GLOSSARY

GLOSSARYA power of, a large number.Bohlan, rag-weed.Loy, a sort of spade peculiar to the west and north-west of Ireland.Lone bush, a hawthorn growing at a distance from all other trees. The lone bushes are dedicated to the fairies, and must not be cut down.Cailee, a visit.Join the world, to marry.To allow, to declare.Gankeynogue, possibly a synonym of leprachaun, used only in the northern districts. A stone barred with fossil reed is said to be the Gankeynogue’s pipe.Fort.The forts referred to are the circular enclosures supposed to have been made, in pre-Christian days, by the Tuatha de Danaan.Breffny, the counties of Cavan and Leitrim, originally part of Connaught, though Cavan is now in Ulster.Printed byR. & R. Clark, Limited,Edinburgh.Price 5s. net.THE CROCK OF GOLDByJAMES STEPHENSAUTHOR OF “THE CHARWOMAN’S DAUGHTER,” ETC.A story of the open air, of deep forests, of rock-strewn pastures, and mountain-tops, and, though the human element is not absent, it deals chiefly with the fairy-folk of old Ireland, with the god Pan, and the great Angus Og.STANDARD.—“There is not another book like thisCrock of Goldin English literature. There are many books like pieces of it, but the humour and the style, these things are Mr. Stephen’s own peculiar gift.”PALL MALL GAZETTE.—“A wise, beautiful, and humorous book …. If you could have given Sterne a soul and made him a poet he might have producedThe Crock of Gold.”DAILY NEWS.—“The author’s inexhaustible vitality, his happy humour, his eloquence, and his whimsicality will delight a host of readers.”GLOBE.—“To imaginative readers Mr. Stephen’s new work will be an intense and abiding delight …. We feel we have been lifted for a brief space above the ordinary things of life, and come back to earth carrying with us the abiding memory of the rarely humorous and the beautiful. We have read nothing quite likeThe Crock of Gold. It has a charm and humour peculiar to itself, and places its author high in the ranks of imaginative poetic writers.”LONDON: MACMILLAN & CO.,Ltd.New Six-Shilling NovelsMARRIAGE. ByH. G. Wells.MRS. LANCELOT. ByMaurice Hewlett.THE REEF. ByEdith Wharton.THE HEROINE IN BRONZE. ByJames Lane Allen.ONE WOMAN’S LIFE. ByRobert Herrick.A REGULAR MADAM. ByAlice Wilson Fox.VAN CLEVE. ByMary S. Watts.EDWARD FAIRLIE FRANKFORT,or Politics among the People. By SirHenry Wrixon, K.C.THE STRANGER AT THE GATE. ByM. O. Wright. Illustrated.A MAN’S WORLD. ByAlbert Edwards.THE RICH MRS. BURGOYNE. ByKathleen Norris. Illustrated.LONDON: MACMILLAN & CO.,Ltd.Original Back Cover.ColophonAvailabilityThis eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of theProject Gutenberg Licenseincluded with this eBook or online atwww.gutenberg.org.This eBook is produced by the Online Distributed Proofreading Team atwww.pgdp.net.Scans for this book are available from the Internet Archive (copy1,2).MetadataTitle:Folk Tales of BreffnyAuthor:Bampton HuntInfoUnknown:#####Language:EnglishOriginal publication date:1912Keywords:Folklore -- IrelandCatalog entriesRelated WorldCat catalog page:4772812Related Open Library catalog page (for source):OL24183245MRelated Open Library catalog page (for work):OL12747511WEncodingRevision History2017-05-13 Started.External ReferencesThis Project Gutenberg eBook contains external references. These links may not work for you.CorrectionsThe following corrections have been applied to the text:PageSourceCorrectionEdit distance64unbeknowntunbeknownst1

GLOSSARYA power of, a large number.Bohlan, rag-weed.Loy, a sort of spade peculiar to the west and north-west of Ireland.Lone bush, a hawthorn growing at a distance from all other trees. The lone bushes are dedicated to the fairies, and must not be cut down.Cailee, a visit.Join the world, to marry.To allow, to declare.Gankeynogue, possibly a synonym of leprachaun, used only in the northern districts. A stone barred with fossil reed is said to be the Gankeynogue’s pipe.Fort.The forts referred to are the circular enclosures supposed to have been made, in pre-Christian days, by the Tuatha de Danaan.Breffny, the counties of Cavan and Leitrim, originally part of Connaught, though Cavan is now in Ulster.

