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16th century dining, included baking live birds in a pie as a form of entremet; hoping they would fly out singing. The famous points towards the close of monasteries by Henry VIII & ends with the maid's nose being stolen... like a demon stealing her soul?

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🌿Trees and forests are deeply rooted in our psyche, and spread their branches over myth, legend, folklore & fairytale. The forests that will always have a place in my heart are Mirkwood, Sherwood, and the timeless glades of Ryhope.

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"Ring Around the Rosie" a rhyme amid great speculation. Originally children danced in a circle & curtsied to a center rose tree/child. It was later associated with the Great Plague, ie: Rosie rashes & posies to ward off the smell of disease...& we all fall down!

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Today is and let's appreciate the many giant monsters from the world's various folklore and mythologies that helped inspired today's kaiju from Dragon's to the Hydra and many, many others.

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The 'Child Ballads' are 305 traditional ballads from England and Scotland, anthologized by Francis James Child during the 19th century.

Illustration by Arthur Rackham of Child Ballad 26, "The Twa Corbies"

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Paula Rego's illustrations really capture the creepy, ominous tones that children's nursery rhymes invoke for me. Growing up with these images really shaped me as an artist - Baa Baa black sheep, Little miss muffet and Hey Diddle Diddle

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Froggie Went a-Courtin’, a 16th century Scottish ballad possibly about queen Mary Stuart became a for Woody Guthrie, Burl Ives & others.

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Good afternoon This is here now for another two fun-filled hours of children's and sayings!
[Image: "The Twa Corbies", an illustration of 26.]

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As it is nursery rhymes and children's stories for today's it gives me the perfect excuse to share Walter Crane's stunning pictures for Beauty and the Beast. More here: https://t.co/ffUczVtHns

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Half a pound of tuppenny rice
Half a pound of treacle
That's the way the money goes
Pop! goes the Weasel.

Such a fun children’s rhyme, but it’s origins
are in poverty.
In 18th century Cockney slang,
‘weasel and stoat’ meant coat
and ‘pop’ was to pawn.

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"The waters of Marcross Well were of medicinal efficacy, especially eye affections. An old rhyme runs thus:

For the itch, the stitch, rheumatic, and the gout,
If the devil isn't in you, this well will take it out."

-#Folklore of 1909

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Wowza! It's AND today! 📖

We are so excited to read 's new poetry which reimagines folktales through an lens, featuring selkies, wulvers and Ghillie Dhu 🐉

Beautifully illustrated by 🌈
(📸/)

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It's so here's a look at our mischievous Tomte's wires...👍

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Jewish proverb: “When there are no songbirds, a crow is as good as a nightingale.”

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Next time you hear “Ring a Ring o' Rosie,” grab a beak mask! Some believe the innocent song reflects the 1665 Great Plague of London; rosie being the rash that had an odor they tried to cover up with “a pocket full of posies.” (Img: K Greenaway)

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One of the most well known Malay nursery rhymes is Bangau oh Bangau (Stork oh Stork), a cause-and-effect song explaining that the stork is thin ultimately because the snake eats frogs. It also alludes to the ability of frogs to call rain, a common old belief

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In the Sea (1883) by Arnold Böcklin (Switzerland, 1827-1901). The Art Institute of Chicago. "Mermaids and tritons frolic in the water with a lusty energy and abandon verging on coarseness."

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Wanted to draw modern!Loretta & you bet your sweet bippy that she’d be a 2000’s hottopic punk complete with store bought individuality.

I listened to a LOT of Fall Out Boy & Taking Back Sunday to get this right lol
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