Tag: Victorian Era

  • Waldteufel Christmas Roses and Skaters Waltz

    Waldteufel Christmas Roses and Skaters Waltz

    Only days after the arrival of Krampus, the Christmas devil, comes the birthday of Emil Waldteufel. Waldteufel is German for “forest devil.” He was born on this date in 1837.

    Though Waldteufel had long been a mainstay of Paris society balls of the Second Empire, he was nearly 40 by the time he achieved international fame. It was the Prince of Wales – the future King Edward VII – who introduced him to London, and his music came to dominate Queen Victoria’s state balls at Buckingham Palace. One of his best-known works, “Les Patineurs” (“The Skaters’ Waltz”) was introduced there in 1882. Another of his most successful waltzes, from the other end of the decade, was “Roses de Noël” (“Christmas Roses”).

    The holidays are in bloom! Take some time to smell the roses with Emil Waldteufel.

    “The Skaters’ Waltz”

    “Roses de Noël”

  • Vinegar Valentines: A Rude History for Hostile Times

    Vinegar Valentines: A Rude History for Hostile Times

    In a climate of political hostility, and with a general decline in civility, is the time ripe for the revival of the “vinegar valentine?”

    Vinegar valentines were insult cards that enjoyed a surge in popularity for a little over a century, beginning in the 1840s. Their creation paralleled a rise in literacy and was abetted by the reasonable asking price of a penny (at their inception) or a nickel (at their twilight in the 1940s and ‘50s).

    The tone of a vinegar valentine is invariably sardonic and usually mean-spirited, with garish caricatures and poison pen verse stabbing fun at an endless parade of types – the spinster, the floozy, the old maid, the dandy, the Romeo, the artiste. Needless to say, they generated a lot of bad feeling and often resulted in fistfights and shouting matches.

    Compounding the hilarity, in the 1840s, recipients rather than the senders were the ones who paid for the postage – so the person on the receiving end actually paid for the privilege of being insulted by an anonymous “admirer.” This is how people entertained themselves before the immediate gratification of the internet.

    It’s always refreshing to stumble across theses reminders that human nature never changes.

    Happy Valentine’s Day!


    More about vinegar valentines here:

    Happy Valentine’s Day, I Hate You

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