![]() ![]() Beware the Nice Ones: He has genuinely good intentions for both the world and in his friendship with Penny, but ends up being pushed far enough by Captain Hammer for him to try to break his rule of Thou Shalt Not Kill.Anti-Villain: Has shades of Woobie, Destroyer of Worlds and Well-Intentioned Extremist.need to rule it."Īn aspiring supervillain seeking world domination "Belligerent topics are not our forte and never was neither do we handle them with kid gloves, when they fairly come in the way."The world is a mess, and I just. The New-York monthly magazine The Knickerbocker has the first example of the term in print, from 1849: It was only when the expression (and presumably also, the gloves) crossed the Atlantic that the negative connotations were lost and 'handling (or treating) with kid gloves' began to be used as we use it today, that is with the meaning 'delicately carefully'. This contraband system of political allusions appears to suit the taste and nerves of the cautious, gentlemanly, kid-gloved Conservatism, which cannot endure the shock of attending a public meeting. In fact, the description 'kid-gloved' came to be used as an insult, implying a lack of manhood, as was recorded in The Leicester Chronicle in January 1842: All in all, Brummel clearly didn't think much of kid gloves and they continued not to be worn by 'persons of quality'. That led me to 'rhodomontade', another word I didn't know, which turns out to mean 'to speak boastfully or bombastically'. They pass the rhodomontade till they're expos'd and scouted. Incidentally, I wasn't familiar with the word 'scouted' as meaning 'scorned' and when I looked it up I found this first usage in Samuel Palmer's Moral Essays, 1710: The dismissal of the gloves by the socialite and fashion authority Beau Brummell was enough to send them to the back of the 19th century chav wardrobe. ![]() Long Wellesley is, also, a man of excellent taste, though he rides in kid gloves, which Brummel used to say a man should be scouted for doing. The Preston Chronicle included this item in February 1837: In the 19th century, kid glove wearing was taken up by a notable member of the gentry, William Pole-Tylney-Long-Wellesley, the fourth Earl of Mornington, which might have been expected to establish them as a desirable accessory. on his Head was a Cap of the same Holland tied with a white Ribbond he has about his Neck two Yards of Cambrick a Cambrick Handkerchief between his Hands, on which he had a pair of white Kid Gloves: and in this manner he lay in state some Days and was afterwards buried in Buckinghamshire.Īt that time, kid gloves were viewed as rather ostentatious and only suitable for the nouveau riche - much as heavy gold chains might be viewed today. Was put into his Coffin, quilted within with white Sattin and after several yards of fine Holland were wrapt about his Body. Thorp, A Distiller in Soho, who died a few Days since, said to be worth £10000 The earliest mentions of kid gloves are from England in the 1730s and the following is a typical report of a wealthy gentleman, laid out in his 'Sunday best', from Bagnall's News, in The Ipswich Journal, December 1734: ![]() They were clearly not intended for use when you were pruning the hedge and wearing kid gloves was the sartorial equivalent of pale white skin, that is, it indicated that the wearer was rich enough to indulge in a life of genteel indoor idleness. I say 'of course' but, in fact, when they were first fashioned in the 18th century they were more often made from lambskin, as that was easier to come by. Kid gloves are, of course, gloves made from the skin of a young goat. What's the origin of the phrase 'Handle with kid gloves'? Handle a situation, or a person or an object, delicately and gingerly.
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