登陆注册
18782200000110

第110章 CHAPTER XIX.(1)

London under Charles II.--Condition and appearance of the thoroughfares.--Coffee is first drunk in the capital.--Taverns and their frequenters.--The city by night.--Wicked people do creep about.--Companies of young gentlemen.--The Duke of Monmouth kills a beadle.--Sir Charles Sedley's frolic.--Stately houses of the nobility.--St. James's Park.--Amusement of the town.--At Bartholomew Fair.--Bull, bear, and dog fights.--Some quaint sports.

During the first six years of the merry monarch's reign, London town, east of Temple Bar, consisted of narrow and tortuous streets of quaintly gabled houses, pitched roofed and plaster fronted. Scarce four years had passed after the devastating fire which laid this portion of the capital in ashes, when a new and stately city rose upon the ruins of the old. Thoroughfares lying close by the Thames, which were wont to suffer from inundations, were raised; those which from limited breadth had caused inconvenience and bred pestilence were made wide; warehouses and dwellings of solid brick and carved stone, with doors, window-frames, and breastsummers of stout oak, replaced irregular though not unpicturesque habitations; whilst the halls of companies, eminent taverns, and abodes of great merchants, were now built "with fair courtyards before them, and pleasant gardens behind them, and fair spacious rooms and galleries in them, little inferior to some princes' palaces." Moreover, churches designed by the genius of Christopher Wren, adorned with spires, steeples, and minarets, intersected the capital at all points.

This new, handsome, and populous city presented an animated, ever changing, and merry scene. From "the high street which is called the Strand," far eastwards, great painted signs, emblazoned with heraldic arms, or ornamented with pictures of grotesque birds and animals, swung above shop-doors and taverns. Stalls laden with wares of every description, "set out with decorations as valuable as those of the stage," extended into the thoroughfares. In the new Exchange, built by the worshipful company of mercers at a cost of eight thousand pounds, and adorned by a fair statue of King Charles II. in the habit of a Roman emperor, were galleries containing rows of very rich shops, displaying manufactures and ornaments of rare description, served by young men known as apprentices, and likewise by comely wenches.

At corners and nooks of streets, under eaves of churches and great buildings, and other places of shelter, sat followers of various trades and vendors of divers commodities, each in the place which had become his from daily association and long habit.

These good people, together with keepers of stalls and shops, extolled their wares in deafening shouts; snatches of song, shouts of laughter, and the clang of pewter vessels came in bursts of discord from open tavern doors; women discoursed with or abused each other, according to their temper and inclination as they leaned from the jutting small-paned windows and open balconies of their homesteads; hackney coaches or "hell carts,"as they drove by, cast filth and refuse lying in kennels upon the clothes of passengers; the carriers of sedan-chairs deposited their burthens to fight for right of way in narrow passages and round crowded corners.

Through the busy concourse flowing up and down the thoroughfares from dawn to dusk, street-criers took their way, bearing wares upon their heads in wicker baskets, before them on broad trays, or slung upon their backs in goodly packs. And as they passed, their voices rose above the general din, calling "Fair lemons and oranges, oranges and citrons!" "Cherries, sweet cherries, ripe and red!" "New flounders and great plaice; buy my dish of great eels!" "Rosemary and sweet briar; who'll buy my lavender?""Fresh cheese and cream!" "Lily-white vinegar!" "Dainty sausages!" which calls, being frequently intoned to staves of melody, fell with pleasant sounds upon the ear. [These hawkers so seriously interfered with legitimate traders, that in 1694they were forbidden to sell any goods or merchandise in any public place within the city or liberties, except in open markets and fairs, on penalty of forty shillings for each offence, both to buyers and sellers.] Moreover, to these divers sights and sounds were added ballad singers, who piped ditties upon topics of the day; quacks who sold nostrums and magic potions; dancers who performed on tight-ropes; wandering musicians; fire-eaters of great renown; exhibitors of dancing dolls, and such like itinerants "as make show of motions and strange sights," all of whom were obliged to have and to hold "a license in red and black letters, under the hand and seal of Thomas Killigrew, Esq., master of the revels to his sacred majesty Charles II."Adown the Strand, Fleet Street, and in that part of the city adjoining the Exchange, coffee-houses abounded in great numbers.

Coffee, which in this reign became a favourite beverage, was introduced into London a couple of years before the restoration.

