Sterling William Mary

Searching For Sterling William Mary ? Limited Offers Below

RMS QUEEN MARY Solid SILVER Cunard SHIPPING Souvenir SPOON 1937
RMS QUEEN MARY Solid SILVER Cunard SHIPPING Souvenir SPOON 1937
Paypal   US $73.71
Lunt Treasure William Mary II 925 Cream Gravy Ladle
Lunt Treasure William Mary II 925 Cream Gravy Ladle
Paypal   US $69.95
TOWLE MANUFACTURING CO Sterling Silver Old English Sugar Tongs NE BX
TOWLE MANUFACTURING CO Sterling Silver Old English Sugar Tongs NE BX
Paypal   US $18.02
Pair of Vtg TOWLE MFG Co Sterling Silver Butter Spreaders Canterbury NE BM
Pair of Vtg TOWLE MFG Co Sterling Silver Butter Spreaders Canterbury NE BM
Paypal   US $26.00
Pair of Vtg TOWLE MFG Co Sterling Silver Butter Spreaders Old English NE BI
Pair of Vtg TOWLE MFG Co Sterling Silver Butter Spreaders Old English NE BI
Paypal   US $25.15
Lunt Silver WILLIAM MARY Sterling Jelly Server 327622
Lunt Silver WILLIAM MARY Sterling Jelly Server 327622
Paypal   US $44.99
WILLIAM MARY LUNT 3PC STERLING YOUTH SET
WILLIAM MARY LUNT 3PC STERLING YOUTH SET
Paypal   US $139.99
Lunt Sterling William Mary FORK 7 1 8
Lunt Sterling William Mary FORK 7 1 8
Paypal   US $75.00
WILLIAM MARY BY LUNT STERLING SILVER TOMATO SERVER 7 3 4
WILLIAM MARY BY LUNT STERLING SILVER TOMATO SERVER 7 3 4
Paypal   US $189.00
Rogers Lunt Bowlen WILLIAM MARY Pattern STERLING Five OClock Teaspoon
Rogers Lunt Bowlen WILLIAM MARY Pattern STERLING Five OClock Teaspoon
Paypal   US $24.99
Vintage 1930s Lunt Treasure Sterling Wm Mary Baby Set in Box 34 gms
Vintage 1930s Lunt Treasure Sterling Wm Mary Baby Set in Box 34 gms
Paypal   US $29.00
Lunt Sterling Silver Flatware 85 pieces William and Mary setting for 12
Lunt Sterling Silver Flatware 85 pieces William and Mary setting for 12
Paypal   US $3,195.00

For more well priced, quality Sterling William Mary Scroll Down Now

R. K. Narayan’s Attitude Towards the English Language

R. K. Narayan’s attitude towards the English language:

a postcolonial posture, a utilitarian gesture

Abstract

This paper is intended to examine R. K. Narayan’s attitude towards the English language as reflected in his essays. Narayan (1906-2001) was born and grown up in a period when English education was already institutionalised in the Indian Sub-continent. Like other Indian writers in English, such as Raja Rao and Mulk Raj Anand, he received English education and used to write in English from the beginning of his literary career up to the end. However, he is seen to have used the English language and literary form to scrutinise colonialism and depict the Indian society continually under change due to the colonial rule. A part of this endeavour seems to be evident in Narayan’s attitude towards the English language. Narayan’s position in this regard is deemed quite ambivalent and complex —he is aware that English is the language of the colonist, yet he is found to have accepted it for practical reasons. That is, his attitude towards the English language appears to have resulted from and shaped by the reality prevailing in the postcolonial setting.

