My
copy of this must-have book for the fashionable lady in 1831 is conveniently
pocket-sized and comprises 244 pages of short stories, poems, articles on
famous women, dozens of ‘preceptive
distichs’, fashion advice and twenty-seven illustrations, including
some ravishing hand-coloured fashion plates. Unfortunately, a number of the
plates have been torn out. Still, enough remain to give a good idea of
what The Ladies’ Pocket
Magazine would have looked like.
Blue ball
dress, 1831
The
fashion advice discusses the fashion plates in the pages following their
illustrations; for example, with regard to the picture above, we learn that the
ball dress is ‘etherial (sic) blue tulle over satin; the corsage is cut
very low… Beret sleeves finished en manchette, with blond lace. The skirt
is trimmed with six rouleaux… The hair is arranged in bands, and bows on
the summit of the head, and in curls at the sides of the face, and adorned with
light sprigs of blue and rose-coloured fancy flowers…. Swansdown boa tippet. ’
It’s
also obvious, from the model’s elaborate hair style, that a lady’s maid is a
must. ‘Manchette’ means cuff or ruffle; personally, I’d have called them
frills, but, doubtless en manchette sounds more haute couture.
The
fashion section continues with news on what’s in and what’s out – 'Dunstable
straw bonnets are in and this Season’s colours are emerald green, azure blue,
lilac, rose and canary-yellow. In Paris, blond lace is very popular and, for
jewellery, it’s gold and emeralds.'
Reading lady
There
are a number of small black and white ‘embellishments’ in the magazine and the
magazine opens with this print of a reading lady. Underneath is written: Richard
Ryan to a Young Lady: on seeing her reading a volume of his poems . This is
followed by the poem itself. The poem ends: Say, what avails it, when I’m
gone / What future ages think of me? /Oh, dearer far to know that one /
Approves me now, and that is thee.
The
‘preceptive distichs’ mentioned in the List of Contents are moral
maxims, e.g:
Avoid
voluptuous pleasure in your prime –
Your days will last and you enjoy their time.
Or
Avoid
the dice, destruction’s net and snare;
The rich man’s prison and the poor man’s fare.
I’m
not sure what the second line means but the general sentiment is clear enough.
Violet evening dress
The
written description of this violet-coloured satin is illegible in places. The
illustrations are hand-coloured and occasionally, as here, the paint was still
a touch wet and left a smear on the opposite page which obscured some
of the description.
However,
I can read some of it: 'The border is trimmed with crepe ruches
to correspond with the dress, they form wreaths of a singularly novel and
pretty appearance; one is arranged near the lower edge of the hem, the other
considerably higher. The head-dress is a green velvet beret, the
brim formed en coeur is decorated with white gauze ribbon, disposed en
tulippe on the inside; five white ostrich feathers, which fall in contrary
directions, are placed in front of the crown.'
I
have to say that I'm not a fan of those absurdly wide shoulders.
Lady Jane Grey solicited to accept the crown
There
are a also number of articles on famous women. The Lady Jane
Grey engraving is accompanied by a poem by a Miss Leslie which begins:
Oh,
not for me, oh not for me, /That fatal toy of gems and gold…
Some
of The Lady’s Pocket Magazine’s comments on famous women are, frankly,
bizarre. Take this one on Anne Boleyn: ‘We think she remained a girl after
she was a wife – a pretty, tittering partner in a dance, but devoid of the mind
and steadiness suited to the conjugal state.’
Not
a view of the forceful, intelligent and sophisticated Anne we hold today!
Charles Barford with Lucy
and Emily
The
short story, Flirtation – a Tale of Modern Times has interesting echoes
of Lydia Bennet. When the regiment comes to town, the lovely Emily’s attention
wanders from the eligible Charles, who adores her, to the fascinating Colonel
Darlington … Will Emily come to her senses before Charles runs out of patience?
Or will Charles turn to her sensible older sister, Lucy?
Alas,
poor Lucy doesn’t even get a look in; at twenty-seven, she’s far too old.
Though, if I were editor, I’d demand that Charles dumps the tiresome Emily and
goes for sensible Lucy instead.
Pink evening dress, 1831
This
is what the magazine has to say about the above garment. ‘A dress of
rose-coloured crepe over satin to correspond; the corsage is cut square,
of a delicate height, it is draped à la grecq (sic), and bordered with
blond lace. Beret sleeve, surmounted by an epaulette, composed of square ends
of rose-coloured ribbon … The trimming of the skirt consists of nœuds (knots)
to correspond… The hair is dressed in a few loose ringlets at the sides of the
face, and in full bows on the forehead, and on the crown of the head; it is
ornamented with rose-coloured fancy flowers.’
The
hair looks fiendishly difficult to do, though, from the way it’s described, one
feels that any half-competent lady’s maid should be able to do it in a trice.
And what on earth does ‘a delicate height’ mean?
The birthplace of Robert
Burns
Occasionally,
the magazine allows a small article about more serious literature, see the
illustration above. Underneath it is a short description of Burns’ birthplace;
the cottage was actually built by the poet’s father, and we have the
description of it in a quote from Burns' The Cotter’s Saturday Night.
The article ends with the note that ‘the house has been turned into a snug
public house’ and the landlord has pinned up the following inscription by
the door: Halt, passenger, and read; / This is the humble cottage, / That
gave birth to the celebrated /Poet, Robert Burns.
The
Ladies’ Pocket Magazine tells us a lot about the period:
what ladies wore, what they read and how they thought. Or, perhaps, it might be
more accurate to say, what the, presumably, male editor thought they should
be reading and thinking.
Elizabeth
Hawksley
4 comments:
I enjoyed this post very much. Do you know if there were any literary magazines for young boys or young girls during the Regency or late Georgian eras, or did these appear on the scene more in the Victorian era?
Thank you for your interesting comment, Lori. In the 18th and early 19th centuries, children would have had access to translations of Perrault's Fairy Tales, or The Arabian Nights' stories, or the tales of Robin Hood, Dick Whittington, folk tales and so on. But the mid-19th century was really the period when children's books took off in a big way. Charles Dickens 'A Christmas Carol' was published in 1843, for example.
If you are interested in following this up, I recommend 'The Oxford Companion to Children's Literature' edited by Humphrey Carpenter and Mari Prichard. They deal with everything from religious stories for children, e.g. Hesba Stretton's
'Jessica's First Prayer' in 1867, to the rise of comics and Penny Dreadfuls with their blood-curdling tales of murder!
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