[27] “Het gestoffeerde Winkelen en Luifelen Banquet. H. van den Berg. Amsterdam, 1693.”
“Jacob was David’s nephew, but not his brother-in-law.
All sorts of barbers’ tools ground here, also fishwives’ and butchers’ knives.”
“Moses was pick’d up among the rushes.
Teeth and grinders drawn here.”
[30] The British Apollo, 1710, vol. iii. p. 34.
[31] Amusements for the Meridian of London, 1708, p. 72.
[32] Bell and the Dragon, still to be met on the signboard.
[33] Addison is wrong in this [derivation], (see under [Miscellaneous Signs], at the end.)
[34] From Martial and other Latin poets, we learn that it was usual for the bibliopoles of those days to advertise new works by affixing copies of the title-pages to a post outside their shops; but whether this method obtained in the last century, the history of Paternoster Row does not inform us.