Trousseau?
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Once upon
a time, many moons ago, a young lady who was courting might turn her thoughts to
assembling her trousseau. Trousseau derives from the French trousse, which
means a bundle
A collection
of linen, household goods, clothing and valuables like jewellery or silver would
be stored in a ‘bottom drawer’ in the UK (a hope chest in USA or glory box in
Australia.) It was the equivalent in some ways of a dowry, an indication of how
much material wealth a woman would bring to a marriage – the richer the bride’s
family, the more valuable the contents of the trousseau.
The
custom persisted until the middle of the twentieth century, when it had evolved
from dowry-like contents to items suitable for setting up home with the lucky
suitor.
Anyway,
what brought this to mind was the bottom drawer in the chest of drawers in my
bedroom. It is the place where odd socks go to hibernate. When a pair of socks
is called for because the housekeeper hasn’t performed her duties efficiently
and there are no longer any matched socks left in the Master’s top drawer, it
is to the bottom drawer one hastens. Surely there must be a pair there?
Depending
on who is conducting the search, singles may find their appropriate partners,
or be approximately paired with something similar. That is, if I am looking,
the married pairs will match exactly. If Barry is searching, ‘They’ll do,’ he’ll
say as two mismatched socks are thrust together. That drives me mad. I know it
doesn’t matter, ‘Who cares? Who’s looking?’ but it matters to me and that is why
my bottom drawer is full of odd socks. They’re not mine – I don’t wear socks.
The funny
thing is that people can now buy deliberately mismatched socks, if they feel so
inclined. They do look as though they belong together, strangely, unlike the
pairs concocted from my bottom drawer.
Mismatched
socks are a symbol for World Down Syndrome Day, on 21st March. They
represent the third copy of chromosome 21 which those with Down’s Syndrome possess.
Trousseau
has two other meanings, one medical (Trousseau’s sign) and one connected
with wine, where it refers to a red wine grape, also known as Bastardo or
Merenzao.