The Cries of London. John Thomas Smith

The Cries of London - John Thomas Smith


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       John Thomas Smith

      The Cries of London

      Exhibiting Several of the Itinerant Traders of Antient and Modern Times

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066236847

       INTRODUCTION.

       WATCHMAN, BELLMAN, and BILLMAN.

       WATER-CARRIER.

       CORPS-BEARER.

       HACKNEY COACHMAN.

       JAILOR.

       A PRISON BASKET-MAN.

       RAT-CATCHER.

       MARKING STONES.

       BUY A BRUSH, OR A TABLE BOOK.

       FIRE-SCREENS.

       SAUSAGES.

       NEW ELEGY.

       ALL IN FULL BLOOM.

       OLD CHAIRS TO MEND.

       THE BASKET-MAKER.

       THE POTTER.

       STAFFORDSHIRE WARE.

       HARD METAL SPOONS TO SELL OR CHANGE.

       DANCING DOLLS.

       SPRIG OF SHILLELAH AND SHAMROCK SO GREEN.

       GINGERBREAD NUTS, OR JACK’S LAST SHIFT.

       CHICKWEED AND GROUNDSEL.

       BILBERRIES.

       SIMPLERS.

       WASHER-WOMEN, CHAR-WOMEN, AND STREET NURSES.

       SMITHFIELD SALOOP.

       SMITHFIELD PUDDING.

       THE BLADDER MAN.

       POSTSCRIPT. BY THE EDITOR.

       Table of Contents

      

There are few subjects, perhaps, so eagerly attended to by the young as those related by their venerable parents when assembled round the fire-side, but more particularly descriptions of the customs and habits of ancient times. Now as the Cries of London are sometimes the topic of conversation, the author of the present work is not without the hope of finding, amongst the more aged as well as juvenile readers, many to whom it may prove acceptable, inasmuch as it not only exhibits several Itinerant Traders and other persons of various callings of the present day, but some of those of former times, collected from engravings executed in the reigns of James I., Charles I. and during the Usurpation of Oliver Cromwell, and which, on account of their extreme rarity, are seldom to be seen but in the most curious and expensive Collections.

      In the perusal of this volume the collector of English Costume, as well as the Biographer, may find something to his purpose, particularly in the old dresses, as it was the custom for our forefathers to wear habits peculiar to their station, and not, as in the present times, when a linen-draper’s apprentice, or a gentleman’s butler, may, in the boxes of the theatre, by means of his dress, and previously to uttering a word, be mistaken for the man of fashion.

      Of all the itinerant callings the Watchman, the Water Carrier, the Vender of Milk, the Town Crier, and the Pedlar, are most probably of the highest antiquity.

      When the Suburbs of London were infested with wolves and other depredators, and the country at large in a perpetual state of warfare, it was found expedient for the inhabitants to protect themselves, and for that purpose they surrounded their city by a wall, and according to the most ancient custom erected barbicans or watch-towers at various distances, commanding a view of the country, so that those on guard might see the approach of an enemy. This is an extremely ancient custom, as we find in the Second Book of Kings, chapter ix. verse 17, “And there stood a watchman on the Tower in Jezreel.”

      With respect to water, it is natural to suppose that before conduits were established in London, the inhabitants procured it from the River Thames, and that infirm people, and the more opulent citizens, compensated others for the trouble of bringing it.

      This must have also been the practice as to milk, in consequence of the farm-houses always being situated in the suburbs for the purpose of grazing the cattle. Stowe, the historian, has informed us that in his boyish days he had his three quarts of milk hot from the cow for his halfpenny.

      The Water Carrier will be described and delineated in the course of this work.

      As the city increased in population, a Town Crier became expedient, so that an article to be sold, or any thing lost, might be in the shortest possible time made known to the inhabitants of the remotest dwelling. Shakspeare has marked the character of a Crier of his time in Hamlet, Act iii. scene 2, “But if you mouth it, as many of our players do, I had as lieve the Town-crier spoke my lines.” Lazarello de Tormes, in the very entertaining history of his life, describes his having been a Crier at Madrid, and that


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