GLOSSARY

A power of, a large number.Bohlan, rag-weed.Loy, a sort of spade peculiar to the west and north-west of Ireland.Lone bush, a hawthorn growing at a distance from all other trees. The lone bushes are dedicated to the fairies, and must not be cut down.Cailee, a visit.Join the world, to marry.To allow, to declare.Gankeynogue, possibly a synonym of leprachaun, used only in the northern districts. A stone barred with fossil reed is said to be the Gankeynogue’s pipe.Fort.The forts referred to are the circular enclosures supposed to have been made, in pre-Christian days, by the Tuatha de Danaan.Breffny, the counties of Cavan and Leitrim, originally part of Connaught, though Cavan is now in Ulster.

A power of, a large number.

Bohlan, rag-weed.

Loy, a sort of spade peculiar to the west and north-west of Ireland.

Lone bush, a hawthorn growing at a distance from all other trees. The lone bushes are dedicated to the fairies, and must not be cut down.

Cailee, a visit.

Join the world, to marry.

To allow, to declare.

Gankeynogue, possibly a synonym of leprachaun, used only in the northern districts. A stone barred with fossil reed is said to be the Gankeynogue’s pipe.

Fort.The forts referred to are the circular enclosures supposed to have been made, in pre-Christian days, by the Tuatha de Danaan.

Breffny, the counties of Cavan and Leitrim, originally part of Connaught, though Cavan is now in Ulster.

Printed byR. & R. Clark, Limited,Edinburgh.

Printed byR. & R. Clark, Limited,Edinburgh.

Printed byR. & R. Clark, Limited,Edinburgh.

Price 5s. net.THE CROCK OF GOLDByJAMES STEPHENSAUTHOR OF “THE CHARWOMAN’S DAUGHTER,” ETC.A story of the open air, of deep forests, of rock-strewn pastures, and mountain-tops, and, though the human element is not absent, it deals chiefly with the fairy-folk of old Ireland, with the god Pan, and the great Angus Og.STANDARD.—“There is not another book like thisCrock of Goldin English literature. There are many books like pieces of it, but the humour and the style, these things are Mr. Stephen’s own peculiar gift.”PALL MALL GAZETTE.—“A wise, beautiful, and humorous book …. If you could have given Sterne a soul and made him a poet he might have producedThe Crock of Gold.”DAILY NEWS.—“The author’s inexhaustible vitality, his happy humour, his eloquence, and his whimsicality will delight a host of readers.”GLOBE.—“To imaginative readers Mr. Stephen’s new work will be an intense and abiding delight …. We feel we have been lifted for a brief space above the ordinary things of life, and come back to earth carrying with us the abiding memory of the rarely humorous and the beautiful. We have read nothing quite likeThe Crock of Gold. It has a charm and humour peculiar to itself, and places its author high in the ranks of imaginative poetic writers.”LONDON: MACMILLAN & CO.,Ltd.New Six-Shilling NovelsMARRIAGE. ByH. G. Wells.MRS. LANCELOT. ByMaurice Hewlett.THE REEF. ByEdith Wharton.THE HEROINE IN BRONZE. ByJames Lane Allen.ONE WOMAN’S LIFE. ByRobert Herrick.A REGULAR MADAM. ByAlice Wilson Fox.VAN CLEVE. ByMary S. Watts.EDWARD FAIRLIE FRANKFORT,or Politics among the People. By SirHenry Wrixon, K.C.THE STRANGER AT THE GATE. ByM. O. Wright. Illustrated.A MAN’S WORLD. ByAlbert Edwards.THE RICH MRS. BURGOYNE. ByKathleen Norris. Illustrated.LONDON: MACMILLAN & CO.,Ltd.

