accounted
the daintiest dish in England; and, I think, for the
bigness of the biggest price.
bigness of the biggest price.
Ben Jonson - The Devil's Association
201:
His rosy ties and garters so o'erblown.
=3. 3. 25 Godwit. = The godwit was formerly in great repute as a table
delicacy. Thomas Muffett in _Health's Improvement_, p. 99, says:
'A fat godwit is so fine and light meat, that noblemen (yea, and
merchants too, by your leave) stick not to buy them at four nobles a
dozen. '
Cf. also Sir T. Browne, _Norf. Birds_, _Wks. _, 1835, 4. 319: God-wyts
. . .
accounted the daintiest dish in England; and, I think, for the
bigness of the biggest price. ' Jonson mentions the godwit in this
connection twice in the _Sil. Wom. _ (_Wks. _ 3. 350 and 388), and
in Horace, _Praises of a Country Life_ (_Wks. _ 9. 121) translates
'attagen Ionicus' by 'Ionian godwit. '
=3. 3. 26 The Globes, and Mermaides! = Theatres and taverns. Mr.
Halliwell-Phillipps has proved that the Globe Theatre on the
Bankside, Southwark, the summer theatre of Shakespeare and his
fellows, was built in 1599. It was erected from materials brought
by Richard Burbage and Peter Street from the theatre in Shoreditch.
On June 29, 1613, it was destroyed by fire, but was rebuilt without
delay in a superior style, and this time with a roof of tile, King
James contributing to the cost.
His rosy ties and garters so o'erblown.
=3. 3. 25 Godwit. = The godwit was formerly in great repute as a table
delicacy. Thomas Muffett in _Health's Improvement_, p. 99, says:
'A fat godwit is so fine and light meat, that noblemen (yea, and
merchants too, by your leave) stick not to buy them at four nobles a
dozen. '
Cf. also Sir T. Browne, _Norf. Birds_, _Wks. _, 1835, 4. 319: God-wyts
. . .
accounted the daintiest dish in England; and, I think, for the
bigness of the biggest price. ' Jonson mentions the godwit in this
connection twice in the _Sil. Wom. _ (_Wks. _ 3. 350 and 388), and
in Horace, _Praises of a Country Life_ (_Wks. _ 9. 121) translates
'attagen Ionicus' by 'Ionian godwit. '
=3. 3. 26 The Globes, and Mermaides! = Theatres and taverns. Mr.
Halliwell-Phillipps has proved that the Globe Theatre on the
Bankside, Southwark, the summer theatre of Shakespeare and his
fellows, was built in 1599. It was erected from materials brought
by Richard Burbage and Peter Street from the theatre in Shoreditch.
On June 29, 1613, it was destroyed by fire, but was rebuilt without
delay in a superior style, and this time with a roof of tile, King
James contributing to the cost.