THE APPAREL OF WOMEN 

by Tertullian

BOOK ONE 


CHAPTER 1

If there existed upon earth a faith in proportion to the reward that faith 
will receive in heaven, no one of you, my beloved sisters, from the time 
when you came to know the living God and recognized your own state, that 
is, the condition of being a woman, would have desired a too attractive 
garb, and much less anything that seemed too ostentatious. I think, rather, 
that you would have dressed in mourning garments and even neglected your 
exterior, acting the part of mourning and repentant Eve in order to expiate 
more fully by all sorts of penitential garb that which woman derives from 
Eve--the ignominy, I mean, of original sin and the odium of being the cause 
of the fall of the human race. 'In sorrow and anxiety, you will bring 
forth, O woman, and you are subject to your husband, and he is your 
master.' Do you not believe that you are (each) an Eve?

(2) The sentence of God on this sex of yours lives on even in our times and 
so it is necessary that the guilt should live on, also. You are the one who 
opened the door to the Devil, you are the one who first plucked the fruit 
of the forbidden tree, you are the first who deserted the divine law; you 
are the one who persuaded him whom the Devil was not strong enough to 
attack. All too easily you destroyed the image of God, man. Because of your 
desert, that is, death, even the Son of God had to die. And you still think 
of putting adornments over the skins of animals that cover you? 

(3) Well, now--if, in the very beginning of the world, the Milesians had 
invented wool by shearing sheep, and if the Chinese had woven the strands 
of silk, and the Tyrians had invented dye and the Phrygians embroidery and 
the Babylonians weaving, if pearls had gleamed and rubies flashed with 
light, if gold itself had already been brought forth from the bowels of 
earth by man's greed, and finally, if a mirror had already been capable of 
giving forth its lying image, do you think that Eve, after she had been 
expelled from Paradise and was already dead, would have longed for all of 
these fineries? She would not. Therefore, she ought not to crave them or 
even to know them now, if she desires to be restored to life again. Those 
thing which she did not have or know when she lived in God, all those 
things are the trappings appropriate to a woman who was condemned and is 
dead, arrayed as if to lend splendor to her funeral.


CHAPTER 2

(1) For those, too, who invented these things are condemned to the penalty 
of death, namely, those angels who rushed from heaven upon the daughters of 
men so that this ignominy is also attached to woman. For when these fallen 
angels had revealed certain well-hidden material substances, and numerous 
other arts that were only faintly revealed, to an age much more ignorant 
than ours--for surely they are the ones who disclosed the secrets of 
metallurgy, discovered the natural properties of herbs, made known the 
power of charms, and aroused the desire to pry into everything, including 
the interpretation of the stars--they granted to women as their special 
and, as it were, personal property these means of feminine vanity: the 
radiance of precious stones with which necklaces are decorated in different 
colors, the bracelets of gold which they wrap around their arms, the 
colored preparations which are used to dye wool, and that black powder 
which they use to enhance the beauty of their eyes.

(2) If you want to know what kind of things these are, you can easily learn 
from the character of those who taught these arts. Have sinners ever been 
able to show and provide anything conducive to holiness, unlawful lovers 
anything contributing to chastity, rebel angels anything promoting the fear 
of God? If, indeed, we must call what they have passed on 'teachings,' then 
evil teachers must of necessity have taught evil lessons; if these are the 
wages of sin, then there can be nothing beautiful about the reward for 
something evil. But why should they have taught and granted such things?

(3) Are we to think that women without the material of adornment or without 
the tricks of beautifying themselves would not have been able to please men 
when these same women, unadorned and uncouth and, as I might say, crude and 
rude, were able to impress angels? Or would the latter have appeared 
beggarly lovers who insolently demanded favors for nothing, unless they had 
brought some gift to the women they had attracted into marriage? But this 
is hardly conceivable. The women who possessed angels as husbands could not 
desire anything further, for, surely they had already made a fine match.

(4) The angels, on the other hand, who certainly thought sometimes of the 
place whence they had fallen and longed for heaven after the heated 
impulses of lust had quickly passed, rewarded in this way the very gift of 
woman's natural beauty as the cause of evil, that is, that woman should not 
profit from her happiness, but, rather, drawn away from the ways of 
innocence and sincerity, should be united with them in sin against God. 
They must have been certain that all ostentation, ambition, and love 
achieved by carnal pleasure would be displeasing God. You see, these are 
the angels whom we are destined to judge, these are the angels whom we 
renounce in baptism, these are the very things on account of which they 
deserved to be judged by men.

(5) What connection, therefore, can there be between their affairs and 
their judges? What business can there be between the condemned and their 
judges? I suppose, the same as between Christ and Belial. How can we with 
good conscience mount that judgment-seat to pronounce sentence against 
those whose gifts we are now trying to get? You realize, of course, that 
the same angelic nature is promised to you, women, the selfsame sex is 
promised to you as to men, and the selfsame dignity of being a judge. 
Therefore, unless here in this life we begin to practice being judges by 
condemning their works which we are destined to condemn in them some day, 
then they will rather judge us and condemn us.


