St. Valentine's Day
February 14
Custom decrees that on this day the
young shall exchange missives in which the love of the sender
is told in verses, pictures, and sentiments. No reason beyond a
guess can be given to connect St. Valentine with these customs.
He was a Christian martyr, about 270 A.D., while the practice
of sending valentines had its origin in the heathen worship of
Juno. It is Cupid's day, and no boy or girl needs any
encouragement to make the most of it.
WHO BEGAN IT?
BY OLIVE THORNE
There's one thing we know positively, that St. Valentine
didn't begin this fourteenth of February excitement; but who
did is a question not so easy to answer. I don't think any one
would have begun it if he could have known what the simple
customs of his day would have grown into, or could even have
imagined the frightful valentines that disgrace our shops
to-day.
It began, for us, with our English ancestors, who used to
assemble on the eve of St. Valentine's day, put the names of
all the young maidens promiscuously in a box, and let each
bachelor draw one out. The damsel whose name fell to his lot
became his valentine for the year. He wore her name in his
bosom or on his sleeve, and it was his duty to attend her and
protect her. As late as the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries
this custom was very popular, even among the upper classes.
But the wiseacres have traced the custom farther back. Some
of them think it was begun by the ancient Romans, who had on
the fourteenth or fifteenth of February a festival in honor of
Lupercus, "the destroyer of wolves"—a wolf-destroyer being
quite worthy of honor in those wild days, let me tell you. At
this festival it was the custom, among other curious things, to
pair off the young men and maidens in the same chance way, and
with the same result of a year's attentions.
Even this is not wholly satisfactory. Who began it among the
Romans? becomes the next interesting question. One old writer
says it was brought to Rome from Arcadia sixty years before the
Trojan war (which Homer wrote about, you know). I'm sure that's
far enough back to satisfy anybody. The same writer also says
that the Pope tried to abolish it in the fifth century, but he
succeeded only in sending it down to us in the name of St.
Valentine instead of Lupercus.
Our own ancestry in England and Scotland have observed some
very funny customs within the last three centuries. At one time
valentines were fashionable among the nobility, and, while
still selected by lot, it became the duty of a gentleman to
give to the lady who fell to his lot a handsome present. Pieces
of jewelry costing thousands of dollars were not unusual,
though smaller things, as gloves, were more common.
There was a tradition among the country people that every
bird chose its mate on Valentine's day; and at one time it was
the custom for young folks to go out before daylight on that
morning and try to catch an owl and two sparrows in a net. If
they succeeded, it was a good omen, and entitled them to gifts
from the villagers. Another fashion among them was to write the
valentine, tie it to an apple or orange, and steal up to the
house of the chosen one in the evening, open the door quietly,
and throw it in.
Those were the days of charms, and of course the rural
maidens had a sure and infallible charm foretelling the future
husband. On the eve of St. Valentine's day, the anxious damsel
prepared for sleep by pinning to her pillow five bay leaves,
one at each corner and one in the middle (which must have been
delightful to sleep on, by the way). If she dreamed of her
sweetheart, she was sure to marry him before the end of the
year.
But to make it a sure thing, the candidate for matrimony
must boil an egg hard, take out the yolk, and fill its place
with salt. Just before going to bed, she must eat egg, salt,
shell and all, and neither speak nor drink after it. If that
wouldn't insure her a vivid dream, there surely could be no
virtue in charms.
Modern valentines, aside from the valuable presents often
contained in them, are very pretty things, and they are growing
prettier every year, since large business houses spare neither
skill nor money in getting them up. The most interesting thing
about them, to "grown-ups," is the way they are made; and
perhaps even you youngsters, who watch eagerly for the postman,
"sinking beneath the load of delicate embarrassments not his
own," would like to know how satin and lace and flowers and
other dainty things grew into a valentine.
It was no fairy's handiwork. It went through the hands of
grimy-looking workmen before it reached your hands.
To be sure, a dreamy artist may have designed it, but a
lithographer, with inky fingers, printed the picture part of
it; a die-cutter, with sleeves rolled up, made a pattern in
steel of the lace-work on the edge; and a dingy-looking
pressman, with a paper hat on, stamped the pattern around the
picture. Another hard-handed workman rubbed the back of the
stamped lace with sand-paper till it came in holes and looked
like lace, and not merely like stamped paper; and a row of
girls at a common long table put on the colors with stencils,
gummed on the hearts and darts and cupids and flowers, and
otherwise finished the thing exactly like the pattern before
them.
You see, the sentiment about a valentine doesn't begin until
Tom, Dick, or Harry takes it from the stationer, and writes
your name on it.
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