County Folk-lore: Printed Extracts. Suffolk. No. 2Lady Eveline Camilla Gurdon Folk-lore society, 1893 - 202 psl. |
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... King Charles , and the principles of Puritanism prevailed among them for many years in their utmost rigour . It is scarcely necessary to say that the Puritans abhorred and proscribed every superstition but their own , which consisted ...
... King Charles , and the principles of Puritanism prevailed among them for many years in their utmost rigour . It is scarcely necessary to say that the Puritans abhorred and proscribed every superstition but their own , which consisted ...
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... King , The moon in the wane , thereon hangeth a thing : Th ' encrease of a pottle ( well proved of some ) , Shall pleasure thy household , ere peascod time come . Thomas Tusser . " Five Hundred points of Good Husbandry , " p . 49 . Set ...
... King , The moon in the wane , thereon hangeth a thing : Th ' encrease of a pottle ( well proved of some ) , Shall pleasure thy household , ere peascod time come . Thomas Tusser . " Five Hundred points of Good Husbandry , " p . 49 . Set ...
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... king , he would give her a great deal of money for it . Forby . " Vocab . of E. Anglia , " vol . ii , p . 406 . Watching in the Church Porch on St. Mark's Night . - The belief on this subject is ( or rather was ) that the apparitions of ...
... king , he would give her a great deal of money for it . Forby . " Vocab . of E. Anglia , " vol . ii , p . 406 . Watching in the Church Porch on St. Mark's Night . - The belief on this subject is ( or rather was ) that the apparitions of ...
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... KING LEAR . " CAP O ' RUSHES . ( Told by an old servant to the writer when a child . ) Well , there was once a very rich gentleman , and he'd three darters . And he thought to see how fond they was of him . So he says to the first ...
... KING LEAR . " CAP O ' RUSHES . ( Told by an old servant to the writer when a child . ) Well , there was once a very rich gentleman , and he'd three darters . And he thought to see how fond they was of him . So he says to the first ...
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... King , he were a ' comin ' down the street an ' he hard her sing , but what she sang he couldn't hare , so he stopped and said : " What were that you was a singin ' of , maw'r ? " The woman , she were ashamed to let him hare what her ...
... King , he were a ' comin ' down the street an ' he hard her sing , but what she sang he couldn't hare , so he stopped and said : " What were that you was a singin ' of , maw'r ? " The woman , she were ashamed to let him hare what her ...
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
County Folk-lore– Printed Extracts. Suffolk. No. 2 Lady Eveline Camilla Gurdon Visos knygos peržiūra - 1893 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Aldeburgh Amy Duny bees believed bewitched Bible Book of Days Bungay called Camilla Gurdon charm child church cure custom Dallinghoo dance daughter death door E. A. Handbook East Anglian Edmund fairy father finger fire Forby Fornham All Saints Francis Hindes Groome ghost girl grave Grundisburgh Hadleigh hand Hawsted head heard Hengrave Hist horses Hugh Pigot husband I-ho Ibid Ipswich Journal J. T. Varden John King lady living London Lowestoft maid married Matthew Hopkins moon Moor morning mother nails never night Norfolk Notes and Queries old woman parish person piece pins Redstone ricararo ring River Dee Rose Cullender round Rushes says seen Stebbings Stowmarket Suffolk Garland Suffolk Notes Suffolk Words superstition supposed thing told town tree Tymms Vocabulary of East warts Wherstead wife witch witchcraft Woodbridge Words and Phrases young Zincke
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