The Traveller's Oracle, Or, Maxims for Locomotion: Containing Precepts for Promoting the Pleasures and Hints for Preserving the Health of Travellers : Part II : Comprising the Horse and Carriage Keeper's Oracle : Rules for Purchasing and Keeping Or Jobbing Horses and Carriages; Estimates of Expenses Occasioned Thereby; and an Easy Plan for Ascertaining Every Hackney-coach Fare, Tom 2Henry Colburn, 1827 |
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Strona 26
... allow a Coachman about 4s . per Week , i . e . about £ 10 . per Year , to pay his Lodging . Brought forward .... ....... Allowance for Oil and Grease , Towels and Leathers , to clean the Carriage , at least 1s . per Week Rent of Coach ...
... allow a Coachman about 4s . per Week , i . e . about £ 10 . per Year , to pay his Lodging . Brought forward .... ....... Allowance for Oil and Grease , Towels and Leathers , to clean the Carriage , at least 1s . per Week Rent of Coach ...
Strona 29
... allow 3s . or 4s . per Week extra , and the Coach- man finds his own Clothes , a plain Blue Coat ; they giving him only a Hat and Great Coat . Brought forward A good full - made Box Coat , with six real Capes , and lined with Shalloon ...
... allow 3s . or 4s . per Week extra , and the Coach- man finds his own Clothes , a plain Blue Coat ; they giving him only a Hat and Great Coat . Brought forward A good full - made Box Coat , with six real Capes , and lined with Shalloon ...
Strona 46
... allowed what is called Night , or Hay Money , i . e . an addition of 1s . 6d . per Night for each Horse , every Night the Horses are out . This is considered as a compensation for the increased price charged for Corn at Inns , which is ...
... allowed what is called Night , or Hay Money , i . e . an addition of 1s . 6d . per Night for each Horse , every Night the Horses are out . This is considered as a compensation for the increased price charged for Corn at Inns , which is ...
Strona 48
... allowed appears to be the true word . : The Dictionary above alluded to is a very deep work instead of its containing more words by thousands than are in Johnson , - ~ Johnson does not give us ten words that are in it - nor does it ...
... allowed appears to be the true word . : The Dictionary above alluded to is a very deep work instead of its containing more words by thousands than are in Johnson , - ~ Johnson does not give us ten words that are in it - nor does it ...
Strona 62
... allow you for your Old One , provided you do not previously otherwise dispose of it . The Money allowed for an Old Carriage , " is less than a Novice will expect . I sold one Chariot , which I had in use only Five years , for only £ 15 ...
... allow you for your Old One , provided you do not previously otherwise dispose of it . The Money allowed for an Old Carriage , " is less than a Novice will expect . I sold one Chariot , which I had in use only Five years , for only £ 15 ...
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Annum Axle-tree Axles baize belly bands Body Bolts Bran Carriage Carts charge Chariot clean Cloth Coach Box Cold Collinge's Colour comfortable convenient cost Crowded Crowded Streets Desire your Coachman Ditto Dogs Door drachm Dressing drive Estimate Expense extremely feet felleys fixed Four frequently give Glass Hackney Coach Hackneyman half Hard water Harness hire Horse's Hostler hour House inches injured Iron keep Lamps Landaulett Legs less Livery London Long Acre Malaga Wine miles minutes Morning never Night o'clock Oats painted Pair of Horses Pannels Perch person pounds purchase Regent's Park Repair require riage ride Road Rotten Stone round Seat seldom Servant shew Shoe side Springs Stable Street Sweet Oil tell thing Tottenham Court Road Town Travelling tremely Truss turn Varnish wear Week Wet Weather Wheels wish
Popularne fragmenty
Strona 26 - Neither a borrower nor a lender be ; For loan oft loses both itself and friend ; And borrowing dulls the edge of husbandry. This above all, — To thine...
Strona 148 - Father, who wouldest not the death of a sinner but rather that he should turn from his wickedness and live...
Strona 26 - Costly thy habit as thy purse can buy, But not expressed in fancy; rich, not gaudy...
Strona 307 - Go call a coach, and let a coach be called, And let the man who calleth be the caller; And in his calling let him nothing call, But Coach! Coach! Coach! O for a coach, ye gods!
Strona 297 - Other hackney men seeing this way, they flocked to the same place, and perform their journeys at the same rate. So that sometimes there is twenty of them together, which disperse up and down, that they and others are to be had everywhere, as watermen are to be had by the waterside.
Strona 225 - Boccarorra (meaning the white man) make de black man workee, make de horse workee, make de ox workee, make ebery ting workee ; only de hog. He de hog, no workee ; he eat, he drink, he walk about, he go to sleep When he please, he libb like a gentleman.
Strona 297 - omit to mention any new thing that comes up amongst us, though never so trivial. Here is one Captain Baily : he hath been a sea captain, but now lives on the land about this city, where he tries experiments. He hath erected, according to his ability, some four hackney coaches, put his men in livery, and appointed them to stand at the Maypole, in the Strand, giving them instructions at what rates to carry men into several parts of the town, where all day they may be had.
Strona 279 - ... in each of thefe holes a fcrew is to be made ; the fteel points are likewife to have a fcrew on them, exactly fitted to that in the (hoes.
Strona 226 - ... sense of honour. As to the first of these orders of men, I have not one word more to say of them: as to the latter, I shall conclude all I have more to offer against them, with respect to their being prompted by the fear of shame, by applying to the duellist what I think Dr. South says somewhere of the liar, " He is a coward to man, and a bravo to God.