from “Eulogy on the Flapper”, by Zelda Fitzgerald She had mostly masculine friends, but youth does not need friends – it needs only crowds … Mothers disapproved of their sons taking the Flapper to dances, to teas, to swim and most of all to heart. She was conscious that the things she did were the things she had always wanted to do. She flirted because it was fun to flirt and wore a one-piece bathing suit because she had a good figure, she covered her face with powder and paint because she didn’t need it and she refused to be bored chiefly because she wasn’t boring. How can a girl say again, “I do not want to be respectable because respectable girls are not attractive,” and how can she again so wisely arrive at the knowledge that “boys do dance most with the girls they kiss most,” and that “men will marry the girls they could kiss before they had asked papa?” Perceiving these things, the Flapper awoke from her lethargy of sub-deb-ism, bobbed her hair, put on her choicest pair of earrings and a great deal of audacity and rouge and went into the battle. Next biography on the biography shelf is Zelda: A Biography, by Nancy Milford
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