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-Project Gutenberg's Lancashire Folk-lore, by John Harland and T. T. Wilkinson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Lancashire Folk-lore
- Illustrative of the Superstitious Beliefs and Practices,
- Local Customs and Usages of the People of the County
- Palatine
-
-Author: John Harland
- T. T. Wilkinson
-
-Release Date: October 23, 2012 [EBook #41148]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LANCASHIRE FOLK-LORE ***
-
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-
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-Produced by Shaun Pinder, Stephen Blundell and the Online
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 41148 ***
Transcriber's Note:
@@ -11318,361 +11280,4 @@ INDEX.
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Lancashire Folk-lore, by
John Harland and T. T. Wilkinson
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LANCASHIRE FOLK-LORE ***
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 41148 ***
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-Project Gutenberg's Lancashire Folk-lore, by John Harland and T. T. Wilkinson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Lancashire Folk-lore
- Illustrative of the Superstitious Beliefs and Practices,
- Local Customs and Usages of the People of the County
- Palatine
-
-Author: John Harland
- T. T. Wilkinson
-
-Release Date: October 23, 2012 [EBook #41148]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LANCASHIRE FOLK-LORE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Shaun Pinder, Stephen Blundell and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note:
-
- Minor spelling and typographical errors have been corrected without
- note. Archaic, dialect and variant spellings remain as printed.
- Greek text has been transliterated and is shown between {braces}.
- Missing chapter titles have been included to match the Contents
- listing for readers' convenience.
-
- Non-standard characters are represented as follows:
- [oe] oe ligature;
- [=e] macron over _e_;
- [)e] breve over _e_;
- [*3] asterism;
- and ^ precedes a superscript character.
-
-
-
-
- LANCASHIRE
- FOLK-LORE:
- ILLUSTRATIVE OF THE
- SUPERSTITIOUS BELIEFS AND PRACTICES,
- LOCAL CUSTOMS AND USAGES
- OF
- THE PEOPLE OF THE COUNTY PALATINE.
-
- COMPILED AND EDITED BY
- JOHN HARLAND, F.S.A.
- AND
- T. T. WILKINSON, F.R.A.S.
-
- [Device]
-
- LONDON:
- FREDERICK WARNE AND CO.
- BEDFORD STREET, COVENT GARDEN.
- NEW YORK: SCRIBNER AND CO.
- 1867.
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- SAVILL AND EDWARDS, PRINTERS, CHANDOS STREET,
- COVENT GARDEN.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-"Folk-lore," though a term that will not be found in our standard
-dictionaries, from Johnson down to Webster, is nevertheless simply a
-modern combination of two genuine old English words--_Folc_, the folk,
-the people, "the common people;" and _Lár_, _Laer_, _Lora_, learning,
-doctrine, precept, law. In the earlier days of our English tongue,
-folk-land, folk-gemote, folk-right, &c., were terms in common use, and
-amongst this class of compound words our fore-elders had _folc-lare_, by
-which they denoted plain, simple teaching suited for the people, what we
-should now call "popular instruction," and hence _folk-lare_ also meant
-a sermon. _Folk-Lore_, in its present signification--and for its general
-acceptance we are largely indebted to the Editor of that valuable
-periodical _Notes and Queries_,--means the notions of the folk or
-people, from childhood upwards, especially their superstitious beliefs
-and practices, as these have been handed down from generation to
-generation, in popular tradition and tale, rhyme, proverb, or saying,
-and it is well termed Folk-Lore in contradistinction to book-lore or
-scholastic learning. It is the unlearned people's inheritance of
-tradition from their ancestors, the modern reflection of ancient faith
-and usage. This Folk-Lore has not been wholly without record in our
-literature. Hone in his delightful _Every-Day Book_, _Year Book_, and
-_Table Book_, has preserved many a choice bit of England's Folk-Lore;
-and his example has been ably followed in Chambers's _Book of Days_.
-Brand's _Popular Antiquities_, Aubrey's _Miscellanies_, Allies's
-_Antiquities and Folk-Lore of Worcestershire_, and other like works,
-have noted down for the information and amusement of future generations
-the prevalent superstitions, and popular customs and usages of the
-people in particular districts, during a past age, and at the present
-time. But the greatest and best depository and record of the Folk-Lore
-of various nations is that excellent periodical _Notes and Queries_,
-from which a charming little volume entitled "_Choice Notes from Notes
-and Queries,--Folk-Lore_," was compiled and published in 1859.
-
-But Lancashire has hitherto been without adequate record, at least in a
-collected form, of its Folk-Lore. This has not been because of any lack
-of such lore. The North of England generally, and Lancashire in
-particular, is remarkably rich in this respect. Possessed and peopled in
-succession by the Celts of ancient Britain, by the Angles and other
-Teutonic peoples, by the Scandinavian races, and by Norman and other
-foreign settlers at early periods,--the result of the respective
-contributions of these various peoples is necessarily a large mass of
-traditionary lore. To bring this together and present it in a collected
-form is the object of this little volume. Its editors have been long
-engaged, apart,--distinctly, and independently of each other,--in
-collecting particulars of the superstitions in belief and practice, and
-of the peculiar customs and usages of the people of Lancashire. One of
-them, born in one of its rural districts, still rich in these respects,
-is thus enabled to remember and to preserve many of those customs and
-usages of his childhood and youth, now rapidly passing into decay, if
-not oblivion. The other, conversant from his earliest remembrances with
-the Folk-Lore of East Yorkshire, and with that of Lancashire for the
-last thirty-five years, is thus enabled to compare the customs and
-usages of both, and to recognise the same essential superstition under
-slightly different forms. Similarity of pursuit having led to personal
-communication, the Editors agreed to combine their respective
-collections; and hence the present volume. They do not pretend herein to
-have exhausted the whole range of Lancashire Folk-Lore; but simply to
-have seized on the more salient features of its superstitious side, and
-those of popular custom and usage. Part I. comprises notices of a great
-number of superstitious beliefs and practices. Part II. treats of
-various local customs and usages, at particular seasons of the year;
-during the great festivals of the church; those connected with birth and
-baptism; betrothal and wedding; dying, death-bed, and funeral customs;
-as well as manorial and feudal tenures, services, and usages.
-
-Should the present volume find favour and acceptance, its Editors may
-venture hereafter to offer another, embracing the fertile and
-interesting subjects of popular pageants, maskings and mummings,
-rushbearings, wakes and fairs, out-door sports and games; punishments,
-legal and popular; legends and traditions; proverbs, popular sayings and
-similes; folk-rhymes, &c. &c.
-
-_September, 1866._
-
-
-But for unavoidable delay, consequent on the preparation of a
-large-paper edition, this volume would have been published prior to
-"Notes on the Folk-Lore of the Northern Counties of England and the
-Borders," by Wm. Henderson. As that work has appeared, it may be as well
-to state that, notwithstanding similarity of subject, the two books do
-not clash. Mr. Henderson's work relates chiefly to the three
-north-eastern counties,--Northumberland, Durham, and Yorkshire,--with
-large notices not only of the Scottish borders, but of Scotland
-generally, and many details as to Devonshire folk-lore. Its notices of
-Cumberland and Westmorland are fewer than of the three counties first
-named; and Lancashire is only two or three times incidentally mentioned.
-The field of this county palatine is therefore left free for the present
-volume.
-
-_January, 1867._
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- PART I.
-
-
- SUPERSTITIOUS BELIEFS AND PRACTICES.
-
- PAGE
- Introduction 1
-
- Lancashire Alchemists 23
-
- Lancashire Astrologers 33
-
- Bells 41
-
- Beal-tine or Beltane Fires; Relics of Baal Worship 45
-
- Boggarts, Ghosts, and Haunted Places 49
-
- Boggart Hole Clough 50
-
- Boggarts or Ghosts in Old Halls 51
-
- House Boggarts, or Labouring Goblins 56
-
- Hornby Park Mistress and Margaret Brackin 59
-
- Boggarts in the Nineteenth Century 61
-
-
- CHARMS AND SPELLS.
-
- Charms and Spells against Evil Beings 62
-
- A Charm, written in Cypher, against Witchcraft and Evil Spirits 63
-
- The Crow Charm and the Lady-bird Charm 70
-
- Pimpernel 71
-
- The Mountain Ash, or Wicken or Wiggen Tree 72
-
- Charms to Cure Sickness, Wounds, Cattle Distemper, etc. 74
-
- Charms for the Toothache 75
-
- Vervain, for Wounds, etc. 76
-
- Charms to Stop Bleeding 77
-
- Touching for the King's Evil 77
-
- Cures for Warts 78
-
- Cure for Hydrocephalus in Cattle 79
-
- Cattle Disorders.--The Shrew Tree in Carnforth 79
-
- Charms for Ague 80
-
- Stinging of Nettles 80
-
- Jaundice 80
-
- To Procure Sleep by Changing the Direction of the Bed 80
-
-
- THE DEVIL, DEMONS, &c.
-
- The Devil 81
-
- Raising the Devil 83
-
- The Devil and the Schoolmaster at Cockerham 83
-
- Old Nick 84
-
- Demonology 86
-
- Demon and Goblin Superstitions 88
-
- Dispossessing a Demoniac 92
-
- Demoniacal Possession in 1594 92
-
- Demoniacal Possession in 1689 98
-
-
- DIVINATION.
