English Folk-rhymes: A Collection of Traditional Verses Relating to Places and Persons, Customs, Superstitions, EtcK. Paul, Trench, Trübner, 1892 - 565 psl. |
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3 psl.
... gone , England , build houses of lime and stone , For after , wars you shall have none . AU . Fuller says " Some make it fulfilled in the year eighty- eight , when the Spanish fleet was beaten , the name of whose king , as a learned ...
... gone , England , build houses of lime and stone , For after , wars you shall have none . AU . Fuller says " Some make it fulfilled in the year eighty- eight , when the Spanish fleet was beaten , the name of whose king , as a learned ...
16 psl.
... gone for ever and aye . Higson's MS . Collection , No. 27. Another version occurs , ibid . , No. 28 : Up a deuce , or else a trey , Or Warthole's gone for ever and aye . The place referred to is Wardal , in Cumberland , between Egre ...
... gone for ever and aye . Higson's MS . Collection , No. 27. Another version occurs , ibid . , No. 28 : Up a deuce , or else a trey , Or Warthole's gone for ever and aye . The place referred to is Wardal , in Cumberland , between Egre ...
45 psl.
... gone , Left seven of a family , Able and Anthony , Richard and Zachary , James , Thomas , and John.-CH. iv . 529 . All the maides in Camberwell , May daunce in an egge shell , For there are no maydes in that well . To which one ...
... gone , Left seven of a family , Able and Anthony , Richard and Zachary , James , Thomas , and John.-CH. iv . 529 . All the maides in Camberwell , May daunce in an egge shell , For there are no maydes in that well . To which one ...
77 psl.
... gone to Evesham fair on a similar errand ; at this disappointment they resolved to take up with the Sippers , who had remained at home , and whom they held in contempt . Upon trial , however , the Stratfordians found themselves unequal ...
... gone to Evesham fair on a similar errand ; at this disappointment they resolved to take up with the Sippers , who had remained at home , and whom they held in contempt . Upon trial , however , the Stratfordians found themselves unequal ...
81 psl.
... gone for a groat a yeare , But now it is denyed . The metre is lamentable , but the cry of the poor was more lamentable . I knew severall that did remember the going of a cowe for 4 per annum . The order was , how many they could winter ...
... gone for a groat a yeare , But now it is denyed . The metre is lamentable , but the cry of the poor was more lamentable . I knew severall that did remember the going of a cowe for 4 per annum . The order was , how many they could winter ...
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Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
English folk-rhymes, a collection of traditional verses relating to places ... G. F. Northall Visos knygos peržiūra - 1892 |
English Folk-rhymes A Collection of Traditional Verses Relating to Places ... Visos knygos peržiūra - 1892 |
English Folk-rhymes A Collection of Traditional Verses Relating to Places ... Visos knygos peržiūra - 1892 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
ancient Antiqs apples April beer bells of St Berkshire bless boys bread butter cake called charm Cheshire child Christ Christmas church corn Cornwall couplet cuckoo custom devil Devonshire door doth drink East eggs England Folklore Friday Garland girl give Gloucestershire hand harvest hath Hazlitt Here's Herefordshire hill Ingleborough John King lady Lancashire Leicestershire Lincolnshire lines London Lord maid master merry Midlands miles moon never night Norfolk North Northamptonshire Notes and Queries Nursery Rhymes parish penny players poor pray proverb quoting rain repeat ride ring Roseberry Topping round Say the bells Shropshire Shrove Tuesday sing sneeze song soul Staffordshire stand steeple stick stone Suffolk Sunday Sussex thee thou Tibberton town tree true love Valentine verse viii Warwickshire wassail West wind Worcestershire word wren Yorkshire
Populiarios ištraukos
145 psl. - Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, Bless the bed that I lie on. Four corners to my bed, Four angels round my head; One to watch and one to pray And two to bear my soul away.
181 psl. - Wassail ! Wassail ! all over the town, Our toast it is white, our ale it is brown : Our bowl it is made of a maplin tree, We be good fellows all ; I drink to thee.
238 psl. - Remember us poor mayers all, And thus we do begin To lead our lives in righteousness, Or else we die in sin. We have been rambling all this night And almost all this day, And now returned back again We have brought you a branch of may. A branch of may we have brought you And at your door it stands. It is but a sprout But it's well budded out By the work of our Lord's hands.
181 psl. - I wish you a merry Christmas And a happy New Year, A pocket full of money, And a cellar full of beer," And a good fat pig to serve you all the year.
239 psl. - A branch of May we have brought you, And at your door it stands ; It is but a sprout, But it's well budded out By the work of our Lord's hands. The hedges and trees they are so green, As green as any leek ; Our heavenly Father he watered them With his heavenly dew so sweet. The heavenly gates are open wide, Our paths are beaten plain, And if a man be not too far gone...
249 psl. - ... incontinency she forfeits her estate ; yet if she will come into the court riding backward upon a black ram, with his tail in her hand, and say the words following, the steward is bound by the custom to re-admit her to her freebench.
208 psl. - severely forbad the custom of Valentines, or giving Boys in writing the names of Girls to be admired and attended on by them ; and, to abolish it, he changed it into giving billets with the names of certain Saints, for them to...
215 psl. - God bless the master of this house, and the mistress also, And all the little children that round the table go...
164 psl. - Speak unto the children of Israel, and bid them that they make them fringes in the borders of their garments throughout their generations, and that they put upon the fringe of the borders a ribband of blue : and it shall be unto you for a fringe, that ye may look upon it, and remember all the commandments of the Lord, and do them...
421 psl. - Hey, my kitten, hey, my kitten, And hey, my kitten, my deary ! Such a sweet pet as this Was neither far nor neary. Here we go up, up, up, And here we go down, down, down, And here we go backwards and forwards, And here we go round, round, roundy.