So he sees -- he sees a soldier hit a woman and rob her, or he himself mends shoes for some of -- a shoemaker would then be called a cordwainer or a cobbler. ❋ Unknown (1999)
June 11th, 2010 | Tags: china mieville, cordwainer smith, Joe R. ❋ Unknown (2010)
I just redid cordwainer-smith. com and now the page about the award is at the link on my name above. ❋ Unknown (2007)
Writing just before the LFP formed, William English, a Philadelphia cordwainer, labor politician, and delegate to the New ❋ Unknown (2006)
Haven't seen a cordwainer for many years my grandfather was one, but he was long gone before I arrived. ❋ Unknown (2008)
“Both equally necessary members of the body corporate,” said Henry, whose father had been a cordwainer. ❋ Unknown (2008)
Outworking cordwainer William Dougherty was not a union member during a short turnout in October of 1811, when he labored "for a livelihood for himself & family," but still faced a union reprimand when he tried to join the organization a couple of weeks later. ❋ Unknown (2006)
William Sampson, their radical Irish defense lawyer, invited master cordwainer plaintiffs to imagine themselves in the shoes of a typical journeyman. ❋ Unknown (2006)
For the cordwainer, a family to feed and educate in the domestic realm was as vital a component of the performance of his manly workplace duties as a hammer and a leather apron. 14 There was no perceived separation between his duties stitching leather and his duties feeding and educating his family. ❋ Unknown (2006)
Tim, being (I suppose) out of credit with the cordwainer, fell upon this ingenious expedient to supply the want of shoes, knowing that Mr Birkin, who loves humour, would himself relish the joke upon a little recollection. ❋ Unknown (2004)
I have sustained a small disaster on my left eye, from the hands of a rascally cordwainer, who pretends to believe himself the King of ❋ Unknown (2004)
John Adams the elder was a farmer and a cordwainer, or shoemaker. ❋ Richard Brookhiser (2002)
A cordwainer made shoes, and a cobbler mended shoes. ❋ Unknown (1999)
There broods a sombre cordwainer from Bremen, gloating over his enormous pipe, in form and size like a small barrel, raising an atmosphere for himself of the fumes of coarse uncut _knaster_. ❋ William Duthie (N/A)
A green bag is now the badge of a cordwainer in this city. ❋ Various (N/A)
Rejoice, then, O 'romantic' youth and maiden, now in the days of thy youth; for this flitting romance -- so soon interrupted by care and grief, by shop and kitchen and nursery, by butcher, baker, tailor, milliner, and cordwainer -- is about the most genuine experience you will have in this world. ❋ Various (N/A)
Edmund was sent to Concord and became a cordwainer or shoemaker. ❋ Unknown (N/A)
Accident directed our attention, while engaged with this subject, to the efforts of another ingenious American to render the use of our lower extremities easier by shaping their artificial coverings more in accordance with their true form than is done by the empirical cordwainer, and thus _Dr. ❋ Various (N/A)
An apprentice of a cordwainer in the town ran away in 1764, or, as it was worded on the police notice, "did elope from service." ❋ Robert Naylor (N/A)
Thomas Veale escaped and went to live in a cave, where he is supposed to have hidden his booty, but he continued to work as a cordwainer. ❋ Philip Gosse (1919)
[My dick hurts], I [pulled] a cordwainer. ❋ I'mNotGayI'mMetro (2023)