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Look, there may come a time when you want to experience

source:Enshenyizhongwangedit:waytime:2023-11-30 18:15:53

(50) Three cabbage-nets, according to some versions.

Look, there may come a time when you want to experience

(51) This is a common phrase in old English songs and ballads. See THE SUMMER'S MORNING, POST, p. 229.

Look, there may come a time when you want to experience

(54) The high-road through a town or village.

Look, there may come a time when you want to experience

(55) That is Tommy's opinion. In the Yorkshire dialect, when the possessive case is followed by the relative substantive, it is customary to omit the S; but if the relative be understood, and not expressed, the possessive case is formed in the usual manner, as in a subsequent line of this song:-

'Hee'd a horse, too, 'twor war than ond Tommy's, ye see.'

(58) Famished. The line in which this word occurs exhibits one of the most striking peculiarities of the Lancashire dialect, which is, that in words ending in ING, the termination is changed into INK. EX. GR., for starving, STARVINK, farthing, FARDINK.

(59) In one version this line has been altered, probably by some printer who had a wholesome fear of the 'Bench of Justices,' into -

'Success to every gentleman That lives in Lincolnsheer.'

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