10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «HAYBAND»
Discover the use of
hayband in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
hayband and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Lloyd's Entertaining Journal
This was irresistible, and off he went, but met with more than one mishap ere he
reached the Cow and Hayband. The Cow and llayband was situated about three
miles from Rochester, across some beautiful fields, by footpaths that diverged ...
2
The lecture on heads. With additions. Cooke's ed
The said white bull, discovering, seeing, and spying out some turnips in the
bottom of the ferry-boat, scrambled into the ferryboat aforesaid, ate up the turnips;
and, to make an «ud of hi* meal, fell to work upon the hayband. ai The The ferry-
boat ...
George Alexander Stevens, 1800
3
The Portfolio of Entertaining & Instructive Varieties in ...
Farmer B. was seized or possessed of, or otherwise well-entitled to, a ferry-boat.
Farmer B. having made his boat fast to a post or shore, by means of a piece of
hay, twisted rope fashion, or as we say, vulgato voca- to, a hayband, went up the
...
4
The American Comic Songster: A Collection of All the Wit, ...
And said as he didn't feel like what he us'd to be, He'd hang himself up, if he
could find him a rope, He hunted about, while with love he did falter, But the devil
a rope could he find up or down ; So he twisted a hayband and he made him a ...
5
The Magazine of Domestic Economy
melt wax ; then take some bees- wax and rub it all over : a halfpenny- worth of
wax will be sufficient for a scythe. Then put it in a dry place, but not warm; it needs
no other covering. The usual method is to wrap a dry hayband round ; but in ...
6
Chambers's Edinburgh Journal
the ferry-boat had made his boat fast to a post on shore, with a piece of hay,
twisted rope-fashion, or, as we say, Tidyo rocato, a hayband. After he luid made
his boat fast to a post on shore, as it was very natural for a hungry man to do, he
went ...
the ferrv-boat had made his boat fast to a post on shore, with a piece of hay,
twisted rope-fashion, or, as we say, tuljo rvcatOj a hayband. After he had made
his boat fast to a post on shore, as it was very natural for a hungry man to do, he
went ...
William Chambers, Robert Chambers, 1841
the ferry-boat had made his boat fast to a post on shore, with a piece of hay,
twisted rope-fashion, or, as we say, rulgo 100080, a hayband. After he had made
his boat fast to :1 post on shore, as it was very n_atural for a hung man to do, ...
He was suddenly tempted by a delicious hayband, and he did not resist. It was
not in the nature or constitution of a bull to resist temptation. He ate that hayband
—and in order to eat the whole of it he got into the boat. It was perfectly plain that
if ...
James Patton, W. D. Ardagh, Robert Alexander Harrison, 1886
of an air, and anxious, unlike Mr. Micawber, to turn something up. He suddenly
smelt hay, and following his nose he discovered the boat and the hayband. As a
matter of course he tasted this new kind of rope, and he found the ends so ...
NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «HAYBAND»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
hayband is used in the context of the following news items.
Footscray flip yields huge gain for Richard Gu's Kinnears Rope …
... his own Colonial Rope Works at Moonee Ponds in 1874, a small but lucrative business, specializing in lashings, clothes-lines and hayband. «Property Observer, Jul 14»