Footnote 6: [(return)]
Tristan le Voyageur. Boiled radishes, it may be important to know, are an excellent substitute for asparagus!
Footnote 7: [(return)]
Forks did not come into use till the time of Charles V. in the latter half of the fourteenth century. In France, these instruments, both in silver and tinned iron, are made so as to bear some resemblance to the fingers, of which they are the substitutes, and they are used exclusively in the business of conveying food to the mouth; while the knives, being narrow and sharp-pointed, can answer no purpose but that of carving.—In England the case is different. The steel forks, in common use among the people, are incapable of raising thin viands to the mouth: while the broad, round-pointed knife was obviously intended for this business.
Footnote 8: [(return)]
The vin d'Aï, in Champagne, according to Patin, was called "Vinum Dei," by Dominicus Bandius. It was the common drink of kings and princes.—Paumier, Traité du Vin.
Footnote 9: [(return)]
Mabillon, Annales Benedictines.
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