| James Robinson Planché - 1834 - 410 pages
...Spenser strongly recommending the abolition of " the antient dress." The mantle he calls " a fit house for an outlaw, a meet bed for a rebel, and an apt cloke for a thief." He speaks of the hood " as a house against all weathers ;" and remarks that while... | |
| Maria Edgeworth - 1835 - 450 pages
...discommodity: for the inconveniences which thereby do arise are much more many ; for it is a fit house for an outlaw, a meet bed for a rebel, and an apt cloak for a thief. First, the outlaw, being for his many Crimea and villanies banished from the towns and houses of honest... | |
| 1837 - 366 pages
...although in some sort poetical, is not favourable to its moral character. " It is a fit house," says he, " for an outlaw, a meet bed for a rebel, and an apt cloak for a thief. First, the outlaw being for his many crimes antl villanyes banished from the townes and houses of honest... | |
| Leitch Ritchie - 1837 - 360 pages
...although in some sort poetical, is not favourable to its moral character. " It is a fit house," says he, " for an outlaw, a meet bed for a rebel, and an apt cloak for a thief. First, the outlaw being for his many crimes and villanyes banished from the townes and houses of honest... | |
| Edmund Spenser - 1839 - 450 pages
...discommodity; for the inconveniences whieh thereby do arise, are much more many; for it is a fit house for an outlaw, a meet bed for a rebel, and an apt cloak for a thief. First, the outlaw being for his many crimes and villainies banished from the towns and houses of honest... | |
| Edmund Spenser - 1839 - 444 pages
...discommodity; for the inconveniences wh1ch thereby do arise, are much more many ; for it is a fit house for an outlaw, a meet bed for a rebel, and an apt cloak for a th1ef. First, the outlaw being for his many crimes and villainies banished from the towns and houses... | |
| Walter Scott - 1841 - 848 pages
...which the same poet regards that favourite part of the Irish dress, the mantle. " It is a fit house for an outlaw, a meet bed for a rebel, and an apt cloke for a thief. First, the outlaw being for his many crimes and villanycs banished from the townes... | |
| Charles Henry Knox - 1842 - 968 pages
...lineal descendant and direct representative of the ancient " mantle, serving many times as a fit house for an outlaw, a meet bed for a rebel, and an apt cloak for a thief," as it is described by a gentleman who wrote a book towards the close of the seventeenth century, shewing... | |
| James Logan - 1843 - 568 pages
...close: at all times he could use it, for " it was never heavy nor cumbersome." — " It was a fit house for an outlaw, a meet bed for a rebel], and an apt cloake for a thiefe."§ My opinion is, that the Irish trouse and mantle were formed like the belted... | |
| Mary Margaret Stanley Egerton Countess of Wilton - 1846 - 512 pages
...their habits. Spenser greatly censured the ancient Irish dress. He considered the cloak " a fit house for an outlaw, a meet bed for a rebel, and an apt cloke for a thief." He also strongly objects to the custom of women wearing mantles, and mentions several... | |
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