-
- Divination 102
-
- Divination at Marriages 103
-
- Divination by Bible and Key 103
-
- Another Lancashire form of Divination 104
-
- Divination by the Dying 104
-
- Second-sight 105
-
- Spirits of the Dying and the Dead 105
-
- Casting Lots, &c. 106
-
-
- MISCELLANEOUS FOLK-LORE.
-
- Druidical Rock Basins 106
-
- Elves and Fairies 110
-
- Folk-Lore of Eccles and the Neighbourhood 113
-
- Tree Barnacles; or, Geese hatched from Sea-shells 116
-
- Warts from Washing in Egg-water 121
-
- Fortune-telling.--Wise Men and Cunning Women, &c. 121
-
- Magic and Magicians 126
-
- Edward Kelly, the Seer 126
-
- Raising the Dead at Walton-le-Dale 128
-
- An Earl of Derby charged with keeping a Conjuror 129
-
-
- MIRACLES.
-
- Miracles, or Miraculous Stories 131
-
- Miracles by a Dead Duke of Lancaster and King 132
-
- A Miraculous Footprint in Brindle Church 134
-
- The Footprint at Smithells of George Marsh, the Martyr 135
-
- A Legend of Cartmel Church 137
-
- The Prophet Elias, a Lancashire Fanatic 138
-
-
- OMENS AND PREDICATIONS.
-
- Omens and Predications 138
-
- Cats 141
-
- Dogs 142
-
- Lambs 142
-
- Birds 142
-
- Swallows 143
-
- Magpies 143
-
- Dreams 145
-
- The Moon 149
-
- Hæver or Hiver 149
-
- Deasil or Widersinnis 151
-
- Omens of Weather for New Year's-day 151
-
- Death Tick or Death Watch 152
-
-
- SUPERSTITIONS, GENERAL AND MISCELLANEOUS.
-
- Popular Superstitions 153
-
- Bones of St. Lawrence, at Chorley 157
-
- The Dead Man's Hand 158
-
- Nineteenth Century Superstition 164
-
- Pendle Forest Superstition 164
-
- East Lancashire Superstition 165
-
- Superstitious Fears and Cruelties 167
-
- Superstitious Beliefs in Manchester in the Sixteenth Century 168
-
- Wells and Springs 169
-
-
- WITCHES AND WITCHCRAFT.
-
- Witchcraft in the Fifteenth Century 174
-
- The Famous History of the Lancashire Witches 176
-
- Dr. Dee charged with Witchcraft 178
-
- The Lancashire Witches 179
-
- Superstitious Fear of Witchcraft 182
-
- A Household Bewitched 184
-
- The Lancashire Witches of 1612 185
-
- The Samlesbury Witches 194
-
- Witchcraft at Middleton 195
-
- Witchcraft in 1633-34 195
-
- The Lancashire Witches of 1633-4 200
-
- Lancashire Witch-finders 200
-
- The Forest of Pendle--The Haunt of the Lancashire Witches 202
-
- Pendle Hill and its Witches 204
-
- Witchcraft about 1654 206
-
- A Liverpool Witch in 1667 206
-
- The Witch of Singleton 207
-
- Witchcraft at Chowbent in the Eighteenth Century 207
-
- Killing a Witch 208
-
- A Recent Witch, near Burnley 209
-
- "Lating" or "Leeting" Witches 210
-
-
- PART II.
-
-
- LOCAL CUSTOMS AND USAGES AT VARIOUS SEASONS.
-
- Church and Season Festivals 212
-
- New Year's-day 214
-
- Fire on New Year's Eve 214
-
- New Year's Luck 214
-
- New Year's First Caller 215
-
- New Year's-day and Old Christmas-day 216
-
- Auld Wife Hakes 216
-
- New Year's Gifts and Wishes 216
-
- Shrovetide 217
-
- Shrove-Tuesday, or Pancake Tuesday 218
-
- Cock-throwing and Cock-fighting 218
-
- Cock-fighting about Blackburn 220
-
- Cock-penny at Clitheroe 220
-
- Cock-fighting at Burnley 220
-
- Shrovetide Customs in the Fylde 221
-
- Lent.--Ash-Wednesday 221
-
- Mid-Lent Sunday, or "Mothering Sunday" 222
-
- Simnel Cakes 223
-
- To Dianeme 223
-
- Bury 224
-
- Bragot-Sunday 225
-
- Fag-pie Sunday 226
-
- Good Friday 226
-
- Easter 227
-
- Pasche, Pace, or Easter Eggs 228
-
- Pace Egging in Blackburn 228
-
- Pace or Peace Egging in East Lancashire 231
-
- Easter Sports at the Manchester Free Grammar School 231
-
- "Lifting," or "Heaving" at Easter 233
-
- Easter Game of the Ring 234
-
- Playing "Old Ball" 234
-
- Acting with "Ball" 235
-
- Easter Customs in the Fylde 236
-
- May-day Customs 238
-
- May Songs 239
-
- May-day Eve 239
-
- May-day Custom 240
-
- Pendleton and Pendlebury May-pole and Games 240
-
- May Custom in Spotland 242
-
- May-day Customs in the Fylde 242
-
- The May-pole of Lostock 243
-
- Robin Hood and May-games at Burnley, in 1579 244
-
- May-day in Manchester 245
-
- Queen of the May, &c. 246
-
- Whitsuntide 246
-
- Whit-Tuesday.--King and Queen at Downham 248
-
- Rogations or Gang Days 248
-
- Oatmeal Charity at Ince 249
-
- Names for Moons in Autumn 250
-
- "Goose-Intentos" 250
-
- All Souls'-day 251
-
- Gunpowder Plot and Guy Fawkes 251
-
- Christmas 252
-
- Creatures Worshipping on Christmas Eve 253
-
- Christmas Mumming 253
-
- The Hobby Horse, or Old Ball 254
-
- Christmas Customs in the Fylde 254
-
- Celebration of Christmas at Wycoller Hall 256
-
- Carols, &c. 257
-
-
- EATING AND DRINKING CUSTOMS.
-
- Various 258
-
- The Havercake Lads 258
-
- Wooden Shoes and Oaten Bread or Jannocks 259
-
- Pork Pasties 260
-
-
- BIRTH AND BAPTISMAL CUSTOMS.
-
- Presents to Women in Childbed 260
-
- Tea-drinking after Childbirth 261
-
- Turning the Bed after Childbirth 261
-
- An Unbaptized Child cannot die 262
-
- Gifts to Infants 262
-
-
- BETROTHING AND BRIDAL OR WEDDING CUSTOMS.
-
- Betrothing Customs 263
-
- Curious Wedding Custom 263
-
- Courting and Wedding Customs in the Fylde 264
-
- Ancient Bridal Custom.--The Bride's Chair and the Fairy Hole 265
-
- Burnley 265
-
- Marriages at Manchester Parish Church 265
-
-
- DYING, DEATH-BED, AND FUNERAL CUSTOMS.
-
- Dying Hardly 268
-
- Burying in Woollen 269
-
- Funeral Dole and Arval Cake 270
-
- Dalton-in-Furness 271
-
- Old Funeral Customs at Warton 271
-
- Funeral Customs in the Fylde 272
-
- Mode of Burial of a Widow who had taken Religious Vows 273
-
- Funeral Customs in East Lancashire 273
-
- Bidding to Funerals 274
-
- Situation and Direction of Graves 275
-
-
- CUSTOMS OF MANORS.
-
- The Honour of Knighthood 277
-
- Maritagium 278
-
- Peculiar Services and Tenures 278
-
- Manor of Cockerham--Regulations for the Sale of Ale 281
-
- Manorial Customs in Furness 281
-
- The Lord's Yule Feast at Ashton 286
-
- Riding the Black Lad at Ashton-under-Lyne 289
-
- Boon Shearing 292
-
- The Principal or Heriot 293
-
- Denton Rent-boons 294
-
- A Saxon Constablewick 295
-
- Talliage or Tallage 296
-
- Rochdale Tithe, Easter-dues, Mortuaries, etc. 297
-
- Farm and Agricultural Celebrations in the Fylde 298
-
- Dalton-in-Furness 299
-
- Letting Sheep Farms in Bowland 300
-
- Mediæval Latin Law Terms 300
-
- Customs [Dues] at Warrington 301
-
-
-
-
-LANCASHIRE FOLK-LORE.
-
-
-
-
-PART I.
-
-
-
-
-SUPERSTITIOUS BELIEFS AND PRACTICES.
-
-
-INTRODUCTION.
-
- "'Tis a history
- Handed from ages down; a nurse's tale
- Which children open-eyed and mouth'd devour,
- And thus, as garrulous ignorance relates,
- We learn it and believe."
-
-In this large section of the Folk-lore of Lancashire we propose to treat
-of all the notions and practices of the people which appear to recognise
-a supernatural power or powers, especially as aids to impart to man a
-knowledge of the future. An alphabetical arrangement has been adopted,
-which is to some extent also chronological. Beginning with the pretended
-sciences or arts of Alchemy and Astrology, the succeeding articles treat
-of Bells, Beltane fires, Boggarts, Charms, Demons, Divination, &c.
