Tag Archives: steampunk

17 Euphemisms for Sex From the 1800s

17 Euphemisms for Sex From the 1800s

Gail Carriger shared this article with me on Facebook.  She writes awesome Steampunk novels including the Parasol Protectorate series.  I encourage you to read them.  You can also read mine if you wish, set in the late Victorian period as well.

While shoe-horning these into conversation today might prove difficult, these 17 synonyms for sex were used often enough in 19th-century England to earn a place in the 1811 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue, a book for upper-crust Britons who had no idea what the proles were talking about.

1. AMOROUS CONGRESS

To say two people were engaged in the amorous congress was by far the most polite option on the list, oftentimes serving as the definition for other, less discreet synonyms.

2. BASKET-MAKING

“Those two recently opened a basket-making shop.” From a method of making children’s stockings, in which knitting the heel is called basket-making.

3. BREAD AND BUTTER

One on top of the other. “Rumor has it he found her bread and butter fashion with the neighbor.”

4. BRUSH

“Yeah, we had a brush once.” The emphasis here is on brevity; just a fling, no big deal.

5. CLICKET

“They left together, so they’re probably at clicket.” This was originally used only for foxes, but became less specific as more and more phrases for doing it were needed.

6. FACE-MAKING

Aside from the obvious, this also comes from “making children,” because babies have faces.

7. BLANKET HORNPIPE

There is probably no way to use this in seriousness or discreetly, but there you have it.

8. BLOW THE GROUNSILS

“Grounsils” are foundation timbers, so “on the floor.”

9. CONVIVIAL SOCIETY

Similar to “amorous congress” in that this was a gentler term suitable for even the noble classes to use, even if they only whispered it.

10. TAKE A FLYER

“Flyers” being shoes, this is “dressed, or without going to bed.”

11. GREEN GOWN

Giving a girl a green gown can only happen in the grass.

12. LOBSTER KETTLE

A woman who sleeps with soldiers coming in at port is said to “make a lobster kettle” of herself.

13. MELTING MOMENTS

Those shared by “a fat man and woman in amorous congress.”

14. PULLY HAWLY

A game at pully hawly is a series of affairs.

15. ST. GEORGE

In the story of St. George and the Dragon, the dragon reared up from the lake to tower over the saint. “Playing at St. George” casts a woman as the dragon and puts her on top.

16. A STITCH

Similar to having a brush, “making a stitch” is a casual affair.

17. TIFF

A tiff could be a minor argument or falling-out, as we know it. In the 19th century, it was also a term for eating or drinking between meals, or in this case, a quickie.

Read the full text here: http://mentalfloss.com/article/12399/17-euphemisms-sex-1800s#ixzz2bFhAPP5J
–brought to you by mental_floss!

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Rifle Juggling

Personally, if I were to juggle firearms I think I would choose something smaller, like derringers, unloaded.  Instead, here in the late 1800’s of steampunk fame, we see the rifle juggler.  At first glance those look more like carbines than rifles, but the bayonets attached give it that extra air of danger.  I can but wonder if they were also loaded…

Late 1800s:

Juggling rifles

Juggler

“As well as the comedians and singers, part of a music hall programme would include dancing, acrobatics or aerial acts. Novelty acts came in all shapes and sizes and might include any of the aforementioned skills, but with some unusual twist to make them more sensational or, as in this case more dangerous – the rifles have bayonets attached.”

– V&A

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Talking Toy Doll from 1890

Thomas Edison produced a talking doll, which he called The Greatest Wonder of the Age

1890:

Edison’s Phonograph Doll, “The Greatest Wonder of the Age”

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Steampunk Aircrew

This is another recurring post on my blog of potential Steampunk Airship crew.  Please select crew for your next airship.  You can’t pick them all.  Keep in mind what purpose your ship will have – pirate, merchant, explorer, trader, military vessel, world conquest…etc.

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1898: Comedy Musical Called “The Air Ship”

c. 1898:

The Air Ship: A musical farce comedy

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Electric Stun Gloves – Tasers of 1913

Electrical stun gloves (1913)

As reported in “Popular Electricity and the World’s Advocate”, 1913:

Electric gloves

Now electricity comes to the policeman’s aid. Jeremiah Creedon, a resident of Philadelphia and an engineer on the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad, has perfected and patented a device by which a policeman can control the most desperate and unruly prisoner.

The inventor describes it as “an improved electrical device for use of policemen and others in making arrests, subduing unruly persons and resisting attacks.” It consists essentially of a pair of gloves provided with electrodes which may be brought in contact with the person grasped by the hand of the wearer. An electric circuit, the terminals of which are formed by the electrodes, supplies an electric shock to the prisoner and effectually renders him unable to resist arrest.

The power for this instrument comes from a battery, worn either in a belt that is provided with it, or in the pocket of the policeman’s coat. Connected with this device also is a small lamp which can be held in one hand and which receives it’s light from the battery. By this means both force and light are provided.

The belt is so fashioned as to take the place of the regulation policeman’s belt. A compact storage battery is carried on the hip and is connected in electric circuit, by conductors, with the primary windings of an induction coil. The secondary windings of the induction coil are connected by flexible, insulated conducting cords or cables to electrode plates located in the palms of a pair of gloves, the electrode plates being insulated from the gloves and from the hands of the wearer by insulating disks.

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1862: Electrotherapy in Paris

1862:

Electrotherapy, Paris

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“Guillaume Duchenne (1806-1875), French physician, demonstrating the use of electrotherapy. He applied electrodes to the cheeks of a woman to stimulate the facial muscles, at the Salpetriere Hospital in Paris.”

– Wikicommons

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Steam-powered Race Cars

Scalding hot speeds achieved by automobiles blowing off a little steam…  These are real historical steam-powered racing cars.  How cool is that?

“A Stanley Steamer setting a record mile at the Daytona Beach Road Course.

“The Stanley Motor Carriage Company was an American manufacturer of steam-engine vehicles from 1902 to 1924. The cars made by the company were colloquially called Stanley Steamers, although several different models were produced. The Stanley Steamer was sometimes nicknamed “The Flying Teapot”.The Stanley company produced a series of advertising campaigns trying to woo the car-buying public away from the “internal explosion engine,” to little effect.”

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Floating Church from 1849

1849:

The Floating Church of the Redeemer

“View of the floating Episcopal church, built 1849. Shows the church on pontoons in the Delaware harbor. The church moored at the foot of Dock Street until reconsecrated to a New Jersey parish in 1853 and placed on a brick foundation. Building burned 1868.”

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Steampunk Aircrew

The latest installment of Steampunk Aircrew.  You are outfitting a new airship, who do you hire as crew.  The following are some applicants.  Choose wisely as you cannot afford them all.  Do you want to fight for the Queen?  for Freedom?  Be a merchant, a pirate, an explorer or a conqueror?  (For previous posts, type “Steampunk Aircrew” into the search block on my home page.)

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