CAMELLIA GRACE LEARN ARTICLE #13

The Language of Flowers

Excerpt from โ€œLanguage of Flowersโ€ by Kate Greenaway, 1884. Courtesy of Public Domain Review.

In the strict social world of the Gilded Age, saying what you meant was rarely an option, particularly for young women. Floriography, the practice of assigning symbolic meanings to specific flowers, gave society women a way to communicate feelings that etiquette would never permit them to say out loud. The tradition had roots going back centuries, but it reached its height in the 19th century in America and Britain, where floriography dictionaries became standard reference books for anyone navigating high society. A red rose meant passionate affection. White camellias expressed admiration. A sprig of lavender tucked into an otherwise cheerful bouquet quietly signaled distrust. Peonies, with their inward-curling petals, suggested bashfulness, while heliotropes hinted at eternal devotion. The details mattered too; not just which flowers were chosen, but how they were combined, how the bouquet was held, and whether it was offered upright or invertedโ€”all could shift the meaning entirely.

 

For a young woman making her debut in this world, fluency in floriography was not optional. Debutantes carried small, carefully arranged posies to society events, their contents chosen to send precise signals to suitors and rivals alike. Receiving a bouquet was its own challenge, requiring the recipient to consult her floriography guide and parse the arrangement before she could properly respond. Wealthy hostesses like Alva Vanderbilt and Caroline Astor were known for floral displays where no bloom was chosen without intention, and the etiquette manuals of the period reinforced how seriously this was all taken. For girls raised in this environment, flowers were not only decoration but vocabulary, and knowing how to use them correctly was as much a social obligation as knowing how to curtsy or address a calling card.


For a full dictionary of the meanings of flowers in the Gilded Age, please refer to: https://sacredearth.com/2021/02/14/victorian-flower-language/

Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish

Photograph of Marion Graves Anthon Fish (1853-1915), wife of Stuyvesant Fish. Public Domain.

Marion Graves Anthon Fish was born in 1853 on Staten Island, the daughter of a lawyer and assemblyman. By her own admission, she had received almost no formal education and could barely read or write; however, that didnโ€™t stop her from rising to the top of the social hierarchy of the Gilded Age elite. In 1876, she married Stuyvesant Fish, a railroad executive and son of Hamilton Fish, who had served as Secretary of State under President Ulysses Grant. The marriage gave Marion access to serious wealth and old family connections, and she used both to build something no one had quite managed before: a social empire run entirely on personality. 


By the 1890s, she had become one of the most talked-about figures in New York and Newport society, known simply as Mamie Fish.


What set her apart from other Gilded Age hostesses was that she had no patience for the stiff, ceremonial dinner parties that defined the era. She pioneered what became known as the fifty-minute dinner, cutting the usual hours-long affairs down to something actually enjoyable, by filling her parties with entertainment, spectacle, and her own sharp humor. Where Caroline Astor had ruled society through authority and tradition, Mamie ruled through irreverence. She was heavyset, blunt, and famously rude to her own guests, yet people came back every time, because being insulted by Mamie Fish had become a mark of having arrived. 


After Astor's death in 1908, Mamie was recognized alongside Alva Vanderbilt and Tessie Oelrichs as one of three women who inherited control of New York's social world. She remained a defining figure of the Gilded Age until her death in 1915.

Other Words and Phrases:
Bully: Grand or excellent.

Cad: A man who acts with deliberate disregard for another's feelings or rights.

The Mad Commodore: A nickname given to James Gordon Bennet Jr., a renowned yachtsman and son of the founder of The New York Herald.

Dance card: A small, decorative booklet (often made of ivory, silver, or silk during the Gilded Age) listing the order of dance styles to be performed at a formal ball, carried by a lady for gentlemen to record their names when requesting specific dances with her.

Skilamalink: Secret, shady, or doubtful.

Athena: The Greek goddess of wisdom.

Flubdub: Pretentious nonsense.

Upshot: The result or conclusion.

Sources:

https://www.gildedheiresses.com/p/decoding-the-language-of-gilded-age
https://robertbrightonauthor.com/blog/flowers-and-sexual-tension-in-the-gilded-age
https://www.proflowers.com/blog/floriography-language-flowers-victorian-era
https://www.antiquetrader.com/features/victorians-used-flowers-to-send-secret-messages
https://americanviscountess.com/2025/08/flowers-and-fans-decoding-the-language-of-gilded-age-social-signals/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marion_Graves_Anthon_Fish
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/229297598/marian_graves-fish
https://desmondfishlibrary.org/uncategorized/mamie-fish/
https://citybeautifulblog.com/2020/05/09/mamie-fish-the-fun-maker-of-the-gilded-age/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Four_Hundred_(Gilded_Age)
https://kellygoshorn.com/archives/2016/05/bully-for-teddy-roosevelt
https://www.merriam-webster.com/wordplay/the-strange-route-from-cadet-to-cad
https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/64130/fabulously-eccentric-life-james-gordon-bennett-jr
https://www.thetrumpetblog.com/history-of-dance-cards/
https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/53529/56-delightful-victorian-slang-terms-you-should-be-using

https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Athena

https://www.ahdictionary.com/word/search.html?q=flubdub

https://www.etymonline.com/word/upshot

https://dustyoldthing.com/dance-cards-history/ 

 

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