-
-Many of these superstitions are important in an ethnological point of
-view, and immediately place us _en rapport_ with those nations whose
-inhabitants have either colonized or conquered this portion of our
-country. In treasuring up these records of the olden times, tradition
-has, in general, been faithful to her vocation. She has occasionally
-grafted portions of one traditional custom, ceremony, or superstition,
-upon another; but in the majority of cases enough has been left to
-enable us to determine with considerable certainty the probable origin
-of each. So far as regards the greater portion of our local Folk-lore,
-we may safely assert that it is rapidly becoming obsolete, and many of
-the most curious relics must be sought in the undisturbed nooks and
-corners of the county. It is there where popular opinions are cherished
-and preserved, long after an improved education has driven them from
-more intelligent communities; and it is a remarkable fact that many of
-these, although composed of such flimsy materials, and dependent upon
-the fancies of the multitude for their very existence, have nevertheless
-survived shocks by which kingdoms have been overthrown, and have
-preserved their characteristic traits from the earliest times down to
-the present.
-
-As what are called the Indo-European, or Aryan, nations--viz., the
-Celts, Greeks, Latins, Germans (Teuton and Scandinavian), Letts, and
-Sclaves--as is now generally acknowledged, have a common ancestry in the
-race which once dwelt together in the regions of the Upper Oxus, in
-Asia; so their mythologies, however diverse in their later European
-developments, may be regarded as having a common origin. Space will not
-allow us to enlarge on this great subject, which has been ably treated
-by Jacob Grimm, Dr. Adalbert Kuhn, and many other German writers, and of
-which an excellent _résumé_ is given in Kelly's _Curiosities of
-Indo-European Tradition and Folk-lore_.
-
-When we refer to the ancient Egyptians, and to the oldest history
-extant, we find some striking resemblances between their customs and our
-own. The rod of the magician was then as necessary to the practice of
-the art as it still is to the "Wizard of the North." The glory of the
-art of magic may be said to have departed, but _the use of the rod_ by
-the modern conjuror remains as a connecting link between the harmless
-deceptions of the present, and that powerful instrument of the
-priesthood in times remote. The divining rod, too, which indicates the
-existence of a hidden spring, or treasure, or even a murdered corpse, is
-another relic of the wand of the Oriental Magi. The divining cup, as
-noticed in the case of Joseph and his brethren, supplies a third
-instance of this close connexion. Both our wise men and maidens still
-whirl the tea-cup, in order that the disposition of the floating leaves
-may give them an intimation of their future destiny, or point out the
-direction in which an offending party must be sought. We have yet
-"wizards that do peep and mutter," and who profess to foretell future
-events by looking "through a glass darkly." The practice of "causing
-children to pass through the fire to Moloch," so strongly reprobated by
-the prophet of old, may be cited as an instance in which Christianity
-has not yet been able to efface all traces of one of the oldest forms of
-heathen worship. Sir W. Betham has observed, in his _Gael and Cymbri_,
-pp. 222-4, that "we see at this day fires lighted up in Ireland, on the
-eve of the summer solstice and the equinoxes, to the Ph[oe]nician god
-Baal; and they are called _Baal-tane_, or Baal's fire, though the
-_object_ of veneration be forgotten." Such fires are still lighted in
-Lancashire, on Hallowe'en, under the names of Beltains or Teanlas; and
-even such _cakes_ as the Jews are said to have made in honour of the
-Queen of Heaven, are yet to be found at this season amongst the
-inhabitants of the banks of the Ribble. These circumstances may appear
-the less strange when we reflect that this river is almost certainly the
-Belisama of the Romans; that it was especially dedicated to the Queen of
-Heaven, under the designation of Minerva Belisamæ; and that her worship
-was long prevalent amongst the inhabitants of Coccium, Rigodunum, and
-other Roman stations in the north of Lancashire. Both the fires and the
-cakes, however, are now connected with superstitious notions respecting
-Purgatory, &c., but their origin and perpetuation will scarcely admit of
-doubt.
-
-A belief in astrology and in sacred numbers prevails to a considerable
-extent amongst all classes of our society. With many the stars still
-"fight in their courses," and our modern fortune-tellers are yet ready
-to "rule the planets," and predict good or ill fortune, on payment of
-the customary fee. That there is "luck in _odd_ numbers" was known for a
-fact in Lancashire long before Mr. Lover immortalized the tradition. Our
-housewives always take care that their hens shall sit upon an _odd_
-number of eggs; we always bathe _three_ times in the sea at Blackpool,
-Southport, and elsewhere; and our names are called over _three_ times
-when our services are required in courts of law. _Three_ times _three_
-is the orthodox number of cheers; and we still hold that the _seventh_
-son of a _seventh_ son is destined to form an infallible physician. We
-inherit all such popular notions as these in common with the German and
-Scandinavian nations; but more especially with those of the Saxons and
-the Danes. Triads of leaders, or ships, constantly occur in their
-annals; and punishments of _three_ and _seven_ years' duration form the
-burden of many of the Anglo-Saxon and Danish laws.
-
-A full proportion of the popular stories which are perpetuated in our
-nurseries most probably date their existence amongst us from some
-amalgamation of races; or, it may be, from the intercourse attendant
-upon trade and commerce. The Ph[oe]nicians, no doubt, would impart a
-portion of their Oriental Folk-lore to the southern Britons; the Roman
-legions would leave traces of their prolific mythology amongst the
-Brigantes and the Sistuntii; and the Saxons and the Danes would add
-their rugged northern modifications to the common stock. The "History of
-the Hunchback" is common to both England and Arabia; the "man in the
-moon" has found his way into the popular literature of almost every
-nation with which we are acquainted; "Cinderella and her slipper" is
-"The little golden shoe" of the ancient Scandinavians, and was equally
-familiar to the Greeks and Romans; "Jack and the bean-stalk" is told in
-Sweden and Norway as of "The boy who stole the giant's treasure;" whilst
-our renowned "Jack the giant-killer" figures in Norway, Lapland, Persia,
-and India, as the amusing story of "The herd boy and the giant." The
-labours of Tom Hickathrift are evidently a distorted version of those of
-Hercules; and these again agree in the main with the journey of Thor to
-Utgard, and the more classical travels of Ulysses. In Greece the clash
-of the elements during a thunderstorm was attributed to the chariot
-wheels of Jove; the Scandinavians ascribed the sounds to the ponderous
-wagon of the mighty Thor; our Lancashire nurses _Christianize_ the
-phenomenon by assuring their young companions, poetically enough, that
-thunder "is the noise which God makes when passing across the heavens."
-The notion that the gods were wont to communicate knowledge of future
-events to certain favoured individuals appears to have had a wide range
-in ancient times; and this curiosity regarding futurity has exerted a
-powerful influence over the minds of men in every stage of civilization.
-Hence arose the consulting of oracles and the practice of divination
-amongst the ancients, and to the same principles we must attribute the
-credulity which at present exists with respect to the "_wise men_" who
-are to be found in almost every town and village in Lancashire. The
-means adopted by some of the oracles when responses were required,
-strangely remind us of the modern feats of ventriloquism; others can be
-well illustrated by what we now know of mesmerism and its kindred
-agencies; whilst these and clairvoyance will account for many of those
-where the agents are said by Eustathius to have spoken out of their
-bellies, or breasts, from oak trees, or been "cast into trances in which
-they lay like men dead or asleep, deprived of all sense and motion; but
-after some time returning to themselves, gave strange relations of what
-they had seen and heard."
-
-The ancient Greeks and Romans regarded dreams as so many warnings; they
-prayed to Mercury to vouchsafe to them a night of good dreams. In this
-county we still hold the same opinions; but our country maidens, having
-Christianized the subject, now invoke St. Agnes and a multitude of other
-saints to be similarly propitious. There are many other points of
-resemblance between the Folk-lore of Lancashire and that of the
-ancients. Long or short life, health or disease, good luck or bad, are
-yet predicted by burning a lock of human hair; and the fire is
-frequently poked with much anxiety when testing the disposition of an
-absent lover. Many persons may be found who never put on the _left_ shoe
-first; and the appearance of a _single_ magpie has disconcerted many a
-stout Lancashire farmer when setting out on a journey of business or
-pleasure. In the matter of sneezing we are just as superstitious as when
-the Romans left us. They exclaimed, "May Jove protect you," when any one
-sneezed in their presence, and an anxious "God bless you" is the common
-ejaculation amongst our aged mothers. To the same sources we may
-probably attribute the apprehensions which many Lancashire people
-entertain with respect to spilling the salt; sudden silence, or fear;
-lucky and unlucky days; the presence of thirteen at dinner; raising
-ghosts; stopping blood by charms; spitting upon, or drawing blood from
-persons in order to avert danger; the evil eye; and a multitude of
-other minor superstitions. We possess much of all this in common with
-the Saxons and the Danes, but the original source of a great, if not the
-greater portion, is probably that of our earliest conquerors.