CHAPTER 3

(1) I am aware that the Book of Henoch which assigns this role to the 
angels is not accepted because it is not admitted into the Jewish canon. I 
suppose it is not accepted because they did not think that a book written 
before the flood could have survived that catastrophe which destroyed the 
whole world. If that be their reason, let them remember that Noe was a 
great-grandson of Henoch and a surviver of the deluge. He would have grown 
up in the family tradition and the name of Henoch would have been a 
household word and he would surely have remembered the grace that his 
ancestor enjoyed before God and the reputation of all his preaching, 
especially since Henoch gave the command to his son Mathusala that the 
knowledge of his deeds should be passed on to his posterity. Therefore, Noe 
could surely have succeeded in the trusteeship of his ancestor's preaching 
because he would not have kept silent about the wonderful providence of God 
who saved him from destruction as well as in order to enhance the glory of 
his own house.

(2) Now, supposing that Noe could not have had this knowledge thus 
directly, there could still be another reason to warrant our assertion of 
the genuineness of this book: he could have easily rewritten it under the 
inspiration of the Spirit after it had been destroyed by the violence of 
the flood, just as, when Jerusalem was destroyed at the hands of the 
Babylonians, every document of Jewish literature is known to have been 
restored by Esdras.

(3) But, since Henoch in this same book tells us of our Lord, we must not 
reject anything at all which really pertains to us. Do we not read that 
every word of Scripture useful for edification is divinely inspired? As you 
very well know, it was afterwards rejected by the Jews for the same reason 
that prompted them to reject almost all the other portions which prophesied 
about Christ. Now, it is not at all surprising that they refused to accept 
certain Scriptures which spoke of Him when they were destined not to 
receive Him when He spoke to them Himself. To all that we may add the fact 
that we have; a testimony to Henoch in the Epistle of Jude the Apostle.


CHAPTER 4

(1) Let us assume for the moment that we do not condemn all womanly 
ornament ahead of time merely because of the fate of those who invented it. 
Let those angels be blamed only for the repudiation of heaven and their 
carnal marriage. Let us rather examine the character of these things 
themselves so that we may learn the reasons why they are so desirable. 
Female toilet has two possible purposes--dress and make-up. 

(2) We use the word dress when we refer to what they call womanly grace, 
whereas make-up is more fittingly called womanly disgrace. Articles of 
dress are considered gold and silver and jewels and clothes, whereas make-
up consists in the care of hair and of the skin and of those parts of the 
body which attract the eye. On one we level the accusation of ambition; on 
the other, that of prostitution. I say that now, O handmaid of God, that 
you may well know what, out of all these, is proper for your behavior, 
since you are judged by different principles, namely, those of humility and 
chastity.


CHAPTER 5

(1) Now, gold and silver, the principal materials of worldly dress, are 
necessarily the same as that from which they come, namely, earth. To be 
sure, they are earth of a nobler sort. For, wet with tears of those 
condemned to penal labor in the deadly foundries of the accursed mines, 
those 'precious' metals leave the name of earth in the fire behind them 
and, as fugitives from the mines, they change from objects of torment into 
articles of ornament, from instruments of punishment into tools of 
allurement, from symbols of ignominy into signs of honor.

(2) But the basic nature of iron and brass and of other metals, including 
the cheapest, is the same (as that of gold and silver), both as to their 
earthy origin and manufacture in the mines, and hence, according to nature 
itself, the substance of gold and silver is no more noble than theirs. 
Should, however, gold and silver derive their estimation from the quality 
of being useful, then certainly the value of iron and brass is higher, 
since their usefulness has been determined in such a way (by the creator) 
that they discharge functions of their own more numerous and more necessary 
for human life, and at the same time lend themselves to the more becoming 
uses of gold and silver. We know that rings are made of iron, and the 
history of antiquity still preserves (the fame of) certain vessels for 
eating and drinking made of brass. It is no concern of ours if the mad 
plentifulness of gold and silver serves to make utensils even for foul 
purposes. 

(3) Certainly you will never plow a field with a golden plow nor will any 
ship be held together with silver bolts; you would never drive; golden 
mattock into the earth nor would you drive a silver nail into a plank. I 
leave unnoticed the fact that the necessities of our whole life depend upon 
iron and brass merely mentioning that those precious materials themselves 
requiring both to be dug out of the mines and forged into their specific 
form to be of any use whatsoever, cannot even be mined without the use of 
iron and brass.

(4) From this, then, you must already judge why it is that gold and silver 
enjoy such high estimation as to be preferred to other materials that are 
related to them by nature and are much more valuable if we consider their 
usefulness.


CHAPTER 6

(1) But how shall I explain those precious little stones which share their 
glory with gold, other than to say that the are only little stones and 
pebbles and tiny little bits of the selfsame earth? They certainly are not 
required for laying foundations or for building up walls or supporting 
pedimen or giving compactness to roofs; the only building they seek to 
erect is this silly admiration of women. They are cautiously cut that they 
may shine, they are cunningly set that they ma glitter, they are carefully 
pierced so as to hang properly an render to gold a meretricious service in 
return.

(2) Moreover, whatever love of display fishes up from the seas around 
Britain or India is merely a kind of shellfish, and its taste is no better 
than that of the giant mussel. Now, there is no reason why I should not 
approve of shellfish as the fruit of the sea. If, however, this shellfish 
produces some sort of growth inside of it, this should be considered a 
fault rather than a cause for glory. And even though we call this thing a 
pearl, it certainly must be seen to be nothing else but a hard and round 
lump inside a shellfish.

There is a tradition that gems also come from the foreheads of dragons, 
just as we sometimes find a certain stony substance in the brains of fish. 

