Tuesday, January 9, 2024

New Year's Resolutions?

Post by Doris McCraw

aka Angela Raines

Photo (C) Doris McCraw

I decided to not do resolutions this year. Instead, I'm focusing on Experience, ie: I experience the joy of walking five days a week. However, just for fun, I thought a look at comments and New Year's Resolutions from the 1800s might be kind of fun.


Photo (c) Doris McCraw
 

From the Leadville Daily/Evening Chronicle of Aprile 21, 1894 we get the following short piece about what happens when you forget your resolutions.

"How many of the young men of this town would recognize their New Year resolutions were they to meet them face to face?"

On February 14, 1892 (Valentine's Day?) The Colorado Daily Chieftain" a Pueblo paper, printed this piece:

"Did some Good. 
Ginsling - It's all nonsense to say that New Year's resolutions do no good. I swore off myself last New Year's.
Lounger - You did, eh?
Ginsling - Yes, sir, and I stuck to it a full week -- saved twenty dollars. 
From the New York Weekly" 


That same publication printed the following on January 1, 1893, reprinted from the New York Herald.

"New Year Resolutions.
Oh, those New Year resolutions that we made with holy awe
How they melted like the snow ganks in a January thaw!
How the man who broke his meerschaum and vowed to smoke no more
Now smokes an old two cent pipe behind the cellar door."

Photo (C) Doris McCraw

From The Avalanche of April 18, 1894, we find the following comment:

"Husband -- One of your New Year's resolutions was that you would not quarrel with me for a year.
Wife -- Yes.
'Well, you are snapping at me half the time already'
'Yes.'
'I should like to know what's become of your good resolutions.'
'You would, eh? Well, I wanted mother to see them, and so I enclosed them in a letter to her, and gave it to you to mail. and she writes me that she never received it. That's what's become of them.'

The final look at resolutions is from the Yankee Blade:

"I hereby resolve to be good
Through all the glad New Year.
Be a tireless searcher for all kinds of "vircher,"
And do nothing my conscience to sere;
I grow better at once and seraphicer
And I wish that my language was graphier
To tell without base diminution
The strength of my great resolution.

Yes, I hereby resolve to be good.
I have made up my mind to do right;
You may bet your last copper that I'm going to act proper,
And shine like a star of the night,
Purge all diabolical animus,
Grow honest and good and magnanimous;
This resolve no power can share it--
Until I get ready to break it." 

And that is how they looked at resolutions in the 1800s. How many of you could relate? 

Until next time:  

Stay Safe, Stay Healthy, Stay Happy 

Doris




4 comments:

Julie Lence said...

Thank you for sharing, Doris. Loved the husband and wife and the one from the New York Weekly.

Renaissance Women said...

Sometimes a look at how things were back in the day can be so eye-opening. Doris

Deborah said...

Thanks for sharing those! They're fun and made me think a little!

Renaissance Women said...

Glad you enjoyed it, Deborah. It was fun digging these pieces out to share. Doris