204 results
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To the ladies. Cheap Petticoats, Cloaks, Mercery, Linen-Drapery, &c. George Murry, (successor to Mr. Thornton,) At His warehouse, No 339, Oxford-Street, The Corner of Queen-Street, Facing Portland-Street.
Murry, George.Date: 1791?]- Books
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Whipping-Tom: or, a rod for a proud lady, bundled up in four feeling discourses, Both Serious and Merry. In order to touch The Fair Sex to the Quick. I. Of the foppish mode of taking snuff. II. Of the Expensive Use of Drinking Tea. III. Of their Ridiculous Walking in red Cloaks, like Soldiers. IV. Of their immodest wearing hoop-petticoats. To which is added, a new satyr, for the use of the female voluntiers in Hyde-Park.
Date: 1722- Books
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The second part of Whipping-Tom: or, a rod for a proud lady. Bundled up in five feeling discourses, both serious and merry. In Order to Touch The Fair Sex to the Quick. The Modern Vanity of taking Poisonous Snuff. Drinking Debilitating Tea. Walking in Scarlet Cloaks. Wearing the Screen for Great Bellies, call'd Hoop-Petticoats. And Unnecessary Toilets. The whole intermix'd with Recipe's for curing The Womens-Evil, and Inoculating Youth and Beauty upon Old Disfigur'd Beaux and Ladies. Also a poem, intitled, The Virgin's Dream; And, a Satyr on the Rise and Fall of Pride, &c. Written by the Author of the First Part.
Date: [1722]- Books
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The works of the author of Whipping-Tom, wherein are contain'd all his treatises both serious and merry. His rod for a proud lady; In Two parts: Which touches the fair Sex to the quick, for taking Snuff, drinking Tea, wearing red Cloaks, and Hoop-Petticoats, and using Toilets; with Recipe's for curing the Womens Evil, and inoculating Youth and Beauty upon old disfigur'd Beaux and Ladies. II. Democritus, the laughing philosopher's trip into England; or seven Days Amusements, intermixt with uncommon Reflections on the Follies and Vices of both Sexes of all Religions, in London and Westminster. III. An essay in praises of knavery. IV. A general key to the writings of the poets of the Last Age. Wherein their Beauties and Excellencies, are display'd, and their Follies and Blunders, expos'd in the Rehearsal. The whole adorn'd with variety of new cuts. With an alphabetical key and index of persons, places, and other remarkable things in town.
Date: [1723]- Pictures
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Men in cloaks with large hats and women in dresses and jackets with flat hats. Etching.
Reference: 35388i- Pictures
Rio de Janeiro: young children are being sold as slaves to men in cloaks and wide hats. Aquatint by Edward Finden, 1824, after Augustus Earle, ca. 1820.
Earle, Augustus.Date: 5. April 1824Reference: 37941i- Books
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A catalogue of goods, sold wholesale and retail, by Gillery Pigott, at the Sun and Peacock, fronting Cheapside, London. Plain and figured modes, and sattins for cloaks, &c. ...
Pigott, Gillery, -1795.Date: 1780?]- Books
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Edmund Nowlan, from London, at the Blue-Ball in Princess-Street, the back of Abbey-Street. Makes for the nobility and gentry, roccelos and great coats; storm-bags, and hussar-cloaks; shooting-stockings, hat-covers, dominicans, that cover the head, neck, and shoulders, to preserve the wig from wind or rain when riding, or travelling, and will not hurt the curts in the lease, for ladies. ...
Nowlan, Edmund.Date: 1756]- Books
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Whipping-tom: or, rod for a proud lady, bundled up in four discourses, both serious and merry ... I. Of the foppish mode of taking snuff. II. Of the expensive use of drinking tea. III. Of their ridiculous walkng in red cloaks ... IV. Of their immodest wearing of Looped Petticoats. To which is added, a new satyr, for the use of the female voluntiers in Hyde-Park.
