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Página 77
... asked a peculiarly fat one to pray for the child . She gave him a rupee ... asked . Just then I emerged from the Rest- house , and the fat man was saved any ... Tenthousandfold give you a thousand in place of one . " The man rejoices ...
... asked a peculiarly fat one to pray for the child . She gave him a rupee ... asked . Just then I emerged from the Rest- house , and the fat man was saved any ... Tenthousandfold give you a thousand in place of one . " The man rejoices ...
Página 77
... asked . Just then I emerged from the Rest- house , and the fat man was saved any further trouble . A. J. O'BRIEN . ARMENIAN FOLK - TALES ( continued ) . 5. Tenthousandfold.1 This man Once upon a time there lived a man and a woman . was ...
... asked . Just then I emerged from the Rest- house , and the fat man was saved any further trouble . A. J. O'BRIEN . ARMENIAN FOLK - TALES ( continued ) . 5. Tenthousandfold.1 This man Once upon a time there lived a man and a woman . was ...
Página 77
... asked . Just then I emerged from the Rest- house , and the fat man was saved any further trouble . A. J. O'BRIEN . ARMENIAN FOLK - TALES ( continued ) . 5. Tenthousandfold.1 This man Once upon a time there lived a man and a woman . was ...
... asked . Just then I emerged from the Rest- house , and the fat man was saved any further trouble . A. J. O'BRIEN . ARMENIAN FOLK - TALES ( continued ) . 5. Tenthousandfold.1 This man Once upon a time there lived a man and a woman . was ...
Página 78
... Tenthousandfold . You will say , - " The priest sent me to you . I have given one ; you are to give a thousand ... ask him , — " Who are you ? No one has come here for a long time . Where are you coming from , and where are you going ? " ― ...
... Tenthousandfold . You will say , - " The priest sent me to you . I have given one ; you are to give a thousand ... ask him , — " Who are you ? No one has come here for a long time . Where are you coming from , and where are you going ? " ― ...
Página 79
... ask Tenthousandfold why it is that when I wall in my garden all the fruit and vegetables dry up ; but when I take ... Tenthousandfold . I have given one ; I am going to receive a thousand . " The priest says to him , - " Go ask ...
... ask Tenthousandfold why it is that when I wall in my garden all the fruit and vegetables dry up ; but when I take ... Tenthousandfold . I have given one ; I am going to receive a thousand . " The priest says to him , - " Go ask ...
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Términos y frases comunes
animals ask Tenthousandfold Australian bachelor Baiame ballads Bantu beak belief Berber blood bride brother Brython Bushmen Bushongo called century ceremonies charm church clan Clare collection common connection Corofin cult culture custom dancing Deiphontes eaten nine exogamy eyes fact father feast folk-tales folklore forest Frazer gave girl give goat HAUSA He-goat head Howitt Hyæna incest killed Kilrush King King's legend little Tortoise Lord Avebury magic maiden marriage marry matrilinear Mianwali Mouse native night origin Pausanias person phratries pixy priest priest's son primitive Prince religion religious RENWARD rites round said,-"Very saints savage says scholar Sheda shilo snake social Society songs spirits stones story survival tale Theal theory told took Tortoise totémique totemism totémisme town tree tribes Upton Grey village wife woman women Woto
Pasajes populares
Página 18 - Stuarts' throne; The bigots of the iron time Had called his harmless art a crime. A wandering Harper, scorned and poor, He begged his bread from door to door, And tuned, to please a peasant's ear, The harp a king had loved to hear.
Página 177 - I remember when its beams were hung with garlands in honour of young women of the parish, reputed to have died virgins ; and recollect to have seen the clerk's wife cutting, in white paper, the resemblances of gloves, and ribbons to be twisted into knots and roses, to decorate these memorials of chastity.
Página 182 - Here come I, old Father Christmas, Welcome, or welcome not, I hope old Father Christmas Will never be forgot.
Página 48 - The law only forbids men to do what their instincts incline them to do; what nature itself prohibits and punishes, it would be superfluous for the law to prohibit and punish. Accordingly we may always safely assume that crimes forbidden by law are crimes which many men have a natural propensity to commit.
Página 49 - But variations, here as elsewhere, would naturally present themselves ; and those of our ancestors who avoided in-and-in breeding would survive, while the others would gradually decay and ultimately perish. Thus an instinct would be developed which would be powerful enough, as a rule, to prevent injurious unions.
Página viii - IN THE CHAIR. THE minutes of the last Annual Meeting were read and confirmed. The...
Página 189 - ... cover. Lastly, we fetched some strings of dried squash and laid them on the tent cover. Of dried squash, I fetched but one string at a time, doubled and folded over my left arm. A string of dried squash, as I have said, was always seven Indian fathoms long; and I have described an Indian fathom as the distance from the tips of the fingers of one hand to the tips of the fingers of the other, with both hands outstretched at either side. As these measurements were made by the women workers, an Indian...
Página 7 - Mary mild, fetch home your child, for ours he's drowned each one. So Mary mild fetched home her child, and laid him across her knee, and with a handful of withy twigs she gave him slashes three. Ay, bitter withy! Ay, bitter withy! You've caused me to smart. And the withy shall be the very first tree to perish at the heart!
Página 98 - . . . It is equally appropriate that the worshipper should dress himself in the skin of a victim, and so, as it were, envelop himself in its sanctity. To rude nations dress is not merely a physical comfort, but a fixed part of social religion, a thing by which a man constantly bears on his body the token of his religion, and which is itself a charm and a means of divine protection.
Página 281 - ... fountain described in the text was a theory that sprang from the brains of the Christian Mamluks. 2 A fair description of the still favourite vehicles, the Shugduf, Takht-rawan, and the Shibriyah. It is almost needless to say that the use of the mariner's compass is unknown to the guides in AlHijaz. 3 Wonderful tales are still told about this same Momiya (mummy). I was assured by an Arab physician, that he had broken a fowl's leg, and bound it tightly with a cloth containing man's dried flesh,...