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Woman Selling Chow-chow

Woman Selling Chow-chow.jpg A tradesman with his swan-panThumbnailsA Chinese BooksellerA tradesman with his swan-panThumbnailsA Chinese BooksellerA tradesman with his swan-panThumbnailsA Chinese BooksellerA tradesman with his swan-panThumbnailsA Chinese BooksellerA tradesman with his swan-panThumbnailsA Chinese Bookseller
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There is little more to be observed of the present engraving than this: that whatever wares, goods, or merchandize are exposed to sale in the open air, which in the open plains, as well in the broad streets of cities, is very much the case, the vender and the articles themselves are, during the summer months, protected from the rays of the sun by a large umbrella, which is generally square, like that in the print. Some hundreds of similar stands and umbrellas were displayed on a plain near the spot where the embassy disembarked, within the mouth of the Pei-ho; the little booths, if they may be so termed, being generally well stored with sweet-meats and sliced water-melons laid upon ice. The poorest peasant in China carries an umbrella, either to defend him against the rays of the sun, or heavy rains.

Author
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Picturesque Representations of the Dress and Manners of the Chinese, by William Alexander Published 1814
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900*621
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