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On Aug 2, 2:44�am, "Paul Crowley" <slkwuoiutiuytciu...@slkjlskjoioue.com> wrote: > "JPW" <jpwearing1...@yahoo.com> wrote in message > > news:7fd5e3fa-4b06-402c-9042-70ed8e004bdf@25g2000hsx.googlegroups.com... > > > On Aug 1, 8:52 am, Roundtable <lancelotinl...@hotmail.com> wrote: > > > Fish was only sold on Fridays in Elizabethan times, in London at > > > least, so if one was served fish on     

Group: humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare · Group Profile · Search for Fishing days in humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare
Author: lackpurity
Date: Aug 4, 2008 12:11

On Aug 1, 3:28�pm, art <acneu...@gmail.com> wrote: --------------------------------------------------------- Richard Nathan wrote in 1998: <<In Hamlet, when Hamlet is pretending to be mad, Polonius asks him, "Do you know me, my lord?" and Hamlet responds, "Excellent well. �You are a fishmonger." MM: Shakespeare didn't believe in unnecessarily killing fish. He knew that Polonius
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"JPW" <jpwearing1816@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:7fd5e3fa-4b06-402c-9042-70ed8e004bdf@25g2000hsx.googlegroups.com... > On Aug 1, 8:52 am, Roundtable <lancelotinl...@hotmail.com> wrote: > > Fish was only sold on Fridays in Elizabethan times, in London at > > least, so if one was served fish on any other day, it was prsumably not fresh, > > but bought the previous Friday. > > Even in my     

Group: humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare · Group Profile · Search for Fishing days in humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare
Author: lackpurity
Date: Aug 4, 2008 11:41

On Aug 1, 3:22 pm, Greg Reynolds <even...@core.com> wrote: On Aug 1, 3:28 pm, art <acneu...@gmail.com> wrote: --------------------------------------------------------- Richard Nathan wrote in 1998: <<In Hamlet, when Hamlet is pretending to be mad, Polonius asks him, "Do you know me, my lord?" and Hamlet responds, "Excellent well.  You are a fishmonger."
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Greg Reynolds wrote: > On Aug 1, 3:28 pm, art <acneu...@gmail.com> wrote: >> --------------------------------------------------------- >> Richard Nathan wrote in 1998: >> >> <<In Hamlet, when Hamlet is pretending to be mad, >> Polonius asks him, "Do you know me, my lord?" and >> Hamlet responds, "Excellent well. You are a fishmonger." >> >> Many Oxfordians claim that this is a reference to     

Group: humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare · Group Profile · Search for Fishing days in humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare
Author: Paul Crowley
Date: Aug 2, 2008 00:44

On Aug 1, 3:28 pm, art <acneu...@gmail.com> wrote: --------------------------------------------------------- Richard Nathan wrote in 1998: <<In Hamlet, when Hamlet is pretending to be mad, Polonius asks him, "Do you know me, my lord?" and Hamlet responds, "Excellent well.  You are a fishmonger." Many Oxfordians claim that this is a reference to Burghley's attempt to get a
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--------------------------------------------------------- Richard Nathan wrote in 1998: <<In Hamlet, when Hamlet is pretending to be mad, Polonius asks him, "Do you know me, my lord?" and Hamlet responds, "Excellent well. You are a fishmonger." Many Oxfordians claim that this is a reference to Burghley's attempt to get a law enacted that would require the English to eat fish twice a week     

Group: humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare · Group Profile · Search for Fishing days in humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare
Author: Dennis
Date: Aug 1, 2008 16:49

On Aug 1, 8:52 am, Roundtable <lancelotinl...@hotmail.com> wrote: Fish was only sold on Fridays in Elizabethan times, in London at least, so if one was served fish on any other day, it was prsumably not fresh, but bought the previous Friday. A Friday meal: Cod and Sprats Butter with sage Manchet bread White wine Fish jelly, boiled Pike Presumably either
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April 1. April Fools Day In sixteenth century France, the start of The New Year was observed on April first. Then in 1562, Pope Gregory introduced a new calendar for the Christian world, and the New Year fell on January first. Those who hadn't heard or didn't believe the change in the date where called "April fools." In France today, April first is called "Poisson d'Avril." French children     

Group: humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare · Group Profile · Search for Fishing days in humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare
Author: Ignoto
Date: Aug 1, 2008 16:14

On Feb 25, 12:59 am, mark tinsky <m...@3riversdbs.net> wrote: The day dawned early as they  usually do in MT , tho from the  thick snow heavy  low clouds you wouldn t  have known it.  Checked the weather and they promised lite snow,  temps just above  freezing , and  lite   winds. I ve been out scouting this week with temps  in the 50 s and brite sun,  not a rising  fish was seen but
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Group: humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare · Group Profile · Search for Fishing days in humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare
Author: Greg Reynolds
Date: Aug 1, 2008 15:22

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Group: humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare · Group Profile · Search for Fishing days in humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare
Author: art
Date: Aug 1, 2008 13:28

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Group: humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare · Group Profile · Search for Fishing days in humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare
Author: JPW
Date: Aug 1, 2008 10:14

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Group: soc.religion.paganism · Group Profile · Search for Fishing days in soc.religion.paganism
Author: Terry McCombs
Date: Mar 30, 2008 20:45

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Group: alt.smokers.pipes · Group Profile · Search for Fishing days in alt.smokers.pipes
Author: Paul Z
Date: Feb 25, 2008 06:16

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