They devour great morsels of beef unsalted, and they eat commonly swine's flesh, seldom mutton, and all these pieces of flesh, as also the entrails of beasts unwashed, they seethe in a hollow tree, lapped in a raw cow's hide, and so set over the fire,... Feast and Famine: Food and Nutrition in Ireland 1500-1920 - 第 12 頁Leslie Clarkson, Margaret Crawford 著 - 2001 - 336 頁有限的預覽 - 關於此書
| 1837 - 830 頁
...seethe in a hollow tree, lapped in a raw cowe's hide, and set over the fire ; and therewithal! they swallow whole lumps of filthy butter, yea, (which is more contrary to nature) they will feed upon horses dying of themselves, not only upon small want of flesh but even for pleasure." There is... | |
| 1837 - 754 頁
...and they eat commonly swine's 6esh, seldom mutton ; and their pieces of flesh, as also the iutrals of beasts unwashed, they seethe in a hollow tree, lapped in a raw cow's hide, and set over the fire ; and thcrcwithall they swallow whole lumps of filthy butter, yea, (which is more... | |
| Charles MacFarlane - 1861 - 852 頁
...commonly swine's flesh, seldom mutton: and all these pieces of flesh, as also the entrails of beaste unwashed, they seethe in a hollow tree, lapped in...swallow whole lumps of filthy butter. Yea (which is most contrary to nature) they will feed on horses dying of themselves, not only upon small want of... | |
| Edward Burnett Tylor - 1874 - 528 頁
...feasted on fallen horses, and seethed pieces of beef and pork with the unwashed entrails of beasts in a hollow tree, lapped in a raw cow's hide, and so set over the fire, and they drank milk warmed with a stone first cast into the fire. 3 Another 1 Ovid. Ex Pouto, iii. 8 ;... | |
| Charles MacFarlane - 1876 - 928 頁
...They devour great morsels of beef unsalted, and they eat commonly awine's flesh, seldom mutton; aud all these pieces of flesh, as also the entrails of...swallow whole lumps of filthy butter. Yea (which is most contrary to nature) they will feed on horses dying of themselves, not only upon small want of... | |
| Sir Arthur Mitchell - 1881 - 376 頁
...cakes thereof "They drink milk warmed with a stone first cast into the fire." "These pieces of flesh, also the entrails of beasts unwashed, they seethe...lapped in a raw cow's hide, and so set over the fire." "What do I speak of tables? — since, indeed, they have- no tables, but eat their meat upon a bundle... | |
| Sir Arthur Mitchell - 1881 - 380 頁
...thereof/' " They drink milk warmed with a stone first cast into the fire." "These pieces of flesh, also the entrails of beasts unwashed, they seethe in a hollow tree, lapped in a raw cow's hide, and BO set over the fire." "What do I speak of tables? — since, indeed, they have no tables, but cat... | |
| George Laurence Gomme - 1890 - 562 頁
...savage people. Their milk was " warmed with a stone first cast into the fire", 2 and " pieces of flesh, also the entrails of beasts unwashed, they seethe...lapped in a raw cow's hide, and so set over the fire." 3 They partook of their food in open encampments " upon a bundle of grass", as Fynes Moryson puts it.... | |
| Fynes Moryson - 1908 - 548 頁
...beasts unwashed, they seeth in a hollow tree, lapped in a raw Cowes hide, and so set over the fier, and therewith swallow whole lumps of filthy butter. Yea (which is more contrary to nature) they will feede on Horses dying of themselves, not only upon small want of flesh, but even for pleasure. For... | |
| Henry Jones Ford - 1915 - 628 頁
...and strain their milk taken from the cow with a like handful of straw, none of the cleanest, and so cleanse, or rather more defile, the pot and milk....will feed on horses dying of themselves, not only on small want of flesh, but even for pleasure; for I remember an accident in the army, when the Lord... | |
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