Price 5s. net.THE CROCK OF GOLDByJAMES STEPHENSAUTHOR OF “THE CHARWOMAN’S DAUGHTER,” ETC.A story of the open air, of deep forests, of rock-strewn pastures, and mountain-tops, and, though the human element is not absent, it deals chiefly with the fairy-folk of old Ireland, with the god Pan, and the great Angus Og.STANDARD.—“There is not another book like thisCrock of Goldin English literature. There are many books like pieces of it, but the humour and the style, these things are Mr. Stephen’s own peculiar gift.”PALL MALL GAZETTE.—“A wise, beautiful, and humorous book …. If you could have given Sterne a soul and made him a poet he might have producedThe Crock of Gold.”DAILY NEWS.—“The author’s inexhaustible vitality, his happy humour, his eloquence, and his whimsicality will delight a host of readers.”GLOBE.—“To imaginative readers Mr. Stephen’s new work will be an intense and abiding delight …. We feel we have been lifted for a brief space above the ordinary things of life, and come back to earth carrying with us the abiding memory of the rarely humorous and the beautiful. We have read nothing quite likeThe Crock of Gold. It has a charm and humour peculiar to itself, and places its author high in the ranks of imaginative poetic writers.”LONDON: MACMILLAN & CO.,Ltd.New Six-Shilling NovelsMARRIAGE. ByH. G. Wells.MRS. LANCELOT. ByMaurice Hewlett.THE REEF. ByEdith Wharton.THE HEROINE IN BRONZE. ByJames Lane Allen.ONE WOMAN’S LIFE. ByRobert Herrick.A REGULAR MADAM. ByAlice Wilson Fox.VAN CLEVE. ByMary S. Watts.EDWARD FAIRLIE FRANKFORT,or Politics among the People. By SirHenry Wrixon, K.C.THE STRANGER AT THE GATE. ByM. O. Wright. Illustrated.A MAN’S WORLD. ByAlbert Edwards.THE RICH MRS. BURGOYNE. ByKathleen Norris. Illustrated.LONDON: MACMILLAN & CO.,Ltd.

Price 5s. net.

THE CROCK OF GOLD

ByJAMES STEPHENS

AUTHOR OF “THE CHARWOMAN’S DAUGHTER,” ETC.

A story of the open air, of deep forests, of rock-strewn pastures, and mountain-tops, and, though the human element is not absent, it deals chiefly with the fairy-folk of old Ireland, with the god Pan, and the great Angus Og.

STANDARD.—“There is not another book like thisCrock of Goldin English literature. There are many books like pieces of it, but the humour and the style, these things are Mr. Stephen’s own peculiar gift.”

PALL MALL GAZETTE.—“A wise, beautiful, and humorous book …. If you could have given Sterne a soul and made him a poet he might have producedThe Crock of Gold.”

DAILY NEWS.—“The author’s inexhaustible vitality, his happy humour, his eloquence, and his whimsicality will delight a host of readers.”

GLOBE.—“To imaginative readers Mr. Stephen’s new work will be an intense and abiding delight …. We feel we have been lifted for a brief space above the ordinary things of life, and come back to earth carrying with us the abiding memory of the rarely humorous and the beautiful. We have read nothing quite likeThe Crock of Gold. It has a charm and humour peculiar to itself, and places its author high in the ranks of imaginative poetic writers.”

LONDON: MACMILLAN & CO.,Ltd.

New Six-Shilling Novels

MARRIAGE. ByH. G. Wells.

MRS. LANCELOT. ByMaurice Hewlett.

THE REEF. ByEdith Wharton.

THE HEROINE IN BRONZE. ByJames Lane Allen.

ONE WOMAN’S LIFE. ByRobert Herrick.

A REGULAR MADAM. ByAlice Wilson Fox.

VAN CLEVE. ByMary S. Watts.

EDWARD FAIRLIE FRANKFORT,or Politics among the People. By SirHenry Wrixon, K.C.

THE STRANGER AT THE GATE. ByM. O. Wright. Illustrated.

A MAN’S WORLD. ByAlbert Edwards.

THE RICH MRS. BURGOYNE. ByKathleen Norris. Illustrated.

LONDON: MACMILLAN & CO.,Ltd.

Original Back Cover.

Original Back Cover.

Original Back Cover.

ColophonAvailabilityThis eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of theProject Gutenberg Licenseincluded with this eBook or online atwww.gutenberg.org.This eBook is produced by the Online Distributed Proofreading Team atwww.pgdp.net.Scans for this book are available from the Internet Archive (copy1,2).MetadataTitle:Folk Tales of BreffnyAuthor:Bampton HuntInfoUnknown:#####Language:EnglishOriginal publication date:1912Keywords:Folklore -- IrelandCatalog entriesRelated WorldCat catalog page:4772812Related Open Library catalog page (for source):OL24183245MRelated Open Library catalog page (for work):OL12747511WEncodingRevision History2017-05-13 Started.External ReferencesThis Project Gutenberg eBook contains external references. These links may not work for you.CorrectionsThe following corrections have been applied to the text:PageSourceCorrectionEdit distance64unbeknowntunbeknownst1

This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of theProject Gutenberg Licenseincluded with this eBook or online atwww.gutenberg.org.

This eBook is produced by the Online Distributed Proofreading Team atwww.pgdp.net.

Scans for this book are available from the Internet Archive (copy1,2).

This Project Gutenberg eBook contains external references. These links may not work for you.

The following corrections have been applied to the text:


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