Keywords: R. K. Narayan, attitude, English language, postcolonial posture, utilitarian gesture

–– I ––

The study of the English language and literature in the postcolonial context seems to be “a densely political and cultural phenomenon” (Ashcroft, Griffiths and Tiffins 1989: 2-3) and consequently comes under the purview of the postcolonial writers. One of the fundamental assertions of postcolonialism is that the English language and literature have played a very significant role in propounding colonial ideology aimed at the survival and consolidation of the colonial rule (Walder 1998). In other words, the construction of English literary education is part of the colonial cultural design (Viswanathan 1995). Many postcolonial writers have attempted to address the issue of cultural domination through the English language and literature. For instance, Thiong’o (1995) opines that the central position given to the study of the English language and literature in Africa emanates from the assumption of the cultural superiority of the West. This is why, he prescribes that the English departments should be abolished from the universities in Africa. Indian novelist Raja Rao (2000: v) states that English is the language of the intellect, not of emotion; and in India English should therefore be appropriated to the level of “a dialect which will some day prove to be as distinctive and colourful as the Irish or the American”. Hence, postcolonial writing uses the language of the colonists but adapts it to the discourse of the colonised. It is performed by two processes: abrogation and appropriation (Ashcroft, Griffiths and Tiffins 1989). Abrogation stands for challenging the notion of universality as claimed by the colonists with regard to the language. Appropriation, on the other hand, is the use of the imperial language to express the cultural experience of the colonised. This is a process by which imperial English is made to encounter vernacular languages. Standard English words are used in many new meanings, and, in turn, the English language receives many new words from indigenous languages. Besides, postcolonial literature emerges out of the tension between these two pulls. Ashcroft, Griffiths and Tiffin (1989: 39) rightly maintain-

… in one sense all post-colonial literatures are cross-cultural because they negotiate a gap between ‘worlds’, a gap in which the simultaneous processes of abrogation and appropriation continually strive to define and determine their practice.

Thus, challenging and overhauling the Eurocentric notion of language become an essential part of literary decolonisation (Loomba 2001).

As Boehmer (1995) illustrates, almost all the aspects of the world of the colonised including the language of instruction and commerce were dominated by the empire. The colonial education of the middle class people then tended to create ‘mental colonization’ among them: “English-language and -literature instruction played a key role in naturalizing British values” (Boehmer 1995:169). By the early 20th century, students from the colonies were heavily influenced by the excellence of the English language and literature. This factor seems to account for the “syncretic” nature of the postcolonial society, which cannot be compartmentalised into either a purely traditional or a purely alien. Ashcroft, Griffiths and Tiffin (1989: 110) contend, “The construction of ‘pure’ cultural value is always conducted within a radically altered dynamic of power relations”. Therefore, a postcolonial reading of R. K. Narayan’s works, especially essays with regard to his attitude to the English language would likely to reveal that he endeavours to formulate a synthesis between the Indian element and the colonial one.

–– II ––

The colonial education that Narayan received might have influenced his views on the English language since in the classroom Narayan had to see English as the first language, his native language being a second language (Walsh 1982). English was the most prestigious subject due to political, administrative, social, economic and scientific reasons. Although Tamil, the language of Narayan’s province, and Sanskrit, the classical language of India, were taught in the school, they were considered inferior in status and provided occasions for jokes. Narayan (2001b: 464) admits this in his essay “English in India”-

But in the classroom neither of these two languages was given any importance; they were assigned to the most helpless among the teachers, the pundits who were treated as a joke by the boys, since they taught only the ‘second language’, the first being English as ordained by Lord Macaulay when he introduced English education in India.

Besides encountering textbooks in English in his school and college, Narayan extensively read English literature outside his syllabus. His father’s library at home and his school library were crammed with books on English literature (Narayan 2001b). Narayan took the full opportunity of the libraries and enthusiastically read Scott, Dickens, Rider Haggard, Marie Corelli, Moliere, Pope, Marlowe, Tolstoy, Thomas Hardy and others (Narayan 1995). He was also in touch with the current literary scene through various magazines such as Little Folks, Nineteenth Century and After, Cornhill, Strand Magazine, Mercury, The Spectator, The Times Literary Supplement and The Manchester Guardian. The cumulative impact of this massive reading of the English literature was that he became very well versed in the English language. As a writer, Narayan opted for the English language simply because it suited him better than his mother tongue. In an interview, he says-

I never had any idea that I was writing in another tongue. My whole education has been in English from the primary school, and most of my reading has been in the English language . . . I wrote in English because it came to me very easily. (qtd. by Sundaram 1988)

It was then very unlikely that a writer like Narayan who learned the English language to such an extent as to produce his works in it, would reject or censure it easily on nationalistic grounds.

