| Mackenzie Edward Charles Walcott - 1859 - 660 páginas
...fair and wise, and good and gay." The song of harvest-home may still be heard : " We have ploughed, we have sowed, We have reaped, we have mowed, We have brought home every load. Hip, hip, huzza." The three first days of March, called the Blind days, are deemed unfavourable for sowing seed.... | |
| Mackenzie Edward C. Walcott - 1859 - 216 páginas
...fair and wise, and good and gay." The song of harvest-home may still be heard : ** We have ploughed, we have sowed, We have reaped, we have mowed. We have brought home every load. Hip, hip, huzza." DEVONSHIRE CUSTOMS. 437 The three first days of March, called the Blind days, are deemed unfavourable... | |
| 1861 - 412 páginas
...load with all due honour, the reapers singing some such strain as the following, " We have ploughed, we have sowed, We have reaped, we have mowed, We have...brought home every load, Hip, hip, hip, Harvest-Home." Farmer and men then sat down to supper, on terms of perfect equality for the evening. Healths were... | |
| William Henderson - 1866 - 422 páginas
...When the neck is cut, there is shouting and halloing, and the reapers call out — We have ploughed, we have sowed, We have reaped, we have mowed, We have brought home every load, With a Hip, hip, hip, hurrah ! Compare with these harvest customs those of Schaumburg-Lippe. When barley... | |
| Nathan Boughton Warren - 1868 - 274 páginas
...to the excitement of the day. " 'Harvest.Home, Harvest.Home; \Vc have ploughed, we have sowed, \Vc have reaped, we have mowed, We have brought home every load ; Hip, hip, hip, Harvest.Home!' ,. " So they sang or shouted. In Lincolnshire and other districts hand.bells were carried by those... | |
| john swann withington and r. abercrombie - 1883 - 814 páginas
...as these :— Hip ! Hip! Harvest Home ! " Or— " Harvest Home ! Harvest Home ! We have ploughed, wo have sowed, We have reaped, we have mowed, We have brought home every load, " The bou»hs do shake and the bells do ring, So merrily comes our harvest in." But if the bells are... | |
| 1887 - 752 páginas
...the villages, and from thousands of lips might be heard the song of rejoicing : We have ploughed ; we have sowed ; We have reaped ; we have mowed ; We have brought home every load. Hip, hurrah ! Harvest Ноше ! 210 [September 10, 1887.] [Conducted by The very personification of thia... | |
| 1887 - 610 páginas
...the villages, and from thousands of lips might be heard the song of rejoicing : We have ploughed ; we have sowed ; We have reaped ; we have mowed ; We have brought home every load. [September 10, 1387.] ALL THE TEAR BOUND. [Conducted by The very personification of this month, when... | |
| G. F. Northall - 1892 - 584 páginas
...harvest in, Our harvest in, our harvest in, So merrily, etc, In Gloucestershire it : We have ploughed, we have sowed, We have reaped, we have mowed, We have brought home every load, Hip, hip, hip, Harvest home!—BD. ii. 582. Well ploughed, well sown ! Well ploughed, etc. Well reaped, well mown;... | |
| Robert L. Ardrey - 1894 - 256 páginas
...and tabor led the procession, while the reapers danced around shouting: "Harvesi-home, harvest- home, We have plowed, we have sowed, We have reaped, we...mowed, We have brought home every load, Hip, hip. hip, harvest home," etc. Those merry days have long since passed. Our age is hard and practical. Everything... | |
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