Valentine's Day the Medieval Way

 

Valentine greetings have been popular since the Middle Ages, a time when prospective lovers said or sang their romantic verses. Written valentines began to appear after 1400. Paper valentines originated in the 1500s, being exchanged in Europe and being given in place of valentine gifts and oral or musical valentine greetings. They were particularly popular in England

The first written valentine (formerly known as "poetical or amorous addresses") is traditionally attributed to the imprisoned Charles, Duke of Orleans, in 1415. While confined in the Tower of London after the Battle of Agincourt, the young Duke reportedly passed his time by writing romantic verses for his wife in France . Approximately sixty of the Duke's poems remain and can be seen among the royal papers in the British Museum . They are credited with being the first modern day valentines.

 

Happy Day
Love, Vick

                        

A Hug
Hugging is good medicine. It transfers energy, and gives the person hugged an emotional boost.  You need four hugs a day for survival, eight for maintenance, and twelve for growth.  A hug makes you feel good.  The skin is the largest organ we have and it needs a great deal of care.  A hug can cover a lot of skin and gives the message that you care.  It is also a form of communication.  It can say things you don't have words for.  The nicest thing about a hug is that you usually can't give one without getting one.

 

"Paint it Black" Rolling Stones