(3) This would indeed crown it all: the Christian woman in need of 
something from the serpent to add to her grace. It is probably in this way 
that she is going to tread upon the serpent's head while around her neck or 
even on top of her own head she carries ornaments that come from the head 
of the Devil!


CHAPTER 7

(1) The only thing that gives glamour to all these articles is that they 
are rare and that they have to be imported from a foreign country. In the 
country they come from they are not highly priced. When a thing is abundant 
it is always cheap. Among certain barbarians where gold is common and 
plentiful the people in the workhouses are bound with golden chains and the 
wicked are weighed down by riches and the richness of their bonds is in 
proportion to their wickedness. At last a way seems to have been found to 
prevent gold from being loved. 

(2) We ourselves have seen the nobility of jewels blushing before the 
matrons in Rome at the contemptuous way the Parthians and Medes and the 
rest of their countrymen used them. It would seem they use jewels for any 
reason except adornment; emeralds lurk in their belts, and only the sword 
knows the round jewels lie hidden in its scabbard, and the large pearls on 
their rough boots wish to be lifted out of the mud. In short, they wear 
nothing so richly jeweled as that which ought not to be jeweled at all; in 
this way it is not conspicuous, or else is conspicuous only to show that 
the wearer does not care for it.


CHAPTER 8

(1) In the same manner, even their servants cause the glory to fade from 
the colors of our garments. They use as pictures on their walls whole 
purple and violet and royal hangings which you with great labor undo and 
change into different forms. Purple among them is cheaper than red. 

(2) For, what legitimate honor can garments derive from adulteration with 
illegitimate colors? God is not pleased by what He Himself did not produce. 
We cannot suppose that God was unable to produce sheep with purple or sky-
blue fleeces. If He was able, then He chose not to do it, and what God 
refused to do certainly cannot be lawful for man to make. Therefore, those 
things cannot be the best by nature which do not come from God, who is the 
Author of nature. Hence, they must be understood to be from the Devil, who 
is the corrupter of nature. 

(3) Obviously, they cannot come from anyone else if they are not from God, 
because those things which are not of God must be of His rival. And there 
is no other rival of God except the Devil and his angels. Now, even if the 
material out of which something is made is from God it does not therefore 
follow that every way of enjoying these things is also of God. We always 
have to raise the question of not only whence shellfish come, but what task 
is assigned to them and where they will exhibit their beauty. 

(4) For it is clear that all those profane pleasures of worldly spectacles 
about which we have already written a special treatise, and even idolatry 
itself, derive their material from the creatures of God. 

(5) But that is no reason why a Christian should devote himself to the 
madness of the circus or the cruelties of the arena or the foulness of the 
theater, just because God created horses, panthers, and the human voice; 
any more than he can commit idolatry with impunity because the incense and 
the wine and fire which feeds on them, and the animals which are the 
victims, are God's workmanship, since even the material thing which is 
adored is God's creature. 

(6) Thus, then, with regard to the use of the material substances, too; 
that use is falsely justified on the basis of their origin from God, since 
it is alien to God and is tainted with worldly glory.


CHAPTER 9

(1) For, just as certain things which are distributed by God in individual 
countries or in individual regions of the sea are mutually foreign to one 
another, so in turn they are considered rare by foreigners but rightfully 
neglected or not desired at all in their land of origin, because no anxious 
longing exists there for a glory which is hardly appreciated by the 
natives. So, it is merely because of this distribution of possessions which 
God has arranged as He wished that the rarity and singularity of an object 
which always finds favor with foreigners stirs up a great desire to possess 
it for the simple reason of not having what God has given to others.

(2) And out of this another vice grows that of immoderate greed--although a 
possession may be necessary, moderation must be exercised. This vice will 
be ambition and the very word 'ambition' must be interpreted in this way 
that from concupiscence encompassing (ambiente) the soul a desire of glory 
is born--a great desire no doubt, which, as we have said is not approved 
either by nature or by truth, but only by a vicious passion of the soul. 
There exist still other vices that are connected with ambition and glory. 
Thus it is this vice of ambition that has enhanced the prices of things 
that by doing so it might add fuel to itself also. 

(3) For, concupiscence has a way of growing greater in proportion as it 
sets a higher value upon that which it desires. A large fortune can be 
lifted out of a little box; a million sesterces can hang from a single 
thread; one slender neck can be surrounded by jewels worth many forests and 
islands; two slender lobes of the ears can cost a fortune; and each finger 
on the left hand puts to shame any money-bag. Such is the power of ambition 
that one damsel carries the whole income from a large fortune on her small 
body.



BOOK TWO 


CHAPTER 1

Handmaidens of the lord, my fellow servants and sisters, on the strength of 
the right of fellow servantship and brother--the right by which I, the very 
last of you, am counted as one of you--I am emboldened to address to you 
some words, not, of course, of affection, but paving the way for affection 
in the cause of your salvation. Salvation, however, and not of women only, 
but also of men is especially to be procured in the observance of modesty. 
For, since we are all temples of God because the Holy Spirit has entered 
into us and sanctified us, modesty is the sacristan and priestess of that 
temple; modesty will prevent anything unclean or profane from entering, 
lest God who dwells therein should be offended and leave the defiled abode.

