Biography of William G. Gray, the British occultist and magician whose pioneering work on the Qabalah and ritual magic contributed enormously to the modern pagan and wiccan revivals.
'The Old Sod': Being the Odd Life and Inner Work of William G. Gray-- a Real Magician
A native of Connecticut, she also lived and worked in New Mexico before settling in Baltimore, where she is an Associate Professor of Visual Arts at Loyola University Maryland. This is her first scholarly book.
And, when the hallowed turf of The Old Course at St. Andrews is described in the parlance of Scots, it is revered as the auld sod. Echoes of these proud Gaelic voices come to life in the adventures of The Auld Sod.
Sometimes he drank in Billy McNeill's but he preferred the Yankee because you nearly always found some of the boys. Why, even now, on account of the game that had just been played a good few of them were in, and, like Patsy, ...
... of the roads was built south of Berwyn.” Mr. Russell's eyes lit up, and he pushed himself up in his seat. “Which road?” “Berwyn Road,” Max said. “It's at the curve between the old Happy Hollow School and my grandpa's ranch.” He looked at ...
The first homesteaders on the Great Plains found an almost treeless land, so they had to use the prairie sod as building material.