Its always nice to see a couple of 'high Victorians' find eachother. G & S perhaps?
Now you can wear your top hats together, and discuss topics such as:
The smell of London. Granted - this is still as valid as ever!
Riding your penny farthing bicycles. The term only came into the popular lexicon circa 1891, so although Victorian, had only become widely acknowledged during the Edwardian period
Making umberella stands out of elephant's feet. Granted
Not believing steam locomotives will ever catch on. More a notion of late Georgian thinking. Victorian ideas on entrepreneurial enterprise were more circumspect and views on steam locomotion were more a symptom of the then medical belief that the bodies major organs & arteries would implode above 30mph, which was absurd as we all now know that the figure is 45mph.
You may also enjoy the 'Grammar & Spelling' section. Now, are we referring to the G & S as espoused by the great Barnes of The Times, as befits an energetic, youthful nation or merely a lack of correct usage in the modern vernacular?
Kindest regards - Phil