1The multitude went forth, the host advanced, one mail-clad band behind another.
2The Nemesis was a common iron steamer, and not a mail-clad steamship.
3These experiments did not deter the Government from constructing mail-clad steamships.
4The mail-clad itched for it, and sought it in advance.
5He extended a mail-clad hand, pointing to some hidden foe.
6Hence he was sometimes not much inferior, as a combatant, to the mail-clad man-at-arms.
7At these words a murmur of dissatisfaction arose from the mail-clad generals in the Council.
8Bran swung the body of the longbow down hard, and the mail-clad knight went down.
9But Alfonso held his mail-clad battalions firm, and the light-armed Moorish horsemen hesitated to attack.
10As the mail-clad Argives marched on, and rushed across the plain, the earth groaned beneath them.
11Yet, in the fulness of time, new children of the Stone Giants (mail-clad Europeans?)
12Then his eyes lit on the silent, mail-clad men at the oar benches, and he started.
13There were mail-clad men among that line of fallen, and those, of course, were not Irish.
14So might a child threaten a mail-clad knight with a bow of string and green willow!
15And he attacks us unawares, like an enemy, with his mail-clad warriors, seeking to slay us.
16Another mail-clad animal of importance is the armadillo of the tropical and temperate regions of South America.