beingceltic

Lincolnshire

But other Lincolnshire practices of the kind seem to oscillate between Allhallows and St

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But other Lincolnshire practices of the kind seem to oscillate between Allhallows and St (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter V: The Fenodyree and his Friends)

With this modified agreement between the Lincolnshire date and the Celtic one contrast the irreconcilable English date of St (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter V: The Fenodyree and his Friends)

Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx

  • comparison: The fenodyree, one is told, has in Lincolnshire a cousin, but he is diminutive; and, like the Yorkshire Hob or Robin Round-Cap, and the Danish Niss, he is used to befriend the house in which he dwells (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter V: The Fenodyree and his Friends)

    "The fenodyree, one is told, has in Lincolnshire a cousin, but he is diminutive; and, like the Yorkshire Hob or Robin Round-Cap, and the Danish Niss, he is used to befriend the house in which he dwells."

  • attestation: But other Lincolnshire practices of the kind seem to oscillate between Allhallows and St (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter V: The Fenodyree and his Friends)

    "But other Lincolnshire practices of the kind seem to oscillate between Allhallows and St."

  • attestation: With this modified agreement between the Lincolnshire date and the Celtic one contrast the irreconcilable English date of St (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter V: The Fenodyree and his Friends)

    "With this modified agreement between the Lincolnshire date and the Celtic one contrast the irreconcilable English date of St."