The proud Lord of Hers was, in spirit, in sackcloth and ashes.
2
None clothed in sackcloth might enter the gate that is called Beautiful.
3
Trixy told her to-night she'd discarded the sackcloth and kept the ashes.
4
The team wanted drama and impact but she preferred sackcloth and ashes.
5
It was an old man clad in sackcloth, who resembled a hermit.
1
It has been a hairshirt week for Leinster, a time to pause.
2
Or they could don the hairshirt and aim to sharply slow spending.
3
If I was a Flagellant now, I would don hairshirt and up flail.
4
She cannot even give us the pleasure of the hairshirt.
5
Chancellor of the exchequer George Osborne's hairshirt Brexit budget has not appeared for one thing.
Ús de cilice en anglès
1
The breastplate and the cilice of bristles she took and dashed with feeble ferocity on the floor.
2
His essential awfulness is denoted not by any cilice mortifying the flesh, but by his grotesque comb-over-baldness.
3
For upwards of a month, then, the mild torture of the goat's-hair cilice did the office I required of it.
4
Ignoring the slash of pain from his cilice, Silas retrieved his gun and began the long trek up the grassy slope.
5
And now I must doff this bristly cilice; they would prick thy tender skin, perhaps make it bleed, as they have me, I see.
6
That other sinful longing, she entirely effaced at last, thereby achieving something that had been impossible to prayers and fasting, to scourge and cilice.