Green Pastures, is the truncated title of a classic bluegrass song by Ralph Stanley, the full title of which is Going Up Home to Live in Green Pastures.
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David has also been praying to the God of green pastures, and a priest explains that while some people say there are many gods, there really is only one.
According to Richard Despard Estes, a biologist specializing in the behaviour of mammals in mainland Africa, they may not need to drink water if they are in green pastures, though they require it much.
(A generous benefactor, Mrs Greg, who became a companion in the 1930s, gifted to the Guild her own nature diaries and other precious items, and Green Pastures bungalow in Holcombe, near Bath (sold in 1962-3)).
# Much of this material is mentioned in THE KING'S ENGLAND - NORFOLK - Green Pastures and Still Waters, edited by Arthur Mee, Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1940.
The Green Pastures is a play written in 1930 by Marc Connelly adapted from Ol' Man Adam an' His Chillun (1928), a collection of stories written by Roark Bradford.