In November 1756, the Bath apothecary John Lovell became acquainted with Sarah Harvey and her aunt Mary Smith (née Harvey), of Shaw House in Melksham.Footnote 1 John soon found that his acquaintance with Sarah had developed into ‘the highest Esteem’, which ‘gradually improv'd into real Love’.Footnote 2 Aunt Smith discouraged the courtship and quashed his proposals owing to his insufficient fortune. Yet he remained a frequent visitor and family friend, receiving ‘an exceeding fine Turkey’ that year as a Christmas gift.Footnote 3 In return, he sent a keg of sturgeon, a large high-status fish typically eaten for a treat or special occasion, which he had received from a friend in London.Footnote 4 He then determinedly continued his pursuit of Sarah, resulting in him being promptly exiled from Shaw.Footnote 5 In a show of humility and attempt at rapprochement, he once again turned to gifts of food, sending Aunt Smith a ‘Baskett with Two Cakes’ in July 1757, followed by some produce from his father's garden. These exchanges provide a useful entry point into studying the cultural meanings of food in eighteenth-century England, as they suggest the much wider significance it held beyond simply eating it. As the anthropologist Mary Douglas writes, ‘Food is not feed.’ Rather, it is a whole system of communication.Footnote 6 In particular, the role and significance of food gifts during the process of courtship represents a whole system of emotional communication which is waiting to be decoded by historians.
The very everyday nature of food gifts means that they have often escaped our notice in studies of courtship and matrimony. This is despite the fact, as Sarah Ann Robin notes, that they were ‘likely the most common of all amorous gifts’, exchanged routinely by couples and their families and not always memorialised in text.Footnote 7 By their very nature, gifts of food were transient, perishable and designed to be consumed either by or with a loved one. Their meaning and intent was therefore very different from quintessential love tokens such as gloves, garters, ribbons, rings and locks of hair which were designed to be kept, and touched, kissed and gazed upon ad infinitum.Footnote 8 Food gifts were further unique in comparison with items such as seals and silhouettes as they were ‘ontologically real and active’ objects able to nourish and materially change the human body.Footnote 9 Given the flourishing of food history as an area of inquiry, a reappraisal of the social, emotional and material significance of food gifts in the making of marriage is long overdue.Footnote 10 This article contends that food represents a crucial component of what Natalie Zemon Davis has termed the ‘gift mode’ during courtship – ‘an essential relational mode, a repertoire of behaviour, a register with its own rules, language, etiquette, and gestures’ – which can shed new light on the mechanics of courtship in everyday life, how intimate relationships were navigated through objects, and how edible items could be harnessed as vehicles for emotional meaning.Footnote 11
The article brings several different historiographies into conversation – chiefly histories of courtship and matrimony, food and food gifts, emotions and material culture, also extending to the senses, embodiment and the natural world. Gifts of food have occasionally featured in histories of courtship, though their appearance has been largely incidental. In her study of Tudor customs, Diana O'Hara found that 14 out of 403 couples involved in matrimonial suits in the Canterbury church courts (3.5 per cent) exchanged animals and foodstuffs as tokens, ranging from pigs, cattle, pigeons and fish, to peas, strawberries, spices and cake.Footnote 12 In her examination of the London Consistory Court between 1586 and 1611, Loreen Giese similarly found that wine was deployed as a monetary gift by courting men hoping to ‘buy’ a woman's love.Footnote 13 The main challenge for the church courts was determining when these items were intended as contractual symbols of marriage, and when they represented more everyday gestures of goodwill, highlighting the inherent flexibility and malleability of food as a gift. As David Cressy found in one case brought before the Durham Consistory Court in 1605, a man could take a ‘kindly received’ bag of apples and a piece of root ginger bitten by both parties as a symbol of betrothal, especially when situated alongside other tokens such as hair, gold coins and a ring, though a woman could just as well contend otherwise.Footnote 14 It is clear, however, that gifts of food did hold some import as a token of marriage, even if their implications have yet to be fully realised by historians.
While food gifts have not played a substantive role in histories of courtship, a significant body of work has established how food was used to create bonds of friendship and patronage between neighbours, kin, tenants and landlords, farmers and landowners, masters and servants, monarchs and courtiers.Footnote 15 These studies have shown how the importance of food gifts declined to some extent in the first half of the seventeenth century, with the growth of London and greater concentration of elite families in the capital, the expansion of retail and the emergence of new patterns of urban sociability. Nonetheless, as Felicity Heal posits, ‘more evidence points to the flexibility of the food gift than to its inexorable decline’, as a panoply of ‘new gifts of the rare and delicate’ came to the fore.Footnote 16 This article consequently explores the flexible meanings of a diversifying range of food gifts over the long eighteenth century, which has been pinpointed by historians as a key moment in the transformation and revitalisation of gifting practices.Footnote 17 In doing so, the article demonstrates how courtship was a key arena in which food gifts retained their vitality in creating and sustaining emotional bonds.
