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- Six bunches a penny, sweet bloomin Lavender
- Fresh Cabbidge
- Antique Ballads
- Past one c'clock, an' a fine morning
- Stinking Fish
- Curds and Whey
- "Buy a fine Singing Bird?"
- Ow-oo
- Fine Writeing Ink
- Fine Oysters
- Sweet Lavender
- Three Rows a Penny pins
- Sw-e-e-p
- New Laid Eggs
- Fine Large Cucumbers
- Buy a Fork or a Fire Shovel
- Flowers, penny a bunch
- Troope every one
- Costers and Cockneys
“Ere y’are, Lidies’ Tormentors. ‘Two’ n penny!” - A view of Petticoat Lane
A view of Petticoat Lane Immediately connected with the trade of the central mart for old clothes are the adjoining streets of Petticoat-lane, and those of the not very distant Rosemary-lane. In these localities is a second-hand garment-seller at almost every step, but the whole stock of these traders, decent, frowsy, half-rotten, or smart and good habiliments, has first passed through the channel of the Exchange. The men who sell these goods have all bought them at the Exchange—the exceptions being insignificant—so that this street-sale is but an extension of the trade of the central mart, with the addition that the wares have been made ready for use. - Dr Bokanky
Dr Bokanky The Street Herbalist “Now then for the Kalibonca Root, that was brought from Madras in the East Indies. It’ll cure the toothache, head-ache, giddiness in the head, dimness of sight, rheumatics in the head, and is highly recommended for the ague; never known to fail; and I’ve sold it for this six and twenty year. From one penny to sixpence the packet. The best article in England.” - Long Song Seller
Long Song Seller “Long songs” first appeared between nine and ten years ago. The long-song sellers did not depend upon patter—though some of them pattered a little—to attract customers, but on the veritable cheapness and novel form in which they vended popular songs, printed on paper rather wider than this page, “three songs abreast,” and the paper was about a yard long, which constituted the “three” yards of song. Sometimes three slips were pasted together. The vendors paraded the streets with their “three yards of new and popular songs” for a penny.