mightymads: (Default)
[personal profile] mightymads posting in [community profile] victorian221b


In this famous scene Watson says that Holmes taught him how to dance. But in actuality where did gentlemen learn this art? (Ladies did probably at home). Was it an obligatory part of homeschooling? But some attended public schools from quite an early age. Was it included in the school curriculum then? A cursory search returned some 19th century manuals on dancing, but dancing is all about practice. You can read as much as you want and hardly learn anything without trying it.

If anyone has links to sources about it or knows something, please help?



PS gifs are not mine, found via google

Date: 2019-03-28 01:19 pm (UTC)
rachelindeed: Havelock Island (Default)
From: [personal profile] rachelindeed
This question reminds me of one of the passages from The Education of Henry Adams that made me laugh out loud. Henry's father was serving as the U.S. ambassador to England in the early 1860s, and Henry came along as his private secretary. He was forced to attend social functions among the British upper crust, and was hilariously mortified all of the time. (He writes about himself in the third person, but this is all autobiographical):

"His social education was more barren still, and more trying to his vanity. His little mistakes in etiquette or address made him writhe with torture. He never forgot the first two or three social functions he attended: one an afternoon at Miss Burdett Coutts's in Stratton Place, where he hid himself in the embrasure of a window and hoped that no one noticed him; another was a garden-party given by the old anti-slavery Duchess Dowager of Sutherland at Chiswick, where the American Minister and Mrs. Adams were kept in conversation by the old Duchess till every one else went away except the young Duke and his cousins, who set to playing leap-frog on the lawn. At intervals during the next thirty years Henry Adams continued to happen upon the Duke, who, singularly enough, was always playing leap-frog. Still another nightmare he suffered at a dance given by the old Duchess Dowager of Somerset, a terrible vision in castanets, who seized him and forced him to perform a Highland fling before the assembled nobility and gentry, with the daughter of the Turkish Ambassador for partner. This might seem humorous to some, but to him the world turned to ashes."

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