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A variety of terms have been used for camlet in different forms:
Once at the top of the long hill which led up from Camlet station, he felt his spirits mounting.
His blue camlet cloak was a local antiquity, like the church-spire.
It is described as a brown cloth supposedly made of camel's hair, similar to that of camlet.
Here was Camlet at last.
Camlet is distraught: for all his wife's shrewishness, he loves her and wants her back.
He became a citizen of Leiden on June 25, 1618 and worked as a camlet (fabric) merchant.
The members of the Ringh family were specialized workers in serge, camlet or cloth.
Walter Camlet, a citizen and cloth merchant, enters, complaining that his own wife is always nagging him.
The guard paid no attention, but continued methodically to hand out, one by one, the packages labelled to Camlet.
These two attempts failed due to the style of fabric into which the yarn was woven - a type of camlet.
They tell Mistress Camlet and she is furious, resolving to go and kill everyone involved in her jealous frenzy.
It is considered of lesser quality than that of camlet, which is also made of camel's hair.
Camlet was where he always got out, leaving the train to creep indolently onward, goodness only knew whither, into the green heart of England.
Of note is Camlet Moat which is one of the borough's five scheduled ancient monuments.
Porter You i' the camlet, get up o' the rail; I'll peck you o'er the pales else.
There is access from Camlet Way, Hadley Wood Road and Games Road.
Within the grounds of the country park, close to the Hadley Road entrance, can be found a small moated isle known locally as Camlet Moat.
Mistress Camlet is madly jealous, but when she discovers that it is all a set-up, she repents; she loves her husband really.
With a fresh blue camlet gown that matched her eyes, and a heart beating in her chest like a trip-hammer, she set out to stalk her victim.
Camlet Way crossed the Thames at Hedsor Wharf and the remains of a Roman bridge were discovered there in the 19th century.
Camlet Way crossed the River Thames by bridge at Hedsor Wharf to Sashes Island near Cookham in Berkshire.
The island is believed to have been at the point where the Thames was crossed by a Roman road called Camlet Way, which ran from St. Albans to Silchester.
Camlet, West Bowlby, Knipswich for Timpany, Spavin Delawarr; and then all the other stations; and then, finally, London.