-
-Divination by means of the works of Homer and Virgil was not uncommon
-amongst the ancients; the earlier Christians made use of the Psalter or
-New Testament for such purposes. In Lancashire the Bible and a key are
-resorted to, both for deciding doubts respecting a lover, and also to
-aid in detecting a thief. Divination by water affords another striking
-parallel. The ancients decided questions in dispute by means of a
-tumbler of water, into which they lowered a ring suspended by a thread,
-and having prayed to the gods to decide the question in dispute, the
-ring of its own accord would strike the tumbler a certain number of
-times. Our "Lancashire witches" adopt the same means, and follow the
-Christianized formula, with a wedding-ring suspended by a hair, whenever
-the time before marriage, the number of a family, or even the length of
-life, becomes a matter of anxiety.
-
-Most nations, in all ages, have been accustomed to deck the graves of
-their dead with appropriate flowers, much as we do at present. The last
-words of the dying have, from the earliest times, been considered of
-prophetic import; and according to Theocritus, some one of those
-present endeavoured to receive into his mouth the last breath of a dying
-parent or friend, "as fancying the soul to pass out with it and enter
-into their own bodies." Few would expect to find this singular custom
-still existing in Lancashire; and yet such is the fact. Witchcraft can
-boast her votaries in this county even up to the present date, and she
-numbers this practice amongst her rites and ceremonies.
-
-A very large portion of the Lancashire Folk-lore is identical in many
-respects with that which prevailed amongst the sturdy warriors who
-founded the Heptarchy, or ruled Northumbria. During the Saxon and Danish
-periods their heathendom had a real existence. Its practices were
-maintained by an array of priests and altars, with a prescribed ritual
-and ceremonies; public worship was performed and oblations offered with
-all the pomp and power of a church establishment. The remnants of this
-ancient creed are now presented to us in the form of popular
-superstitions, in legends and nursery tales, which have survived all
-attempts to eradicate them from the minds of the people. Christ, his
-apostles, and the saints, have supplanted the old mythological
-conceptions; but many popular stories and impious incantations which now
-involve these sacred names were formerly told of some northern hero, or
-perhaps invoked the power of Satan himself. The great festival in honour
-of Eostre may be instanced as having been transferred to the Christian
-celebration of the resurrection of our Lord; whilst the lighting of
-fires on St. John's eve, and the bringing in of the boar's head at
-Christmas, serve to remind us that the worship of Freja is not extinct.
-When Christianity became the national religion, the rooted prejudices of
-the people were evidently respected by our early missionaries, and hence
-the curious admixture of the sacred and the profane, which everywhere
-presents itself in our local popular forms of expression for the
-pretended cure of various diseases. The powers and attributes of Woden
-and Freja are attributed to Jesus, Peter, or Mary; but in all other
-respects the spells and incantations remain the same.
-
-Our forefathers appear to have possessed a full proportion of those
-stern characteristics which have ever marked the Northumbrian
-population. Whatever opinions they had acquired, they were prepared to
-hold them firmly; nor did they give up their most heathenish practices
-without a struggle. Both the "law and the testimony" had to be called
-into requisition as occasion required; and even the terrors of these did
-not at once suffice. In one of the Anglo-Saxon _Penitentiaries_, quoted
-by Mr. Wright in his _Essays_, we find a penalty imposed upon those
-women who use "any witchcraft to their children, or who draw them
-through the earth at the meeting of roads, because that is great
-heathenishness." A Saxon _Homily_, preserved in the public library at
-Cambridge, states that divinations were used, "through the devil's
-teaching," in taking a wife, in going a journey, in brewing, when
-beginning any undertaking, when any person or animal is born, and when
-children begin to pine away or to be unhealthy. The same _Homily_ also
-speaks of divination by fowls, by sneezing, by horses, by dogs howling,
-and concludes by declaring that "he is no Christian who does these
-things." In a Latin _Penitentialia_ now in the British Museum, we find
-allusions to incantations for taking away stores of milk, honey, or
-other things belonging to another, and converting them to our own use.
-He who rides with Diana and obeys her commands, he who prepares _three_
-knives in company in order to predestine happiness to those born there,
-he who makes inquiry into the future on the first day of January, or
-begins a work on that day in order to secure prosperity during the whole
-of the year, is pointed out for reprobation; whilst hiding charms in
-grass, or on a tree, or in a path, for the preservation of cattle,
-placing children in a furnace, or on the roof of a house, and using
-characters for curing disease, or charms for collecting medicinal herbs,
-are enumerated, for the purpose of pointing out the penances to be
-undergone by those found guilty of "such heinous sins." Nearly all these
-instances may be said to belong to the transition state of our
-Folk-lore, and relate at once both to the ancient and the modern
-portions of our subject. We have seen that much the same practices were
-used by the Greeks and Romans; and it is a curious fact that many of the
-more important are still in vogue amongst the peasantry of Lancashire.
-Many persons will still shudder with apprehension if a dog howl during
-the sickness of a friend: dragging a child across the earth at "four
-lane ends" is yet practised for the cure of whooping-cough: fern seed is
-still said to be gathered on the Holy Bible, and is then believed to be
-able to render those invisible who will dare to take it. We still have
-prejudices respecting the first day of the new year; black-haired
-visitors are most welcome on the morning of that day; charms for the
-protection of families and cattle are yet to be found; and herbs for the
-use of man and beast are still collected when their "proper planets are
-ruling" in the heavens. More copies of Culpepper's _Herbal_ and Sibley's
-_Astrology_ are sold in Lancashire than all other works on the same
-subjects put together, and this principally on account of the planetary
-influence with which each disease and its antidote are connected. Old
-Moore's _Almanac_, however, is now sadly at a discount, because it lacks
-the table of the Moon's signs; the farmers are consequently at a loss to
-know which will be healthy cattle, and hence they prefer a spurious
-edition which supplies the grave omission.
-
-Several lucky stones for the protection of cattle have, within a few
-years past, been procured by the writer from the "shippons" of those
-who, in other respects, are not counted behind the age; and it would
-have been easy to collect an ample stock of horse-shoes and rusty
-sickles from the same sources. However, during the last forty years the
-inhabitants of Lancashire have made rapid progress both in numbers and
-intelligence. They have had the "schoolmaster abroad" amongst them, and
-have consequently divested themselves of many of the grosser
-superstitions which formed a portion of the popular faith of their
-immediate predecessors; but there is yet a dense substratum of popular
-opinions existing in those localities which have escaped the renovating
-influences of the spindle or the rail. As time progresses many of these
-will become further modified, or perhaps totally disappear; and hence it
-may be desirable to secure a permanent record of the customs and
-superstitions of the county.
-
-As to the most ancient forms of religious belief or cult, we may surely
-assume that the _simple_ must of necessity precede the _complex_, and
-consequently the idea of _one_ supernatural Being must be anterior in
-point of time to that of _two_ or more. Under this view, the good and
-the evil principles would form the second stage of development--a
-necessary consequence of increased observation--and, accordingly, we
-find the Great Spirit and his Adversary among the prevailing notions of
-some of the least civilized communities. A gradual progression from one
-to many gods appears to have been the natural process by which all known
-mythologies have been formed. The tendency of observation to multiply
-causes, real or ideal, and to personify ideas, may be ranked as one of
-the tendencies of unassisted human nature; and the operation of this
-natural force must have been equally efficient at all times and in all
-countries. In the early stages of social improvement, man would be very
-forcibly affected by natural phenomena. The regular succession of day
-and night--the order of the seasons--the heat of summer--the cold of
-winter--storms and tempests on sea and land--the sensations of pleasure
-and pain, hope and fear--would each impress him with ideas of effects
-for which he could assign no adequate causes; but having become
-susceptible of supernatural influences, the addition of imaginary beings
-to his mythology would keep pace with his experience, until every
-portion of the heavens, the earth, and the sea, was peopled with, and
-presided over, by its respective deity or demi-god. Thus it was that the
-rolling thunder and the "lightning's vivid flash" suggested the idea of
-a Jupiter grasping his destructive bolts, or of a Thor wielding his
-ponderous hammer. The "raging tempest" and the "boiling surge" gave
-birth to a Neptune or Njörd, each endowed with attributes suited to the
-aspects of the locality where the observations were made, and specially
-adapted to the intellectual condition of the community which first
-deified the conception. As society progressed in civilization, so did
-the study of philosophy and religion. The poets and the priests,
-however, did not entrust their speculations to the judgment of the
-people; they were too sensible of the power which secrecy conferred upon
-their occult pursuits, and hence they allegorized their conceptions of
-supernatural agencies, and also their ideas of the ordinary operations
-of nature and art. The elements were spoken of as persons, and the
-changes which these underwent were regarded as the actions of
-individuals; and these in the lapse of ages, by losing their esoteric
-meaning, came to be considered as realities, and so passed into the
-popular belief. This is eminently the case with the northern mythology,
-respecting which we are at present more particularly concerned; for by
-far the greater portion of these highly poetical, though rugged myths,
-admit of a very plausible and rational explanation on astronomical and
-physical principles.[1] Whether this was equally the case with the Greek
-and Roman mythologies is now, perhaps, more difficult to determine.
