were worn in Scotland long before the time of Pythagoras. Indeed, we are told
by Jamblychus that Abaris, the famous Highland philosopher, contemporary, and
personal acquaintance of the sage of Crotona, wore long trousers. I myself can
attest the truth of that description, as I well remember the person and dress of
that learned mountaineer.
I would have explained the reasons that compelled
the posterity of those mountaineers to abandon the breeches of their
forefathers, and expose their knees to the wind. I would have convinced the
English antiquaries that the inhabitants of Yorkshire came originally from the
Highlands of Scotland, before the Scots had laid aside their breeches, and wore
this part of dress, long after their ancestors, as well as the southern
Britons, were unbreeched by the Romans. From this distinction they acquired
the name of Brigantes, quasi Bragantes; and hence came the verb to brag,
or boast contemptuously; for the neighbours of the Brigantes, being
at variance with that people, used, by way of contumelious defiance, to clap
their hands to the seat of their trousers and cry Brag-Brag.
I would
have drawn a learned comparison between the shield of Aiax and the sevenfold
breeches of a Dutch skipper. FinalIy, I would have promulgated the original use
of trunk-breeches, which would have led me into a discussion of the rites of a
divinity differently worshipped by the southern and northern inhabitants of
this kingdom.
These disquisitions would have unveiled the mysteries that now
conceal the origin, migration, superstitions, languages, laws, and connections
of different nations. But I shall only observe that Linschot and others are
mistaken in deriving the Japanese from their neighbours the Chinese; and that
Dr. Kempfer is right in his conjecture, supposing them to have come from Media
immediately after the confusion of Babel. It is no wonder, therefore, that,
being Braccatorum filii, they should retain the wide breeches of their
progenitors.
-" The History of an Atom."
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