... the housemaid slept under the kitchen dresser ; and the one man-servant was turned at night out of the house. Had our friend chanced to get amongst trades-people, he might have found Mr Kerr, the eminent goldsmith in the Parliament Square, stowing... The New Monthly Belle Assemblée - 178 ページ1847全文表示 - この書籍について
| Robert Chambers - 1847 - 366 ページ
...eminent goldsmith in the Parliament Square, stowing his menage into a couple of small rooms above his booth-like shop, plastered against the wall of St...be approached through a mean alley — the College Wynd. The churches were chiefly clustered under one roof ; the jail was a narrow building, half-filling... | |
| Frederick William Watkeys - 1908 - 472 ページ
...kitchen. A wealthy goldsmith had a dwelling of two small rooms above his booth, the nursery and kitchen being placed in a cellar under the level of the street,...children are said to have " rotted off like sheep." With families of the well-to-do and respectable so closely confined, it is a matter of wonder how the... | |
| Esther Singleton - 1913 - 364 ページ
...worse among the trades-people. An eminent goldsmith had a shop in a booth stuck on a wall of St. Giles Church, the nursery and kitchen however being placed...the children are said to have rotted off like sheep. There was scarce a room in the whole city without a bed ; there was very little water, and that was... | |
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