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silver stirrup cup - USAThe stirrup cup was created for holding a drink to be taken while mounted on horseback, usually prior to a hunt moving off. As it is of small capacity it can be emptied quickly and there is no need to set it down during use, which would an impossibility anyway, while in the saddle. The most popular surviving late eighteenth/early nineteenth century specimens are those in the shape of a fox’s head. Modelled in detail, the fur is represented realistically and they are of a size to be held easily in the hand. Contemporary counterparts in porcelain were made at the Derby factory and elsewhere. This silver stirrup cup is of modern manufacture. It is unmarked and has the monogram GG roughly engraved in the interior of the cup. The fox's head up-side down is the base of the cup, standing on the ears and the nose of the wild animal. The cup is 3 1/2 in. high (cm. 8,5) and was bought from an US dealer through the Internet. This item is not for sale, but most of my pieces were bought through the Internet. On the top and on the right bar of this page there are some advertisings of websites of silver and antique dealers |
A poem titled 'Stirrup-cup' written by American poet Sidney Clopton Lanier (1842-1881):The Stirrup-CupDeath, thou'rt a cordial old and rare:Look how compounded, with what care! Time got his wrinkles reaping thee Sweet herbs from all antiquity. David to thy distillage went, Keats, and Gotama excellent, Omar Khayyam, and Chaucer bright, And Shakespeare for a king-delight. Then, Time, let not a drop be spilt: Hand me the cup whene'er thou wilt; 'Tis thy rich stirrup-cup to me; I'll drink it down right smilingly. Tampa, Florida, 1877. (from Poems of Sidney Lanier , Edited by His Wife 1842-1881) |
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