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ANCIENT CALLING OF COSTERMONGERS.
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
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ANCIENT CALLING OF COSTERMONGERS.

The earliest record of London cries is,
according to Mr. Charles Knight, in Lydgate's
poem of "London Lyckpeny," which is as
old as the days of Henry V., or about 430


008

illustration [Description: 915EAF. Page 008.]
years back. Among Lydgate's cries are enu-
merated "Strawberries ripe and cherries in
the rise;" the rise being a twig to which the
cherries were tied, as at present. Lydgate,
however, only indicates costermongers, but does
not mention them by name.

It is not my intention, as my inquiries are
directed to the present condition of the coster-
mongers, to dwell on this part of the question,
but some historical notice of so numerous a body
is indispensable. I shall confine myself there-
fore to show from the elder dramatists, how
the costermongers flourished in the days of
Elizabeth and James I.

"Virtue," says Shakespeare, "is of so little
regard in these coster-monger times, that true
valour is turned bear-herd." Costermonger
times are as old as any trading times of
which our history tells; indeed, the stationary
costermonger of our own day is a legitimate
descendant of the tradesmen of the olden time,
who stood by their shops with their open case-
ments, loudly inviting buyers by praises of their
wares, and by direct questions of "What d'ye
buy? What d'ye lack?"

Ben Jonson makes his Morose, who hated all
noises, and sought for a silent wife, enter "upon
divers treaties with the fish-wives and orange-
women," to moderate their clamour; but Morose, above all other noisy people, "cannot endure a
costard-monger; he swoons if he hear one."

In Ford's "Sun's Darling" I find the fol-
lowing: "Upon my life he means to turn
costermonger, and is projecting how to forestall
the market. I shall cry pippins rarely."

In Beaumont and Fletcher's "Scornful Lady"
is the following:

"Pray, sister, do not laugh; you'll anger him,
And then he'll rail like a rude costermonger."

Dr. Johnson, gives the derivation of costard-
monger (the orthography he uses), as derived
from the sale of apples or costards, "round
and bulky like the head;" and he cites Burton
as an authority: "Many country vicars," writes
Burton, "are driven to shifts, and if our great
patrons hold us to such conditions, they will
make us costard-mongers, graziers, or sell ale."

"The costard-monger," says Mr. Charles
Knight, in his "London," "was originally an
apple-seller, whence his name, and, from the
mention of him in the old dramatists, he appears
to have been frequently an Irishman."

In Ireland the word "costermonger" is almost
unknown.