Date: 1722- Books
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By command of Their Excellencies the Lords Justices, I do hereby give publick notice on the present occasion of the death of Her Late Majesty Queen Anne, Of blessed memory, that they expect, that all Lords and privy-councillors, do put themselves and their livery-servants into the deepest Mourning (black cloaks excepted) on Sunday the twenty second of this instant, and their coaches and chairs on that day fortnight, on which on nails of bullion or gilt nails are to beseen, neither for the first six months that they put on them any escutcheons of their arms of crest; and further theydirect, that all other His Majesties Subects do put themselves into the deepest Mourning (black cloaks excepted) on Sunday the twenty second of this instant, and their coaches and chairs on that day fortnight, on which no nails of bullion or gilt nails are to be seen, neither for the first six months that they put on them any escutcheons of their arms or crest; and further they direct, that all other His Majesties subjects do put themselves into the deepest mourning (black cloaks excepted) on Sunday the twenty second of this instant. Dated at my Office, the 16th August, 1714. William Hawkins, Ulster, King of Arms of all Ireland.
Ireland. Lords Justices and Council.Date: 1714]- Books
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A catalogue of part of the valubale Spanish silks and other effects of the St. Joachim Prize, taken by His Majesty's Ship the Monmouth, Capt. Charles Wyndham. Consisting of great choice of the richest gold and silver brocades, compleat suits for gentlemen and ladies, not made up; cloaks, manteels, aprons, handkerchiefs, hoods, and tippets of the sinest needlework; great variety of gold and silver lace for petticoats and robings, of the most beautiful patterns; rich remnants of gold and silver brocades for gentlemens waistcoats, several pieces of flower'd velvet, plain and flower'd silks, ribbonds, &c. Which will be sold by auction, by Mr. Cock, at his house in the Great Piazza, Covent-Garden, on Monday next, the 7th of this instant, May, 1744, and the four following days. The said goods can be viewed only on Saturday the 5th of May, (to prevent their being damaged in the shewing) and the sale will begin each day at half an hour after eleven precisely. Catalogues of which may be had gratis at the place of sale.
Cock, Mr. (Christopher), active 1720-1749.Date: 1744]- Books
A cloak for funeral rites / [Benjamin Ward Richardson].
Richardson, Benjamin Ward, 1828-1896Date: 1889- Books
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The Cloak's knavery. A new song.
Date: 1732- Books
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The auld cloak. A Scots Song.
Date: 1785?]- Pictures
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Ruth comes to take shelter under Boaz's cloak. Engraving.
Reference: 18531i- Digital Images
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Saint Martin of Tours (IV century). Emblem: cloak and beggar.
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turn your cloak for fairy folks live in old oaks.
SopDate: 2021- Books
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A ballad of the cloak's knavery. To an excellent new tune, much in request.
Date: 1760?]- Books
Cloak of charity : studies in eighteenth-century philanthropy / [Betsy Rodgers].
Aikin-Sneath, Betsy.Date: [1949]- Pictures
An Algerian man wearing a rough cloak sitting against a plain studio backdrop.
Date: [approximately 1900]Reference: 538942iPart of: The Fallaize Collection.- Pictures
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A country woman wearing hat and red cloak. Watercolour attributed to S. Jenner.
Jenner, Stephen, 1796-Reference: 560828i- Pictures
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An old man in cloak and turban smoking a long pipe (chibouk). Watercolour, 18--.
Date: 1800-1899Reference: 25217i- Pictures
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A barefoot man wearing a cloak, hat and beads: he is carrying a stick. Watercolour.
Reference: 37992i- Pictures
Joannes Schenck à Grafenberg, aged 45, wearing a hat and a cloak with a high fur collar. Line engraving, 1644.
Date: 1644Reference: 46202i- Pictures
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A traveller is sitting in the shade of a tree with his cloak off and he is shown in the background buffetted by the wind, wrapping his cloak around him. Etching by W. Hollar for a fable by Aesop.
Aesop.Reference: 39722i