This research also contributes to the rapidly expanding field of emotions and material culture, extending a scholarship which has focused principally on made objects which were created, inscribed and preserved by humans to also encompass the organic, the transitory and the ephemeral.Footnote 18 As Joanne Begiato has urged, ‘there is critical value in including all types of objects in discussions about emotions in the past’, from foods to memories and smells, and even entirely imagined objects, calling on historians to be more expansive in their definitions of materiality.Footnote 19 The most recent work on landscape and environments has done just this, probing our emotional relationships with nature, land, animals and – most importantly – foodstuffs.Footnote 20 Rachel Winchcombe has emphasised the power of foods in maintaining ‘emotional health’, with items such as chocolate believed to stimulate passions such as joy and cheerfulness whilst banishing those of grief and sadness.Footnote 21 Sasha Handley has similarly shown how the milky mixture of sack posset could aid fertility and stimulate health, as well as eliciting affective states from loyalty to a monarch to love for a spouse.Footnote 22 Such work is shaped by a burgeoning new and neo-materialist scholarship in which foods possess their own active force and lively vitality as a type of matter. As living organisms and what the political theorist Jane Bennett has termed ‘edible matter’, foods can be treated as ‘actants’ which exist alongside and inside human beings – ‘conative bodies vying alongside and within an other complex body (a person's “own” body)’.Footnote 23 Part of the distinctive nature of food gifts as emotional objects therefore lies in their agentic material properties and ability to act upon the human body, nourishing it and stimulating feelings of joy, delight, love and desire.
The article at once examines the nature of food as an emotional object, and the navigation of courtship through food. As scholars such as Christopher Kissane highlight, food is good to think with, as it provides a useful prism to reflect and refract the guiding principles and beliefs structuring everyday life.Footnote 24 In doing so, the article draws upon a wide range of source material including material objects, visual sources such as paintings and prints, and textual sources including pamphlets, medical treatises, ballads, songs, plays, periodicals, novels and trade cards. Particularly important are letters and diaries, which are especially revealing of courting practices among the middling sorts and provincial urban gentry, who set out the emotional and social significance of their gifts at great length in writing. These men were schoolmasters, apothecaries, clergymen, composers, lawyers, Justices of the Peace, businessmen, Members of Parliament and landed gentlemen, whilst the women were primarily gentlemen's daughters. These sources provide the most detailed evidence of gifts proffered by courting men, who sent the greatest number and variety of food gifts, having primary responsibility for instigating and actively pursuing a match.
The article's key questions ask: how were gifts of food used to navigate the process of courtship? What exactly distinguished sweets, meat, fish and fruit as suitable items to present to a lover? How did they vary by class, gender, across the country, over the century and through different stages of courtship? What might smelling, tasting and consuming these items reveal about the role of the senses and the body in courting rituals? And more broadly, how were organic or perishable items such as food used to communicate and materialise emotions in practice? In endeavouring to answer these questions, the article is divided into four sections which each examine particular categories of edible gift: sweet treats and snacks such as cakes, comfits and gingerbread; exclusive or rare tokens such as venison and hothouse fruits; items cultivated in a family garden or estate and shared among the families of courting couples; nutritious items designed to safeguard the health of a beloved. These are arranged broadly to follow the progress of a relationship, from the cakes and wine used as a means of flirtation to the game meats used to demonstrate masculine prowess, and the oysters deployed to show concern for the health of a future spouse.
Flirtation, sweet treats and snacks
The question of how to initiate courtship was a vexed one for many suitors, with gifts of food providing an expedient answer.Footnote 25 Many courtships began with sweet treats and snacks such as cakes, nuts, comfits and sweetmeats proffered by men to women who excited their romantic interest. In one ballad, a young damsel recounted:
How many Sweethearts Courted me
And always loving kind and free,
They gave me Cakes and Kisses to[o],
And often did Loves game renew.Footnote 26
These edible tokens were presented by men during the earliest phases of courting games and wooing, often accompanied by kisses and wine.Footnote 27 Their material properties were important in provoking certain passions, with sweet foodstuffs believed to stimulate feelings of joy, delight and mirth.Footnote 28 The somatic and sensory delight generated by sweet gifts is evident in ballads, where female protagonists recounted how suitors used ‘Custards with Cheese-Cakes and kisses’ to enchant and ‘betray’ their senses. As this extract suggests, these foods were also believed to stimulate desire, as a ‘ready right way’ to reach ‘the fountain of blisses’.Footnote 29 Sugar retained its medicinal uses as a nourishing food well into the eighteenth century, praised by medical writers as ‘an innocent, nutritious, and healthy substance’. Nonetheless, its principal use by this period was as a preservative and sweetener, with writers highlighting the appeal of its ‘sweet and obliging Taste’.Footnote 30 These sensory and material properties made sweet foodstuffs the ideal tokens with which to commence a romantic relationship, to be consumed whilst flirting, talking and walking together in public. The purpose of these edible tokens was not commitment, but the frisson of romance, enjoyment and sensual pleasure.
In her study of Old Regime Lyon, Julie Hardwick has demonstrated how ‘walking out’ in the emergent public sphere represented ‘a new form of heterosociability’, whereby couples strolled through cities, along rivers and through vegetable gardens and orchards while enjoying snacks such as biscuits and grapes together.Footnote 31 The ritual also reflected the rise of ‘snacking’, which ‘increasingly occupied the interstices of structured eating’ from the late seventeenth century onward.Footnote 32 One particularly detailed early account of ‘walking out’ whilst snacking is provided in the diary of the Colchester schoolmaster George Lloyd (1642–1718) in the 1670s. During the earlier and less turbulent phase of his on-again, off-again courtship with Mrs Gray, he walked out with her in Spring Gardens in Westminster after dinner, drinking wine and eating cheesecake. The following week, the couple visited St Georges Fields in Lambeth to drink cider and eat cake, staying until 8 p.m.Footnote 33 These outings provided a safe public setting in which to develop their intimacy and test their compatibility over food, without entailing any further obligation to marry.
