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"Commend me to the nurseryman and the poulterer."
"Rutherfurds," he said, as a quality poulterer might say "quail."
The purchaser was a neighbouring poulterer, and they were unquestionably doomed to die before the next market day.
"I shall have to pay the poulterer for them, if he doesn't catch them," said Jude.
If he was shooting birds and selling them to a poulterer you wouldn't think twice cause it's nature's way, killing and eating.
A single basket made of moss, once containing plovers' eggs, held all that the poulterer had to say to the rabble.
He also played "the Poulterer" in a 2004 television adaptation of A Christmas Carol.
Go to doss with the poulterer, you understand, and shake up with the milchmand.
It was headed by a poulter or poulterer (though this last term is more often for a merchant who deals in poultry).
His father, Thomas Brewer, was a poulterer, and his mother's Christian name was True.
The cover was lifted from within, and the pigeons flew away with a clatter that brought the chagrined poulterer cursing and swearing to the door.
The Nisbets of Dean held the office of Hereditary Poulterer to the King.
At that time, Butcher Row really was Butcher Row for it had no less than five, plus a fishmonger and a poulterer.
Two years afterwards he married Anne Purvis, daughter of a poulterer in Leadenhall Street, and started a school at Greenwich.
Mr. Poulterer instructs the small-business owners in the techniques of molding ice cream into shapes like apples, bananas, pumpkins, Christmas trees and wreaths.
No. 19 : House of L'outarde d'or, originally a sign of a poulterer, built in 1487 with a sign made in 1708.
In the match report in the Blackburn Times on 6 April 1883, Warburton was described as a "Master plumber; also pub landlord and poulterer".
Joseph Shepherd Munden (1758 - February 6, 1832), English actor, was the son of a London poulterer, and ran away from home to join a strolling company.
He was born in Newport Street, Long Acre, Westminster, the third son of John Horne, a poulterer in Newport Market.
Any man having the power to refuse these things, no matter whether he were called a Pope or a Poulterer, would, of course, have the power of afflicting numbers of innocent people.
In March 1686, Northumberland married Catherine Wheatley, the daughter of poulterer, Robert Wheatley of Bracknell in Berkshire.
Sutherland was an able seaman and also the ship's poulterer (which meant he prepared game birds for the table, including for instance those shot by Joseph Banks and Lieutenant Gore).
Other participants have smaller markets in mind and attend sessions taught by Duane D. Poulterer of Media, Pa., the owner of D.D.P., which sells ice cream molds.
"We passed a full half company g down from the west hills bag and baggage-and ot on leave either I tel1 you whoever gives such orders del us like Sese to the poulterer!"
"My dear child, commend Dr. Grant to the deanery of Westminster or St. Paul's, and I should be as glad of your nurseryman and poulterer as you could be.