–– III ––

India became free from the colonial rule in 1947, but the linguistic and cultural implication of colonialism still remained operative, serving two conspicuously unavoidable purposes: a unifying linguistic agency for administration and a means of wider international communication (Kachru: 1995). In the mean time, the issue of either the acceptance or the rejection of the English language became one of the hot debates since the beginning of Indian nationalist movement in the 1920s. Gandhi’s ‘Swadeshi Movement’ was aimed at embracing all that was swadeshi (indigenous), and hence English being a foreign language came under the scrutiny of this movement. The use of the English language by the Indians was often denounced, and Hindi was seen as a possible substitute. In his novel Waiting for the Mahatma, Narayan (2001a: 27) has made Gandhi declare that he will not deliver his lecture in English because “It’s the language of our rulers. It has enslaved us”. As Leela Gandhi (1998: 147) points out, Gandhi’s rejection of the English language stems from his belief in “the legitimate cultural primacy” of the Indian languages.

Nevertheless, the attempted ban on the English language created two contradictory positions among the Indian writers. The first group consisting of the writers using the indigenous languages protested against writing in English on nationalistic grounds. The second group constituted of the Indian writers in English continued writing in the English language to express their Indian experience. These polarities existing at the end of the colonial period surfaced with renewed vigour and extended dimensions after the independence of India (Dharwadker and Dharwadker 1996). Indian lawmakers framed a fifteen- year time limit to upgrade Hindi to the position of the official language of India. However, this project of expelling English within a fixed period yielded almost no result. Iyengar (2000) presents sufficient statistics of 1957 to show that there was no spectacular advance of Hindi, and the position of English as an Indian official language remained the same – English was still the language of inter-state communication or the sole lingua franca, the language of higher administration, law courts, education and examinations. Resultantly, parliamentary enactment gave English the status of “an associate language” with Hindi.

That Narayan (1988a: 14) was aware of the debate on the position of the English language in his country is evident in his essay “Fifteen Years”-

. . . various causes, practical, political, etc. have demanded the abolition of English from our midst. It is almost a matter of national propriety and prestige now to declare one’s aversion to this language, and to cry for its abolition.

There was a time when many people blindly admired English, and the ability to talk and write in the English language earned great prestige for a person. Notwithstanding, at present the patriotic fervour of the people made the language a hotcake for debate. Narayan (2000) depicts the same situation in his first novel Swami and Friends dealing with the effect of the colonial rule on the Indian people. The novel discloses that while people feel antipathy towards the British, they are also attracted to the paraphernalia of the colonial power. As a result, the colonial language has been the signifier of power and dignity. In the Albert Mission School, English is the most prestigious subject. Sankar’s name is well known because he can speak to the teachers in English in the open class (Swami and Friends 7); and likewise Rajam’s friends respect him because he speaks very good English, “exactly like a ‘European’” (Swami and Friends 12). In “Fifteen Years”, Narayan (1988a) takes a postcolonial view on this issue, showing his awareness that English is an alien language, yet advocating its use in India for practical purposes. According to him, the day-to-day reality has made it impossible for the Indians to castigate the English language.

Narayan (1988a) presents an imaginary conversation between an Indian judge and the personified English language. The judge puts forth the verdict that the English language must leave the country-

When we said, ‘Quit India,’ we meant it to apply to Englishmen as well as their language. And there does not seem to be much point in tolerating you in our midst. You are the language of the imperialist, the red-tapist, the diabolical legalist, the language which always means two things at the same time. (“Fifteen Years” 15)

Contrariwise, in reply to the judge, the English language points out that it has been firmly rooted in the Indian soil. In other words, having been practised for two hundred years, the English language has been part and parcel of the Indian society including its education, cultural activities, government machinery, law courts, business, trades, sports, aviation, navigation, agriculture, science, technology and so forth. In the essay, although the judge feels that the language must quit India, he cannot present any solid ground why it should be so; rather he remains confused and his advocacy inconclusive.

