The Standard Household-Effect Company (from Literature and Life)
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About This Book
A conversational essay records a friend's distress at elaborate seasonal house preparations and links the behavior to an inherited domestic conscience made worse by modern conveniences that multiply items needing care. The friend contrasts ritualized American closing and mothproofing with a French habit of leaving furnishings in place and accepting minor dust or moth damage to avoid double labor. He proposes a social remedy of exclusively furnished rental houses owned and maintained by landlords, removing tenants' responsibility for packing, dusting, and preserving household goods. Anecdotes about a wife who found furnished houses easier illustrate the argument against obsessive housekeeping rituals.
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