“Then when the Bottel doth grow old,

And will good Liquor no longer hold,

Out of its side you may take a Clout,

Will mend your Shooes when they’r worn out;

Else take it, and hang it upon a Pin,

It will serve to put many Trifles in,

As Hinges, Awls, and Candle-ends,

For young Beginners must have such things.

Then I wish, etc.”

The next most popular English drinking vessel was the greybeard, or as it was sometimes, but seldom, called the Bellarmine, from the Cardinal of that name so famous for his controversial works. These jugs were imported largely from the Low Countries, where the Cardinal’s name was a reproach. These greybeards are of very common occurrence, being frequently found in excavating on the sites of old houses.