Talk:Mightily Oats: Difference between revisions
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I just wonder if the ax for forgiveness is inspired by the ax in the Norwegian mythical history: St Olav won Norway to Christianity when he lay down his ax (and he was killed, but everybody then realised he was a saint). Sorry, am unable to find link - all links I find are just about use of symbol, not meaning. | I just wonder if the ax for forgiveness is inspired by the ax in the Norwegian mythical history: St Olav won Norway to Christianity when he lay down his ax (and he was killed, but everybody then realised he was a saint). Sorry, am unable to find link - all links I find are just about use of symbol, not meaning. (unsigned comment by [[User:Toove]], 18 April 2012) | ||
It seems that ''All Gong and No Dinner'' was actually written by Nigel ''Rees''. I wonder if he used "relief" as a verb. I hate annotations. --[[User:Old Dickens|Old Dickens]] ([[User talk:Old Dickens|talk]]) 05:02, 5 January 2014 (GMT) |
Latest revision as of 05:02, 5 January 2014
I just wonder if the ax for forgiveness is inspired by the ax in the Norwegian mythical history: St Olav won Norway to Christianity when he lay down his ax (and he was killed, but everybody then realised he was a saint). Sorry, am unable to find link - all links I find are just about use of symbol, not meaning. (unsigned comment by User:Toove, 18 April 2012)
It seems that All Gong and No Dinner was actually written by Nigel Rees. I wonder if he used "relief" as a verb. I hate annotations. --Old Dickens (talk) 05:02, 5 January 2014 (GMT)