Page:The Story of Nell Gwyn.djvu/159

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HER BEDSTEAD.
143

Chairman Callow, with singular discreetness, omits, it will be seen, to name the places at which he waited longest. Eleven shillings and sixpence seems very little for carrying and waiting eleven hours. But the most curious bill, and it is one with which I have been only recently supplied, is a silversmith's—in which the principal sum is a charge for making a bedstead for Nelly, with ornaments of silver, such as the King's head, slaves, eagles, crowns, and Cupids, and Jacob Hall dancing upon a rope of wire-work. The document must be given entire: —

Work done for ye righte Honble. Madame Guinne.
John Cooqūs, siluersmyth his bill.
1674. Deliuered the head of ye bedstead weighing 885 onces 12 lb. and I haue received 636 onces 15 dweight so that their is over and aboue of me owne siluer two hundred [and] forty eight onces 17 dweight at 7s 11d. par once (ye siluer being a d't worse par once according ye reste) wich comes to   £
98
s.
10
d.
2
For ye making of ye 636 onces 15 d't at 2s. 11d par once; comes to, 92 17 3
  onces. dweight.
Deliuered ye kings head weighing 197 5
one figure weighing 445 15
ye other figure with ye caracter weighing 428 5
ye slaues and ye reste belonging unto it 255  
ye two Eagles weighing 169 10
one of the crowne[s] weighing 94 5
ye second crown weighing 97 10