The Traditional Games of England, Scotland, and Ireland: With Tunes, Singing-rhymes, and Methods of Playing According to the Variants Extant and Recorded in Different Parts of the Kingdom, Volum 2Alice Bertha Gomme D. Nutt, 1898 |
Inni boken
Resultat 1-5 av 51
Side xv
... person with trees - Perambulation of boundaries - Animals repre- sented - Ballads sung to a dance - Individual form games- Hearth worship-- Objection to giving light from a fire - Child - stealing by witch - Obstacles in path when ...
... person with trees - Perambulation of boundaries - Animals repre- sented - Ballads sung to a dance - Individual form games- Hearth worship-- Objection to giving light from a fire - Child - stealing by witch - Obstacles in path when ...
Side 23
... person is cognisant of actions done by the living , and capable of re- senting personal wrongs and desecration of the grave . It shows clearly the sacredness of the grave ; but what , perhaps to us , is the most interesting feature , is ...
... person is cognisant of actions done by the living , and capable of re- senting personal wrongs and desecration of the grave . It shows clearly the sacredness of the grave ; but what , perhaps to us , is the most interesting feature , is ...
Side 24
... person ' may allude to it . " Halliwell ( Nursery Rhymes , p . 224 ) describes the game as above . Oliver , Oliver , follow the King ! Oliver , Oliver , follow the King ! Oliver , Oliver , last in the ring ! Jim Burguin wants a wife ...
... person ' may allude to it . " Halliwell ( Nursery Rhymes , p . 224 ) describes the game as above . Oliver , Oliver , follow the King ! Oliver , Oliver , follow the King ! Oliver , Oliver , last in the ring ! Jim Burguin wants a wife ...
Side 25
... person to " eat " something disagreeable is a well - known form of expressing contempt . The rhyme was supposed to be very efficacious in rousing an indifferent or lazy player when playing " touch " ( A. B. Gomme ) . Oranges and Lemons ...
... person to " eat " something disagreeable is a well - known form of expressing contempt . The rhyme was supposed to be very efficacious in rousing an indifferent or lazy player when playing " touch " ( A. B. Gomme ) . Oranges and Lemons ...
Side 78
... persons of the thimble - rig class , probably the same as the game called " Fast and Loose . " Prickey Sockey Christmas morning is ushered in by the little maidens play- ing at the game of " Prickey Sockey , " as they call it . They are ...
... persons of the thimble - rig class , probably the same as the game called " Fast and Loose . " Prickey Sockey Christmas morning is ushered in by the little maidens play- ing at the game of " Prickey Sockey , " as they call it . They are ...
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
The Traditional Games of England, Scotland, and Ireland: With ..., Volum 2,Del 1 Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1898 |
The Traditional Games of England, Scotland, and Ireland: With Tunes ..., Volum 2 Alice Bertha Gomme Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1898 |
The Traditional Games of England, Scotland, and Ireland: With Tunes, Singing ... Alice Bertha Gomme Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2018 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
a-weeping A. B. Gomme A. C. Haddon apple ball bells of St bonnie bread and wine bride bright summer's day called catch centre ceremony Chase child circle custom dance round daughter Jane Earls Heaton face your lover fair lady Fochabers Folk-lore Journal Fraserburgh girl gives go round goes gold ring Gregor Haddon Halliwell Halliwell's head join hands King kiss kneel lady Lancashire Lincolnshire Liphook London love best maidens marbles marriage married Miss Dendy mother Nottinghamshire Nursery Rhymes Oats and beans Oranges and lemons players Pray Queen Anne ransom Rhymes Rosehearty Round and round round the village sailors Sally Water Say the bells sheep Shinty Shropshire Shropshire Folk-lore side singing soldiers Sporle Sprinkle Stand and face sweetheart Symondsbury three dukes a-riding turn verse walk Warwickshire weeping wish you joy words young
Populære avsnitt
Side 27 - Lemons," say the bells of St. Clemens, " You owe me five farthings," say the bells of St. Martin's. " When will you pay me ?
Side 195 - One, two, Buckle my shoe; Three, four, Shut the door; Five, six, Pick up sticks; Seven, eight, Lay them straight; Nine, ten, A good fat hen; Eleven, twelve, Who will delve?
Side 93 - Lady Queen Anne, she sits in the sun, As fair as a lily, as brown as a bun,
Side 300 - His ubi nequiquam dictis experta Latinum contra stare videt penitusque in viscera lapsum serpentis furiale malum totamque pererrat, turn vero infelix ingentibus excita monstris immensam sine more furit lymphata per urbem. ceu quondam torto volitans sub verbere turbo, quem pueri magno in gyro vacua atria circum intenti ludo exercent; ille actus habena curvatis fertur spatiis, stupet inscia supra impubesque manus mirata volubile buxum; dant animos plagae: non cursu segnior illo per medias urbes agitur...
Side 64 - Up and down the City Road, In and out the Eagle, That's the way the money goes, Pop goes the...
Side 9 - Thus the farmer sows his seed, Thus he stands and takes his ease, He stamps his foot and claps his hands And turns around to view his land.
Side 316 - Four colly birds, Three French hens, Two turtle doves, and A partridge in a pear tree.
Side 299 - The first tyme that he, the prince, went to the towne of Sterling to meete the king, seeing a little without the gate of the towne a stack of corne, in proportion not unlike to a topp, wherewith he used to play, he said to some that were with him. ' Loe there is a goodly topp :' whereupon one of them saying, ' Why doe you not play with it then ?' he answered, ' Set it up for me, and I will play with it.
Side 105 - ... the side, with a seal or piece of metal or wood at the end, and that, when used, the parchment was rolled up with all the strings and their seals hanging together, so that the drawer had no reason for choosing one more than another, but drew one of the strings by mere chance, on which the roll was opened to see on what stanza he had fallen : if such were the form of the game, we can very easily imagine why the name was applied to a charter with an unusual number of seals attached to it, which...