The wealth of new urban spaces for sociability and pleasure which sprang up over the eighteenth century developed and embedded these rituals by encouraging the leisured consumption of food between mealtimes. As one pamphlet reported at mid-century, the ‘New Breakfasting-Hutt near Sadler's-Wells’ was ‘crouded with young Fellows and their Sweethearts’ drinking tea and coffee, repeating love songs, and whiling away the time until dinner.Footnote 34 Prints such as Thomas Rowlandson's St James's Courtship and St Giles's Courtship drew a direct line between the sensual pleasures of food and drink and the thrill of flirtation and seduction. Whilst the St James's couple delicately imbibe cups of coffee, their St Giles's counterparts carouse over a jug of wine.Footnote 35 For some gentlemen, the theatre proved a fitting location to treat women who piqued their romantic interest, amongst theatregoers enjoying wine, ham, cold chops and pasties.Footnote 36 When attempting to woo the gentleman's daughter Miss Newsome in York in February 1761, the Beverley gentleman John Courtney (1734–1806) sat behind her for a performance of Richard Steele's sentimental comedy The Conscious Lovers and ‘treated her’ with sweetmeats to indicate his attraction. Disappointingly, the next day ‘she held down her head’ and deliberately passed him by ‘on the other side of the street’. Four years later, Courtney again reached for the sweetmeats whilst walking out in town with a ‘vastly pretty sensible agreable’ young woman from Newcastle called Miss Kitty Rutter. However, he decided to drop his suit the following month owing to her insufficient fortune and overly numerous family.Footnote 37 Nonetheless, the sharing of sweetmeats had provided a momentary source of pleasure and a material means of gauging any potential romantic interest in its earliest stages, without being under any subsequent obligation to pursue it.
Sweet foods from bonbons to jellies, ices and spiced cakes were particularly highly valued for their exoticism and high price, as products of imperialism and Britain's trading empire.Footnote 38 They could be purchased from the increasing number of cake and confectionery shops in towns, especially London, where they clustered around high-end shopping districts such as St James's, encouraging customers to sit-in and engage in sociability and fashionable display.Footnote 39 In the print in Figure 1, two fashionably dressed women depart a cake shop blowing kisses at a pair of stylish dandies by the counter. They call out, ‘much obliged to you gentlemen, adieu!’ and ‘Bye Bye! Dandies! nice Cakes!’ The men subsequently realise that they are unable to pay the exorbitant sum of nine shillings and sixpence spent on treats such as sugar plums, crying out ‘D––n me if I have any Brass!!’ The offer of sugared delicacies could provide men with a valuable avenue for developing greater familiarity with women by treating them and engaging in flirtation and conversation. Yet in their attempts to attract women of fashion by imitating the refined tastes of the upper classes, the conspicuous consumption of simply named ‘Bob’ and ‘Jim’ has clearly extended too far. For men who did have the means, such tokens could be packaged in expensive decorative boxes such as crystal, porcelain and silver bonbonnières which turned these transient gifts into something more concrete. These offerings combined the tangible and intangible in a single token, making the romantic meanings of edible gifts more explicit through evocative depictions of the altar of love, Cupid, his bow and quiver of arrows, blooming flowers and kissing doves.Footnote 40
Nonetheless, one of the merits of edible gifts – like related perishable tokens such as nosegays – was that they did not necessarily require a substantial financial outlay, with the Dictionary of Love derisively noting that ‘a silly girl’ could easily be ‘seduced by a dozen of stick-cherries’.Footnote 41 Labouring men used cakes, nuts, brandy snaps and gingerbread purchased from local feasts and fairs as a way to break the ice and commence the process of courtship.Footnote 42 In Christopher Anstey's novel Memoirs of the Noted Buckhorse (1756), the protagonist, a boxer, is thunderstruck with love at first sight, causing him to forget that he is already married. He presents the young lady who has inspired his passion with a pennyworth of gingerbread as a token, which she accepts with a bow. He then invites her to drink a glass of wine at a nearby inn and pledges to marry her as soon as she thinks proper.Footnote 43 In Jane Austen's Emma (1815), the farmer Robert Martin rides ‘three miles round one day’ to procure the heroine's protégée Harriet Smith some walnuts after she expresses a taste for them.Footnote 44 Later accounts of the courtships of ‘common or working people’ similarly described young men using nuts and brandy snaps as ‘tidings’ at local feasts:
If a young man prevails upon a young woman to accept of a ‘tiding’, which means accepting [a] brandy-snap and nuts, the ice is broken, and it is mostly looked upon by young and old as a kind of ‘god's penny’, for the girl feels laid under some obligation to him; it is a proof that they are making love to each other if not actually engaged.Footnote 45
Much like the use of bonbonnières by the affluent gentry, such tokens could be sent alongside, or followed up with, tangible keepsakes such as wooden nutcrackers carved with romantic symbols such as hearts, birds, the date, and initials of the recipient.Footnote 46 These snacks and treats provided an efficacious means for men and women to socialise, engage in flirtation, arouse feelings of joy, delight and desire, test their attraction and establish a putative match.
