seborabsinth
Sebor Absinth <small><sup>TM</sup></small>

Wormwood's been around for years - long before absinthe was a twinkle in Dr. Pierre Ordinaire's eye (wormwood is the ingredient in absinthe that gives it its hallucinogenic properties).

Early references can be found in the Bible, and it's the following passage from Revelation that has caused controversy over recent years: "And the third angel sounded, and there fell a great star from heaven, burning as it were a lamp, and it fell upon the third part of the rivers, and upon the fountains of waters; And the name of the star is called Wormwood: and the third part of the waters became wormwood; and many men died of the waters, because they were made bitter." (Revelation 8:10-11 KJV)

Wormwood has been seen as closely connected with the apocalypse. Not surprising then, that when people spotted that 'Chernobyl' translates as 'wormwood', there was mass foreboding. Will a nuclear disaster destroy the world? Or is it just an eerie coincidence.

1789
George Washington becomes the first president of the United States.

Did you know that Washington was a big fan of marijuana? He even grew it on his own farm. No great controversy though, as in the 1790s the plant was grown mainly for hemp and soil stabilization. Not for making joints.
1797
In 1797 Henri-Louis Pernod got his hands on Dr Ordinaire's absinthe recipe by way of a lucrative business deal. Pernod and his friend Daniel Henri Dubied promptly opened the first absinthe distillery, located in the beautiful Couvet, in Switzerland.
1814
"The Star Spangled Banner" is composed in Baltimore, MD.

"The Star-Spangled Banner" was only officially made the national anthem by Congress in 1931. The last verse especially has controversial resonance today:

O thus be it ever when free-men shall stand Between their lov'd home and the war's desolation;
Blest with vict'ry and peace,
may the heav'n-rescued land Praise the Pow'r that hath made and preserv'd us a nation!
Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just,
And this be our motto: "In God is our trust!"
And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave!
1830
Tumultuous times for the English and French. In England, George IV dies and his brother William IV accedes to the throne, while in France there's a revolution, with Louis Philippe, the "Citizen King", nabbing the throne. It was under the reign of Louis Philippe that absinthe became a common drink in its own right. Prior to this it was really only drunk as a cordial, and used as a flavour for other beverages.
1844
Paul Marie Verlaine is born in northeast France, in Metz. His father, an infantry captain, was stationed here. Verlaine was an only child but an orphaned cousin lived with them, Elisa Dehee, with whom Verlaine later fell madly in love. The family moved to Paris in 1851.
1859
In this year Manet paints "The Absinthe Drinker". He also meets Charles Baudelaire, who was a big fan of absinthe. Baudelaire, a well-known poet and art critic, had a great influence on Manet's life, as he promoted the revival of graphic art and introduced him to the leading artists of the era's etching movement.
1871
Verlaine and Rimbaud get together this year.

Verlaine had a famously tempestuous relationship with Rimbaud, with whom he fell in love when Rimbaud was a teenage poet and asked him for literary advice. The two poets traveled together for a time, and Verlaine helped Rimbaud achieve fame in Paris. As they grew apart there were huge fights, and Verlaine ended up shooting Rimbaud in the wrist. Rimbaud pressed charges and Verlaine went to prison for two years. Bob Dylan wittily referred to this love affair in his album 'Blood on the Tracks':

"Situations have ended sad,
relationships have all been bad,
mine have been like Verlaine's and Rimbaud's".

Verlaine spent his later years drinking absinthe in the cafes of Paris, and his late poetry often reflects on the cliché of a celebrity poet pickled in absinthe. He died in 1896 at a prostitute's home.
1878
8 million litres of Absinthe were imported into the United States this year.
1888
After an evening drinking absinthe, and a fierce argument with his artist housemate Gauguin, Vincent Van Gogh cut off the lobe of his left ear.

There are so many versions of this story. The most common (and plausible) is that Van Gogh cut off his left earlobe, put it in an envelope and gave it to a prostitute named Rachel saying "Guard this object carefully". But of course there are conspiracy theories. Did Gauguin in fact cut off Van Gogh's ear during a drunken duel and try to cover it up?

Some doctors now think that the artist may have had a congenital brain lesion, aggravated by the absinthe. After the ear incident he was hospitalised for a time.
1895
Maignan paints "The Green Muse".

Absinthe's most popular nickname was la fee verte (the green fairy). It was also known as l'atroce sorciere (the atrocious sorceress), and Notre-Dame de l'oubli (Our Lady of forgetting).
1901
In the same year that the Pernod plant in Pontarlier catches fire when struck by lightning (the fire burnt for four days), Picasso paints The Absinthe Drinker and Woman Drinking Absinthe, both oil on canvas.

These paintings are characteristic of what is known as Picasso's 'blue period' (1901-1904), during which time he created blue-tinted, serious paintings of society's outcasts, including prostitutes, beggars and fellow artists.

Picasso fit right into the bohemian Parisian lifestyle of his contemporaries, a life coloured by celebrities and fellow absinthe-drinkers. He married twice and had four children by three women, often maintaining a number of mistresses at any one time.
1908
Absinthe is officially banned in Switzerland (Article 32 of federal constitution)

The Jean Lanfray 'absinthe murder' had been swiftly followed by another in Geneva. A man named Sallaz had binged on absinthe and hacked his wife to death. Another petition in Geneva got 35,000 signatures. Politicians suggested compromises - absinthe was big business in Switzerland at that time - but in 1908 it was finally banned.
1910
The Swiss absinthe ban came into effect on October 7th. Holland also banned absinthe this year. Absinthe was never hugely popular in Holland, but the drink was banned as a preventative measure.
1912
Picasso paints Bottle of Pernod and Glass, a 'synthetic cubist' oil on canvas. Absinthe is banned in the United States.

Picasso depicted absinthe in a number of media during his career, and the changes in his thinking and artistic progress can be charted by his changing depiction of "the green fairy". We have earlier seen the "Woman Drinking Absinthe" (1901) which demonstrates a realist approach, and also a focus on the human form, while this painting marks Picasso's move towards cubism.
1914
Picasso creates "Glass of Absinthe", a 'cubist' painted bronze sculpture with a perforated silver absinthe spoon

Picasso explored cubism through sculpture as well as painting. Picasso was concerned with spatial proportion and perspective, and creating sculpture allowed the artist to fully explore the implications of cubist painting. Picasso also created cubist sculptures using non-artistic materials like scraps of wood, metal and paper: "Mandolin" and "Clarinet" were two such sculptures.
1922
The French government passed a bill allowing the sale of imitation (wormwood-free) Absinthe.
1951
Monk records the classic of modern music "Straight, No Chaser".

The lyrics have some great advice to share:

Pack up the moment and Take it with you on the road 'Cause now is the time
1963
John F. Kennedy is assassinated in Dallas, Texas.
1977
Star Wars 'A New Hope' breaks all previous records by grossing $461 million.
1980
John Lennon is shot and killed near his Manhattan apartment.
1989
The Berlin Wall is torn down by the East Germans on 9th November, signifying the collapse of Communism and the Cold War.
2000
Sebor Absinth TM launch their new pre-mixed cocktail "Wildemule": a blend of Sebor Absinth TM, ginger & lime. The cocktail is named after the quintessential absinthe drinker Oscar Wilde, and packaged in pure aluminium, moving absinthe into the 21st century.
2001
Absinthe is legalized in France, partly thanks to a lot of research and passionate lobbying by Francois Guy (see earlier entry).
2006
We drive two bottles of Sebor Absinth TM post-haste to a swish London hotel. Apparently Outkast just can't get enough.