Black Tom.

The Earl of Ormonde, Lord Deputy of Ireland in the reign of Elizabeth; so called from his ungracious ways and “black looks.”

“He being very stately in apparel, and erect in port, despite his great age, yet with a dark, dour, and menacing look upon his face, so that all who met his gaze seemed to quake before the same.”—Hon. Emily Lawless: With Essex in Ireland, p. 105.

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Entry taken from Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, edited by the Rev. E. Cobham Brewer, LL.D. and revised in 1895.

Black Rood of Sootland
Black Russia
Black Saturday
Black Sea
Black Sheep [Kârâ-Koin-loo]
Black Standard
Black Strap
Black Swan
Black-thorn Winter (The)
Black Thursday
Black Tom
Black Watch
Black … White
Blacks
Blacks (The)
Blackacre (Widow)
Blackamoor
Blackness
Blacksmith
Bladamour
Blade