(2) But it is not our object now to speak of modesty which the omnipresent 
divine precepts sufficiently promulgate and prescribe, but I do intend to 
talk about something that pertains to modesty, that is, the way in which 
you ought to conduct yourselves. For, too many women--I trust God will 
permit me to reprove this very thing by censuring it in all concerned--
either in ignorant simplicity or downright dishonesty so conduct themselves 
as if modesty consisted solely in the integrity of the flesh and the 
avoidance of actual sin and as if there were no need to care for the 
externals, I mean about the arrangement of dress and ornament. They go 
right ahead in their former pursuit of beauty and glamour, showing in their 
walk the very same appearance as do women of the pagans who are devoid of 
all understanding of true modesty because there is nothing true in those 
who do not know God, the Master and Teacher of all truth. 

(3) For, if any modesty can be assumed to exist among the Gentiles, it is 
certainly so imperfect and defective that even though it asserts itself to 
some extent in the way of thinking, it destroys itself by a licentious 
extravagance in the matter of dress after the manner of the usual 
perversity of the Gentiles of actually desiring that of which it shuns the 
effect. How many pagan women are there who do not desire to be pleasing 
even to strangers? Who is there among them who does not try to have herself 
painted up in order that when desired she may refuse? In fact, this is a 
characteristic of Gentile modesty, not actually to fall, but to be willing 
to do so, or even not to be willing, yet not quite to refuse. Is there any 
wonder? All things are perverse which are not from God.

(4) Let those women, therefore, look to it, who, by not holding on to the 
whole good, easily mix with evil even what they do hold fast. It is your 
obligation to be different from them, as in all other things, so also in 
your gait, since you ought to be perfect as your heavenly Father is 
perfect.


CHAPTER 2

(1) You must know that perfect modesty, that is, Christian modesty, 
requires not only that you never desire to be an object of desire on the 
part of others, but that you even hate to be one. First of all, because the 
effort to please by external beauty does not come from a sound conscience, 
since beauty we know to be naturally the exciter of lust. Why, then, excite 
that evil against yourself? Why invite something to which you profess to be 
a stranger? Secondly, because we ought not to open the way to temptations. 
For, although by their vehemence--from which God guard His own--they 
sometimes lead to greater perfection, they certainly disturb the soul by 
presenting a stumbling block to it.

(2) We ought, indeed, to walk so in holiness and in the total fullness of 
our faith that we can be confident and sure in our own conscience, desiring 
that modesty may abide in us to the end, yet not presumptuously relying on 
it. For, the one who is presumptuous is less likely to feel apprehension, 
and he who feels less apprehension takes less precaution, and the one who 
takes less precaution is in the greater danger. Fear is the true foundation 
of our salvation, whereas presumption is a hindrance to fear. 

(3) Therefore, it will be more useful for us if we foresee the possibility 
that we may fall than if we presume that we cannot fall. For in 
anticipating a fall we will be fearful, and if fearful we will take care, 
and if we take care we shall be safe. On the other hand, if we are 
presumptuous and have neither fear nor take any precautions, it will be 
difficult for us to achieve salvation. He who acts securely and not at the 
same time warily does not possess a safe and firm security, whereas he who 
is wary can truly say that he will be safe. May the Lord in His mercy 
always take care of His servants that they may happily be permitted even to 
presume on His goodness.

(4) But why are we a source of danger to others? Why do we excite 
concupiscence in others? If the Lord in amplifying the Law does not make a 
distinction in penalty between the actual commission of fornication and its 
desire, I do not know whether He will grant impunity to one who is the 
cause of perdition to another. For he perishes as soon as he looks upon 
your beauty with desire, and has already committed in his soul what he 
desires, and you have become a sword (of perdition) to him so that, even 
though you are free from the actual crime of unchastity, you are not 
altogether free from the odium (attached to it). As for instance, when a 
robbery has been committed on some man's land, the actual crime is not 
imputed to the master, but, as long as the estate is in bad repute, he also 
is tinged with a certain amount of infamy 

(5) Are we, then, going to paint our faces in order that others may perish? 
What about the Scripture which tells us: 'Thou shalt love thy neighbor as 
thyself. Do not seek only your interests, but those of your neighbor'? Now, 
no utterance of the Holy Spirit should be restricted only to its present 
matter, but must be directed and referred to every occasion to which its 
application is useful. Since, therefore, our own welfare as well as that of 
others is involved in the pursuit of beauty which is so dangerous, it is 
time for you to realize that you must not only shun the display of false 
and studied beauty but also remove all traces of natural grace by 
concealment and negligence, as equally dangerous to the glances of 
another's eyes. 

(6) For, although comeliness is not to be censured as being a bodily 
happiness, as an additional gift of the divine Sculptor, and as a kind of 
fair vestment of the soul, it must be feared because of the affront and 
violence on the part of those who pursue it. This danger even Abraham, the 
father of the faith, greatly feared because of his wife's shapely form and, 
untruthfully introducing Sara as his sister, he purchased his life by her 
disgrace.


CHAPTER 3

(1) Now, let it be granted that excellence of form is not to be feared as 
if it were either harmful to those who possess it or ruinous to those who 
desire it or dangerous for those who come in contact with it; let us 
further assume that it is neither an occasion of temptation nor surrounded 
by danger of scandal--it is enough to say that it is not necessary for the 
handmaidens of God. For, where modesty exists there is no need of beauty, 
since, strictly speaking, the normal use and effect of beauty is 
wantonness, unless, of course, someone can think of some other good that 
flows from bodily beauty. Let those women enhance the beauty they possess 
or seek for beauty they do not possess who think that they bestow upon 
themselves what is demanded from beauty when they exhibit it to others.

