Cover to “Chamber of Chills” #19, Warren Kremer, 1953

Harvey Comics.

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More vintage Christmas card weirdness.

Here is another of those strange vintage Christmas cards that I talked about yesterday.  If you wander around Pinterest or Wikimedia Commons, you’ll see that people from generations past often had a sense of humor that is as weird as the average meme-make today.  The card below dates from the Victorian era, and serves as an example of a greeting card that features a brief, bizarre, rhyming poem.

It also illustrates what seems to me to be a common trope.  Vintage holiday cards (which appear to include those for Thanksgiving and New Year’s) often feature the same common subjects that their designers deemed both funny and festive.  These include baby chicks (cute enough), dirigibles (because … blimps are interesting?) and frogs (huh?).

Anyway … the frogs you see upended below are actually serving up a parable to the reader.  (They slipped on the ice, you see, because they disobeyed their mother’s wishes.)  Soooooo, this card was meant for children?  Or … adults with a dark sense of humor who enjoy laughing at frogs’ injuries?

Also … they’re carrying pipes.  How old are these disobedient frogs?

 

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Richard Wagner meets Hans Anderson Brendekilde.

I’m linking here to a video posted by Youtube user Richard Brittain — it’s a nice rendition of the overture of Richard Wagner’s “Tannhauser,” paired with Hans Anderson’s Brendekilde’s circa-1880 painting, “A Woodland Landscape.”

The music and the painting are perfect for each other.  Wagner always evokes a mood; I’ve enjoyed it as “writing music” since I was a kid.  And that painting can be immersive — especially when you maximize it on your computer screen.

If you’re anything like me, it’ll make you want to find out where that path down there leads.

 

Cover to “House of Mystery” #237, Bill Draut, 1975

DC Comics.

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Because nothing says “Merry Christmas” like an undead woolly mammoth speaking in verse while cupids try to kill it.

Vintage Christmas cards are nuts, as anyone who’s ever gone down that particular Kafka-esque rabbit hole will tell you.  If you do a simple Google image search, you can see that our supposedly dignified forebears evidently toked up a lot around the holidays, whether it was on opium or bathtub gin or cocaine-fueled Coca-Cola or sassafras or whatever.

This might be the weirdest one yet.  The card below dates from 1912, and actually features a handwritten, rhyming poem –a lot of these antique holiday cards feature short, peculiar, rhyming poems; it was almost a folk-art genre unto itself.

Anyway, you’ll see that the poem below describes a woolly mammoth being excavated, and then … resurrecting or something.  (Or is this its ghost?)  The prehistoric animal has a creepy (though quaint and nicely vivid poem) addressing his saviors.  I’m pretty sure it’s about women’s suffrage, though I’m not sure whether it’s for or against.  I’m leaning toward the latter.  The poem gets harder to read toward the end, but … does it describe the female animals leading the males “meekly” to their long-ago death and entombment in the ice?  (And the author’s position is sort of implied by the one-word query, “Suffragette?” circled and written in blood-red letters.)

There are two cupids endeavoring to kill this unholy animal; you can find them in the top corners.  Because it’s a zombie, they are wisely aiming for its head.

“Merry Christmas,” in other words.

What is sassafras, exactly, anyway?  I can honestly you that I do not know for sure.

 

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Letter from George H.W. Bush to Bill Clinton, January 20, 1993

George H.W. Bush, 41st President of the United States, died last night at the age of 94.  Below is the traditional letter he left in the Oval Office for his successor, Bill Clinton.

 

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Seasons Greetings, One and All!

If I haven’t said this to you individually yet, then I am wishing you and yours a fun, safe and happy holiday season.

 

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Photo credit: 19th Century Christmas card by Louis Prang