The trade for the mender of bad soles is a cobbler. This is a person who repairs or makes shoes. It is from Julius Caesar written by William Shakespeare.
He is a cobbler. Basically someone that fixes shoes (soles). The phrase is a pun talking about how the tribunes were very bad tempered (or had bad soles/souls ;))
This was a line spoken in William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar It means he's a cobbler (fixes the "soles" of broken shoes) and he is also at the same time talking about how tribunes were bad tempered. (bad "souls)
Versailles
Perhaps because if it is free then no profit exists.
It was a very good thing
He is a cobbler. Basically someone that fixes shoes (soles). The phrase is a pun talking about how the tribunes were very bad tempered (or had bad soles/souls ;))
This was a line spoken in William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar It means he's a cobbler (fixes the "soles" of broken shoes) and he is also at the same time talking about how tribunes were bad tempered. (bad "souls)
act 1 scene 1, line 13. "A trade sir, that, I hope, may use with a safe conscience, which is indeed, sir, a mender of bad soles." The pun is "bad soles." It has a double meaning of 'bad souls.' "Truly, sir, all that I live by is with awl" The pun is with the 'awl,' meaning 'all.'
A Cobbler is someone who fixes shoes. He replaces old and damaged leather soles with new ones. In order to pierce the heavy leather he uses a kind of pick or extra heavy needle called an awl to punch holes in the leather and thread the stitching through it.
Bellows mender
No.
A shoe mender is called as cobbler
The Mender - 1915 was released on: USA: 31 December 1915
The Milk-Eyed Mender was created on 2004-03-23.
A Mender of Ways - 1914 was released on: USA: December 1914
The Mender of Nets - 1912 was released on: USA: 15 February 1912
Mona Mender has written: 'Music manuscript preparation' -- subject(s): Musical notation