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"coloured by echoes of the Annunciation" (Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 297). Sautman describes the folk tradition of Saint Anne: "ancient figure of motherhood, . . . first mother in the family of Christ, protector of women in childbed, the
"coloured by echoes of the Annunciation" (Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 297). Sautman describes the folk tradition of Saint Anne: "ancient figure of motherhood, . . . first mother in the family of Christ, protector of women in childbed, the
"coloured by echoes of the Annunciation" (Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 297). Sautman describes the folk tradition of Saint Anne: "ancient figure of motherhood, . . . first mother in the family of Christ, protector of women in childbed, the
"coloured by echoes of the Annunciation" (Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 297). Sautman describes the folk tradition of Saint Anne: "ancient figure of motherhood, . . . first mother in the family of Christ, protector of women in childbed, the
"coloured by echoes of the Annunciation" (Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 297). Sautman describes the folk tradition of Saint Anne: "ancient figure of motherhood, . . . first mother in the family of Christ, protector of women in childbed, the
"coloured by echoes of the Annunciation" (Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 297). Sautman describes the folk tradition of Saint Anne: "ancient figure of motherhood, . . . first mother in the family of Christ, protector of women in childbed, the
"coloured by echoes of the Annunciation" (Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 297). Sautman describes the folk tradition of Saint Anne: "ancient figure of motherhood, . . . first mother in the family of Christ, protector of women in childbed, the
"coloured by echoes of the Annunciation" (Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 297). Sautman describes the folk tradition of Saint Anne: "ancient figure of motherhood, . . . first mother in the family of Christ, protector of women in childbed, the
"coloured by echoes of the Annunciation" (Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 297). Sautman describes the folk tradition of Saint Anne: "ancient figure of motherhood, . . . first mother in the family of Christ, protector of women in childbed, the
"coloured by echoes of the Annunciation" (Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 297). Sautman describes the folk tradition of Saint Anne: "ancient figure of motherhood, . . . first mother in the family of Christ, protector of women in childbed, the
"coloured by echoes of the Annunciation" (Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 297). Sautman describes the folk tradition of Saint Anne: "ancient figure of motherhood, . . . first mother in the family of Christ, protector of women in childbed, the
"coloured by echoes of the Annunciation" (Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 297). Sautman describes the folk tradition of Saint Anne: "ancient figure of motherhood, . . . first mother in the family of Christ, protector of women in childbed, the
"coloured by echoes of the Annunciation" (Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 297). Sautman describes the folk tradition of Saint Anne: "ancient figure of motherhood, . . . first mother in the family of Christ, protector of women in childbed, the
"coloured by echoes of the Annunciation" (Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 297). Sautman describes the folk tradition of Saint Anne: "ancient figure of motherhood, . . . first mother in the family of Christ, protector of women in childbed, the
"coloured by echoes of the Annunciation" (Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 297). Sautman describes the folk tradition of Saint Anne: "ancient figure of motherhood, . . . first mother in the family of Christ, protector of women in childbed, the
"coloured by echoes of the Annunciation" (Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 297). Sautman describes the folk tradition of Saint Anne: "ancient figure of motherhood, . . . first mother in the family of Christ, protector of women in childbed, the
"coloured by echoes of the Annunciation" (Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 297). Sautman describes the folk tradition of Saint Anne: "ancient figure of motherhood, . . . first mother in the family of Christ, protector of women in childbed, the
"coloured by echoes of the Annunciation" (Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 297). Sautman describes the folk tradition of Saint Anne: "ancient figure of motherhood, . . . first mother in the family of Christ, protector of women in childbed, the
hand dede. Sm notes that this is the "sole example" of the use of hand-dede in post-Conquest English. A relatively ancient word, it implied "violence" and sometimes "criminal violence," or could mean "the actual perpetrator of a crime" and in
and for Conall, see the particularly amusing Fled Bricrenn, "Bricriu's Feast," translated in The Celtic Heroic Age: Literary Sources for Ancient Celtic Europe and Early Ireland and Wales, ed. John T. Koch in collaboration with John Carey, third ed. (Andover,