| François Le Gouz de La Boullaye - 1837 - 162 sidor
...shoes of Ireland for the dogs of England," meaning that their shoes are worth more than the English.**1 For cloaks they have five or six yards of frize drawn...kicking? Is not this intended to convey the idea that a hich is the fittest salutation with which to greet English dogs 1 — M. heads, which they kill before... | |
| 1837 - 654 sidor
...shoes of Ireland for the dogs of England,' meaning that their shoes are worth more than the English. " For cloaks they have five or six yards of frize drawn...no shirts, and about as many lice as hairs on their heads, which they kill before each other without any ceremony. " The northern Irish have for their... | |
| 1841 - 436 sidor
...shoes of Ireland for the:dogs of England,' meaning that their shoes are worth more than the English. For cloaks they have five or six yards of frize drawn...no shirts, and about as many lice as hairs on their heads, which they kill before each other without any ceremony. The northern Irish have for their only... | |
| 1841 - 435 sidor
...For cloaks they have five or six yai /sof frize drawn round the neck, the body, and over the bend, and they never quit this mantle, either in sleeping,...no shirts, and about as many lice as hairs on their heads, which they kill before each other without any ceremony. The northern Irish have for their only... | |
| 1853 - 446 sidor
...shoes of Ireland for the dogs of England,' meaning that their shoes are worth more than the English. For cloaks they have five or six yards of frize drawn...no shirts, and about as many lice as hairs on their heads, which they kill before each other without any ceremony. The northern Irish have for their only... | |
| George Sigerson - 1871 - 356 sidor
...which they call ' trowsers ' ; their shoes which are pointed, they call brogues with a single sole. . . For cloaks they have five or six yards of frize drawn round the neck, the body, and over the head." The Tour of M. de la BauUaye k Gouz in Ireland, AD 1644. Translation, London, 1837, fip. 39-44. The... | |
| William Gregory Wood-Martin - 1889 - 376 sidor
...frize, which they call trousers. Their shoes, which are pointed with a single sole, they call brogues For cloaks they have five or six yards of frize drawn...mantle, either in sleeping, working, or eating The girls of Ireland, even those living in towns, have for their head-dress only a ribbon, and, if married,... | |
| Edmund Hogan - 1894 - 536 sidor
...; their breeches are a pantaloon of white frieze. For cloaks they have five or six yards of frieze drawn round the neck, the body, and over the head,...or eating. The generality of them have no shirts. The northern Irish have for their only dress a breeches and a covering for the back, without bonnet,... | |
| William Gregory Wood-Martin - 1902 - 500 sidor
...fri/.e, which they call trowsers. Their shoes, which are pointed, with a single sole, they tall brogues. For cloaks they have five or six yards of frize, drawn...the head, and they never quit this mantle, either sleeping, working, or eating. . . . The girls of Ireland, even those living in towns, have for their... | |
| John Stevens - 1912 - 320 sidor
...common soldiers, or from the nasty filthiness of the nation in general.' Even Le Gouz admits that ' the generality of them have no shirts, and about as many lice as hairs on their heads, which they kill before each other without any ceremony.' M. Bouridal describes the Irish soldiers,... | |
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