10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «CHECKLATON»
Discover the use of
checklaton in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
checklaton and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
... did care:" As no whit dreading any liuing wight; But in a Jacket quilted richly
rare Upon checklaton he was strangely dight, And on his head a roll of linnen
plight, Like to the Mores of Malaber he wore; With which his locks, as blacke as
pitchy ...
Patrick Cullen, William A. Oram, Anne Lake Prescott, 2005
2
The Faerie queene, book VI.- Two cantos of Mutabilitie.- The ...
As no whit dreadinghany living wight ; But in a iacket, quilted richly rare Upon
checklaton,4 he was straungely dight5; And on his head a roll of linnen plight,6
Like to the Mores of Malaber, he wore, With which his locks, as blacke as pitchy
night ...
3
Faerie queene. book VI. Two cantos of mutabilitie. ...
He wore no armour, ne for none did care, As no whit dreading any living wight ;
But in a iacket, quilted richly rare Upon checklaton,4 he was straungely dight5;
And on his head a roll of linnen plight,6 Like to the Mores of Malaber, he wore,
With ...
Edmund Spenser, George Stillman Hillard, Philip Masterman, 1845
4
The works of Edmund Spenser, ed. by J.P. Collier
But in a Jacket, quilted richly rare Upon checklaton," he was straungely dight ;
And on his head a roll of linnen plight, Like to the Mores of Malaber, he wore,
With which his locks, as blacke as pitchy night, Were bound about and voyded
from ...
Edmund Spenser, John Payne Collier, 1862
He wore no armour, ne for none did care, As no whit dreading any living wight ;
But in a iacket, quilted richly rare Upon checklaton,4 he was straungely dight 5 ;
And on his head a roll of linnen plight,6 Like to the Mores of Malaber, he wore, ...
Edmund Spenser, George Stillman Hillard, 1857
6
The poetical works of Edmund Spenser
He wore no armour, ne for none did care, As no whit dreading any living wight ;
But in a iacket, quilted richly rare Upon checklaton,4 he was straungely dight5;
And on his head a roll of linnen plight,6 Like to the Mores of Malaber, he wore,
With ...
Edmund Spenser, George Stillman Hillard, Philip Masterman, 1839
7
Robert d'Artois; or, The heron vow [by J.H. St. Aubyn].
... though methought I had ne'er seen any checklaton " " I don't care about the
checklaton, hundreds may wear the same. — I look to the height, 222 ROBERT D'
ARTOIS.
John Humphrey St. Aubyn, Robert (count of Artois.), 1835
8
Chaucer and Array: Patterns of Costume and Fabric Rhetoric ...
626 defines checklaton as “a 'kind of guilded leather with which they [the Anglo
Irish] embroider theyr Irishjackes [i.e. jackets]',” as depicted in Spenser's View
ofthe Present State of Ireland, in The Complete Poetical Works ofSpenser, R. E.
Neil ...
9
A Supplement to Johnson's English Dictionary: Of which the ...
C H I C H R But in a jacket, quilted richly rare Upon Checklaton he was strangely
dight. Sp. F.Q. B.VI.C.VII. st.43. [The meaning of this word in the fore-cited
passages is ascertained by Spenser's own authority; but whoever chooses to
consult ...
George Mason, Samuel Johnson, 1801
10
Observations on the Faerie Queene of Spenser
But in a jacket quilted richly rare Upon Checklaton, he was strangely dight:
Checklaton likewise occurs in the last-mention'd poem of Chaucer. His robe was
of Chekelatoun.t Spcght * interprets this word, a stuff of checkerwork made of
cloth of ...