The Wanderers Grave: A Shepherdess Betrayed (Scottish Folklore)

Liath Wolf
Liath Wolf
4.7 هزار بار بازدید - 9 ماه پیش - Consider supporting me on Patreon:
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It is thought by many that love is the greatest power on this earth, but this immense energy can often times backfire. For the gift of love can be harshly tourn from our hands and the resulting pain, is an experience like no other, an experience that has changed many lives and altered the course of history as we know it. For todays tale, we look at a tragic love story and the life long effects of the intertwined relationships that it produced. The Wanderers Grave.

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References:
Anon (1775) The Wandering Shepherdess. S. Harward; sold also at his shops in Glocester and Cheltenham, 1775.
Anon (1797-1846) Broadside ballad, “The wandering shepherdess” Printed by Turner, Printer, Coventry.
Anon (1840) The wandering shepherdess, or, The betrayed damsel. Glasgow, Printed for the booksellers
Anon (1860-1880) Broadside ballad entitled 'The Unfortunate Shepherdess' Printed and Sold by JAMES LINDSAY, Wholesale Stationer, 11 King St., City, Glasgow.
Barbour, J. G. (1886) Unique Traditions, chiefly of the West and South of Scotland. Glasgow. Thomas D. Morison.
Levin, D. (1967) History as Romantic Art: Bancroft, Prescott, and Parkman.
Towsey, M. (2010) Reading the Scottish Enlightenment: Books and Their Readers in Provincial Scotland, 1750–1820.
9 ماه پیش در تاریخ 1402/08/26 منتشر شده است.
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