Showing posts with label richard valpy french. Show all posts
Showing posts with label richard valpy french. Show all posts

Thursday, April 9, 2009

SOCIAL INTERCOURSE

An automatic beer truck


The latter days are but a repetition of the former. `As it was ... so shall it be also. They did eat, they drank.'

Social life is intimately connected with the social or festive board; in short, with eating and drinking, because these are a necessity of nature. Other customs and habits may be fleeting, but men must eat, men must drink. Food ministers not only to the principle of life, but to that of brain force also. Thought is stimulated, activity is excited, man becomes communicable. He then seeks society and enjoys it. Thus has social intercourse gathered round the social board. Eating and drinking are two indispensable factors in dealing with the history of a nation's social life. Adopting the adage by way of accommodation, `In vino veritas,' truth is out when wine is in, once know the entire history of a nation's drinking, and you have important materials for gauging that nation's social life.


So does Richard Valpy French continue in his introduction to Nineteen Centuries of Drink in England.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

ON HOSPITABLE THOUGHTS INTENT

Satan


It must interest every thoughtful being to know how our national life and national customs have come to be what they are. They have not sprung up in a night like a mushroom. They have been forming for ages. Each day has contributed something. The great river of social life, ever flowing onward to the ocean of eternity, has been constantly fed by the tributaries of necessity, appetite, fashion, fancy, vanity, caprice, and imitation. Man is a bundle of habits and customs.

With some, it is true, life is mere routine, a round of conventionalities; literally `one day telleth another;' with others, each day is a reality, has its fresh plan, is a rational item in the account of life. To these nothing is without its meaning; there is a definiteness, a precision, about its hours of action, of thought, of diversion, of ministering to the bodily claims of sustenance by eating and drinking. Around the latter, social life has fearfully encircled itself. The world was, and still is, -- `On hospitable thoughts intent.'


The above, taken from a tome which I suspect we will cite often here at Drinking Healths, is one Richard Valpy French's 1884 work, Nineteen Centuries of Drink In England.