Heiress Advice Page by Sabrina Jeffries - Author Heiress Trivia Page by Sabrina Jeffries - Author Heiress Video
 
For all its excesses, the Regency upper-class lived and died by rules. (You could call them the first “Rules” girls.) So, of course, one of the great contradictions was how men and women were expected to behave.
 
As the gentle sex, women were to be without vices and opinion. They were to be modest, dutiful and the prettier the better (reputation, breeding and fortune also came into play when calculating their worth). Spirited girls who spoke their minds, showed too much temper or wit or appeared too familiar with manly interests—gambling, boxing, profanity—were quickly labeled: hoydens. (This was not a good thing.)
 
Meanwhile, society happily embraced young women prone to hysterics, fainting fits and swooning, according to Georgette Heyer’s Regency World.  Bottomline:  The wise young Regency woman learned just enough math to be able to safeguard the household budget. Ironically, it would be during the Regency, as arranged marriages gave way to unions of love, that women with good conversational skills finally came into favor.  After all, who wants a dull companion for life?


bamming: fooling or lying or pulling one's leg

cattle: horses

cropsick: hung over

foxed: drunk

havey-cavey: suspicious

lightskirt: prostitute

milk-and-water miss: an insipid young female

parure: a set of matching jewelry

rake: man of big sexual appetite, few morals

rig: coach and horse together

Stubble it!: Be quiet!