Queen's Pattern Silver Runcible Spoon, 1872

Queens pattern silver runcible spoon London 1872 Chawner Edward Lear
Queens pattern silver runcible spoon London 1872 Chawner Edward Lear DSCN3093 DSCN3094 DSCN3095

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Runcible Spoon - Queen's pattern - London 1872 by George Adams - 14.3cm long; 38g - PF/2280

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This is a very rare example of an antique silver runcible spoon (aka pickle or chutney spoon or spork) in the highly sought after Queen's pattern. 

This Victorian spoon was made the premier specialist flatware makers of the 19th Century - Chawner & Company (under the leadership of George Adams). It is in excellent original condition with crisp double-struck decoration (i.e. on both sides of the stem) and has the additional benefit of having no personalised engravings nor erasures.

The runcible spoon appears in two works by Edward Lear: The Owl & The Pussy Cat ("They dined on mince and slices of quince, which they ate with a runcible spoon") and Twenty-Six Nonsense Rhymes and Pictures ("The Dolomphious Duck, who caught Spotted Frogs for her dinner with a Runcible Spoon").