(2) But someone will say: Suppose we exclude wantonness and give to 
chastity its rightful place. Why should we not be permitted to enjoy the 
simple praise that comes to beauty and to glory in a bodily good? Let 
whoever takes pleasure glorying in the flesh see to that. For us, in the 
first place there can be no studious pursuit of glory, since glory is of 
its very nature a kind of exaltation and, in turn, exaltation is 
incongruous for those who, according to God's precept profess humility. 
Secondly, if all glory is vain and foolish how much more so that which is a 
glorying in the flesh particularly in us? For, if we must glory in 
something, let be in the spirit rather than in the flesh that we wish to 
please, since we are pursuers of things spiritual.

(3) Let us find our joy in that which is really our business. Let us seek 
for glory in those things in which we hope for salvation. To be sure, a 
Christian will also glory in his flesh, but only after it has endured 
torture for Christ's sake in order that the spirit may be crowned in the 
flesh rather than that the flesh may attract the eyes and sighs of a young 
man. Thus, a thing that from every point of view is useless to you, you can 
safely scorn if you do not possess it and neglect if you do possess it.


CHAPTER 4

(1) Holy women, let none of you, if she is naturally beautiful, be an 
occasion of sin; certainly, if even she be so, she must not increase 
beauty, but try to subdue it. If I were speaking to Gentiles, I would give 
you a Gentile precept and one that is common to all: you are bound to 
please no one except your own husbands. And, you will please your husbands 
in the proportion that you take no pains to please anyone else. Be 
unconcerned, blessed sisters: no wife is really ugly to her own husband. 
She was certainly pleasing to him when he chose to marry her, whether it 
was for her beauty or for her character. Let none of you think that she 
will necessarily incur the hatred and aversion of her husband if she spends 
less time in the adornment of her person.

(2) Every husband demands that his wife be chaste; but beauty a Christian 
husband certainly does not demand, because we Christians are not fascinated 
by the same things that the Gentiles think to be good. If, on the other 
hand, the husband be an infidel, he will be suspicious of beauty precisely 
because of the unfavorable opinion the Gentiles have of us. For whose sake, 
then, are you cultivating your beauty? If for a Christian, he does not 
demand it, and if for an infidel, he does not believe it unless it is 
artless. Why, then, are you so eager to please either one who is suspicious 
or one who does not desire it?


CHAPTER 5

(1) To be sure, what I am suggesting is not intended to recommend to you an 
utterly uncultivated and unkempt appearance; I see no virtue in squalor and 
filth, but I am talking about the proper way and norm and just measure in 
the care of the body. We must not go beyond what is desired by those who 
strive for natural and demure neatness. We must not go beyond what is 
pleasing to God. 

(2) For, surely, those women sin against God who anoint their faces with 
creams, stain their cheeks with rouge, or lengthen their eyebrows with 
antimony. Obviously, they are not satisfied with the creative skill of God; 
in their own person, without doubt, they censure and criticize the Maker of 
all things! Surely they are finding fault when they try to perfect and add 
to His work, taking these their additions, of course, from a rival artist. 

(3) This rival artist is the Devil. For, who else would teach how to change 
the body but he who by wickedness transformed the spirit of man? It is he, 
no doubt, who prepared ingenious devices of this sort that in your own 
persons it may be proved that to a certain degree you do violence to God.

(4) Whatever is born, that is the work of God. Obviously, then, anything 
else that is added must be the work of the Devil. What a wicked thing it is 
to attempt to add to a divine handiwork the inventions of the Devil! We do 
not find our servants borrowing something from our foes, nor do soldiers 
desire anything from the enemy of their general. For, it is certainly a sin 
for you to solicit a favor from the enemy of Him in whose hands you lie. 
Can a true Christian really be helped by that evil one in anything? If he 
is, I do not think he will be a Christian for long, for he will belong to 
him from whom he strives to learn. 

(5) How alien are these things to your principles and to your promises--how 
unworthy of the name of Christian that you bear! To have a painted face, 
you on whom simplicity in every form is enjoined! To lie in your 
appearance, you to whom lying with the tongue is not allowed! To seek for 
that which is not your own, you who are taught to keep hands off the goods 
of another! To commit adultery in your appearance, you who should eagerly 
strive after modesty! Believe me, blessed sisters! How can you keep the 
commandments of God if you do not keep in your own persons the features 
which He has bestowed on you?


CHAPTER 6

(1) I see some women dye their hair blonde by using saffron. They are even 
ashamed of their country, sorry that they were not born in Germany or in 
Gaul! Thus, as far as their hair is concerned, they give up their country. 
It is hardly a good omen for them that they wish their hair to be flame-
colored and mistake for beauty something which merely stains them. 

(2) As a matter of fact, the strength of these bleaches really does harm to 
the hair, and the constant application of even any natural moist substance 
will bring ruin to the head itself, just as the warmth of the sun, while 
desirable for giving life and dryness to the hair, if overdone is hurtful. 
How can they achieve beauty when they are doing themselves harm; how can 
they make something attractive by means of filth? Shall a Christian woman 
heap saffron on her hair as upon an altar? For, surely, anything that is 
normally burned in honor of an unclean spirit, may be considered as a 
sacrifice to idols, unless it is applied for honest and necessary and 
wholesome uses for which all of God's creatures were provided. 