Hence, Narayan (1988a) is found to claim that the English language has been an integral part of the Indian reality. In fact, in the Indian context, it has been turned into the Indian English rather than the English of England. Narayan’s (1988a: 8) position seems to echo the statement of Iyengar (2000): “English has become ours, it is not less ours for being primarily the Englishman’s or the American’s”.

–– IV ––

Narayan (1988a) obviously objectively thinks over the case of Hindi, that is, its establishment as a state language within a limited period of time. And in the essay “To a Hindi Enthusiast”, he suggests that it is impossible to impose Hindi as a state language in a set time limit. Quoting the aphorism from Shakespeare that “ripeness is all”, he argues ripeness cannot be forced by a government order or by the prescription of a commission. Like a sociolinguist (e.g. Hudson 1981), he maintains that the growth of a language is a natural process, which cannot be artificially stopped. Narayan (1988a: 26) then advocates the cause of English by adopting a postcolonial view-

For me, at any rate, English is an absolutely swadeshi language. English, of course, in a remote horoscopic sense, is a native of England, but it enjoys, by virtue of its uncanny ability, citizenship in every country in the world. It has sojourned in India longer than you or I and is entitled to be treated with respect. It is my hope that English will soon be classified as a non-regional Indian language.

It is thus evident that Narayan (1988a) is not advocating the servile imitation of the English language or the culture represented and spread by it. Rather, his intention is to absorb it into the grand procession of the Indian languages. The English language would be treated as one in the long list of the Indian languages and dialects, and its inclusion would not at all affect the total pattern of the language habit of the Indian people.

–– V ––

While Narayan (1988b: 28) seems to accept the presence of English in the day-to-day Indian reality, he also analyzes the cause of its popularity, commenting in “To a Hindi Enthusiast” that “half the charm of English was engendered by the manner in which its schoolbooks were produced”. The high quality print and coloured frontispiece exhibiting some London Bridge, rivers and towers, and the carefully selected contents with relevant black and white pictures have played a significant role in establishing the English language in this country. Narayan’s experience is consistent with that of Anita Desai (1996: 222) who writes in her essay “A Coat in Many Colors”-

Hindi texts we were given to study were, in contrast to the English ones, dry, pedantic, unimaginative, and unrelated to the simplicities of everyday life. They were also unattractively printed and published, a not unimportant factor to a child who, at that age, judges by the feel, the touch, and the taste of things.

It is then evident that both Narayan and Anita Desai are of the opinion that the highly sophisticated and impressive appearance of English books is responsible for their popular appeal to the people in India.

On the whole, Narayan’s position respecting the issue of the English language is rather complex. He seems to say that it could have been better if Hindi had taken the place of the English language in India, but presently it seems impossible to put Hindi to that exalted status and, therefore, it will be wise to accept the position of the English language. Again, when Narayan speaks in favour of the English language, he does not mean the King’s English; rather he means the language that has been coloured with the Indian context and filled with the vocabulary from the native languages and dialects. In his essay “A Literary Alchemy”, Narayan (1988c: 197) puts forward his idea of the Indian English which, he thinks, is the inevitable outcome of a natural process-

We have fostered the language for over a century and we are entitled to bring it in line with our own habits of thought and idiom. Americans have adapted the English language to suit their native mood and speech without feeling apologetic, and have achieved directness and unambiguity in expression.

That is, Narayan is suggesting that the Indian people should violate the “purist” conception of the English language and insert some new expressions suiting the Indian context. To Narayan, expressions like “Please do the needful” and “And oblige” are very much pertinent to the Indian context. Although inappropriate according to the “purist” standard of the English language, these expressions are a “masterpiece of economy and contribution to the English language” (“A Literary Alchemy” 198). While Narayan is considering the use of the Indian English, he is, at the same time, proposing to reconstruct the universal criteria of the language. In other words, he is abrogating and appropriating the language.

