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Ronald Searle: A Christmas Carol and Hot Elder Wine

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The elderberry is "the Englishman's grape" and can be used to make a rich, fruity wine. In Victorian era winters, hot elder wine was sold from stands in the street. It could also be served indoors, as it was quite generously in Charles Dickens'sThe Pickwick Papers (1836). This doesn't quite explain why Ronald Searle chose to depict a hot elder wine stand in his cover illustration for Dickens's classic A Christmas Carol (1843, 1961). It's a great period detail, but not one that specifically occurs in the story. So why is it here on the front of the dust jacket?

A Christmas Carol (1961)
Ronald Searle

Scan by Tom Bloom


An 1842 drawing by George Scharff shows a hot elder wine stand in Holborne. Is it possible this could have been Searle's source material? If so, Searle's version certainly isn't a slavish copy.

Hot elder wine stand seen in Holborne, detail, winter 1842
George Scharff

https://janeaustensworld.wordpress.com/tag/elder-wine/




A more refined commercial setup is depicted more recently in John Finnie's 1986 plate for Wedgwood.
Street Seller of Hot Elder Wine
Wedgwood, 1986
John Finnie

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Wedgwood-Street-Seller-Sellers-London/dp/B001L2U7IG


Then again, perhaps it's just an incidental detail that happened to receive unusual cover prominence in the wraparound art. Searle's full spread is meant to emphasize Bob Cratchit and Tiny Tim and likely was designed as interior art forced into double duty as a cover illustration.
https://ronaldsearle.blogspot.com/2008/01/more-dickens.html



Note:  My thanks to Tom Bloom for providing the scan of the book cover which got me started on this subject. This is his fifteenth contribution to Attempted Bloggery.


Matt Jones's 2008 post called "More Dickens" includes much or even all the art from Searle's A Christmas Carol and may be seen here.


This year is Ronald Searle's centenary. I don't suppose I've mentioned that before.


At this point, we might as well go out singing:

"Elderberry Wine" (1972)

By Elton John and Bernie Taupin


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