Exclusivity, status and masculinity
Some of the most highly valued food gifts in early modern England were exclusive, distinctive or exotic items which conveyed the status and means of the sender. The lack of more mundane domestic foodstuffs in early modern gift-giving rituals has been highlighted by Felicity Heal, who notes the absence of grain, ale, beer, fruits such as apples and pears, and vegetables more generally. Rather, she writes, gifts had ‘to be distinctive, in some measure marked out from the quotidian pattern of household consumption’.Footnote 47 In their work on Tudor and Stuart customs, David Cressy and Diana O'Hara both cite examples of individuals using root ginger as a token of marriage. This exotic imported spice was native to Southeast Asia and cultivated in Jamaica and other islands from the late seventeenth century, making it a singularly distinctive token of love. Other such exclusive items included spices such as nutmeg and exotic fruits such as oranges.Footnote 48
One such exclusive gift, in the eighteenth century, was the pineapple. The delicacy was first introduced to England from its sugar colony in Barbados and cultivated domestically in hothouses from the seventeenth century. A single pineapple took two to three years to grow to size, with each plant yielding only a single prized fruit. The vast amount of labour and infrastructure required made this an extortionately expensive symbol of taste and status. Genteel gardeners accordingly rushed to cultivate home-grown pineapples in pineries on their country estates, with ‘anyone who was anyone among the upper echelons of society’ growing their own pineapples by the 1770s.Footnote 49 As the gardener John Giles wrote in his treatise on the subject, ‘every gentleman of taste and fortune’ was keen to cultivate this ‘polite article of gardening’.Footnote 50 This included the Essex MP Colonel Isaac Martin Rebow (1731–1781), who had a hothouse installed in his Kitchen Gardens at Wivenhoe Park in Colchester in the 1760s. Between 1769 and 1771 he sent several home-grown pineapples as gifts to his sweetheart and first cousin Mary Martin (c. 1751–1804) and her family. In her letters, Mary praised the ‘exceeding good’ quality of this ‘noble’ fruit, which she often received situated alongside other exclusive foodstuffs such as venison, partridge and pheasant.Footnote 51 The vogue for pineapples among the aristocracy had largely abated by the 1780s, reflecting the accelerating pace and quixotic fashions of consumer society. After this period, the fruit alone was not sufficient to impress, and came to require greater scale, magnificence and grandeur.Footnote 52
A key part of the pineapple's desirability as a gift was its ‘delightful fragrant smell’ and the ‘excellency, fragrancy, and flavour’ of its fruit.Footnote 53 One delivery received by Mary Martin in 1769 smelled ‘as fine as ever I knew one’, and she didn't doubt it would ‘prove as good in y Taste’.Footnote 54 Another savoured by the Martin family on Christmas Day in 1770 was judged ‘y highest Flavor of any we have had this latter season’, with a further pineapple the following year considered ‘as fine a one as ever I tasted’.Footnote 55 The taste of food gifts therefore helped to generate an emotional connection between couples by stimulating feelings of delight and gustatory pleasure. In this way, taste could operate as a type of affective currency, helping us to extend the boundaries of materiality beyond objects themselves to also encompass the various sensory and somatic rituals that they were involved in.Footnote 56 In doing so, we position objects in what new materialist scholars have figured as a reciprocal partnership with humans, where they are able to shape us – our bodies, identities, feelings, relationships and decisions – as much as we shape them.Footnote 57 The enduring influence of the pineapple in shaping familial relationships is perhaps best illustrated in the case of one suitor who, after tasting the fruit for the first time at the home of his future in-laws in 1757, wrote to praise the profound impression it had made upon him, noting that he would ‘retain that Favour’ in his memory ‘as long as I live’.Footnote 58
Such exotic fruits including pineapples, grapes, nectarines and peaches were commonly gifted within landed gentry families, and served to visiting guests.Footnote 59 As Maggie Lane highlights in her work on the culinary world of Jane Austen, Mr Darcy's wealth in Pride and Prejudice (1813) is indicated by the ‘beautiful pyramids’ of hothouse fruits that he serves to visitors. Indeed, it is at this exact point in the novel – visiting Pemberley with her aunt and uncle Mr and Mrs Gardiner – when the heroine Elizabeth Bennet first uses the word ‘love’ to describe her feelings for Darcy, stimulated by food and the hospitality she has received. The scene takes on even greater significance as it is the only mealtime scene in Austen's novels ‘which is described straightforwardly by the narrator as impinging on the heroine's consciousness’.Footnote 60 It was this precise social cachet that suitors hoped to channel when selecting hothouse fruits as a romantic gift. In 1773 the Norfolk parson James Woodforde (1740–1803) gifted some peaches to his love interest Betsy White, whom he had been regularly dining and taking tea with.Footnote 61 The exorbitant price of these treats is satirised in the print of a fruit shop lounge in Figure 2, where a customer looks glumly ahead at his bill of five shillings for one peach, coupled with eighteen shillings for a bunch of grapes. Exotic fruits could therefore operate as important markers of status, whilst eating and drinking together smoothed the path to matrimony as prized opportunities for conviviality and conversation.
