comic valentine
Accession Number NWHCM : 1922.135.774
Description
Comic Valentine card, printed in black, grey, red and yellow on white, showing a shocked man, standing on his doorstep, confronted by a new-born baby in a basket; verse reads - Only one more! It knows its pa, but pray don't stand aghast / For little ones, I've often heard, will find their home at last / You wicked soul, you are a whited sepulchre, 'tis said / So take it in - it's meant for you - and tuck it up in bed / But mind you, keep aloof from girls, whenever you're in town / They don't like babies much, you know, unless they are their own!; card is animated by means of a paper flap which lifts to reveal the baby in the basket; 1870 - 1890; three copies
Read Morecomic valentine
A market for satirical cards emerged alongside the popularity of caricatures as an art form and the wide availability of cheap coloured printing in the 1840s – 1850s. ‘Mock’ or ‘Vinegar’ typically feature unflattering caricature images and mean-spirited, sometimes offensive satirical verses. Cards were cheaply produced and could be bought for one penny. Such cards lampooned people of all trades and professions and they frequently stereotyped racial and ethnic groups, especially African-Americans and the Irish. Women were included in the venom, with old maids, assertive women, ‘flirts’and ‘coquettes’ portrayed as devils, snakes, tigers, or hissing cats. The receiver of the Valentine paid the postage initially, so the receipt of these cards must have been doubly hurtful.