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From the Heart
The shops are crammed with things that would make the most exquisite
Valentine gifts. There’s the pale lemon sun dress with the
tiny parsley green hearts at Chloe, the bubblegum pink leather
holdall with gold hardware at Ungaro, the dazzling gold evening
trainers at Hogan, the covetable Satin de Chanel compact of pinky
lilac highlighter for cheeks and décolletage. A bottle
of Givenchy’s Very Irresistible anyone? But are there people
who actually buy Valentine’s Day presents, beyond the highly
acceptable bunch of flowers and box of chocolates? I just don't
know of anyone who takes Valentine’s Day shopping seriously.
And it’s not just laziness, or lack of interest , some sort
of vague gift agnosticism. There are strong feelings involved.
‘I don't like to be told how and when to show my love,’
one sensible nine-and-a-half-months pregnant friend of mine objects.
This is someone who spends a quarter of each year planning her
husband’s birthday surprise. ‘Isn't the whole thing
a bit cheap and tacky. You can't do these things to order. We’re
not sheep. Surely every day should be Valentine's Day.’
Her words make me deeply uncomfortable, as though she is insulting
my religion. For so much of my life Valentine’s Day meant
everything. At school and at university your worth was measured
by the number of Valentine’s cards you could boast. We had
pacts with our friends to save face. ‘I’ll send you
three if you send me three’, we’d say and then send
four or five, for mystery. Of course, it’s easy to forget
that originally it was all about mystery and anonymity. Sending
a Valentine was a (relatively) non risky way of making a quasi
declaration that was easy to deny or withdraw if met with indifference.
During the awkward years it represented about the most tentative
steps you could take towards someone you liked who, with any luck,
would never even know it was you. Yet it also felt incredibly
daring. What if he recognised the postmark! What if he deciphered
your wobbly left handed writing! The desires to be original and
artistic, but also entirely untraceable sometimes clashed. Will
he know the tinned Fray Bentos Steak and Kidney Pie is from me?
Two tickets to Ian Bostridge singing in The Tempest at Covent
Garden with ‘Happy Valentine’s Day to My Darling Husband
Love from Guess Who? XXX!’ is pretty good, but it isn’t
the same.’
Yet Valentine’s Day excitement needn’t just be the
preserve of teenagers.
Nor should it lose its mystique at the instigation of the card
companies
with their ‘Happy Valentine’s Day to a Gorgeous Grandson
Love Grandma.’ There
must be a grown-up way of honouring the festival without buckling
under its
commercial taint. The best Valentine I ever received was a box
full of about a
hundred pieces of scrap paper, each one, like the most complimentary
kind of
fortune cookie, expressing a lovely sentiment concerning myself
and my future. I
have kept them in a small leather case which says Bolsa de Viaje
on the front
and I still look at them occasionally, if I have a low moment.
They never
fail to revive me. Perhaps I’ll dust down the heart shaped
cake tins this
morning and put pen to paper . Then I might just go and have a
little look round the
stores, just in case. The time to make your mind up about shopping
is never.
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