The most exclusive food gift unequivocally associated with landed hierarchy and elite masculinity was venison, classified as the private property of landowners and banned from sale on the open market. As Heal notes, venison was ‘the food of lords’ in early modern England, and as such was singled out as ‘the most determined, and most gift-ascribed of all items of consumption’.Footnote 62 This exclusive food gift was popularly sent as a token of courtship by aristocratic men as an indication of their wealth and status; the presence of deer indicated a deer park, and a deer park a country seat and judicious match. During his courtship of Elizabeth Jeffreys, heiress of Brecon Priory in Wales (c. 1724–1779) between 1745 and 1749, the barrister Charles Pratt (1714–1794) sent a side of venison for Elizabeth to consume with her family, likely procured from his family's country estate, Wilderness, in Kent. Elizabeth praised the meat as being ‘prodigiously Fat & fine’, with the fattest meat also held to be the most flavoursome.Footnote 63 The token was particularly important as a show of status since Jeffreys was a wealthy heiress, whereas her suitor – though high-born and well educated – was a financially straitened third son, initially leading her mother to oppose the match.Footnote 64
The hunting of venison, and shooting of game meats such as partridge and pheasant, could further provide an indication of idealised masculine qualities such as courage, resourcefulness and strength of mind and body. Pamphlets in praise of hunting lauded it as evidence of masculine health and virility, a ‘Manly Exercise’ in stark contrast to the trifling effeminacy of activities such as masquerades and balls.Footnote 65 The gifting of venison could therefore gesture more widely to a man's strong constitution, vigour, and skill in horsemanship, which was an essential attribute for the polite gentleman. For one young gentlewoman, the sight of her suitor astride his horse in the 1750s was ‘to see him in his Utmost Perfection’, emphasising to friends that he was ‘remarkable for Riding vastly well’.Footnote 66 Shooting, too, was a test of polite masculinity, and of gentlemanly qualities such as coolness, composure and self-control.Footnote 67 It is thus unsurprising that some suitors triumphantly reported their successes to their sweethearts. Edward Leathes (1747–1788) was the third son of a wealthy Essex politician and landowner, and like many younger gentry sons was destined for a career in the Church. Following the end of the game-shooting season in February 1772, he proudly shared his ‘prodigious’ sporting success with his sweetheart Elizabeth Reading (1748–1815). She dutifully responded that ‘your hand must be greatly improv'd’, flattering him that ‘’tis well the Season is over, for you would certainly in a little time have become the dread of the whole Feather'd Tribe’.Footnote 68 Gifts of venison and game had a dual purpose for courting men as signifiers of wealth and status, and as material tokens of polite masculinity.
Exclusive food gifts reflected the genteel status and manly attributes of the sender, whilst also bestowing honour upon recipients and their families for being part of these landed networks of power. As was the case in gifting networks more widely, such tokens could be consumed in company or shared onward as a way for recipients to reinforce or elevate their own social status. After Elizabeth Jeffreys and her mother received a side of venison from her suitor Charles Pratt in 1749, they re-gifted the neck to his sister Mrs Anne Gee in Richmond, confirming the increasing interconnectedness of their two families.Footnote 69 During the 1770s, the Essex gentlewoman Mary Martin used the food gifts sent by her suitor and first cousin Isaac Rebow to host a number of ‘grand’ meals for friends and family. She reported her delight at how:
I cut a very smart Figure (thanks to you) both in my Dinner, & Supper & Luckily had y Venison done just as it shou'd be, which was allow'd by every body to be y finest ever seen, & I really beleive [sic] Cut full an Inch & half Deep of Fat, y Wood Pigeons were likewise very fine, & just in high order.Footnote 70
A further delivery of partridges sent alongside some pineapples was likewise used ‘to Cut a Figure with’ at dinner, for which Mary was ‘infinitely oblig'd’ to him.Footnote 71 These tokens once again highlight the flexibility of food as a gift, which could either be consumed by the giver and recipient (like cakes or wine) or eaten by the recipient with others, standing in for the giver in absentia (like pineapples or game). Such tokens are a category apart from typical courting gifts such as jewellery and personal accoutrements due to their imbrication in wider networks of hospitality and commensality, conferring power and privilege upon the individuals who sent, received and consumed them.
Familial care, households and gardens
Whilst exclusive and exotic gifts had their merits, there was also clearly enormous value placed upon the local and home-grown, particularly in an age of commerce and industry. To cultivate fruits and vegetables for friends, family and loved ones suggested a particular type of care, thought and effort invested in the recipient.Footnote 72 It also ensured the freshest quality, with senders keen to emphasise how gifts such as cucumbers had been ‘taken and cut’ that morning.Footnote 73 In his great treatise on landscape gardening, Humphry Repton (1752–1818) argued that fruits were ‘most delicious when gathered by our own hands’. In contrast was the negligible ‘care and trouble, in the package and conveyance’ of goods from major commercial markets. There was a vast difference, he argued, ‘betwixt the strawberries plucked from the bed, and those brought from a fruit-shop, perhaps, gathered with unwashed hands the day before’.Footnote 74 Hence a clear line was drawn between the home-grown, thoughtful and individual, and the generic and commercial, tainted by an unknown number of hands.
Fruits cultivated in a family's own garden or estate represented an offering both from and of a suitor and their kin. It is striking just how many food gifts originated with a suitor's wider family, before being directed to a woman's aunts, uncles and parents. In passing through these networks, gifts of food worked to bring two families together in advance of matrimony. At the end of 1756, the Bath apothecary John Lovell, with whom this article opened, was banished from Shaw House after refusing to curb his pursuit of Sarah Harvey. In an attempt to get back into the good graces of her aunt Mary Smith, he sent her some melons and Brussels apricots grown in his father's garden. Apricots were commonly grown in gentlemen's orchards during this period, particularly across the south of England, with Brussels apricots the most highly esteemed flavoursome variety. Melons were highly prized; once the preserve of royalty, they were now common amongst the better sorts.Footnote 75 Alongside the fruits, John included a note for Aunt Smith explaining that they were:
a Testimony of having imprinted on my Mind a truly grateful Remembrance of all her past Favours to me, and of my continuing to bear the same Respect to her as I ever did, and that I shou'd think myself very happy if indulg'd again in the same Opportunities of shewing it, which I had before my being so unhappily, and, as I hope, quite undeservedly, exil'd from Shaw.
