Like
Like — being in celtic tradition.
3 citations2 sources1 traditions
Gesta Danorum (Books I-IX)
- relationship: Like the last comer, he was bidden to declare his condition; and he
said that he had a certain man's handmaid to wife, and was doing peasant
service to her master in order to set her free. (The Danish History, > Book Six.)
"Like the last comer, he was bidden to declare his condition; and he said that he had a certain man's handmaid to wife, and was doing peasant service to her master in order to set her free."
Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx
- attribution: Like the soldiers of our earthly world, they were possessed of terribly fascinating music; and in the autumnal season they had their rings, still named from them, in which they sang and danced (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter II: The Fairies' Revenge)
"Like the soldiers of our earthly world, they were possessed of terribly fascinating music; and in the autumnal season they had their rings, still named from them, in which they sang and danced."
- comparison: Like ancient work rough with age, grey-cheeked; Stones that confine her where she was slain (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume II > Chapter VII: Triumphs of the Water-world)
"Like ancient work rough with age, grey-cheeked; Stones that confine her where she was slain."