Narayan (2001c: 480) seems to be mocking at the idea of adhering to the principles laid down by the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) which, in his essay “After the Raj” is described as “a sacred cow for us in India”. He expresses the same attitude in his essay “English in India” where he asserts that for maximum benefit the English language must reach the grassroots level of India. And here too he is speaking not of standard English but of its Indian variety: “the language must be taught in a simpler manner, through a basic vocabulary, simplified spelling, and explained and interpreted through the many spoken languages of India” (Narayan 2001c: 468).

–– VI ––

Narayan shows his awareness to the complex issues regarding the position of the English language in the colonial India. He is conscious of the foreign origin of the language and its imperial connotation. Notwithstanding, he clearly depicts how the English language has established a firm root in India and become an essential part of its social reality. Thus, Narayan’s voice is rather polyphonic.

That is to say, Narayan seems to believe that it is impossible to eliminate the English language from the social reality of India. And he pragmatically suggests the acceptance of the language in its Indianized form. Hence, Narayan’s attitude towards the English language is formed by the postcolonial reality and utilitarian value. To sum up, as Iyengar (2000: 359) comments, Narayan-

“uses the English language much as we used to wear dhoties manufactured in Lancashire— but the thoughts and feelings, the stirrings of the soul, the wayward movements of the consciousness, are all of the soil of India”.

Works Cited

Ashcroft, Bill, Gareth Griffiths and Helen Tiffin. The Empire Writes Back: Theory and Practice in Post-colonial Literatures. Ed. Terence Hawkes. London and New York: Routledge, 1989.

- - -, ed. The Post-colonial Studies Reader. London and New York: Routledge, 1995.

Boehmer, Elleke. Colonial & Postcolonial Literature. Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press, 1995.

Desai, Anita, “A Coat in Many Colors.” South Asian English: Structure, Use and Users. Ed. Robert J. Baumgardner. Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1996. 221-30.

Dharwadker, Aparna and Vinay Dharwadker, “Language, Identity, and Nation in Postcolonial Indian English Literature.” English Postcoloniality: Literatures from Around the World. Eds. Radhika Mohanram and Gita Rajan. Westport, Connecticut and London: Greenwood Press, 1996.

Gandhi, Leela. Postcolonial Theory: A Critical Introduction. New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1998.

Hudson, R. Sociolinguistics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1981.

Iyengar, K. R. Srinivasa. Indian Writing in English. 5th ed. New Delhi: Sterling Publishers Private Limited, 1985. Rpt. 2000.

Kachru, Braj B. “The Alchemy of English.” The Post-colonial Studies Reader. Eds. Bill Ashcroft, Gareth Griffiths and Helen Tiffin. London and New York : Routledge. 1995. 291-95.

Loomba, Ania. Colonialism/Postcolonialism. London and New York: Routledge, 2001.

Narayan, R. K. My Days: A Memoir. 1974. Mysore: Indian Thought Publications, 1995.

- - - , “Fifteen Years.” R. K. Narayan. A Writer’s Nightmare: Selected Essays 1958-1988. New Delhi: Penguin Books, 1988a. 14-16.

- - - , “To a Hindi Enthusiast.” R. K. Narayan. A Writer’s Nightmare: Selected Essays 1958-1988. New Delhi: Penguin Books, 1988b. 26-28.

- - - , “A Literary Alchemy.” R. K. Narayan. A Writer’s Nightmare: Selected Essays 1958-1988. New Delhi: Penguin Books, 1988c. 196-198.

- - - , Swami and Friends. 1935. Rpt. in The Magic of Malgudi. Ed. S. Krishnan. New Delhi: Penguin Books, 2000.

- - - , Waiting for the Mahatma. 1955. Mysore: Indian Thought Publications, 2001a.

- - - , “English in India”. The Writerly Life: Selected Non-fiction of R. K. Narayan. Ed. S. Krishnan. New Delhi: Viking, 2001b. 464-468.

- - - , “After the Raj.” The Writerly Life: Selected Non-fiction. Ed. S. Krishnan. New Delhi: Viking, 2001c. 480-83.

Rao, Raja. Forward to Kanthapura. New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2000.