(3) But the Lord has said: 'Which of you can make a white hair black or out 
of a black a white?' Thus do they refute the word of the Lord. 'Behold,' 
they say, 'out of white or black we make it blonde, which is surely more 
attractive.' Why, you will even find people who are ashamed of having lived 
to old age and try to make their hair black when it is white. Are you not 
ashamed of such folly? Trying to keep it a secret that you have reached 
that age for which you longed and prayed, sighing for youth which was a 
time of sin, missing the chance to show some true maturity! I hope that the 
daughters of Wisdom will avoid such foolishness. The harder we work to 
conceal our age the more we reveal it. 

(4) Or does your eternal life depend on the youthful appearance of your 
hair? Is that the incorruptibility which we have to put on for the reign 
that is to come--the incorruptibility promised by the kingdom that will be 
free from sin? Well, indeed, you speed toward the Lord, well you make haste 
to be free from this most wicked world, you who find it unpleasant to 
approach your own end!


CHAPTER 7

(1) What profit, again, do you derive for your salvation from all the labor 
spent in arranging your hair? Why can you not leave your hair alone, 
instead of at one time tying it up, at another letting it hang loose, now 
cultivating it, now thinning it out? Some women prefer to tie it up in 
little curls, while others let it fall down wild and disheveled--a hardly 
commendable kind of simplicity. Besides, some of you affix to your heads I 
know not what monstrosities of sewn and woven wigs, now in the form of a 
cap as if it were a casing for the head and a covering for the crown, now 
in the form of a chignon at the back of the neck. 

(2) I am surprised that there is no open defiance of the Lord's precepts 
one of which declares that no one can add anything to his stature. You, 
however, do add something to your weight anyway by wearing some kind of 
head-dresses or piling shield-bosses upon your necks! If you are not 
ashamed of your outrageous behavior, then be at least ashamed of covering 
yourselves with filth, in the fear that you may be putting on a holy and 
Christian head the cast-offs of hair of some stranger who was perhaps 
unclean, perhaps guilty and destined for hell. In fact, why do you not 
banish all this slavery to beauty from your own free head? It will do you 
no good to seem beautiful; you are wasting your time looking for the 
cleverest manufacturers of wigs. God commands women to be veiled. I imagine 
He does so lest the heads of some of them should be seen!

(3) I certainly hope that I, in the day of Christian joy, miserable man 
that I am, may be able to raise my head at least as high as your heels. 
Perhaps I will then see whether or not you will arise with your ceruse, 
your rouge, your saffron, and all that parade of head-gear; whether it will 
be women painted up that way whom the angels will carry up to meet Christ 
in the clouds. If these things are now good and are of God, then they will 
join your rising bodies and find there again their proper place. But 
nothing can rise but flesh and spirit sole and pure. Whatever, therefore, 
does not rise in spirit and flesh is damned, because it is not of God. Have 
nothing to do now with things that are damned; let God see you today such 
as He will see you on the day of your final resurrection.


CHAPTER 8

(1) Of course, I am now merely talking as a man and, jealous of women, I 
try to deprive them of what is their own! But are there not certain things 
that are forbidden to us, too, out of regard for the sobriety we should 
maintain out of fear we owe to God? 

(2) Now, since, by a defect of nature, there is inborn in men because of 
women (just as in women because of men) the desire to please, the male sex 
also has its own peculiar trickeries for enhancing their appearance: for 
instance, cutting the beard a bit too sharply, trimming it too neatly, 
shaving around the mouth, arranging and dyeing our hair, darkening the 
first signs of gray hair, disguising the down on the whole body with some 
female ointments, smoothing off the rest of the body by means of some 
gritty powder, then always taking occasion to look in a mirror, gazing 
anxiously into it. Are not all of these things quite idle and hostile to 
modesty once we have known God, have put aside the desire to please others 
and forsworn all lasciviousness? 

(3) For, where God is there is modesty, where modesty is there is dignity, 
its assistant and companion. How shall we ever practice modesty if we do 
not make use of its normal means, that is, dignity? How shall we ever be 
able to make use of dignity in practicing modesty unless we bear a certain 
seriousness in our countenance, in our dress, and in the appearance of the 
entire man?


CHAPTER 9

(1) In the same manner, therefore, you must be intent on curtailing and 
rejecting all superfluous elegance in your clothing and the remaining 
lumber of your finery. For, what good does it do to wear on your face an 
appearance of propriety and temperance and a simplicity that is in 
accordance with the divine teaching if the rest of the body is covered with 
a lot of frilly and foolish pomps and luxuries? 

(2) To be sure, there is no difficulty in recognizing how close the 
connection is between these pomps and the business of lasciviousness and 
how they must interfere with the principles of modesty: such frills 
adjoined to fancy dress prostitute the grace of true beauty, so much so 
that, if they are not worn, natural beauty makes no impression and is 
hardly noticed as if disarmed and altogether ruined; on the other hand, if 
natural beauty is not present, the supporting aid of fancy dress supplies 
grace, as it were, of its own power. 

(3) Lastly, finery and elegant dress have a tendency to deprive of peace 
those periods of life which are already blessed with quiet and withdrawn 
into the harbor of modesty, and to disturb their seriousness by stimulating 
desires which evidently try to compensate for the coldness of age by the 
provocative charms of dress.

(4) First, then, blessed sisters, have nothing to do with the lewd and 
seductive tricks of dress and appearance. Secondly, if some of you, because 
of wealth or birth or former dignities, are forced to appear in public in 
overly elaborate dress, as if they had not yet acquired the good sense that 
is fitting to their age, take heed to temper the evil that is in this 
thing, lest under pretext of necessity you give rein to unbounded license. 

