196 
KERAMIC STUDIO 
SOME QUOTATIONS WITH GIFTS 
With a pocketbook: " We must expect change " — Dickens. 
A cigar box: "Our best remains are ashes" — Horace's 
Odes. 
A cigarette case: " Swift as a shadow, short as anj^ dream " 
— Alidsummer' s Night Dream. 
A tobacco -jar: "The man who smokes thinks Hke a Sage, 
and acts Hke a Samaritan" 
A tea cup and saucer: "We'll tak a cup o kindness yet, 
for days of Auld Lang Syne" 
A Racquet case: " You shall be welcome. Madam, to ni}' 
Court" — Henry V. 
A shaving cup: "Much ado about nothing" 
A tea urn: "The bubbling and loud hissing urn, throws 
up a steamy column, and the cups that cheer, but not inebriate, 
wait on each" 
A salad bowl: "Let onion atoms lurk within the bowl, 
and half suspected animate the whole " 
or "The tender lettuce brings on softer sleep" 
A stein: " Drink fayre. Don't swayre. Long live the king " 
A tankard: " Its a long tankard that cannot be refilled " 
A bon bon dish: "A dish where sweets compacted lie" 
A pair shoe buckles: "We must go together" — Dickens 
A frame for a child's picture: " Her angel face as the great 
eye of Heaven shyned bright, and maketh sunshine in each 
shady place" — Spencer's Fairie Queen. 
Silver shoe buckles for a child: " O happy earth, whereon 
thy innocent feet doe ever tread " — Spencer's Fairie Queen 
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STUDIES OF HUMLOCK 
