1835 — John Monteath, Dunblane Traditions: Being a Series of Warlike and Legendary Narratives, Biographical Sketches of Eccentric Characters, &c., John MIller (1887), page 56:
"Isna yer ghaist like a rickle o' banes rowed up in an auld din hide?"
1881 — William Reid, The Two Students, Houlston and Sons (1881), page 118:
"How daur ye, ye rickle o' banes and rags, misca' only decent woman that gaet; […]
1896 — Maggie Swan, For the Sake o' the Siller, Oliphant, Anderson & Ferrier (1896), page 66:
"Guid sake! lassie, what an airm ye hev, deed ye're jist a rickle o' banes a' the gither, they haena gien ye yer meat doon at Balhelvie; aye, I kent brawly what it would be."