(5) For, how can you fulfill the precept of humility which we profess as 
Christians if you do not keep in check the use of wealth and finery which 
so encourage the pursuit of glory? For, glory tends to exalt and not to 
humble.

(6) 'But,' you will say, 'may we not use what is ours?' Who is forbidding 
you to use what is yours? No one less than the Apostle who advises us to 
use this world as if we did not use it. He tells us: 'The fashion of this 
world is passing away. And those who buy, let them act as though they 
possessed not.' And why? Because he had previously said: 'The time is 
growing short.' If, then, he plainly shows that even wives themselves are 
so to be had as if they be not had, because the times are straitened, what 
would he think about all these vain appliances of theirs?

(7) In fact, are there not many who do just that, dedicating themselves to 
be eunuchs and for the kingdom of God voluntarily foregoing a desire which 
is so strong and, as we know, permitted to us? Are there not some who deny 
themselves what God has created, abstaining from wine and from dishes of 
meat, the enjoyment of which provides no particular danger or fear? But 
they sacrifice to God the humility of their soul in restricting their use 
of food. Therefore, you have used your wealth and finery quite enough, and 
you have plucked the fruit of your dowries sufficiently before you came to 
know the teaching of salvation. 

(8) For, we are the ones for whom the times were to run their course to the 
end; we were predestined by God before the world was created for the 
extreme end of time; and so we are trained by God to castigate and, so to 
speak, emasculate the world. We are the circumcision of all things both 
spiritual and carnal, for in both spirit and in the flesh we circumcise the 
things of this world.


CHAPTER 10

(1) Of course, it was God who taught men how to dye wool with the juice of 
herbs and the slime of shells; it had escaped Him, when He bade all things 
to come into existence, to issue a command for the production of purple and 
scarlet sheep! It was God, too, who devised the manufacture of those very 
garments which, light and thin in themselves, are heavy only in their 
price; God it was who produced such a great amount of gold for the careful 
setting and fitting of jewels; and it was God, too, to be sure, who caused 
the puncturing of ears and was so interested in tormenting his own 
creatures as to order suffering to infants with their first breath; and 
this, in order that from these scars on the body-- it seems as if the 
latter was born to be cut--there might hang some sort of precious stones 
which, as is well known, the Parthians insert in their shoes in place of 
studs! 

(2) As a matter of fact, this gold whose glitter you find so attractive is 
used by some nations for chains, as pagan literature tells us. And so, it 
is not because of intrinsic value that these things are good, but merely 
because they happen to be rare. After artistic skills, however, had been 
introduced by the fallen angels, who had also discovered the materials 
themselves, elaborate workmanship, combined with the rareness of these 
things, brought about the idea of their being precious and stimulated the 
desire on the part of the women to possess them because of their precious 
character.

(3) Now, if these very angels who discovered the material substances of 
this kind as well as their charms--I mean gold and precious stones--and 
passed on the techniques of working them and taught, among other things, 
the use of eyelid-powder and the dyeing of cloth, if these angels, I say, 
are condemned by God, as Henoch tells us, how are we ever going to please 
God by taking pleasure in things developed by those who because of those 
acts provoked the wrath and punishment of God?

(4) I will grant you that God foresaw all these things and that He has 
permitted them, and that Isaias does not object to any purple garments, 
permits the wearing of an ornament shaped like a bunch of grapes in the 
hair, and finds no fault with crescent-shaped necklaces. Still, let us not 
flatter ourselves, as the pagans are accustomed to do, that God is merely 
the Creator of the world and thereafter pays no attention to the works He 
has created. 

(5) Could we not be acting much more usefully and cautiously if we were to 
presume that all these things have been provided by God at the beginning 
and placed in the world in order that they should now be means of testing 
the moral strength of His servants, so that, in being permitted to use 
things, we might have the opportunity of showing our self-restraint? Do not 
wise masters purposely offer and permit some things to their servants in 
order to try them and to see whether and how they make use of things thus 
permitted, whether they will do so with moderation and honesty? 

(6) However, is not that servant deserving more praise who abstains 
totally, thus manifesting a reverential fear of the kindness of his master? 
Therefore the Apostle concludes: 'All things are lawful, but not all things 
are expedient.' It will be much easier for one to dread what is forbidden 
who has a reverential fear of what is permitted.


CHAPTER 11

(1) Moreover, what reasons have you for appearing in public in fancy dress, 
since you are automatically removed from the occasions which demand that 
sort of thing? You do not visit pagan temples nor do you long for the 
spectacles nor do you keep the holy days of the Gentiles. People only wear 
fancy dress in public because of those gatherings and the desire to see and 
to be seen, either for the purpose of transacting the trade of wantonness 
or else of inflating their vanity. You, however, have no cause of appearing 
in public, except such as is serious. 

(2) You either visit some sick brethren or attend the sacrifice of the Mass 
or listen to the word of God. Any one of these functions is an occasion of 
seriousness and holiness for which there is no need of any extraordinary 
studiously arranged and luxurious attire. And if you are required to go out 
because of friendship or duty to some Gentile, why not go dressed in your 
own armor--all the more, in fact, because you are going to those who are 
strangers to the faith? It is desirable that there be some way of 
distinguishing between the handmaids of God and of the Devil so that you 
may be an example to them and they be edified in you; as St. Paul says: 
'Let God be glorified in your body.' God, however, is glorified in your 
body through modesty; hence, also, through dress that is suitable to 
modesty.

