bridecake
Appearance
See also: bride-cake
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]bridecake (countable and uncountable, plural bridecakes)
- (archaic) Synonym of wedding cake.
- 1648, Robert Herrick, “The Bride-Cake”, in Hesperides[1]:
- This day my Julia thou must make
For Mistresse Bride, the wedding Cake:
Knead but the Dow, and it will be
To paste of Almonds turn’d by thee:
Or kisse it thou, but once, or twice,
And for the Bride-Cake ther’l be Spice.
- 1860, Mary Theresa Vidal, chapter 15, in Bengala, Or, Some Time Ago[2], volume 1, London: John W. Parker & Son, pages 193–194:
- But when the day should come for sending a piece of bridecake and cards with ‘Mrs. Herbert’ on them, all these wrongs would be avenged!
- 1871, George Eliot [pseudonym; Mary Ann Evans], chapter 3, in Middlemarch […], volume I, Edinburgh, London: William Blackwood and Sons, →OCLC, book I:
- Mr. Casaubon seemed even unconscious that trivialities existed, and never handed round that small-talk of heavy men which is as acceptable as stale bride-cake brought forth with an odor of cupboard.
- 1874, John Ruskin, letter to Charles Eliot Norton, 12 October, 1874, in Letters of John Ruskin to Charles Eliot Norton, Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1904, p. 107[3]
- The Glacier des Bois is no more. Of that of our days is left a little white tongue of ice showing in the blank bed. . . . But the saddest of all is Mont Blanc itself from here—it is, to what it was, as a mere whitewashed wall to a bridecake.
- 1876, Lewis Carroll, The Hunting of the Snark […] , London: Macmillan, Fit the First. The Landing:
- He came as a Baker: but owned, when too late—
And it drove the poor Bellman half-mad—
He could only bake Bridecake—for which, I may state,
No materials were to be had.
References
[edit]- “bridecake”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.