| Theodore Martin - 1874 - 360 str.
...verses by one of her many lovers, Sir Hanbury Williams. " By Jove," she exclaimed, as she ran into 1 " I have met with more than one in Dublin who assured...remember to have seen the lovely Peggy with a little dish on her head, and without shoes to cover her delicate feet, crying through College Green, Dame Street,... | |
| 1878 - 234 str.
...with more than one in Dublin," says Lee Lewes in his Memoirs, " who assured me that they remembered the lovely Peggy, with a little dish upon her hand...without shoes to cover her delicate feet, crying through College Green and Dame Street, 4 All this fine young salad for a halfpenny, all for a halfpenny, here.'... | |
| Henry Barton Baker - 1878 - 434 str.
...with more than one in Dublin," says Lee Lewes in his Memoirs, " who assured me that they remembered the lovely Peggy, with a little dish upon her hand,...without shoes to cover her delicate feet, crying through College Green, and Dame Street, and other parts of that end of the town: ' All this fine young salad... | |
| 1878 - 244 str.
...with more than one in Dublin," says Lee Lewes in his Memoirs, " who assured me that they remembered the lovely Peggy, with a little dish upon her hand...without shoes to cover her delicate feet, crying through College Green and Dame Street, ' All this fine young salad for a halfpenny, all for a halfpenny, here.'... | |
| Percy Hetherington Fitzgerald - 1883 - 408 str.
...with the youngest (later the Hon. Mrs. Cholmondeley) on her breast, and Peggy trotting by her side. I have met with more than one in Dublin who assured...without shoes to cover her delicate feet, crying through College Green, Dame Street, and other parts of that end of the town, 'All this fine young salad for... | |
| Percy Hetherington Fitzgerald - 1883 - 446 str.
...her hand, and without shoes to cover her delicate feet, crying through College Green, Dame Street, and other parts of that end of the town, 'All this fine young salad for a halfpenny.'" She was " taken up " by a gang of fellows, who, when she was scarcely nine... | |
| Theodore Martin - 1906 - 376 str.
...She had been literally picked out of the streets of Dublin as a child crying 'halfpenny salads,* * ' I have met with more than one in Dublin who assured me that they remember to have seen lovely Peggy with a little dish on her head, and without shoes to cover her delicate feet, crying through... | |
| John Fyvie - 1906 - 496 str.
...Hon. Mrs. Cholmondeley) on her breast, and Peggy, the charming, lovely Peggy, trotting by her side.' ' I have met with more than one in Dublin who assured me that they remembered to have seen the lovely Peggy, with a little dish upon her hand, and without shoes to cover... | |
| Janet Dunbar - 1968 - 282 str.
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| Janet Dunbar - 1968 - 286 str.
[ Omlouváme se, ale obsah této stránky je nepřístupný. ] | |
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