A mischievous sprite of English folklore.
1The frolics of Robin Goodfellow are rendered with the utmost grace and spirit.
2Puck, or Robin Goodfellow, is the leader of the fairy band.
3And there was Robin Goodfellow waiting for him under the tree!
4On his side, half his face bloody and caved in, lay Robin Goodfellow.
5All this is precisely the conduct of Robin Goodfellow, described so charmingly by Milton:
6In England, Robin Goodfellow was supposed to perform like functions.
7I cannot believe that was an act of coincidence, not from the infamous Robin Goodfellow.
8The colors are red and black, like Robin Goodfellow.
9No, of course I am thinking of Robin Goodfellow.
10This impish animal had been christened Robin Goodfellow, a name that was shortened for convenience to Robin.
11As regards the tricky stories, they may be due to a confusion between Robin Hood and Robin Goodfellow.
12Here's the original Robin Goodfellow.
13But it is a Robin Goodfellow nevertheless, a perfect Puck, that loves nothing on earth so well as mischief.
14Ariella, myself, and...and Robin Goodfellow.
15An instance of a fairy incubus is given in the "Life of Robin Goodfellow," Hazlitt's Fairy Mythology, p.
16How many hands, now dust, had awakened his strings ere he became the Robin Goodfellow and Familiar of Gaetano Pisani!
Translations for Robin Goodfellow