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Pommerol suggests, no other than the ancient Celtic god Grannus, whom the Romans identified with Apollo, and whose worship is attested by inscriptions found not only in France but in Scotland and on the Danube.

As the horses trampled upon her for some time, I came to see if she had sustained any inconvenience." POMMEROL. "CLOTILDE, this girl is named FERNANDE. She is as bad as she can well be, therefore I implore you to take her home with you and adopt her. Will you do it?" CLOTILDE. "Of course I will. Who could refuse such a trifling request! But look, here come the people of the house."

Pommerol suggests, no other than the ancient Celtic god Grannus, whom the Romans identified with Apollo, and whose worship is attested by inscriptions found not only in France but in Scotland and on the Danube. Thus in the province of Picardy "on the first Sunday of Lent people carried torches through the fields, exorcising the field-mice, the darnel, and the smut.

POMMEROL. "I am a lawyer with an enormous practice. Having nothing whatever to do, I came here to find FERNANDE, the pretty waiter girl. Here comes my cousin CLOTILDE. She is an angel of virtue and the mistress of my friend ANDRE. What can she want here?" CLOTILDE. "My carriage has just run over a young girl, who lives here.

CLOTILDE. "Write if you choose. I will put the letter in a lamp-post box, so that he will never get it. On second thought I will keep it. FERNANDE writes the letter and CLOTILDE confiscates it. ANDRE, POMMEROL and a variety of people come and go and talk of a variety of things. Finally FERNANDE and ANDRE are led out to marriage, and the dread ceremony is perpetrated. Curtain.

As compared with Frou Frou, it is much more palatable, and far more powerful, and there is no reason to suppose that it contains anything deleterious to the moral health of the play-goer. An analysis made by order of PUNCHINELLO shows that it consists of the following materials, combined in the following proportions: ACT I. Scene, a Gambling-House. Enter M. POMMEROL, a benevolent lawyer.

The Banker, being naturally indignant, attempts to relieve his mind by punching FERNANDE's head. Heroic interference by POMMEROL, and consequent tableau. Curtain. SATIRICAL PERSON, to one of the ushers. "Will you tell me what street this house is in?" USHER. "Twenty-fourth street, sir." SATIRICAL PERSON. "All right.

The lads and lasses go about from house to house, making the customary request; in some places they wear masks or are otherwise disguised. See Ch. Beauquier, op. cit. pp. 31-33. Curiously enough, while the singular is granno-mio, the plural is grannas-mias. Dr. Pommerol, "La fête des Brandons et le dieu Gaulois Grannus," Bulletins et Mémoires de la Société d'Anthropologie de Paris, v.

Ned King will come ay, and Pommerol. What hinders, old friend?" The seaman shook his head. "Not for me, Sir Walter." "Why, man, will you let that great marvel lie hid till the hills crumble and bury it?" "I will return but not yet. When I have seen my son a man, I go back, but I go alone." "To the city of the gold kings?" "Nay, to the Mount of the Angels, of which the priest told."

Pommerol recently spoke at the Anthropological Society of Paris, of two such rounded stones picked up in the Puy-de-Dome. Similar stones have been discovered at Viry-Noureuil, and M. Massenat has one in his collection from Chez-Pourre.