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Updated: June 25, 2025
Some men on the Common cam' doon an' shoo'd the loons awa' frae pappin' Sandy wi' duds, an' we got hame withoot any farrer mishap; but a' forenicht I heard Sandy wirrin' awa' till himsel', an' sayin' ilky noo an' than "Ill-gettit little deevils; an' me gae them an' orange box too!" Nathan cam' in juist afore I shut the shop, an' tell'd Sandy that there had been an' awfu' row on the Common.
Still a third theory to account for the similarity of folk-tale incidents was started by James A. Farrer and elaborated by Andrew Lang in connection with the general movement initiated by Sir Edward Tylor to explain mythology and superstition by the similar processes of savage psychology at definite stages of primitive culture.
There was a big meetin' i' the washin'-hoose nae farrer gane than lest nicht; an' efter a fell while's crackin', Bandy startit to speak aboot mismirizin' an' phrenology, an' that kind o' thing. Bandy tell'd aboot some o' his exploits mismirizin' sailors, an' took on to show aff his po'ers on Sandy.
If we hold, with Mr. But an opponent may argue, like Mr. J. A. Farrer in 'Primitive Manners, that the ceremony of capture is mainly a concession to maiden modesty among early races. Here one may observe that the girls of savage tribes are notoriously profligate and immodest about illicit connections. Only honourable marriage brings a blush to the cheek of these young persons.
Can you imagine Miss Hurst standing over a hot stove all day and spending her evenings mending your worn-out shirts?" Prescott looked up, his face set hard. "You have said enough." There was silence after this, until a big man dressed in old brown overalls stopped his horse near-by. "I've fixed up with Farrer to send over his gasoline tractor to do the fall breaking," he said.
Farrer hath added that excellent Preface that is printed before it. At the time of Mr. Duncon's leaving Mr. Herbert, which was about three weeks before his death, his old and dear friend Mr. Woodnot came from London to Bemerton, and never left him till he had seen him draw his last breath, and closed his eyes on his death-bed.
Farrer would say, "There was in it the picture of a divine soul in every page: and that the whole book was such a harmony of holy passions, as would enrich the world with pleasure and piety." And it appears to have done so; for there have been more than twenty thousand of them sold since the first impression. And this ought to be noted, that when Mr.
Ward, timidly. "He's afraid of nothing." "Except ghosts," remarked her daughter, softly. "Hold your tongue, miss," said her father, twisting his moustache. "No sensible man is afraid of what doesn't exist." "A lot of people believe they do, though," said Mr. Farrer, breaking in. "I heard the other night that old Smith's ghost has been seen again swinging from the apple tree.
Farrer, "that they are far more remarkable than any of the sun's, and more calculated to inspire dread by the nocturnal darkness they contend with, and hence are held in popular fancy nearly everywhere, to cause, portend, or accord with changes in the lot of mortals, and all things terrestrial."
"We we are going to be married," said Mr. Farrer, trying to speak boldly. The sergeant-major drew himself up, and the young man gazed in dismay at a chest which seemed as though it would never cease expanding. "Married!" exclaimed the sergeant-major, with a grim laugh. "Married to a little tame bunny-rabbit! Not if I know it. Where's your mother?" he demanded, turning to the girl.
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