| Inverness Gaelic Society - Celtic literature - 1889 - 476 pages
...the body resting on solid axles, and it must have been thoroughly uncomfortable, " and after a while divers great ladies, with as great jealousy of the...made them coaches, and rid in them up and down the countries to the great admiration of the behold< rs, and then by little and little they grew usual... | |
| Inverness Gaelic Society - Celtic literature - 1889 - 436 pages
...the body resting on solid axles, and it must have been thoroughly uncomfortable, " and after a while divers great ladies, with as great jealousy of the...made them coaches, and rid in them up and down the countries to the great admiration of the beholders, and then by little and little they grew usual among... | |
| Inverness Gaelic Society - Celtic literature - 1889 - 442 pages
...the body resting on solid axles, and it must have been thoroughly uncomfortable, "and after a while divers great ladies, with as great jealousy of the Queen's displeasure, made tlnm ccaches, and rid in them up and down the countries to the great admiration of the beholders, and... | |
| Sir Walter Gilbey - Carriages and carts - 1903 - 156 pages
...court ladies." Stow, referring to the coach brought to England by Boonen, says : — " After a while divers great ladies, with as great jealousy of the...made them coaches and rid in them up and down the countries, to the great admiration of all the beholders, but then by little and little they grew usual... | |
| John Stow - London - 1908 - 490 pages
...come from Stow's collections: ' In the ye: in- 1564 Guilliam Boonen, a Dutchman, became the Queene's Coachman, and was the first that brought the use of coaches into England. . . . Then little by little they grew usuall among the Nobilities, and others of Sort, and within twentie... | |
| Sir Sidney Lee, Charles Talbut Onions - Anniversaries - 1916 - 724 pages
...1564, and within twenty years after there was a great trade in them. ' After a while,' says Stow, ' divers great ladies, with as great jealousy of the Queen's displeasure, made them coaches, and rid them up and down the countries to the great admiration of all beholders.' Before that time long wagons... | |
| West (U.S.) - 1883 - 692 pages
...come into general use until the reign of James. Their uséis noticed by Stow as follows: "In the year 1564 Guilliam Boonen, a Dutchman, became the queen's...that brought the use of coaches into England. After a while, divers great ladies, with as great jealousy of the queen's displeasure, made them coaches,... | |
| William T. Jackman - Business & Economics - 1962 - 870 pages
...innovation that was taking their living from them3. So many coaches were in use on the London streets, divers great ladies, with as great jealousy of the...made them coaches, and rid in them up and down the countries, to the great admiration of all the beholders, but then by little and little, they grew usual... | |
| W. Turrentine Jackman - Business & Economics - 1962 - 870 pages
...innovation that was taking their living from them3. So many coaches were in use on the London streets, divers great ladies, with as great jealousy of the...made them coaches, and rid in them up and down the countries, to the great admiration of all the beholders, but then by little and little, they grew usual... | |
| Cyrus Hoy - Literary Collections - 1980 - 380 pages
...of coaches in England was thus: In the yeare 1564 Guilliam Boonen, a Dutchman, became the Queene's Coachman, and was the first that brought the use of coaches into England . . . Then little by little they grew usuall among the Nobilities, and others of Sort, and within twentie... | |
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