We are asked by the author, a biographer not only of Charles Dickens but of London too, to contemplate the novelist unbuttoned, in peep-show dishabille. |
In one oil on view in Paris and Washington, a model in dishabille turns to speak to an artist who warms his hands against a stovepipe in a sexually suggestive gesture. |
One of Mr. West's clients even invited him to her hotel room to pack up clothes while she was in dishabille. |
She was as angry as Caitlin was, but her anger was directed toward Crane, whom she saw as the cause for her sudden state of dishabille. |
She was in her parlour, half dressed in what they call, I believe, a dishabille. |
She looked at him as though she had noticed his dishabille for the first time. |