Sundaram, P. S. R. K. Narayan as A Novelist. Delhi: B. R. Publishing Corporation, 1988.

Thiong’o, Ngugi Wa. “On the Abolition of the English Department.” The Post-colonial Studies Reader. Eds. Bill Ashcroft, Gareth Griffiths and Helen Tiffin. London and New York : Routledge. 1995. 438-442.

Viswanathan, Gauri. “The Beginnings of English Literary Study in British India.” The Post-colonial Studies Reader. Eds. Bill Ashcroft, Gareth Griffiths and Helen Tiffin. London and New York : Routledge. 1995. 431-437.

Walder, Denis. “Post-colonial Theory.” A Handbook to Literary Research. Eds. Simon Eliot and W. R. Owens. London: Routledge, 1998.

Walsh, W. R. K. Narayan: A Critical Appreciation. London: William Heinemann Ltd., 1982.

About the Author

Associate Professor, Department of English, Jahangirnagar University, Savar, Dhaka, MA in English Language and PhD in Applied Linguistics & ELT, interested in phonetics, phonology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, sociolinguistics, psycholinguistics, testing, error analysis, methodology, poetry, literary criticism, etc

RMS QUEEN MARY Solid SILVER Cunard SHIPPING Souvenir SPOON 1937
RMS QUEEN MARY Solid SILVER Cunard SHIPPING Souvenir SPOON 1937
Paypal   US $73.71
Lunt Treasure William Mary II 925 Cream Gravy Ladle
Lunt Treasure William Mary II 925 Cream Gravy Ladle
Paypal   US $69.95
TOWLE MANUFACTURING CO Sterling Silver Old English Sugar Tongs NE BX
TOWLE MANUFACTURING CO Sterling Silver Old English Sugar Tongs NE BX
Paypal   US $18.02
Pair of Vtg TOWLE MFG Co Sterling Silver Butter Spreaders Canterbury NE BM
Pair of Vtg TOWLE MFG Co Sterling Silver Butter Spreaders Canterbury NE BM
Paypal   US $26.00
Pair of Vtg TOWLE MFG Co Sterling Silver Butter Spreaders Old English NE BI
Pair of Vtg TOWLE MFG Co Sterling Silver Butter Spreaders Old English NE BI
Paypal   US $25.15
Lunt Silver WILLIAM MARY Sterling Jelly Server 327622
Lunt Silver WILLIAM MARY Sterling Jelly Server 327622
Paypal   US $44.99
WILLIAM MARY LUNT 3PC STERLING YOUTH SET
WILLIAM MARY LUNT 3PC STERLING YOUTH SET
Paypal   US $139.99
Lunt Sterling William Mary FORK 7 1 8
Lunt Sterling William Mary FORK 7 1 8
Paypal   US $75.00
WILLIAM MARY BY LUNT STERLING SILVER TOMATO SERVER 7 3 4
WILLIAM MARY BY LUNT STERLING SILVER TOMATO SERVER 7 3 4
Paypal   US $189.00
Rogers Lunt Bowlen WILLIAM MARY Pattern STERLING Five OClock Teaspoon
Rogers Lunt Bowlen WILLIAM MARY Pattern STERLING Five OClock Teaspoon
Paypal   US $24.99
Vintage 1930s Lunt Treasure Sterling Wm Mary Baby Set in Box 34 gms
Vintage 1930s Lunt Treasure Sterling Wm Mary Baby Set in Box 34 gms
Paypal   US $29.00
Lunt Sterling Silver Flatware 85 pieces William and Mary setting for 12
Lunt Sterling Silver Flatware 85 pieces William and Mary setting for 12
Paypal   US $3,195.00
WILLIAM MARY LUNT STERLING SUGAR TONG
