I love chocolate...

Yet Another Period Drama Blog

Friday, November 8, 2013

To love & be loved

She wanted love
But got pushed away
Wanted to be noticed
The wrong way
Wanted to love 
But that was the only way
To be loved or so she thought
Didn't care 
Just wanted love
But could not find it
Got lost
Then found it
Didn't know
What to do with it...

What is morality?
Or tranquility?
Happiness is it just a dream?

It's not reality

Happiness
Contentment
Security

So hard to wish for? 

To love & be loved


Poem created and written by violet Hayward

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Ooh fall is in the air... And I'm in the mood for some ouija conjuring....





I had to share an article from one of my favorite newsletter email subscriptions called Recollections. I so adore their turn of the century clothing. But what really surprised me was I didn't know that they also had a blog. And of course being Halloween around the corner I wanted to share this little article about the victorian era and a little ouija divination. 



Halloween Pastimes

Just to help get us in the proper frame of mind, we have posted a brief article about the Ouija board on Recollections Blog. Victorians were fascinated with the idea of communicating with those who had already passed on. Even though “divination” was declared a sin by the church, this board game was extremely popular along with séances and other attempts to reach deceased loved ones.

Did you Know?
 
At Halloween time Victorians would have parlour games that were supposed to foretell the future. Two that could be played using apples were the “Apple Grab” and “Tossing the Apple Peel.

For the first game, the names of all the boys and girls at the party were etched onto apples. Apples with the boys’ names went into one barrel, and all the girls’ names into another. The children take turns “grabbing” an apple from the barrel of the opposite sex using anything BUT their hands. The apple they grabbed will name their future love.

For Tossing the Apple Peel, Girls would peel an apple, making sure the peel is kept intact in one long winding strip. She would then toss the peel over her shoulder, and let it fall to the ground. The peel will fall into a shape that represents the initial of the first name of her true love.

 

Those Victorians, who from today’s point of view seemed to have a decidedly morbid bent, were fascinated by the idea of being able to communicate with departed loved ones. Though it was first brought to the market in 1890, the parlour game known as the Ouija board had been around for many years before that time. Victorians were exposed to death far more often than we are today, and the Ouija board gained immense popularity.

Between the 1840’s and 1920’s, there was a great interest in spiritualism and divination. At the same time the mainstream church declared divination a sin, which only served to drive the practice into private homes and small gatherings. Before 1890 people made their own devises similar to Ouija boards whereby a spirit might answer simple questions. Taking advantage of this “new craze” in May of 1890, three men filed a patent for the then well-known “planchette” and “talking board”.

The enduring fascination with this game is still evident today. What group of giggling little girls have not asked questions of this mysterious board during a sleepover? As ever, there are those who claim that this type of experimentation is a sin, while others see it as a harmless pastime for a long Halloween evening.


Monday, January 14, 2013

The Moors of Wuthering Heights

Wuthering Heights...

An image on show at the exhibition of Top Withens farmhouse near Haworth which is thought to have been an inspiration for the Emily Brontë classic 'Wuthering Heights

'“Catherine Earnshaw, may you not rest as long as I am living. You said I killed you--haunt me then. The murdered do haunt their murderers. I believe--I know that ghosts have wandered the earth. Be with me always--take any form--drive me mad. Only do not leave me in this abyss, where I cannot find you! Oh, God! It is unutterable! I cannot live without my life! I cannot live without my soul!” 

“I cannot express it; but surely you and everybody have a notion that there is or should be an existence of yours beyond you. What were the use of my creation, if I were entirely contained here? My great miseries in this world have been Heathcliff's miseries, and I watched and felt each from the beginning: my great thought in living is himself. If all else perished, and he remained, I should still continue to be; and if all else remained, and he were annihilated, the universe would turn to a mighty stranger: I should not seem a part of it. My love for Linton is like the foliage in the woods: time will change it, I'm well aware, as winter changes the trees. My love for Heathcliff resembles the eternal rocks beneath: a source of little visible delight, but necessary. Nelly, I am Heathcliff! He's always, always in my mind: not as a pleasure, any more than I am always a pleasure to myself, but as my own being.” 










History of the moors at Wuthering Heights...



Saturday, January 12, 2013

Vanity Fair





Vanity Fair

I finally had a chance to watch Vanity Fair last night, Since we decided to get netflix I have had the oppertunity to enjoy so many great movies that before I never before had the pleasure of viewing. So of course I have to pick my period drama movies first. 
I so enjoyed this movie due to Reese Witherspoon playing in it I don't think she even plays in a movie that I don't like. 
The story line was very interesting though...
Growing up poor in London, Becky Sharp (Witherspoon) defies her poverty-stricken background and ascends the social ladder alongside her best friend, Amelia.