(3) But some of you may object that the (Christian) name should not be 
blasphemed in us by making some derogatory change of our former style of 
dress. Well, let us then continue to practice our former vices! If we must 
keep the same appearance, let us also maintain the same conduct! Then 
certainly the pagans will not blaspheme the (Christian) name! It is, 
indeed, a great blasphemy if it is said of one of you: 'Since she became a 
Christian she walks in poorer garb'! Are you going to be afraid to appear 
to be poorer from the time that you have been made richer and to be more 
shabbily clothed from the time when you have been made more clean? In a 
word, should a Christian walk according to what is pleasing to the pagan or 
according to what is pleasing to God?


CHAPTER 12

(1) We should certainly see to it that we never give adequate cause to 
another to blaspheme. Yet, how much more conducive to blasphemy is it if 
you who are called the priestesses of modesty go around dressed and painted 
like those who are immodest! In fact, to what extent could one consider 
those poor, unhappy victims of organized lust to be beneath you? Even 
though in the past some laws used to forbid them to adorn themselves as 
married women or as matrons, now, surely, the corruption of our times which 
is daily growing worse makes it very difficult to distinguish them from the 
most honorable women. 

(2) Yet even the Scripture suggest to us that the alluring display of 
beauty is invariably joined with and appropriate to bodily prostitution. 
That powerful city which rules over the seven mountains and over many 
waters merited from the Lord the appellation of a prostitute and received 
that name because of the likeness of dress. Surely she sits in purple and 
scarlet and gold and precious stones; surely those things are cursed 
without which an accursed prostitute could not have been described. 

(3) The only reason why Juda thought that Thamar was sitting (on the cross-
road) for hire was because she had painted her face and adorned herself, 
and thus (because she was hidden beneath her 'veil' and, by the kind of 
dress she wore, pretended that she was a harlot) he considered her as such, 
addressed her as such and bargained with her in the same fashion. Thus, we 
learn that it is our obligation to provide in every way against all 
immodest associations or even the suspicion of them. For, why is the purity 
of the chaste mind stained by the suspicion of another? Why is something 
looked for in me which I abhor? Why does not my garb announce beforehand my 
character lest my spirit should be wounded through hearing what is said by 
those who are shameless? Well, it is certainly permitted to you to appear 
chaste to an unchaste person.


CHAPTER 13

(1) Some women may say: 'I do not need the approval of men. For I do not 
ask for the testimony of men: it is God who sees my heart.' We all know 
that, to be sure, but let us recall what the Lord said through the Apostle: 
'Let your modesty appear before men.' Why would he have said that unless we 
should be an example and a witness to those who are evil? Or, what did 
Christ mean by 'let your works shine before men'? Why did the Lord call us 
'the light of the world'? Why did He compare us to a city set on a mountain 
if we were not to shine in (the midst of) darkness and stand out among 
those who are sunk down? 

(2) 'If you hide your light under the measure,' you will necessarily be 
lost in darkness and run down by many people. It is our good works that 
make us to be the lights of the world. Moreover, what is good, provided it 
be true and full, does not love the darkness; it rejoices to be seen and 
exults in being pointed out by others. 

(3) It is not enough for Christian modesty merely to be so, but to seem so, 
too. So great and abundant ought to be your modesty that it may flow out 
from the mind to the garb, and burst forth from the conscience to the outer 
appearance, so that even from the outside it may examine, as it were, its 
own furniture --a furniture that is suited to retain the faith forever. We 
must, therefore, get rid of such delicacies as tend by their softness and 
effeminacy to weaken the strength of our faith. 

(4) Otherwise, I am not so sure that the wrist which is always surrounded 
by a bracelet will be able to bear the hardness of chains with resignation; 
I have some doubts that the leg which now rejoices to wear an anklet will 
be able to bear the tight squeeze of an ankle chain; and I sometimes fear 
that the neck which is now laden with strings of pearls and emeralds will 
give no room to the executioner's sword.

(5) Therefore, my blessed sisters, let us think of the hardships to come, 
and we will not feel them. Let us abandon luxuries and we will never miss 
them. Let us stand ready to endure every violence, having nothing which we 
would be afraid to leave behind. For, these things are really the bonds 
that hold down the wings of our hope. Let us cast away the ornaments of 
this world if we truly desire those of heaven. 

(6) Do not love gold--that substance which caused the very first sins of 
the people of Israel to be branded with infamy. You should hate that which 
ruined your fathers, that gold which they adored when they abandoned God, 
for even then gold was food for the fire.

But the lives of Christians are never spent in gold, and now less than 
ever, but in iron. The stoles of martyrdom are being prepared, and the 
angels who are to carry us (to heaven) are being awaited. 

(7) Go forth to meet those angels, adorned with the cosmetics and ornaments 
of the Prophets and Apostles. Let your whiteness flow from simplicity, let 
modesty be the cause of your rosy complexion; paint your eyes with 
demureness, your mouth with silence; hang on your ears the words of God, 
bind on your neck the yoke of Christ; bow your heads to your husbands--and 
that will be ornament enough for you. Keep your hands busy with spinning 
and stay at home--and you will be more pleasing than if you were adorned in 
gold. Dress yourselves in the silk of probity, the fine linen of holiness, 
and the purple of chastity. Decked out in this manner, you will have God 
Himself for your lover.