Largest and leading source for New and Vintage Annalee Dolls. Welcome to suecoffee. Sue Coffee enjoys sharing her passion for collecting dolls with others throughout the country. On suecoffee. Shop current year dolls or browse through hundreds of doll categories such as Annalee Elves, Angels, Santas, Scarecrows, Clowns, Humans, Animals, Bunnies, Mice, Ornaments, and themes for each holiday and occasion. The selection also includes vintage dolls dating back to the 's.

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Wales has a strong and distinctive link with music. Singing is a significant part of Welsh national identity, and the country is traditionally referred to as "the land of song". Historically, Wales has been associated with folk music, choral performance, religious music and brass bands. However modern Welsh music is a thriving scene of rock, Welsh language lyricism, modern folk, jazz, pop, and electronic music. Particularly noted in the UK are the Newport rock scene , once labelled 'the new Seattle', and the Cardiff music scene , for which the city has recently been labelled 'Music City', for having the second highest number of independent music venues in the UK.


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The character of John Barleycorn in the song is a personification of the important cereal crop barley and of the alcoholic beverages made from it, beer and whisky. In the song, John Barleycorn is represented as suffering indignities, attacks and death that correspond to the various stages of barley cultivation, such as reaping and malting. Kathleen Herbert draws a link between the mythical figure Beowa a figure stemming from Anglo-Saxon paganism that appears in early Anglo-Saxon royal genealogies whose name means "barley" and the figure of John Barleycorn. Herbert says that Beowa and Barleycorn are one and the same, noting that the folksong details the suffering, death, and resurrection of Barleycorn, yet also celebrates the "reviving effects of drinking his blood". Lloyd and Ralph Vaughan Williams ponder whether the ballad is "an unusually coherent folklore survival" or "the creation of an antiquarian revivalist, which has passed into popular currency and become 'folklorised ' ".




The international passengers edge slowly towards Bruxelles Midi, their faces pressed against the train windows as they pass Station Chapelle, not knowing whether they are there yet. Is this where we get off? Hearing not so much the sound of the suburbs but the unvoiced anxiety of those who fear they might miss their onward connections, to Paris, Antwerp, maybe beyond even Amsterdam, passengers reach up for their luggage….