-Enough, however, remains in the etymology of the names to prove that
-both these and the northern systems had much in common. The fundamental
-conceptions of each possess the same leading characteristics; and both
-are probably due to the conquering tribes who migrated into Europe from
-the fertile plains of Central Asia.[2]
-
-During these early ages, war was considered to be the most honourable
-occupation. Valour constituted the highest virtue; and in the absence of
-all written records, tradition, in course of time, would add
-considerably to the prowess of any daring chieftain. A mighty conqueror
-would be considered by his followers as something more than human. The
-fear of his enemies would clothe him with attributes peculiar to their
-conceptions of inferior deities; and this, together with the almost
-universal "longing after immortality" which seems to pervade society in
-all its stages, sufficiently accounts for the origin of the heroes and
-heroines--the demi-gods and goddesses of every mythology. Hence
-Hercules--the younger Odin--and a numerous train of minor worthies to
-whom divine honours were decreed in the rituals of Italy and of the
-north.
-
-On the introduction of Christianity, a powerful reactionary force was
-brought into the popular belief, and many of its grosser portions were
-speedily eliminated. The whole of the mythological creations were
-divided into two distinct classes, according to the attributes for which
-they were more particularly distinguished. Those whose tendencies
-inclined towards the benefit of mankind were translated to heavenly
-mansions, with God as supreme; whilst the wickedly disposed were
-consigned to the infernal regions, under the dominion of the Devil. The
-festivals of the gods were transformed into Christian seasons for
-rejoicing, their temples became churches, and the names of Christ, his
-apostles, the Virgin Mary, and the saints, took the places of those of
-Jupiter, Mercury, Thor, Freja, and Woden. All the inferior deities that
-presided over the woods, the mountains, the seas, and the rivers, were
-degraded into demons, and were classed amongst those fallen spirits who
-are employed by the evil one to harass and deceive mankind. Our early
-missionaries, however, had studied human nature too well to attempt too
-violent a change. They contented themselves, for the most part, with
-diverting the current of thought into different channels; they gave
-_new_ names to _old_ conceptions, and then left their more rational and
-more powerful faith to produce its known effects upon the superstitions
-of the masses. But the habits and opinions of a people who have long
-been under the influence of any mythological system, have become too
-deeply rooted to admit of easy eradication; and hence, in our own
-country, as in others, the transition from heathenism to Christianity
-was effected by almost imperceptible steps.
-
-There are, however, many points of resemblance between the early
-Scandinavian and the Roman mythologies. Both had probably a common
-origin, but each became modified by increased civilization and the
-character of the localities occupied by each succeeding wave of a
-migratory population. "Every country in Europe," says the learned editor
-of Warton's _History of Poetry_, "has invested its popular belief with
-the same common marvels: all acknowledge the agency of the lifeless
-productions of nature; the intervention of the same supernatural
-machinery; the existence of elves, fairies, dwarfs, giants, witches,
-wizards, and enchanters; the use of spells, charms, and amulets." The
-explosions and rumbling sounds occasionally heard in the interior of
-Etna and Stromboli were attributed, in ancient times, to the rage of
-Typhon, or the labours of Vulcan: at this day, the popular belief
-connects them with the suffering souls of men in the infernal regions.
-"The marks which natural causes have impressed upon the unyielding
-granite were produced, according to the common creed, by the powerful
-hero, the saint or the god, and large masses of stone, resembling
-domestic implements in form, were the toys or the tools of the demi-gods
-and giants of old. The repetition of the voice among the hills of
-Scandinavia is ascribed by the vulgar to the dwarfs mocking the human
-speaker; in England the fairies are said to perform the same exploits;
-while the more elegant fancy of Greece gave birth to Echo, a nymph who
-pined for love, and who still fondly repeats the accents that she hears.
-The magic scenery occasionally presented on the waters of the Straits of
-Messina is ascribed by popular opinion to the power of the Fata Morgana;
-the gossamer threads which float through the haze of an autumnal morning
-are [in Lancashire also] supposed to be woven by the ingenious dwarfs;
-the verdant circlets in the dewy mead are traced beneath the light steps
-of the dancing elves; and St. Cuthbert is said to forge and fashion the
-beads that bear his name, and lie scattered along the shores of
-Lindisfarne."[3] If we draw our parallels a little closer, we shall
-find, as has been well observed, that "the Nereids of antiquity are
-evidently the same with the Mermaids of the British and northern shores:
-the inhabitants of both are placed in crystal caves, or coral palaces,
-beneath the waters of the ocean; they are alike distinguished for their
-partialities to the human race, and their prophetic powers in disclosing
-the events of futurity. The Naiades differ only in name from the Nixens
-of Germany, the Nisses of Scandinavia, or the Water-elves of the British
-Isles. The Brownies are of the same kindred as the Lares of Latium [and
-these agree exactly with the Portuni mentioned by Gervase of Tilbury in
-his _Otia Imperialis_]. The English Puck [the Lancashire Boggart], the
-Scotch Bogle, the French Goblin, the Gobelinus of the Middle Ages, and
-the German Kobold, are probably only varied names for the Grecian
-Khobalus, whose sole delight consisted in perplexing the human race, and
-evoking those harmless terrors that constantly hover round the minds of
-the timid. So, also, the German Spuck, and the Danish Spogel, correspond
-with the more northern Spog; whilst the German Hudkin, and the Icelandic
-Puki, exactly answer to the character of the English Robin
-Goodfellow."[4] Our modern devil, with his horns and hoof, is derived
-from the Celtic Ourisk and the Roman Pan.
-
-Some of our elves and satyrs are arrayed in the costumes of Greece and
-Rome; and the Fairy Queen, with her attendants, have at times too many
-points of resemblance to escape being identified as Diana and her
-nymphs. The Roman Jupiter, by an easy transformation, becomes identical
-with the Scandinavian Thor--the thunderbolt and chariot of the former
-corresponding to the hammer and wagon of the latter. Odin takes the
-place of Mercury. Loki is the same as Lucifer, for, like him, he was
-expelled from heaven for disobedience and rebellion. Hother encountered
-Thor, as Diomede did Mars. "The Grendels of the north answer to the
-Titans of the south; they were the gods of nature to our
-forefathers--the spirits of the wood and wave." Jupiter's eagle, the
-war-sign of the Romans, is similar in character to Odin's raven among
-the Danes; both nations considered that if the bird appeared to flutter
-its wings on the banners, conquest was certain; but if they hung
-helplessly down, defeat would surely follow. Warcock Hill, on the
-borders of Lancashire and Yorkshire, has probably derived its name from
-the unfurling of this terrible ensign during the conflicts between the
-Saxons and the Danes for the possession of Northumbria;--the local
-nomenclature of the district attests the presence of colonists from both
-nations, and extensive traces of their fortifications still remain as
-evidence that our slopes and hill-tops formed at once the battle-fields
-and the strongholds of the country.
-
-The power of the Devil, his personal appearance and the possibility of
-bartering the soul for temporary gain, must still be numbered among the
-articles of our popular faith. Repeating the Lord's Prayer backwards is
-said to be the most effectual plan for causing him to rise from beneath;
-but when the terms of the bargain are not satisfactory, his exit can
-only be secured by making the sign of the cross and calling on the name
-of Christ.[5]
-
-When we come to examine the miscellaneous customs and superstitions of
-the county, we find many remarkable traces of a former belief. Tradition
-has again been true to her vocation; and in several instances has been
-most careful to preserve the _minutiæ_ of the mode of operation and
-supposed effects of each minor spell and incantation. The principal
-difficulty now lies in the selection; for the materials are so plentiful
-that none but the most striking can be noticed. Among these we observe
-that, a ringing in the ears; shooting of the eyes; throwing down, or
-spilling the salt; putting on the left shoe first; lucky and unlucky
-days; pouring melted lead into water; stopping blood by means of charms;
-the use of waxen images; enchanted girdles; and lovers' knots, are all
-observed and explained almost exactly as amongst the Greeks and Romans.
-The details in many have been preserved to the very letter, whilst the
-supposed effects are exactly the same both in the ancient and modern
-times. Our marriageable maidens never receive knives, or any pointed
-implements, from their suitors, for the very same reason that such
-presents were rejected by their Scandinavian ancestors--they portend a
-"breaking off" in the matrimonial arrangements, and are notorious for
-"severing love."
-
- "If you love me as I love you,
- No knife shall cut our love in two."
-
-We never return thanks for a loan of pins. A "winding sheet" on the
-candle forebodes death; and dogs howling indicate a similar calamity.[6]
-Almost every one is aware that cuttings of human hair ought always to be
-burnt; that if _thirteen_ sit down to dinner one of them will die before
-the end of the year; that it is unlucky to meet a woman the first thing
-in the morning; and that a horse-shoe nailed or let into the step of
-the door will prevent the entrance of any evil-disposed person. We have
-probably derived nearly the whole of these notions from the Scandinavian
-settlers in the North of England. They considered it quite possible too
-to raise the Devil by the same means now practised by our "wise men;"
-and after their conversion to Christianity they are known to have marked
-their dough with a cross in order to ensure its rising--a practice which
-many of our country matrons still retain. Sodden bread is always
-considered to be bewitched, provided the yeast be good, and hence the
-necessity for the protection of the cross.
