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Updated: May 22, 2025
Says Jennings, says he "'We should na ha' set out so like gentlefolk a top o' the coach yesterday. *Baggin-time; time of the evening meal. Dree; long and tedious. Anglo-Saxon, "dreogan," to suffer, to endure. "'Nay, lad! We should ha' had more to walk if we had na ridden, and I'm sure both you and I'se* weary o' tramping. *"I have not been, nor IS, nor never schal." Wickliffe's Apology, p.
Now, let us turn our attention to this stone, and ask, first, what light does the inscription on the cup throw on its nature? "Dre," I may remind you, is an old English word, used, I think, by Burns, identical with the Saxon "dreogan," meaning to "suffer." So that the writer at least contemplated that the stone might "suffer changes." But what kind of changes external or internal?
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