Clean and Decent

(scan from internet source | 1960 Viking Press edition)
Subtitle:  The Unruffled History of the Bathroom and the W.C.
Author:  Lawrence Wright
 
 

Edition Cited in The Compleat Witch


Publisher:  University of Toronto Press
City:  Toronto
Year:  1967
additional information
Pages:  281
Binding: Paperback
Size: 5.5 x 8.5
 
Front Flap Copy
(from the 1960 Viking Press edition)
 

Clean and Decent,” says the author’s preface, “is meant to entertain even is scholarship does keep breaking through.”  To the American publishers this is traditional British understatement since, in addition to being vastly entertaining, the book is also continuously fascinating and frequesntly astonishing.  On the one hand an extraordinary history of personal hygiene down the ages (with special emphasis on the outré, the quaint, and the politely scatalogical), it also contains a solid core of social history and innumberable lively reflections on changing manners.It is apparent to Lawrence Wright that more can be learned about past peoples from their bathrooms than from their battlefields.  To make his point he provides hundreds of illustrations, prints and photographs, many of them rediscovered “bygones” that have never before been reprinted.  Thus one learns that Queen Elizabeth I has a valve watercloset; that Louis XIV had cushions in his bath; that baths have been concealed in sofas and washbasins in pianos; that, although whiskey may be added to bath water, mutton chops should definitely not be eaten in the bath proper.  Clean and Decent is a serious architect’s distinctive contribution to his profession.  It will also add considerably to the gaiety of nations.

Table of Contents
(from the 1960 Viking Press edition)
 

Author’s Preface
Acknowledgements
I Man Becomes House-Trained
II ‘Omnia Commoda’
III The Odour of Sanctity
IV ‘Every Saturday Nyght’
V Bath Knights and Bagnios, Conduits and Quills
VI Dirty Days
VII Fecundating Springs
VIII Lieux à l’Anglaise
IX Bason, Bidet and Pot
X Baths and Buggs
XI The Cholera Years
XII The Water Cure
XIII Was Health Worth It?
XIV ‘The Benison of Hot Water’
XV ‘The Subject is a Peculiar One’
XVI Plumber’s Progress
XVII Toilet Sundries
XVIII Millions of Baths
Short Bibliography
Illustrations:  Sources and Acknowledgements
Index
 
Online Resources
OpenLibrary
Archive.org
Project Gutenberg
Wikipedia (book or author)
WorldCat
 
Editions (arranged by year)

[ no cover yet ] 

Year:  1960
Publisher:  Routledge & K. Paul
City:  London
Pages:  281
Binding:  Unknown
Size: Unknown
Cover Price:  Unknown
LoC:  60002466
 
Year:  1960
Publisher:  The Viking Press
City:  New York
Pages:  282
Binding: hardback
Size: 6″ x 9″
Cover Price:  $4.95
LoC:  
60001507
Notes:  First American edition.
 

[ no cover yet ]

 
Year:  1966
Publisher:  Routledge & K. Paul
City:  LondonPages:  282
Binding:  paperback
Size: Unknown
Cover Price:  Unknown
LoC:  
67107979
Notes: (revised, foreword by, afterword by, etc.)
 

 

Year:  1967
Publisher:  University of Toronto Press
City:  Toronto
Pages:  281
Binding:  paperback
Size: 5.5 x 8.5
Cover Price:  $2.00
LoC:  
77350721
Notes: (revised, foreword by, afterword by, etc.)
 

[ no cover yet ] 

 
Year:  1980
Publisher:  Routledge & Kegan Paul
City:  London, BostonPages:  211
Binding: paperback
Size: Unknown
Cover Price:  £2.95
ISBN:  0710006470
LoC:  
80040441
Notes: Rev. ed. / with additional material by Dave Larder.

 

Subtitle: The History of the Bathroom & the W. C.
Year:  1984
Publisher:  Routledge
Pages:  224
Binding: paperback
Size: Unknown
Cover Price:  Unknown
ISBN 10:  0710046650

ISBN 13:  9780710046659
LoC:
Notes: New Ed edition.

 

 


Subtitle:  The Fascinating History of the Bathroom and the Water-Closet
Year:  2005
Publisher:  Penguin
Pages:  Unknown
Binding: paperback
Size: Unknown

Cover Price:  Unknown
ISBN 10:  0141390352

ISBN 13:  9780141390352Notes: (revised, foreword by, afterword by, etc.)
 
[cover: medium size/align center]
Title: (if different)
Subtitle: (if different)
Year:
Publisher:
Pages:
Binding: (hardback, paperback, booklet, other)
Size: (width x height in inches)
Cover Price:
ISBN:
LoC:
Notes: (revised, foreword by, afterword by, etc.)

Additional Photos/Images

 
“A rare and rather absurd piece of toilet furniture, known in France as the demoiselle, was a sort of robot substitute for a chambermaid.  In some forms it was basically a dummy figure for dressmaking, but it could act also as a wig-stand, and given adjustable arms could hold a mirror and a basin in convenient positions; it might include a table for oddments of the toilet.  In its near-human form it must have been an unnerving companion overnight in a half-dark bedroom.”
 
Misc. Quotes
(interesting or pithy quotes from the book)
Disclaimer
 
Due to the obscurity of some titles, the contents of The Compleat Witch Illustrated Bibliography Project may contain information that is inaccurate or incomplete. We encourage readers to submit corrections and pertinent addenda like images, quotes, or other information, either as a Comment on the appropriate post or via The Compleat Witch Illustrated Bibliography Facebook page.

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