-
-We always get out of bed either on the right side, or with the right
-foot first; we take care not to cross two knives on the table; mothers
-never allow a child to be weighed soon after its birth; our children
-still blow their ages at marriage from the tops of the dandelion; and
-all these for similar reasons, and with similar objects, to those of the
-peasantry of Northumbria during the period of Danish rule. They supposed
-that the dead followed their usual occupations in the spirit-world, and
-hence, probably, the weapons of war and the implements of domestic life
-which we find amongst the ashes of their dead. They were also of opinion
-that buried treasure caused the ghosts of the owners to haunt the places
-of concealment; and many of our country population retain the same
-opinions without the slightest modification.
-
-The Folk-lore of dreams is an extensive subject, and would require a
-series of essays for its full elucidation. The _Royal Dream Book_, and
-_Napoleon's Book of Fate_, command an extensive sale amongst our
-operatives, and may be consulted for additional information. Our country
-maidens are well aware that _triple_ leaves plucked at hazard from the
-common ash, are worn in the breast for the purpose of causing prophetic
-dreams respecting a dilatory lover. The leaves of the yellow trefoil are
-supposed to possess similar virtues; and the Bible is not unfrequently
-put under their pillows with a crooked sixpence placed on the 16th and
-17th verses of the first chapter of Ruth, in order that they may both
-dream of, and see, their future husbands. "Opening the Bible for
-direction" is still practised after any troublesome dream, or when about
-to undertake any doubtful matter. To dream of the teeth falling out
-betokens death, or the loss of a lawsuit. Other signs of death are
-dreaming of seeing the Devil; or hearing a sound like the stroke of a
-wand on any piece of furniture. The proverb that "lawyers and asses
-always die in their shoes," is invariably quoted when any sudden
-calamity befalls one of the profession.
-
-Like the ancients, the folk of Lancashire have various superstitious
-observances and practices connected with the moon, especially with the
-new moon. Christmas thorns are said to blossom only on _Old_ Christmas
-Day; and persons will go considerable distances at midnight in order to
-witness the blossoming. Oxen, too, are supposed to acknowledge the
-importance of the Nativity of Christ, by going down on their knees at
-the same hour; and this is often quoted as a proof that our legislators
-were wrong in depriving our forefathers of their "eleven days" when the
-new style was enforced by Act of Parliament.[7]
-
-Some of our farmers are superstitious enough to hang in the chimney a
-portion of the flesh of any animal which has died of distemper, as a
-protection from similar afflictions; they also preserve with great care
-the membrane which sometimes envelopes a newly born foal, in the hope
-that it will ensure them good luck for the future. Sailors do not like
-to set sail on a Friday. Servant girls will rarely enter upon a new
-service either on a Friday, or on a Saturday: should they do so, they
-have an opinion that they will disagree with their mistresses and "not
-stay long in place." Most females entertain strong objections against
-giving evidence, or taking oaths, before the magistrates, when
-_enceinte_. At Burnley, not long ago, a witness in a case of felony was
-threatened with imprisonment before she would comply with the necessary
-forms. All children that are born in the twilight of certain days are in
-consequence supposed to be endowed with the faculty of seeing spirits;
-and some of our "wise men" take advantage of this, and persuade their
-dupes that they were so circumstanced at birth.
-
-Such instances might be multiplied to an almost indefinite extent, did
-space permit; but the preceding will suffice to prove both the probable
-origin and prevalence of many of our popular superstitions. To a greater
-or less extent their influence pervades all classes of society; and he
-who would elevate the intellectual condition of the people must not
-neglect this thick stratum of _common notions_ which underlies the
-deepest deposits of mental culture. As a recent writer in the _Quarterly
-Review_ reports of Cornwall, so we may state of Lancashire:--"Pages
-might be filled, not with mere legends wrought up for literary purposes,
-but with serious accounts of the wild delusions which seem to have lived
-on from the very birth of Pagan antiquity, and still to hold their
-influence among the earnest and Christian people of this portion of
-England.... Superstition lives on, with little abatement of vitality, in
-the human heart. In the lower classes it wears its old fashions, with
-very slow alterations--in the higher, it changes with the rapidity of
-modes in fashionable circles. We read with a smile of amusement and
-pity, the account of some provincial conjuror, who follows, with slight
-changes, the trade of the Witch of Endor; and we then compose our
-features to a grave expression of interest--for so society requires--to
-listen to some enlightened person's description of the latest novelties
-in table-turning or spirit-rapping; or to some fair patient's account of
-her last conversation with her last quack-doctor."
-
-The labours of Croker, Keightley, Thorpe, and Kemble, following in the
-wake of the Brothers Grimm, have added considerably to our knowledge of
-the Folk-lore of the North of Europe; but much yet remains to be
-collected before the subject can be examined in all its bearings.
-
-It is hoped that in the following pages the facts collected will suffice
-to prove that the superstitious beliefs, observances, and usages of
-Lancashire are by no means unworthy of the attention of the antiquary,
-the ethnologist, or the historian.
-
-
-LANCASHIRE ALCHEMISTS.
-
-Alchemy (from _al_, Arab. the, and {chêmeia}, chemistry), the pretended
-art of transmuting the inferior metals into gold or silver, by means of
-what was called the Philosopher's Stone, or the powder of projection, a
-red powder possessing a peculiar smell, is supposed to have originated
-among the Arabians; Geber, an Arabian physician of the seventh century,
-being one of the earliest alchemists whose works are extant; but written
-so obscurely as to have led to the suggestion that his name was the
-origin of our modern term _gibberish_, for unintelligible jargon. A
-subsequent object of alchemy was the discovery of a universal medicine,
-the _Elixir Vitæ_, which was to give perpetual life, health, and youth.
-The Egyptians are said to have practised alchemy; and Paulus Diaconus, a
-writer of the eighth century, asserts that Dioclesian burned the library
-of Alexandria, in order to prevent the Egyptians from becoming learned
-in the art of producing at will those precious metals which might be
-employed as "the sinews of war" against himself.[8] The earliest English
-writer on alchemy was probably St. Dunstan, Archbishop of Canterbury, in
-the tenth century. "He who shall have the happiness to meet with St.
-Dunstan's work, 'De Occulta Philosophia' [that on the 'Philosopher's
-stone' is in the Ashmole Museum], may therein read such stories as will
-make him amazed to think what stupendous and immense things are to be
-performed by virtue of the Philosopher's Mercury."[9] A John Garland is
-also said to have written on alchemy and mineralogy prior to the
-Conquest.[10] Alchemy was much studied in conventual establishments[11]
-and by the most learned doctors and schoolmen, and the highest Church
-dignitaries--nay, even by kings and popes. Albertus Magnus, a German,
-born in 1282, wrote seven treatises on alchemy; and Thomas Aquinas "the
-angelic doctor" (said to have been a pupil of Albert), wrote three works
-on this subject. Roger Bacon ("Friar Bacon"), born at Ilchester in 1214,
-though he wrote against the folly of believing in magic, necromancy, and
-charms, nevertheless had faith in alchemy; and his chemical and
-alchemical writings number eighteen. Of his _Myrrour of Alchemy_, Mr. J.
-J. Conybeare observes, "Of all the alchemical works into which I have
-been occasionally led to search, this appears the best calculated to
-afford the curious reader an insight into the history of the art, and of
-the arguments by which it was usually attacked and defended. It has the
-additional merit of being more intelligible and more entertaining than
-most books of the same class."[12]
-
-Raymond Lully, born at Majorca in 1235, is said to have been a scholar
-of Roger Bacon, and to have written nineteen works on alchemy. Arnoldus
-de Villa Nova, born in 1235, amongst a number of works on this subject,
-wrote _The Rosarium_, a compendium of the alchemy of his time. He died
-in 1313, on his way to visit Pope Clement V. at Avignon. Another pope,
-John XXII., professed and described the art of transmuting metals, and
-boasts in the beginning of his book that he had made two hundred ingots
-of gold, each weighing one hundred pounds. Among English alchemists of
-the fourteenth century may be mentioned Cremer, abbot of Westminster
-(the disciple and friend of Lully), John Daustein, and Richard, who both
-practised and wrote upon the "hermetic philosophy," as it was termed. In
-the fifteenth century was born George Ripley, a canon registrar of
-Bridlington, who wrote the _Medulla Alchymiæ_ (translated by Dr. Salmon
-in his _Clavis_), and another work in rhyme, called "The Compound of
-Alchemie," which was dedicated to Edward IV. Dr. John Dee (born 1527),
-the warden of Manchester College, and his assistant, or "seer," Edward
-Kelly (born 1555), were both avowed alchemists. Dee wrote a _Treatise of
-the Rosie Crucian Secrets, their excellent methods of making Medicines
-and Metals_, &c. Ashmole says of him, that "some time he bestowed in
-vulgar chemistry, and was therein master of divers secrets: amongst
-others, he revealed to one Roger Cooke 'the great secret of the elixir'
-(as he called it) 'of the salt of metals, the projection whereof was
-one upon a hundred.'[13]
-
-"'Tis generally reported that Dr. Dee and Sir Edward Kelly were so
-strangely fortunate as to find a very large quantity of the elixir in
-some parts of the ruins of Glastonbury Abbey." It had remained here,
-perhaps, ever since the time of the highly gifted St. Dunstan, in the
-tenth century.[14] The great Lord Bacon relates the following story in
-his _Apothegms_:--
-
-"Sir Edward Dyer, a grave and wise gentleman, did much believe in Kelly,
-the alchemist, that he did indeed the work, and made gold; insomuch that
-he went into Germany, where Kelly then was, to inform himself fully
-thereof. After his return he dined with my Lord of Canterbury, where at
-that time was at the table Dr. Brown, the physician. They fell in talk
-of Kelly. Sir Edward Dyer, turning to the archbishop, said--'I do assure
-your Grace that that I shall tell you is truth: I am an eye-witness
-thereof; and if I had not seen it, I should not have believed it. I saw
-Master Kelly put of the base metal into the crucible; and after it was
-set a little upon the fire, and a very small quantity of the medicine
-put in, and stirred with a stick of wood, it came forth, in great
-proportion, perfect gold, to the touch, to the hammer, and to the test.'