In light of Aunt Smith's dissatisfaction with the Lovell family's genteel credentials, it is notable that these highly valued fruits had been grown by John's father, making them ‘doubly valuable’ to John as a gesture.Footnote 76 Furthermore, these tokens moved through much of the family themselves, passing not just between lovers, but from his father, to John, to Sarah, and subsequently to her aunt. Gifts of food were therefore set apart from quintessential love tokens such as garters or gloves by blurring the line between courtship gifts and general tokens of goodwill. As such, they helped to unite two families anticipating a matrimonial tie, as signs of their hospitality and favour.
As dualistic items situated at the boundary between tokens of goodwill and explicit offerings of courtship, gifts of food could also be sent from women to their suitors. However, as with the proportion of courtship gifts more broadly, women's gifting was less regular and less intense in volume.Footnote 77 After the death of her first husband in 1788, Elizabeth Leathes (née Reading) rekindled her friendship with her childhood sweetheart Edward Peach. Edward was now a Justice of the Peace and had maintained his connection with the Reading family through managing the estate of Elizabeth's late grandfather Thomas Reading (1714–1768). Edward lived in the Old Hall in Sundridge, Kent, where he owned many of the local establishments including a public house, the workhouse and a nearby farm.Footnote 78 In January 1790, Elizabeth sent him a ‘very excellent’ turkey, a hen pheasant and a brace of partridges, ‘all equally good in their kind’, for which she had the ‘best thanks’ of her ‘sincere Friend’.Footnote 79 These were seasonal gifts, with turkeys typically gifted and eaten at Christmastime. They were also particular to East Anglia, where turkeys were reared in their thousands and made to walk all the way to London to be slaughtered. Perhaps as a result, turkeys had a reputation for being tough and tasteless birds. Yet rearing and slaughtering them locally made a vast difference to the freshness and quality of the meat, and they were commonly gifted as local specialities by inhabitants of Norfolk.Footnote 80 In spring the same year, Edward sent half a dozen pigeons as a comparably local offering, and hoped to send some lamb but ‘could not find out the proper conveyance’.Footnote 81 The frequent exchange of edible gifts signalled the couple's ongoing warmth and affection toward one another, helping to rekindle and advance their romance after twenty years apart.
Other courting women similarly participated in the economy of food gifts, with the Essex gentlewoman Mary Martin sending several parcels of fish such as turbot, crayfish and flounder to Isaac Rebow in the 1770s. Isaac was her first cousin, again situating these tokens both within the realm of courtship and of familial care and goodwill. As was increasingly the case over the later eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, Mary sourced her fish from local fishmongers rather than fish ponds (‘now-a-days, all is looked for at shops’, lamented William Cobbett in his Rural Rides).Footnote 82 Whilst Elizabeth Leathes opted for the turkeys which were particular to Norfolk, Mary selected the fish which were abundant in Essex due to their proximity to the Channel and the River Colne. When certain fish were in season, she could procure them ‘at any time’. If none were available, they could be sent for directly from Billingsgate, though at the risk of inferior quality.Footnote 83 One parcel of flounder was intended for his mother, Mary's aunt, in March 1770, after Mary was ‘greatly Concern'd’ by accounts of her health.Footnote 84 Another, she wrote to Isaac, was ‘really design'd for you, only I thought it was better to Direct them to Her, for fear of a Rumpus’.Footnote 85 A third parcel of fish was sent alongside some stockings that she had made for him, ‘with which they will come very well’, combining the everyday with a hand-made token more explicitly prefiguring marriage, and the care she invested in him as his future wife.Footnote 86 Her offerings of fish were particularly appropriate tokens due to their very indeterminacy as a gift, situated both within the economy of courtship and also within broader networks of exchange between family and friends.
Whilst Mary sourced her turbot and flounder from the local fishmonger, she did nonetheless enjoy popular pastimes such as bobbing for eels.Footnote 87 Fishing parties were lively occasions for sociability and conviviality, as in George Morland's sentimental depiction of an angling party in Figure 3. Such excursions could bring together mixed groups of young men and women in close proximity for sustained periods of time, therefore providing an invaluable chance to generate a romantic bond under the watchful eye of parents, friends or chaperones.Footnote 88 The Justice of the Peace Robert Lee (né Philipps) (c. 1706–1755) inherited his great-uncle's estate in Binfield, Berkshire, in 1736. Although a substantial distance from the coast, the area was well supplied by ponds, which were typically stocked with fish such as carp, perch, pike, tench, roach and trout.Footnote 89 In 1738, Lee ventured on a fishing expedition on his friend Mr Terry's pond in nearby Winkfield, in a group that included his love interest Molly Hopson, and her sister. At the end of their excursion, they divided the catch between Robert Lee and his friend Mr Seddon, vicar of Warfield, plus a gift for Molly's father. The token fit very clearly into his wider patterns of exchange, where he routinely exchanged locally caught fish with friends and family. In addition to the present for Molly's father, the excursion provided an indispensable opportunity for the couple to spend time together at close quarters, and converse freely both on the water and during their subsequent walk home.Footnote 90
