- (1518–1581): "All Englishe, and the most part with delight, even in Dublin,
speak Irishe". The Old
English historian Richard Stanihurst (1547–1618)
wrote as follows:...
- sections: "Souldiers sommons,
marche of footemen,
marche of horsmen, trumpetts,
Irishe marche,
bagpipe and the drone,
flute and the droome,
marche to the fighte...
- No, for the most
parte of them are
degenerated and
growen almost meare Irishe, yea, and more
malicious to the
Englishe then the very
Irish them selves"...
-
would bring: "Soe that the
speach being Irish, the hart must
needes be
Irishe; for out of the
aboundance of the hart, the
tonge speaketh". He pressed...
- of Tarbet, and
seven score of men of the head of Lennox, that
spoke both
Irishe and the
English Scottish tongues very well,
light footmen very well armed...
- blue)
precedence flags to be flown: ...That this was an
Englishe and not an
Irishe action, and the
colours contended for the
fflagg of St
George and not of...
- Farnaby; "Nobody's Gigge", by
Richard Farnaby; "****ngton's Pownde" and "The
Irishe Dumpe" (anonymous); "The Ghost" and "The
Earle of Oxford's Marche" by William...
- sommons; The
marche of footemen; The
marche of horsmen; The trumpets; The
Irishe marche; The
bagpipe and the drone; The
flute and the droome; The marche...
-
would bring: "Soe that the
speach being Irish, the hart must
needes be
Irishe; for out of the
aboundance of the hart, the
tonge speaketh." The pamphlet...
-
sommons the
marche of
footemen the
marche of hor**** the
trumpetts the
Irishe marche the
bagpipe and the
drone the
flute & the drõme the
marche to the...