Storyline

William Makepeace Thackeray's witty assessment of the British class system, as seen through the experiences of one young woman, is brought to the screen with some serious star power in this period comedy drama. Becky Sharp (Reese Witherspoon) is a bright and ambitious girl born to a poor British family. Becky is determined to make something of herself however she can, and after accepting a job as a nanny for the children of the powerful and aristocratic Sir Pitt Crawley (Bob Hoskins), she wastes no time ingratiating herself with the family. Pretty Becky catches the eye of Crawley's handsome and eligible son Rawdon (James Purefoy), and becomes chummy with sharp-tongued Aunt Matilda (Eileen Atkins). Between the two of them, Becky is introduced to London's most exclusive social circle, where she becomes re-acquainted with Amelia Sedley (Romola Garai), a former school chum who is amused by Becky's efforts to scale the ladder of social influence. Becky weds Rawdon, but following initial happiness, the social and economic stability she dreamed of begins to collapse when he begins drowning his troubles in gambling and drink, and soon she turns to the powerful Marquess of Steyne (Gabriel Byrne) for support. Meanwhile, Amelia's fortunes fall even harder following the death of her husband. Vanity Fair was directed by Mira Nair, who enjoyed a surprise international success with 2002's Monsoon Wedding. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
Its like I really wanted to see Reese Witherspoon's role move up the social ladder but the way she went about it was not the best way, it was her downfall especcially when she sent her son away I totally lost all respect for her. 
And then her friend Amelia what a pathetic sight I must admit. In the begining her love for that idiot Captain George Henry Osborne. I mean he was a jerk in the beginning to the end. I mean to fall for your best friends friend that kind of tells you what kind of scum ball he is. Of course Amelia finally finds out in the end. 

Thursday, January 10, 2013

Mansfield Park...



Jane Austen's  Mansfield Park


For the past couple of nights I've been entertaining myself with watching Jane Austen's Mansfield Park. 
I must admit it was quite good and made me want to be like Fannie Price even though in this time in age who could? unless your of an angelic creature. And to think of one so good hearted and enduring. I definatelly had to look up this certain word I always question myself from time to time when I do not use a certain word often. And I found this :en·dur·ing 
adj.
1. Lasting; continuing; durable: a novel of enduring interest.
2. Long-suffering; patient.
I found this definition of Fanny to be her.
 Poor dear sweet Fannie she really did endure...
And like they say good things happen to those who wait.
I am so happy she did not fall for the fake play that Henry Crawford tried. 
And I just love that about Fanny that she may come off passive and you would think gullible but she stood by her instincts and heart and the outcome was what prevailed. And lets not forget Henry, he gave in to his lust and went off with Maria.
So lets see... 
you then have Maria, the daughter of Sir Thomas Bertram
What a piece of work right? She has a perfectly great husband yes I know he's not the handsomest but by god you know he's trust worthy and loves her. Which makes makes him beautiful. 
So typical of Maria to run off with Mr.Crawford, you ask me they deserve each other.
 So they're both ruined at the end for their selfishness and lust to which we all know doesn't last.
Then you have...
  Edmund Bertram. The Bertrams' younger son. He will become a clergyman.The only one of the Bertrams' children with a good head and a good heart, Edmund is Fanny's closest companion.
Then Edmund blindly falls in love with shallow Mary which almost becomes the fall of him.

Then of course there is Mary Crawford...
 She is beautiful and charming, but also shallow and evil. She becomes friends with a reluctant Fanny, while Edmund falls in love with and nearly proposes to her.
 Then of course there's 
Henry Craford...
  -  Mary's brother. He is equally charming and possibly even more amoral, and he possesses a sizeable estate. First Maria and Julia fall in love with him, and he takes to Maria, despite her engagement. When Maria marries and the sisters leave Mansfield, he falls for Fanny and proposes to her. Everyone is convinced he is a changed man.
To we know the answer to that one...

I really found this Movie to be very well made and I thank my dear Jane Austen for another huge sucess. I almost to want to compare this to A Jane eyre but I cannot quite do this you see only in the same as maybe the role of Jane eyre to Fanny they both attain the some what same characteristics.
This one film was filmed in 1983 
And I've noticed that it had been remade several times. I really do look forward to seing the more modern versions, anything Jane Austen really I just adore and will definatelly occupy my time viewing and will be content.