-My Lord Archbishop said, 'You had need take heed what you say, Sir
-Edward Dyer, for here is an infidel at the board.' Sir Edward Dyer said
-again pleasantly, 'I would have looked for an infidel sooner in any
-place than at your Grace's table.' 'What say you, Dr. Brown?' said the
-archbishop. Dr. Brown answered, after his blunt and huddling manner,
-'The gentleman hath spoken enough for me.' 'Why,' saith the archbishop,
-'what hath he said?' 'Marry,' saith Dr. Brown, 'he said he would not
-have believed it except he had seen it; and no more will I.'"
-
-Professor De Morgan observes that "Alchemy was more than a popular
-credulity: Newton and Boyle were amongst the earnest inquirers into it."
-Bishop Berkeley was of opinion that M. Homberg made gold by introducing
-light into the pores of mercury. Amongst the works of the Hon. Robert
-Boyle (vol. iv. 13-19), is _An Historical Account of a Degradation of
-Gold, made by an anti-Elixir: a Strange Chemical Narrative_, in which he
-says--"To make it more credible that other metals are capable of being
-graduated or exalted into gold, by way of projection, I will relate to
-you, that by the like way, gold has been degraded or imbased.... Our
-experiment plainly shows that gold, though confessedly the most
-homogeneous and the least mutable of metals, may be in a very short time
-(perhaps not amounting to many minutes), exceedingly changed, both as to
-malleableness, colour, homogeneity, and (which is more) specific
-gravity; and all this by so very inconsiderable a portion of injected
-powder," &c.
-
-"When Locke, as one of the executors of Boyle, was about to publish some
-of his works, Newton wished him to insert the second and third part of
-Boyle's recipes (the first part of which was to obtain 'a mercury that
-would grow hot with gold'), and which Boyle had communicated to him on
-condition that they should be published after his death."[15] "Mangetus
-relates a story of a stranger calling on Boyle, and leaving with him a
-powder, which he projected into the crucible, and instantly went out.
-After the fire had gone out, Boyle found in the crucible a
-yellow-coloured metal, possessing all the properties of pure gold, and
-only a little lighter than the weight of the materials originally put in
-the crucible."[16]
-
-From these proofs of the credulity of great men, let us turn to the
-encouragements vouchsafed to alchemy and its adepts by the Kings and
-Parliaments of England. Raymond Lully visited England on the invitation
-of Edward I.; and he affirms in one of his works, that in the secret
-chamber of St. Katherine, in the Tower of London, he performed in the
-royal presence the experiment of transmuting some crystal into a mass of
-diamond, or adamant, as he calls it; on which Edward, he says, caused
-some little pillars to be made for the tabernacle of God. It was
-popularly believed, indeed, at the time, that the English king had been
-furnished by Lully with a great quantity of gold for defraying the
-expense of an expedition which he intended to make to the Holy Land.
-Edward III. was not less credulous on this subject than his grandfather,
-as appears by an order which he issued in 1329, in the following
-terms:--"Know all men that we have been assured that John of Rous, and
-Master William of Dalby, know how to make silver by the art of alchemy;
-that they have made it in former times, and still continue to make it;
-and considering that these men, by their art, and by making the precious
-metal, may be profitable to us and to our kingdom, we have commanded our
-well-beloved Thomas Cary to apprehend the aforesaid John and William
-wherever they can be found, within liberties or without, and bring them
-to us, together with all the instruments of their art, under safe and
-sure custody." The first considerable coinage of gold in England was
-begun by Edward III. in 1343: and "The alchemists did affirm, as an
-unwritten verity, that the rose nobles, which were coined soon after,
-were made by projection or multiplication alchemical, by Raymond Lully,
-in the Tower of London." But Lully died in 1315; and the story only
-shows the strength of the popular faith in alchemy. That this pretended
-science was much cultivated in the fourteenth century, and with the
-usual evil results, may be inferred from an Act passed 5 Hen. IV. cap. 4
-(1404), to make it felony "to multiply gold or silver, or to use the
-craft of multiplication," &c. It is probable, however, that this statute
-was enacted from some apprehension that the operations of the
-multipliers might possibly affect the value of the king's coin. Henry
-VI., a very pious, yet very weak and credulous prince, was as great a
-patron of the alchemists as Edward III. had been before him. These
-impostors practised with admirable success upon his weakness and
-credulity, repeatedly inducing him to advance them money wherewith to
-prosecute the operations, as well as procuring from him protections
-(which he sometimes prevailed upon the Parliament to confirm) from the
-penalties of the statute just mentioned.[17] In 1438, the king
-commissioned three philosophers to make the precious metals; but, as
-might be expected, he received no returns from them in gold or
-silver.[18] His credulity, however, seems to have been unshaken by
-disappointment, and we next find him issuing one of these protections,
-which is too long to print entire, granted to the "three famous men,"
-John Fauceby, John Kirkeby, and John Ragny, which was confirmed by
-Parliament May 31, 1456. In this document the object of the researches
-of these "philosophers" is described to be "a certain most precious
-medicine, called by some philosophers 'the mother and empress of
-medicines;' by some, 'the inestimable glory;' by others, 'the
-quintessence;' by others, 'the philosopher's stone;' by others, 'the
-elixir of life;' which cures all curable diseases with ease; prolongs
-human life in perfect vigour of faculty to its utmost natural term;
-heals all healable wounds; is a most sovereign antidote against all
-poisons; and is capable of preserving to us and our kingdom other great
-advantages, such as the transmutation of other metals into the most real
-and finest gold and silver."[19] Fauceby, here mentioned, is elsewhere
-designated the king's physician.[20] We have not traced the position of
-the other two adepts named. Fauceby, however, notwithstanding his power
-of gold-making, did not refuse to accept a grant from the king, in 1456,
-of a pension of 100_l._ a year for life.[21]
-
-We come now to the two most distinguished of Lancashire alchemists, both
-knights, and at the head of the principal families of the county. They
-seem to have been actively engaged together in the delusive pursuit of
-the transmutation of metals; and, self-deceived, to have deluded the
-weak king with promises of wealth which never could be realised. These
-Lancashire adepts were Sir Edmund de Trafford, Knight, and Sir Thomas
-Ashton [of Ashton], Knight. The former was the younger of two sons of
-Henry de Trafford, Esq., and Elizabeth his wife, daughter of Sir Ralph
-Radcliffe, Knight. The elder son, Henry, dying at the early age of
-twenty-six years, this Edmund succeeded as his heir about King Henry V.
-(1414), and he was knighted by Henry VI. at the Whitsuntide of 1426. He
-married Dame Alice Venables, eldest daughter and co-heir to Sir William
-Venables, of Bollyn, Knight. Their only son, Sir John Trafford, knighted
-about 1444, in his father's life-time, married Elizabeth, daughter of
-Sir Thomas Ashton, of Ashton-under-Lyne, Knight; whilst Sir Edmund's
-youngest daughter, Dulcia, or Douce, married Sir John Ashton, a son of
-Sir Thomas, in 1438; so that the two families were connected by this
-double alliance. Sir Thomas Ashton, the alchemist, was the eldest son of
-Sir John de Ashton (Knight of the Bath at the coronation of Henry IV. in
-1399, Knight of the Shire in 1413, and Constable of Coutances in 1417),
-and of his first wife, Jane, daughter of John Savile, of Tankersley,
-county York. Sir Thomas married Elizabeth, daughter of Sir John Byron.
-The date of his death is not known. Sir Edmund Trafford died in 1457.
