| Warren F. Kuehl, Lynne Dunn - 1997 - 340 lapas
...their critics noted, they adopted the advice of the mother to her daughter who wished to learn to swim. "Hang your clothes on a hickory limb, but don't go near the water."35 Peace advocates, as distinct from pacifists, were even more difficult to deal with because... | |
| Ellis Briggs - 1998 - 492 lapas
...so the possibility was by no means remote.) On his return, Marriner promptly dubbed our effort the "hang your clothes on a hickory limb but don't go near the water" telegram, but he nevertheless took our draft to Secretary Stimson and succeeded in selling it to him.... | |
| William Carroll - 1998 - 620 lapas
...responsibility for safety and use not in accordance with the above stated purposes. Mother may I take a swim? Yes my darling daughter; Hang your clothes on a hickory limb, And don't go near the water. Old mother witch fell in a ditch, Picked up a penny and thought she was... | |
| J. Allan Hobson - 1999 - 324 lapas
...blocked. Delia is like the nursery rhyme girl who asks her mother if she can go out to swim and is told, "Yes, my darling daughter. Hang your clothes on a hickory limb but don't go near the water!" A boy is urinating and so polluting her bathing place. In Scenes 3 and 4 she is still questing, but... | |
| Rebecca Trachtenberg Alpert - 2000 - 312 lapas
...it is freely chosen. This compromise is intrinsically unstable. It reminds me of the nursery ditty: "Mother may I go out to swim?" "Yes, my darling daughter. Hang your clothes on the hickory bush, but don't go near the water!" Only a sadistic God would create hundreds of thousands... | |
| Joseph Twadell Shipley - 2001 - 688 lapas
...sounding line; hence radiosonde, rocketsonde. For the audible sound, and supersonic activity, see suen. Mother, may I go out to swim? Yes, my darling daughter....on a hickory limb, ' But don't go near the water. -Nursery rhyme, its variations discussed in Walter de la Mare's The Scarecrow (1945) suen: sound. L... | |
| Richard B. Philp - 2016 - 354 lapas
...sense and some of the information provided in this chapter. chapter three Water and soil pollution (Hang your clothes on a hickory limb but don't go near the water) Introduction Three components of the biosphere can serve as toxicological sinks: soil, air, and water.... | |
| Jackie Silberg - 2002 - 516 lapas
...nobody's toeses are posies of roses As Moses supposes his toeses to be. Humor Parts of the Body Mother, Mother, may I go out to swim? Yes, my darling daughter....clothes on a hickory limb, But don't go near the water. Theme Connection Clothing Families Humor The Complete Book of Rhymes, Songs, Poems, FingerpUys, and... | |
| Jean Shinoda Bolen - 2004 - 372 lapas
...from experience that carries even the hint of risk. This pattern is echoed in the Mother Goose rhyme: "Mother, may I go out to swim?" "Yes, my darling daughter....on a hickory limb, "but don't go near the water." Although the mother appears to be strong and independent, this appearance is often deceptive. She may... | |
| Clyde Freeman Herreid - 2007 - 483 lapas
...done ahead of time. It is necessary to get some field experience as this anonymous rhyme highlights: Mother may I go out to swim? Yes, my darling daughter. Hang your clothes on a hickory limb And don't go near the water. Enough caution. Aspiring swimmers and case teachers have to dive in sometime.... | |
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