"I would say to every man who follows his own plough... | |
"The oxen plough the field. | |
# Come. friends who plough the sea # # Truce to navigation. | |
# You in the army now You not behind the plough # | |
'Cause I'd sure clean your plough. | |
"I would say to every man who follows his own plough... | |
"The oxen plough the field. | |
# Come. friends who plough the sea # # Truce to navigation. | |
# You in the army now You not behind the plough # | |
'Cause I'd sure clean your plough. | |
- Haven't they got snow-ploughs? | |
A black hole ploughs into the cloud of comets that surrounds our solar system and flings them towards Earth with incredible force. | |
At least we'd get a holiday, to rest our ploughs and axes. | |
Because our training at the track, we had no trouble getting the ploughs hitched. | |
Before I was 15, I learned to hate those things. ...I swore I would leave ploughs and pitch forks to farmers. | |
- Haven't they got snow-ploughs? | |
A black hole ploughs into the cloud of comets that surrounds our solar system and flings them towards Earth with incredible force. | |
At least we'd get a holiday, to rest our ploughs and axes. | |
Because our training at the track, we had no trouble getting the ploughs hitched. | |
Before I was 15, I learned to hate those things. ...I swore I would leave ploughs and pitch forks to farmers. | |
'Happily, Jeremy ploughed on.' | |
'Twas not l who first ploughed up the field. | |
'We ploughed on and soon we reached the beautiful city of Birmingham. ' | |
'We ploughed on northwards with the monotony only broken by a light sprinkling of massive discomfort.' | |
'We ploughed on through the field and things looked promising.' 'But then...' | |
'Blondine's safari continues by ploughing through 'a sizeable pavement cafe.' | |
(COUGHS) Yeah, old bey'll do the ploughing. | |
- I got ploughing' to do. | |
- I'm ploughing on. | |
- I'm ploughing! | |
'Happily, Jeremy ploughed on.' | |
'Twas not l who first ploughed up the field. | |
'We ploughed on and soon we reached the beautiful city of Birmingham. ' | |
'We ploughed on northwards with the monotony only broken by a light sprinkling of massive discomfort.' | |
'We ploughed on through the field and things looked promising.' 'But then...' | |
'Blondine's safari continues by ploughing through 'a sizeable pavement cafe.' | |
(COUGHS) Yeah, old bey'll do the ploughing. | |
- I got ploughing' to do. | |
- I'm ploughing on. | |
- I'm ploughing! | |