As we saw in yesterday’s Christmas literature post, the first commercially available Christmas cards were sent in 1843, the same year as Dickens’s A Christmas Carol was published. In that post we also revealed the humorous origins of the robin redbreast on the front of Christmas cards.
Now, presumably quite soon after Christmas cards appeared on the scene, the phrase ‘Christmas card’ was being used in print. But at the moment, the earliest use of the specific phrase ‘Christmas-card’ recorded by the Oxford English Dictionary is in an 1883 work by an art critic…
Ruskin, by the way, was also the one who was supposed to have been terrified and disgusted by his wife’s pubic hair on their wedding-night. It turns out he wasn’t (this story was first told nearly a century later), so let’s get back to the nativity instead, a more … ahem, wholesome topic for the festive season. And it is to the nativity scene that we will turn tomorrow…
Image: John Ruskin self-portrait, 1861, Wikimedia Commons.