Page:Costume, fanciful, historical, and theatrical (1906).djvu/73

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IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY
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usually ornamented with a band of black velvet embroidered in gold.

There is a fine record of Elizabeth of Woodville in the British Museum, her hair pale yellow in colour, arranged with a small curl on the forehead, and brought up under a high crown, with

ELIZABETH OF WOODVILLE.

large closed arches whence it falls, the points of the arches being finished with fleurs-de-lys. Her dress is of gold brocaded in blue, and the sleeves are tight-fitting; ermine outlines the shoulders, and a crimson scarf does its picturesque duty as a girdle, and a broad hem of ermine outlines the skirt, which is very full and has an extremely long train; and beneath the dress we are allowed