10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «DUDHEEN»
Discover the use of
dudheen in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
dudheen and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Smoking and Smokers: An Antiquarian, Historical, Comical, ...
An Antiquarian, Historical, Comical, Veritable, and Narcotical Disquisition George
Thomas Fisher (Jun.), William Alfred Delamotte. CHAPTER VIII. OF THE
DUDHEEN & MEERSCHAUM IN PARTICULAR. HAVE already observed in the
former ...
George Thomas Fisher (Jun.), William Alfred Delamotte, 1845
Whin 1 take me dudheen, And the smoke wreaths arise, I can see her bright eyes
Whur a laugh lurkin' lies, And her white little chin Wid it's dape dimple in, — Oh,
there^ never was seen such a winsome colleen As her through the smoke of me
...
Edward Jewitt Wheeler, 1897
She's a poutin' colleen • Whin she sees me dudheen ! Whin the smoke wreaths
arise There's a snap in her eyes, Whur an imp lurkin' lies, And she tilts her white
chin Wid its dape dimple in, — Oh, there niver was seen such a poutin' colleen As
...
4
Kit Carson Days, 1809-1868: Adventures in the Path of Empire
The arms of both parties, though not ostentatiously displayed (which might have
interfered with our negotiation), being placed where they could be reached at a
moment's warning; a pipe (Carson's own particular "dudheen") being put into ...
Edwin Legrand Sabin, 1935
This new habit (previously it was usual for a clay pipe to be smoked at leisure
with the stem supported in the hand) brought about the production of special
short pipes such as the Scottish cutty and the Irish dudheen although many a
pipe was ...
6
A Dictionary of Hiberno-English: The Irish Use of English
... an awful dudaire' (KG, Kerry). dudeen /'du:di:n/ also dudheen, dhoodeen, etc.,
duidin n., a short- stemmed clay pipe (SOM, Kerry), often smoked by women (in
whom it often caused cancer of the lip) < Ir duidin (dimin. of duid, a stump, a pipe)
.
Terence Patrick Dolan, 2004
7
The Farthing journal. By Jeremy Queen
I lighted a cigar, and offered him another, but he declined it; and after groping his
cotamore for half a minute, produced a dudheen, (a short pipe) which he lighted
at the candle. I have smoked tobacco these ten years, — Persian or pigstail ...
The. Sailor. and. His. Dudheen. IT is possible to find a sailor who does not smoke
or chew tobacco; but he is a rare creature. The great majority of seamen enjoy
their pipes and some chew the weed as well, finding much comfort and ...
... his dudheen in his own deliberate and silent fashion, I have a chance to inform
the reader that this man is the wisest carpenter in our town. He has first-class
tools and keeps them sharp and shining. He uses a steel square to do things that
a ...
Then the blackness of the pitaroseand filled the heart of Burney. Sucking the
corpse of his deceased dudheen, he staggered through his duties with his
barrowful of stones and dirt, feeling for the first time that the curseofAdam was
upon him.