Page:An Old English Home and Its Dependencies.djvu/73

Rh At the risk of branching away from my topic, I must have another word relative to dealers. There is still in England a good deal of good plain old oak; old cradles, old standing clock cases, old bureaus, etc., without any carving on them, but fine in their lines and in their simplicity. These wretches buy them up and give them into the hands of mechanical carvers to adorn in "Elizabethan style," and then they sell these good old articles of furniture—defaced and spoiled and rendered all but worthless. "Good heavens!" said I to one of these gentry; "you have utterly, irrevocably ruined that noble wardrobe." "Well, sir, I couldn't sell it for one-tenth of the price hadn't I done this. The buyers like this, and I have to suit their taste." To return to the hearth and to the settle. A friend one day saw a screen of carved oak in a cottage. He bought it for half a guinea, and then called me into consultation on it. With a little study it revealed itself to be the back of a settle of Henry VII.'s