同类推荐
  • 释门归敬仪护法记

    释门归敬仪护法记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 杨文敏集

    杨文敏集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说一向出生菩萨经

    佛说一向出生菩萨经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 四宜堂集

    四宜堂集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 竹庵草录

    竹庵草录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 大洋彼岸,远方思念

    大洋彼岸,远方思念

    江之苏是一个加拿大留学生,她想回国但是不能,不为什么,就是如此矛盾,后来她回国了,回去见到了心心念念想着的人,但是事实和她想的不一样,来自社会,生活和家庭的压迫几乎让她喘不过气来但是,最后生命的碎隙中终于出现了一道曙光
  • 重生之战火回归

    重生之战火回归

    一个牺牲在抗美援朝战场上的志愿军,五十多年后奇异的醒来,却还拥有生前的记忆与身躯。一个生活在战争年代的人如何在现代生存?他与现代人的代沟究竟有多深?他生前留下的子嗣现已年逾花甲,是否还认他这个实际上只有二十几岁的父亲?他经历过最残酷的战争,少年老成……为了自己的孩子,他也可以学会变得冲动。他可以熟悉这个环境,与年轻人共舞,在这样的时代就连思想保守的他也会笑蹋红尘。“忠孝与我无关,真男人,情义无双!”
  • 白居易(中国十大文豪)

    白居易(中国十大文豪)

    白居易,字乐天,号香山居士。生于唐代宗大历七年(772年)正月二十日,出生之地是今河南省新郑县。白氏先祖本为胡人,是西域龟兹国的王候。后来汉化较深,生于官宦之后,诗书之家,白居易从小就受汉文化的熏陶。
  • 永恒的友谊

    永恒的友谊

    主要讲了主角龙蓝彩和它的一群龙朋友冒险于龙族世界最终拯救了龙族的故事,其中有许多惊险的地方,也待慢慢品味。
  • 夏裔

    夏裔

    历史本就是靠鲜血铸就的。当战斗的号角再一次的吹响,少年们身披黄金甲跨着骏马冲向了峥嵘的战场。在这个悲哀的年代,历史将在一次以鲜血来书写。
  • 魔荼罗

    魔荼罗

    荼罗华现,魔性起。嗜血杀戮万千人。轮回路,道成空。枯冢成山血成海。虚日现,星辰聚。众星隐,虚日遁。苍天泣血,万魔吼!!!新人新书,厚颜求收藏,求推荐,求打赏,努力更新是必须的,但是有了大家的努力支持,本书的生命才会更长,新书开道,万望鼎力相助。
  • 教师医疗预防手册

    教师医疗预防手册

    为了指导教师的身心健康和职业发展,我们特地编辑了这套“教师职业发展与健康指导”图书,分为《教师爱岗敬业教育手册》、《教师职业道德与素质手册》、《教师教学质量提升手册》、《教师快乐工作手册》、《教师工作减压手册》、《教师文化娱乐手册》、《教师饮食保健手册》、《教师身体健康手册》、《教师医疗预防手册》、《教师心理健康手册》10册。本图书除了对教师的职业发展规划给予一定指导外,同时还对教师的身心健康进行了鞭辟入里的分析研究,具有很强的系统性、实践性和实用性,非常适合大中小学学校领导、教师,以及在校专业大学生和有关人员阅读,也是各级图书馆陈列收藏的最佳版本。
  • 《周礼》主体思想与成书年代研究(当代中国人文大系)(修订版)

    《周礼》主体思想与成书年代研究(当代中国人文大系)(修订版)

    《周礼》一书原名《周官》,最初见于《汉书·河间献王传》。《传》云:献王好古学,广求遗书,所得皆先秦古文旧书,有《周官》、《尚书》等多种。武帝时,除挟书之律,开献书之路”,献王入朝,当以此书进献,遂入于秘府。哀帝时,刘歆校书中秘,得此书,著于《七略》。班固本之,作《艺文志》,录《周官经》六篇。汉末郑玄作注,唐贾公彦作疏,此书遂列于五经,为《三礼》之首。自汉至今,学者对此书争论甚烈,迄无定论。我们在今日跳出经学之争的圈子,以史学眼光看此书,把它作为研究周代典章制度的史料,应取何种态度,学者所见亦往往不同。
  • 名声大噪:影后的招牌男友

    名声大噪:影后的招牌男友

    他,b城的混世魔王,人人畏惧,听到“周岛”二字赶紧跑,就怕惹上麻烦。她,是全校校花还是学霸,却是过街老鼠,没戏可拍,只能专演尸体。顾君曦打死也没想到自己的走红的方式是——靠尸体?他亲手捧红她,本想占为己有,可是走红之后,心血管医生、同一个公司的屏幕情侣无一对她展开追求.......她暗恋他许久,但身边却有紧紧纠缠的痴心初恋,哪知自己最喜欢的后辈还是他的大学学妹,对他展开猛烈攻势,哪里知道自己卷入这场四角旋涡........
  • 向来情深,奈何缘浅

    向来情深,奈何缘浅

    向来情深,奈何缘浅。情深是我,缘浅是他。这一生唯一的疯狂,唯一的错误,唯一的深情,全是因他。如果可以从来,我愿用一切换不和你相遇。但如何能重来。