WILLIAM MARY LUNT STERLING SUGAR TONG
Paypal   US $39.99
TOWLE MFG Co Sterling Silver Cream Ladle Canterbury NE BL
TOWLE MFG Co Sterling Silver Cream Ladle Canterbury NE BL
Paypal   US $18.50
WILLIAM MARY BY LUNT STERLING SILVER BABY SPOON 4 1 4
WILLIAM MARY BY LUNT STERLING SILVER BABY SPOON 4 1 4
Paypal   US $59.00
Lunt Sterling WILLIAM MARY Serrated Fruit Spoon
Lunt Sterling WILLIAM MARY Serrated Fruit Spoon
Paypal   US $39.99
WILLIAMMARY LUNT STERLING 5 OCLOCK SPOONS
WILLIAMMARY LUNT STERLING 5 OCLOCK SPOONS
Paypal   US $29.99
Lunt Sterling Silver Serving Spoon
Lunt Sterling Silver Serving Spoon
Paypal   US $75.00
Lunt William Mary Sterling Silver Bon Bon Tongs 545ozt 17g 3 1 2 No Monogram
Lunt William Mary Sterling Silver Bon Bon Tongs 545ozt 17g 3 1 2 No Monogram
Paypal   US $28.00
Lunt WILLIAM MARY STERLING Sugar Tongs 7340739
Lunt WILLIAM MARY STERLING Sugar Tongs 7340739
Paypal   US $60.95
Lunt WILLIAM MARY STERLING Lapel Pin 6682408
Lunt WILLIAM MARY STERLING Lapel Pin 6682408
Paypal   US $28.99
ENGLISH GEORGIAN STERLING SILVER FISH SLICE SERVER
ENGLISH GEORGIAN STERLING SILVER FISH SLICE SERVER
Paypal   US $325.00
Very Rare ca 1710 Pair of Silver Tea Caddie by Anthony Nelme London
Very Rare ca 1710 Pair of Silver Tea Caddie by Anthony Nelme London
Paypal   US $3,999.00
LUNT PICKLE OLIVE FORK ELEGANT WILLIAM MARY TREASURE PATTERN
LUNT PICKLE OLIVE FORK ELEGANT WILLIAM MARY TREASURE PATTERN
Paypal   US $21.50
William Mary Baby Cup Sterling
William Mary Baby Cup Sterling
Paypal   US $333.09
Lunt Sterling Silver Carving Knife Fork William Mary 1921 Small Steak
Lunt Sterling Silver Carving Knife Fork William Mary 1921 Small Steak
Paypal   US $145.00
STERLING WILLIAM MARY LUNT SUGAR TONG N R
STERLING WILLIAM MARY LUNT SUGAR TONG N R
Paypal   US $34.99
ANTIQUE LUNT TREASURE WILLIAM MARY PATTERN STERLING 1921
ANTIQUE LUNT TREASURE WILLIAM MARY PATTERN STERLING 1921
Paypal   US $19.99
Magnificent Huge Sterling Silver Monteith Punch Bowl Mask Satyr DJ Wellby 1910
Magnificent Huge Sterling Silver Monteith Punch Bowl Mask Satyr DJ Wellby 1910
Paypal   US $7,009.85
1 STERLING SILVER PLATED SERVING PIECES LOT VINTAGE SUGAR SPOONS SERVERS
1 STERLING SILVER PLATED SERVING PIECES LOT VINTAGE SUGAR SPOONS SERVERS
Paypal   US $10.00
Lunt WILLIAM MARY Solid Youth Tea Fork 4319434
Lunt WILLIAM MARY Solid Youth Tea Fork 4319434
Paypal   US $54.99
Lunt WILLIAM MARY STERLING Asparagus Server 327457
Lunt WILLIAM MARY STERLING Asparagus Server 327457
Paypal   US $381.95
Lunt WILLIAM MARY STERLING Dressing Fork 5426692
Lunt WILLIAM MARY STERLING Dressing Fork 5426692
Paypal   US $229.95
Lunt WILLIAM MARY Sterling Cheese Server 327482
Lunt WILLIAM MARY Sterling Cheese Server 327482
Paypal   US $30.99
Lunt WILLIAM MARY 2 Pc Dressing Serving Set 5426691
