- The Irish Street-seller
The Irish Street-seller The fruit-sellers, meaning thereby those who deal principally in fruit in the season, are the more intelligent costermongers. The calculation as to what a bushel of apples, for instance, will make in half or quarter pecks, puzzles the more ignorant, and they buy “second-hand,” or of a middle-man, and consequently dearer. The Irish street-sellers do not meddle much with fruit, excepting a few of the very best class of them, and they “do well in it,” I was told, “they have such tongue.” - 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. - 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.” - The Street Seller of Crockery Ware
The Street Seller of Crockery Ware The goods are carried in baskets on the head, the men having pads on the cloth caps which they wear—or sometimes a padding of hay or wool inside the cap—while the women’s pads are worn outside their bonnets or caps, the bonnet being occasionally placed on the basket. The goods, though carried in baskets on the head to the locality of the traffic, are, whilst the traffic is going on, usually borne from house to house, or street to street, on the arm, or when in large baskets carried before them by the two hands. - The London Coffee Stall
The London Coffee Stall The coffee-stall keepers generally stand at the corner of a street. In the fruit and meat markets there are usually two or three coffee-stalls, and one or two in the streets leading to them; in Covent-garden there are no less than four coffee-stalls. Indeed, the stalls abound in all the great thoroughfares, and the most in those not accounted “fashionable” and great “business” routes, but such as are frequented by working people, on their way to their day’s labour. - Merchant of Jeddah
Arab Merchant under sun umbrella selling their wares - Bread Seller in the streets of Cairo
Bread Seller in the streets of Cairo - Open air food market
- Buy my fine Myrtles and Roses
- Pots and Kettles to mend
- Young lambs to sell
- "Buy a fine Singing Bird?"
- Six bunches a penny, sweet bloomin Lavender
- Fine Writeing Ink
- Flowers, penny a bunch
- Three Rows a Penny pins
- Buy a Fork or a Fire Shovel
- Fine Oysters
- Troope every one
- Milk below, Maids
- Sixpence a pound, Fair Cherryes
- Buy a doll, Miss
- Past one c'clock, an' a fine morning
- Songs, penny a sheet
- Buy the fair ballads I have in my pack
- I love a ballad in print
- Fresh Cabbidge
- Fresh and sweet
- Antique Ballads
- New Laid Eggs
- Stinking Fish
- Knives and Scissors to Grind
- Letters for post
- Cat's and Dog's Meat
- Dust, O
- O' clo
- Ow-oo
- Sw-e-e-p
- Great News
- Wat d'yer call that
- Cabbages O Turnips
- Hot Spice Gingerbread
- Knives to Grind
- Old Cloths
- Buy a Live Goose
- Sand 'O
- Cherries, O ripe cherries, O
- Fine Strawberries
- Chairs to mend
- Sweet Lavender
- All a blowin
- Any Earthen Ware, buy a jug or a tea pot
- Fresh Oysters, penny a lot
- Buy my sweet Roses
- Ere's yer toys for girls an boys
- Fine Large Cucumbers
- Curds and Whey
- Ripe Cherries
- Tiddy Diddy Doll
- Large silver eels