The following courtroom scene could encapsulate the psycology of suit
wearing :
'This court has found you guilty of murder aggravated rape, kidnap, commiting an unnatural act, breaking and entering, burglary, assult, crulety to a horse, summugling explosives, culpable driving, arson, forgery, attempting to bribe a mortuary attendant, possesion of a probhibited animal and bigamy.
But because you have, as a mark of respect, taken the trouble of wearing a suit for your appearance before me today, I've decided to let you off with a warning'.
So, do men wear suits in a pathetic, infantile hope of reprieve from some terrible judgment which they feel they deserve?
Is it the sheath for a hideous wepon which is the male being?
Is it a shame container, or is the suit a grament for decepyion and fraudlence: a slimy, slippery ruse, cleaned, pressed and symmetrical to conceal a great, inner, unbalanced, filthy shabbiness?
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Q. What do you say to a drummer in a three-piece suit?
A. "Will the defendant please rise?"
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