Lunt WILLIAM MARY 2 Pc Dressing Serving Set 5426691
Paypal   US $441.95
Lunt WILLIAM MARY Master Butter Knife 327438
Lunt WILLIAM MARY Master Butter Knife 327438
Paypal   US $64.95
Lunt WILLIAM MARY STERLING Ice Serving Spoon 327627
Lunt WILLIAM MARY STERLING Ice Serving Spoon 327627
Paypal   US $309.95
Lunt Sterling William Mary BUTTER KNIFE
Lunt Sterling William Mary BUTTER KNIFE
Paypal   US $52.00
Lunt Sterling William Mary ROUND BOWL SOUP SPOON
Lunt Sterling William Mary ROUND BOWL SOUP SPOON
Paypal   US $55.00
Lunt WILLIAM MARY Sterling Bon Bon Spoon 327589
Lunt WILLIAM MARY Sterling Bon Bon Spoon 327589
Paypal   US $46.99
Lunt WILLIAM MARY Pickle Olive Fork 327524
Lunt WILLIAM MARY Pickle Olive Fork 327524
Paypal   US $40.99
Lunt Sterling William Mary PICKLE OLIVE FORK 5 1 2
Lunt Sterling William Mary PICKLE OLIVE FORK 5 1 2
Paypal   US $35.00
Lunt Sterling William Mary SALAD FORK 6
Lunt Sterling William Mary SALAD FORK 6
Paypal   US $60.00
William Mary Lunt Butter Spreaders All Sterling 2
William Mary Lunt Butter Spreaders All Sterling 2
Paypal   US $90.00
William Mary Lunt Jellied Cranberry Server
William Mary Lunt Jellied Cranberry Server
Paypal   US $65.00
William Mary Lunt Luncheon Fork
William Mary Lunt Luncheon Fork
Paypal   US $72.00
William Mary Lunt Place Fork New
William Mary Lunt Place Fork New
Paypal   US $105.00
William Mary Lunt Salad Fork
William Mary Lunt Salad Fork
Paypal   US $65.00
William Mary Lunt Salad Fork Place
William Mary Lunt Salad Fork Place
Paypal   US $75.00
William Mary Lunt Tomato or Pastry Server Pierced
William Mary Lunt Tomato or Pastry Server Pierced
Paypal   US $167.00
WILLIAM MARY LUNT STERLING GRAVY LADLE
WILLIAM MARY LUNT STERLING GRAVY LADLE
Paypal   US $139.99
WILLIAM MARY LUNT STERLING DINNER KNIVES
WILLIAM MARY LUNT STERLING DINNER KNIVES
Paypal   US $43.99
WILLIAM MARY LUNT STERLING PICKLE FORK
WILLIAM MARY LUNT STERLING PICKLE FORK
Paypal   US $33.99
Lunt WILLIAM MARY 2 Pc Baby Set 1968469
Lunt WILLIAM MARY 2 Pc Baby Set 1968469
Paypal   US $83.95
William and Mary Sterling Silver Teaspoon by Lunt
William and Mary Sterling Silver Teaspoon by Lunt
Paypal   US $78.95
1921 Rogers Lunt Bowlen William and Mary Style Sterling Silver
1921 Rogers Lunt Bowlen William and Mary Style Sterling Silver
Paypal   US $4,750.00
WILLIAM MARY LUNT 2 STERLING CREAM SOUP SPOONS
WILLIAM MARY LUNT 2 STERLING CREAM SOUP SPOONS
Paypal   US $137.99
Lunt WILLIAM MARY Knife 9 1 2 2525923
Lunt WILLIAM MARY Knife 9 1 2 2525923
Paypal   US $64.95
Lunt WILLIAM MARY Salad Fork 1243724
Lunt WILLIAM MARY Salad Fork 1243724
Paypal   US $107.95
LEMP PABST EST 4 VINTAGE GORHAM STER SILVER JULIP STRAW HEART SHAPED SPOONS
LEMP PABST EST 4 VINTAGE GORHAM STER SILVER JULIP STRAW HEART SHAPED SPOONS
Paypal   US $9.99
Pacific Ocean at Carmel

Leave a Comment

Previous post:

Next post: