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In merry England there is no end of popular ballads on this theme.
And this (as has been before observed) is Merry England!
The concept of Merry England takes the opposite view of this period.
With a rueful smile, I directed that our original course be resumed, and once again we set off toward merry England.
The concept of Merry England is an example of uchronic myth.
The utopian vision of a traditional England is sometimes referred to as Merry England.
Have you not Merry England?"
This gives Golnir a very strong Merry England atmosphere.
In merry merry England .
Merry England, 1888 9, xii.
"Well, if so, 'tis on the faith of such mummery that priests burn women in merry England.
St. George for merry England!"
By the 19th century, the maypole had been subsumed into the symbology of "Merry England".
Favourable perceptions of Merry England reveal a nostalgia for aspects of an earlier society that are missing in modern times.
And then heigh-ho for Merry England and the just enjoyment of the fruits of your labours.
The Rise and Fall of Merry England: The Ritual Year, 1400-1700.
By the time of Robin Hood the term meant something more akin to pleasing and tranquil - hence Merry England.
The shouts of both parties augmented the fearful din, the assailants crying, "Saint George for merry England!"
At this time he wrote "Merry England" (which appeared in the December 1825 New Monthly Magazine).
'Shake 'em up like those snowstorm globes to remind them of their holiday in Merry England.
The later works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge also subscribed to some extent to the "Merry England" view.
The London-based Anglo-Catholic magazine of prose and verse Merry England began publication in 1879.
The traditional view held that food was relatively abundant in the UK, or at least in "Merry England" with its "miraculous fertility".
"Hurrah for Merry England", was set twice to music and printed in The Musical Times, in 1861 and 1880.
Merrie England was a major publication that sold 750,000 copies within one year.
In 1893 he published some of his articles on socialism as the book, Merrie England.
The war was over, democracy saved, and here was Merrie England.
But what was hoped for by many was a kind of superior Merrie England.
So Tau was a stage set of Merrie England.
Another section was found in the material for his 1897 ballet, Victoria and Merrie England.
A glimpse of Merrie England with bells on.
Merrie England is a comic opera by Edward German.
It further extends to Merrie England Shoals, with depths of less than two meters.
Merrie England may also refer to:
His apotheosis is a public lecture on the subject of Merrie England that turns into a drunken rant against the very notion.
The ballet Victoria and Merrie England (1898) won praise from most critics:
Two of those, and one other, were eventually re-used in Victoria and Merrie England.
To provide a civilising influence away from the city streets by reviving the old Merrie England idealised lifestyle.
Merrie England.
This is merrie England, after all.'
'The last witch was hanged in Merrie England in 1685,' I said.
It seems from the design on the ride, that the Merrie England theme was in mind from as early as the mid-eighties.
Next, Passmore toured in Merrie England again in 1911.
Merrie England is an influential collection of essays on socialism by Robert Blatchford, published in 1893.
In the 1960s, the Merrie England bar and an amusement arcade were constructed at the end of the pier nearest to the shore.
Arthur Sullivan quotes the anthem at the end of his ballet Victoria and Merrie England.
Merrie England- 2,000 (1993)
The May Queen is the subject of Edward German's opera Merrie England.
This immediately followed a successful revival of Merrie England by Hood and Edward German.