Swift
'The Lady's Dressing Room" is an offhanded ode to women by Jonathan Swift and narrated by the Queen of Love. The poem basically describes the dressing room of Celia, seen through the spying eyes of her lover Strephon. Strephon has so idealized his beloved -- and all other women -- that when he realizes that she is a mere human being, he wretches. Finally he realizes, "Oh! Celia, Celia, Celia shits!" Swift's poem is not, as a casual reading would suggest, disparaging toward women. Rather, Swift points out that while Celia may be vain and self-conscious, obsessed with her appearance, she is nevertheless a human being. Strephon has failed to acknowledge Celia's humanity and so when he sees stains on her stockings and smells her bodily discharges, he is turned off to all women. The Queen of Love laments Strephon's attitude in the final stanza of the poem: "I pity wretched Strephon blind to all the Charms of Female Kind." For Swift, women's roles do resemble Celia's: she spends five hours dressing and is as a result "haughty." However, these roles are not positive for either gender. Celia has fallen into a trap of vanity, defining herself solely through her appearance. Similarly, Strephon has "blinded" himself to women's innate beauty because he believes in an unattainable ideal of perfection. Written almost three centuries ago, "The Lady's Dressing Room" adequately describes an almost universal role of women: their self-perception and their perception by others.
'The Lady's Dressing Room" describes the women known to Swift, in eighteenth century England. However, the poem equally applies to modern females, which is why...
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