WINE AND ITS HISTORY
GHOSTS OF MANY THIRSTS REMARKABLE EXHIBITION -The ghosts of a thousand lordly thirsts of history lurk at the Vintners' Hall, in Upper Thames Street, East London, where a unique loan exhibition illustrating—with drinking vessels, books and documents —the history of wine in England, was lately assembled. Mr. Francis Berry, the honorary organiser, had gathered a display of absorbing interest. The layman stood bemused before the amazing array of materials which contained drinks from B.C. to D.O.R.A. Gold, silver, glass, horn, wood, " treen," leather —they wink and flash from their cases. There was a beautiful glass goblet lent by the King, which Queen Elizabeth is said to have used. There was a Greek tasting vessel in lovely pink glass.; they used it in Cyprus in the fifth century B.C. From the peat bog* of Ireland was dug the thirteenth-century " mether," ana Gargantua himself would gaze respectfully at a wassail, or " lamb's wool," bowl of lignum-vitae wood, the largest known, the capacity being o\ gallons. That respect would kindle again when confronted by the giant claret bottle, with a capacity of 28 ordinary bottles, described lovingly in the catalogue as " a triumphant example of the glass-blower's craft." It was an erstwhile Duke of Edinburgh, who had it filled to the top. Beside it, in charming contrast, were two tiny bottles, filled, corked ' and labelled, exactly similar to those mado for the Queen's dole's house. And there was the very gilt cup mentioned by Pepys, with four bells hanging from it, which was Henry VIII.'s gift to the Worshipful Company of Barbers —whose loan it is—in 1540. Probably the most intrinsically valuable single exhibit on view, it is worth, at a modest estimate, £IO,OOO.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19330805.2.174.40
Bibliographic details
New Zealand Herald, Volume LXX, Issue 21562, 5 August 1933, Page 3 (Supplement)
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285WINE AND ITS HISTORY New Zealand Herald, Volume LXX, Issue 21562, 5 August 1933, Page 3 (Supplement)
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