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Scarecrows

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good*

*Best Available: (ex-library)

$14.29
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Pictures and Histories of Scarecrows

I initially bought this book for my daughter via anything Halloween related in which I adamately disapprove. The pictures are magnificienc and shows various forms of the Scarecrow. Then curiosity got the best of me and I was compelled to research the history of the fabled figure: The Scarecrow is one of the most familiar figures of the rural landscape not only in the United Kingdom but throughout Europe and many other countries of the world. His ragged figure has been recorded in rural history for centuries. His image has proved irresistible to writers from William Shakespeare to Walter de la Mare as well as to film makers since the dawn of the silent movie. Yet, despite all his fame, the origins and the development of the scarecrow have remained obscurred in mystery. The above is from the cover of Scarecrow Fact and Fable, Author Peter Haining, Published in 1986 by Robert Hale. Earliest known written fact about scarecrow's written in 1592.Definition of a scarecrow - That which frightens or is intended to frighten without doing physical harm. Most literally that which - scares away crows, hence the name scarecrow. Decline is due to the change of farming technology started with the industrial revolution. The hectic life of the farmer means that he doesn't have time to even feel the earth or walk it. He sits in his combination machine i.e J.C.B. He is protected against the elements and maybe listening to music. He is high off the ground and the earth and its magical properties are lost in a kind of factory floor. The hedges have gone to make larger areas. Lots of wild life has gone but somehow "The Crow" survives. The farmer of old would once a year sew his land by hand after the land had been lovingly prepared and tended. Now this is all done by machine. The farmer used to discard his old clothes and create a friendly chap and put him to guard his crops. He worked and still does. Farmers of today barely make a Scarecrow. On talking to them young and old still have a love of them. They try electronic ones and pop up balloon types. They are still trying to find an answer! The birds soon get wise to these. I believe if the Scarecrow is going to do his job he has to have a mystical feel about him. Twelve years ago when I turned my life back over to the Lord Jesus Christ I vowed to try and do away with all pagan rituals (not realizing the scare crow can be viewed as a pagan ritual. Thus, I was hosting a party and made a statement,"What this place is missing is a Scarecrow" and since then I have followed it as an art form. Alas, a farmer rarely attends to this. But when he does, he is delighted. Also in the past they used boys or old men to add a "clapper clapper". This meant that the old kept in touch with life and the young were kept busy. In Peter Haining's book he tried to find the origins of the Scarecrow. It was a human sacrifice. Divine in Pagan times. Hence the use of the Crucifix. The crop had to be germinated to grow and for life t
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