Gifts of food sent to a woman's family home represented a creative way for courting men to elicit an invitation to dine. Eating and drinking together created valuable time for a suitor to converse with a woman and her family, as in the print City Courtship in Figure 4, where a man and his sweetheart talk whilst their families take tea. The gout-ridden father on the right echoes William Hogarth's evocation of a marriage settlement, where the two patriarchs negotiate over terms, though in this instance the young couple incline their heads toward one another and talk happily.Footnote 91 While courting the gentleman's daughter Elizabeth Jeffreys in the 1740s, the barrister Charles Pratt sent a pig as a gift to her mother. As a result, Elizabeth's mother instructed her daughter to write to Charles requesting his presence at dinner. Elizabeth accordingly entreated him ‘you must come so dont be Engaged’.Footnote 92 The gentleman Edward Peach utilised a similar tactic in his courtship of Elizabeth Leathes (née Reading), sending her two fowls and a duck as a gift in the 1780s. He evidently expected that his gifts would obtain him an invitation to dinner, asking that ‘if it will not be unpleasant and inconvenient to you I will with the greatest pleasure and satisfaction to myself partake of the Duck with you at three o’ Clock or any other hour you most approve of. I shall call upon you some time before dinner.’Footnote 93 Following dinner, couples could then spend the evening together walking in the garden or sitting up late talking, enabling them to converse freely and ascertain their compatibility as spouses.Footnote 94 As the prospect of matrimony became more certain, such meetings became much more frequent, with couples dining and drinking tea and chocolate on an almost daily basis as settlements were drawn up, the articles of marriage were drafted and signed and a licence procured.Footnote 95 The tea table could even provide an apposite location for a proposal, with the composer John Marsh (1752–1828) ‘declaring & engaging’ himself to Elizabeth Brown ‘in a low voice’ over drinks – much like the couple in Figure 4 – whilst their companions were ‘trotting on’.Footnote 96
Health, diet and nourishment
Food was believed to have either beneficial or detrimental effects for a person's bodily health, impacting on their digestive systems, their nerves and reproductive organs. It also directly affected their teeth in the physical process of biting and chewing it, particularly in an era of poor oral hygiene and only partial access to dentistry, where many had lost all of their teeth by their early forties.Footnote 97 Loreen Giese has revealed how some suitors in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century England presented women with silver toothpicks and carved earscoops to establish a contract to marry, indicating some investment in and care for their physical health.Footnote 98 Engraved fruitwood or bone apple-corers or scoops carved with romantic symbols such as hearts and the recipient's initials remained popular gifts crafted by labouring suitors into the eighteenth century. These represented particularly thoughtful tokens as they enabled a beloved to continue eating raw apples after losing their teeth, through scraping out the soft flesh.Footnote 99
One particular foodstuff defined the later stages of courtship, as a beloved sweetheart looked sure to attain the status of wife: the humble oyster. Oysters could be purchased for as little as twelvepence a peck (for around twenty-five), rising to three or four shillings a barrel.Footnote 100 The most sought-after and expensive varieties were ‘the best green native Colchester’, and ‘Exceeding fine’ Pyefleet oysters from Pyefleet Creek in Essex, with proprietors advertising their services to the ‘Nobility, Gentry, Tradesmen and Others’.Footnote 101 Echoing the emphasis on the hand-picked over the commercial discussed above, such traders stressed that their oysters were picked ‘fresh from the Beds’ on fixed days, did not pass through Billingsgate, and came in branded barrels to guarantee quality. Usefully for courting couples, they could be shipped across the country from oyster warehouses, which often offered free local delivery, or purchased from street sellers, fairs and markets.Footnote 102
Oysters possessed a twofold power in provoking feelings of lust and desire, with pretty oyster girls objectified for their sexual availability, and oysters themselves (alongside other shellfish such as crabs, crayfish and lobsters) renowned for their aphrodisiac properties.Footnote 103 The Colchester schoolmaster George Lloyd may have hoped that the lustful qualities of oysters would help to secure his engagement to his beloved Mrs Gray in 1677. She had already informed him in August that ‘all things were at an end’ between them, but he ‘writt an answer’ and opted not to send it, deciding that the subject was better broached in person. He travelled to London to propose in October, purchasing a carnelian ring and barrel of oysters as tokens. The act of sharing the oysters would have provided valuable time to repair their broken relationship, potentially reignite their bond by stirring sexual desire, and show his care and investment in safeguarding her physical health. For a short period, at least, it worked, with Lloyd staying over with her ‘all night’ the following month.Footnote 104
The highly nutritious and ‘strength-restoring’ properties of oysters made them a particularly apposite choice for nourishing a future wife.Footnote 105 In this sense, as Jane Bennett suggests, the emotional power of food as a type of object arises from how it ‘modifies the human matter with which it comes into contact’, mutually transforming both the eater and eaten.Footnote 106 In October 1790 the gentleman Edward Peach sent a barrel to the widow Elizabeth Leathes to aid her recovery from illness, noting they were ‘esteem'd very nutritious’ and in ‘no ways improper for you at this time’.Footnote 107 He asked her to ‘give me leave to be your Physician’ and in addition to the oysters recommended that she consume a ‘Neck of Mutton made into Broth’ with ‘a Turnip or two’.Footnote 108 Mutton ranked highly in tables of the most nourishing foods, with meat broths known for their therapeutic properties. Lighter-coloured vegetables such as parsnips were viewed as lighter and therefore easier to digest, coming highly recommended by medical writers for their nourishing properties.Footnote 109 This exchange was only a month before the couple's wedding, which took place on 25 November 1790, and so enabled Edward to begin caring for Elizabeth akin to a spouse.
