View Full Version : Meaning of "kiss" in 1910
woofwoofwoof
02-24-2019, 05:51 PM
Just started "Howards End" by Forster. Early on, there is a kiss between two characters which is both scandalous and assumed to be a prelude to marriage. I'm never sure of writing from this time whether "kiss" is a euphemism for sex of if the times were such that a kiss meant more in 1910 than now.
What's the consensus of the meaning?
ennison
02-26-2019, 03:15 PM
A kiss is just a kiss on that you can rely
tailor STATELY
02-26-2019, 05:01 PM
Shelley said it well: "Soul meets soul on lover's lips."
1910 was shortly after the Victorian era and the conventions of that era possibly continued to be embraced. In a quick search at http://victorian-era.org/victorian-era-courtship-rules-and-marriage.html I found this:
4. There was no physical contact between the woman and the gentleman until marriage.
5. Victorian etiquette for men courting dictated that a man could offer the girl his hand if the road was uneven. That was the only touch, which was accepted between a man and a woman, who was not engaged to him.
Ta ! (short for tarradiddle),
tailor STATELY
woofwoofwoof
02-26-2019, 06:12 PM
Thanks, I appreciate the responses. The last few books I read included Portnoy's Complaint, Tropic of Cancer, and A Clockwork Orange, so maybe my judgement has been affected....
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