The Derbyshire cotton-trader Joseph Strutt (1765–1844) took a similar approach during the illness of his sweetheart Isabella Douglas (1769–1802) in the spring of 1791. Her indisposition and the fear of losing her made him realise, he wrote, just how much he loved her. As a result, only her ‘compleat restoration to health’ could secure his future happiness. Joseph's investment in Isabella's ill health, and the lengths to which he was willing to go in order to ensure her recovery, worked to underscore his devotion as a future husband. To his mind, similarly to Edward Peach, the most nourishing foods available were meat and oysters. The former were considered heating foods which warmed and enlivened the body, shaped by the older humoural model and advocated by medical writers throughout the eighteenth century.Footnote 110 Yet a woman's personal tastes were also important, both in the arena of courtship and in discourses on diet and health.Footnote 111 Since Isabella did not like meat, Joseph opted to send a routine delivery of oysters by the barrel, writing:
I have not heard lately whether your Oysters came regularly & whether you have enough of them – if they do not, or are not good, & you still prefer them, I desire I may know that I may order you some immediately from London; remember you are no longer to treat me with ceremony on this score.Footnote 112
The strength of his commitment was evinced by the lengths to which he would go to procure her suitable foodstuffs, despite his distance from the coast meaning that there were often ‘none fit to eat’. Through food, he declared his desire to ‘sit by … watch over … wait upon’ Isabella in matrimony. He advised that she ‘do anything which will contribute to the ease of your mind, or the strength of your body’ – through his food gifts, Joseph endeavoured to do the same.Footnote 113
Conclusion
This article has sought to restore the critical importance of food gifts in navigating the path to matrimony in England during the long eighteenth century. In the absence of any a priori symbolic association with love or romance, the emotional meaning of food gifts was shaped by a number of factors, including their rarity, exoticism, freshness, nutritional properties, where they had been grown, by whom, and with whom they were consumed. Personal tastes were also important, and the desire to show knowledge of and attentiveness to a recipient's preferences. These tokens are so significant because they represent an entirely unique category of courtship gift, one hitherto neglected by historians, set apart from the garters, gloves, hair, ribbons and rings which have typically been used to distinguish courting behaviour. Through them, we see courtship made everyday, inextricably bound up in the webs of exchange which bound human beings to one another and to the natural world. This was not food eaten to live, but utilised as a powerful material means of communication, a vehicle for status, identity and emotion, and the creation of interpersonal bonds.
If melons, turkeys and fish can all constitute emotional objects, what does this suggest about where the boundaries of affective meaning begin and end? The article has endeavoured to demonstrate why we must extend our definition of materiality beyond man-made or machine-made objects, and beyond extant objects preserved in archives and museums, to also include foodstuffs and other perishable or organic items from the natural world. In doing so, we recognise how more ephemeral or transitory items also had important emotional meanings, which continued long after they ceased to exist in any tangible sense. The foodstuffs exchanged during courtship had the power to stimulate love, lust, joy, sensory delight and gustatory pleasure. They could function as gestures of humility, generosity and friendship, and signal thought, effort and familial care. These affective meanings would have looked noticeably different in other contexts, such as in the tokens exchanged between friends, family members or neighbours, demonstrating the cultural and emotional flexibility of food as a gift.
Food gifts further represent unique tokens of courtship as they could be given with the intention of being consumed with a loved one, thereby creating further opportunities for intimacy through walking, talking and dining together. They help to illuminate how courtship could be initiated, and the range of spaces in which it was situated: in public gardens and squares, the grounds and ponds of country estates, at fairs or wakes, in theatres, confectionery shops and around a tea table. Such items underscore the continuing importance of families in shepherding along successful courtships, through hosting suitors for tea and chocolate, inviting them to dine and sharing the bounties of their gardens or estates. By paying close attention to such gifts, we can reconstruct a whole intangible system of feeling, and intrinsic part of the gift mode, which gave structure and meaning to the social and emotional process of courtship.
Given the centrality of food and food gifts in navigating the rituals of courtship, it is fitting therefore that food also symbolically and practically marked the change in a couple's status from suitors to spouses. Following their nuptials, couples informed their wider friends and family of their marriage by writing to them and distributing slices of the bride cake – a fruit cake decorated with almond and sugar icing – through the post.Footnote 114 One tale published in the periodical The Connoisseur accordingly figured the whole process of courtship through cake, in a dream purportedly inspired by a slice of the bride cake sent by a newly married couple. In the dream, courting couples crowded into the Temple of the God of Marriage, which was ‘covered with a great number of Cakes of different shapes and appearance’. Some cakes were embellished with ‘glittering toys’ representing the potential rewards of marriage, including a fine house and a coach and six. In the Temple, couples approached the altar and applied to Cupid to gift them a cake. In one sense, the cakes represented virtuous femininity, with the ‘most elegant’ cakes with the ‘sweetest ingredients’ costing the largest sum of money. In another, they embodied marriage itself, with some women reaching the altar only to trade their ‘plain’ cake for a ‘much more glittering’ alternative.Footnote 115 Through cake, courtship comes full circle, from a suitor's opening gambit to a material signification of matrimony. The edible gift emerges as an unparalleled system of emotional communication, at once a symbol and the very literal food of love.
Acknowledgements
I am immensely grateful to Joanne Begiato and Alysa Levene for reading drafts of this article, and to Lucy Allen, Tul Israngura Na Ayudhya, Benjamin Jackson, Stéphane Jettot and Rachel Winchcombe for generously sharing references and unpublished work. This research was presented to audiences at the History Lunchtime Research Seminar at Oxford Brookes University, the Oxford Graduate Seminar in History, the conference ‘Emotion, Embodiment and the Everyday, 1500–1800’ at the University of Cambridge, and the Franco-British History Seminar at the Sorbonne University in Paris, all of whom provided helpful feedback and suggestions. I am also indebted to this journal's anonymous reviewers for their thoughtful and constructive feedback.