-Their supposed power of transmuting the baser metals into gold had great
-attractions for a weak king, whose treasury was low, and who was
-encumbered with debt. They were not mere adventurers, but men descended
-from ancient families, opulent, and of high estimation in their native
-county. Fuller found in the Tower of London, and copied,[22] a patent
-granted to these two knights by Henry VI., in the twenty-fourth year of
-his reign (1446), of which he gives the following translation:--"The
-King to all unto whom, &c., greeting--Know ye, that whereas our beloved
-and loyal Edmund de Trafford, Knight, and Thomas Ashton, Knight, have,
-by a certain petition shown unto us, set forth that although they were
-willing by the art or science of philosophy to work upon certain metals,
-to translate [transmute] imperfect metals from their own kind, and then
-to transubstantiate them by their said art or science, as they say, into
-perfect gold or silver, unto all manner of proofs and trials, to be
-expected and endured as any gold or silver growing in any mine;
-notwithstanding certain persons ill-willing and maligning them,
-conceiving them to work by unlawful art, and so may hinder and disturb
-them in the trial of the said art and science: WE, considering the
-premises, and willing to know the conclusion of the said work or
-science, of our special grace have granted and given leave to the same
-Edmund and Thomas, and to their servants, that they may work and try the
-aforesaid art and science lawfully and freely, without any hindrance of
-ours, or of our officers, whatsoever; any statute, act, ordinance, or
-provision made, ordained, or provided to the contrary notwithstanding.
-In witness whereof, &c., the King at Westminster, the 7th day of April"
-[1446.][23] Fuller leaves this curious document, which might fitly have
-been dated the _first_ instead of the 7th April, without a word of
-comment. The two knightly alchemists, doubtlessly imposing on themselves
-no less than on their royal patron, kept the king's expectation wound up
-to the highest pitch; and in the following year he actually informed his
-people that the happy hour was approaching when by means of "the stone"
-he "should be able to pay off his debts!"[24] It is scarcely necessary
-to add that the stone failed, and the king's debts must have remained
-unpaid, if his majesty had not pawned the revenue of his Duchy of
-Lancaster, to satisfy the demands of his clamorous creditors. Henry VI.
-was deposed by Edward IV. in March, 1461, and though he was nominally
-restored to the throne in October, 1470, he lost both crown and life in
-May, 1471, being found dead (most probably murdered) in the Tower on the
-evening or the morrow of the day on which Edward IV. entered London
-after his victory at Barnet. Such are some of the most notable facts in
-the practice of alchemy as connected with Lancashire. It will naturally
-be asked if alchemy is still practised in this county? We can only say,
-that if it be it is in very rare instances, and with the greatest
-secrecy. The more chemistry is known--and the extent to which it has
-been developed within the last twenty years is truly marvellous--the
-more completely it takes the ground from under the feet of a believer in
-alchemy. It is not like astrology, which accepts the facts of the true
-science of astronomy, and only draws false conclusions from true
-premisses. Alchemy could only have sprung up at a period when all the
-operations of the chemist's laboratory were of the most rude, imperfect,
-and blundering character; when the true bases of earths and minerals and
-metals were unknown; when what was called chemistry was without
-analysis, either quantitative or qualitative; before the law of definite
-proportions had been discovered; when, in short, chemistry was a groping
-in the dark without the help of any accurate weight or measure, or
-other knowledge of the countless substances which are now so extensively
-investigated, and so accurately described in the briefest formulas. A
-man, to become an alchemist in the nineteenth century, must study only
-the hermetical writings of past ages, shutting both eyes and ears to all
-the facts of modern chemistry. It is scarcely possible at this day to
-find such a combination of exploded learning and scientific ignorance.
-Hence we conclude that alchemy is in all probability, from the very
-nature of things, an obsolete and forgotten lore.
-
-
-LANCASHIRE ASTROLOGERS.
-
-Astrology (literally the Science of the Stars), is now understood to
-signify the mode of discovering future events by means of the position
-of the heavenly bodies, which has been termed judicial astronomy. This
-quasi science found universal belief among all the nations of antiquity
-except the Greeks. Among the Romans it was eagerly cultivated from the
-time of the conquest of Egypt. In the second century the whole world was
-astrological. All the followers of Mohammed have ever been, and still
-are, believers in it. The Church of Rome has repeatedly condemned the
-art, but popes and cardinals rank amongst its votaries. Cardinal d'Ailly
-(about 1400), calculated the horoscope of Jesus Christ; and in the
-fifteenth century Pope Calixtus III. directed prayers and anathemas
-against a comet which had either assisted in or predicted the success of
-the Turks against the Christians. The establishment of the Copernican
-system was the death of astrology. The last of the astrologers was
-Morin, best known as the opponent of Gassendi. The latter in youth had
-studied and believed in the art, but afterwards renounced and written
-against it. Morin, who worked thirty years at a book on astrology, and
-who disbelieved in the motion of the earth, repeatedly predicted the
-death of Gassendi, but was always wrong, as he was in foretelling the
-death of Louis XIII. Since his death, in 1656, the pseudo-science has
-gradually sunk, and has not since, it is believed, been adopted by any
-real astronomer. Roger Bacon and other early English philosophers were
-believers in astrology, no less than in alchemy. In Lancashire the most
-remarkable practisers of the art were Dr. John Dee, warden of Manchester
-College, his friend and "seer," Sir Edward Kelly, and John Booker, of
-Manchester. Dee was the son of a wealthy vintner, and was born in London
-in 1527. At the age of fifteen he was entered at St. John's College,
-Cambridge, where he seems to have devoted himself to the study of
-mathematics, astronomy, and chemistry; displaying great assiduity and
-industry. At twenty he made a year's tour on the Continent, chiefly in
-Holland, and on his return was made one of the fellows of Trinity
-College on its foundation by Henry VIII., in 1543. In 1548 he was
-strongly suspected of being addicted to "the black art," probably from
-his astrological pursuits; and having taken his degree of A.M., he again
-went abroad to the university of Louvaine and to Rheims, and elsewhere
-in France; returning to England in 1551, when he was presented by Cecil
-to King Edward VI., who assigned him a pension of one hundred crowns,
-which he subsequently relinquished for the rectory of Upton-on-Severn.
-Shortly after the accession of Mary, he was accused of "practising
-against the queen's life by _enchantment_;" the charge being founded on
-some correspondence between him and "the servants of the Lady
-Elizabeth." He was long imprisoned and frequently examined, but as
-nothing could be established against him he was set at liberty by an
-order of the church in 1555. On the accession of Elizabeth, Dee was
-consulted by Lord Robert Dudley respecting "a propitious day" for the
-coronation. He says, "I wrote at large and delivered it for her
-Majesty's use, by the commandment of the Lord Robert (afterwards Earl of
-Leicester), what in my judgment the ancient astrologers would determine
-on the election day of such a time as was appointed for her Majesty to
-be crowned in." He was presented to the queen, who made him great
-promises (not always fulfilled); amongst others, that where her brother
-Edward "had given him a crown, she would give him a noble" [one-third
-more--viz., from 5_s._ to 6_s._ 8_d._]. Nothing can better mark the
-belief in astrology than the fact that Queen Elizabeth's nativity was
-cast, in order to ascertain whether she could marry with advantage to
-the nation. Lilly, some eighty years later, declares[25] that he
-received twenty pieces of gold, in order that he might ascertain where
-Charles I. might be most safe from his enemies, and what hour would be
-most favourable for his escape from Carisbrooke Castle.
-
-In 1564 Dee again visited the Continent, and was presented to the
-Emperor Maximilian, probably on some secret mission; for Lilly says, "he
-was the Queen's intelligencer, and had a salary for his maintenance from
-the Secretaries of State. He was a ready-witted man, quick of
-apprehension, and of great judgment in the Latin and Greek tongues. He
-was a very great investigator of the more secret hermetical learning
-(alchemy), a perfect astronomer, a curious astrologer, a serious
-geometrician; to speak truth, he was excellent in all kinds of
-learning."[26] Dee was repeatedly and urgently sent for one morning "to
-prevent the mischief which divers of her Majesty's privy council
-suspected to be intended against her Majesty, by means of a certain
-image of wax, with a great pin stuck into it, about the breast of it,
-found in Lincoln's Inn Fields." For some years Dee led a life of privacy
-and study at Mortlake in Surrey, collecting books and MSS., beryls and
-magic crystals, talismans, &c. So strong was the popular belief in his
-neighbourhood that he had dealings with the devil, that in 1576 a mob
-assembled, broke into his house, and destroyed nearly all his library
-and collections; and it was with difficulty that he and his family
-escaped the fury of the rabble. In October, 1578, by the Queen's
-command, he had a conference with Dr. Bayley, her Majesty's physician,
-"about her Majesty's grievous pains, by reason of toothache and the
-rheum," &c.; and the same year he was sent on a winter journey of about
-1500 miles by sea and land, "to consult with the learned physicians and
-philosophers [_i.e._, astrologers], for her Majesty's health-recovering
-and preserving." Passing over his more useful and valuable services to
-the State and to the world, as we are only noting here his doings as an
-astrologer, &c., we may remark that most of his proceedings and writings
-in this pseudo-science or art were accomplished after he had passed his
-fiftieth year. It was in 1581 that he took into his service, as an
-assistant in his alchemical and astrological labours, an apothecary of
-Worcester named Edward Kelly, born in 1555, and who was called "The
-Seer," because, looking into magic crystals or speculæ, it was said he
-saw many things which it was not permitted to Dee himself to behold.
-Kelly also acted as Dee's amanuensis, and together they held
-"conversations with spirits." They had a black speculum, it is said "a
-polished piece of cannel coal," in which the angels Gabriel and Raphael
-appeared at their invocation. Hence Butler says--
-
- "Kelly did all his feats upon
- The devil's looking-glass--a stone."
-
-In 1583 a Polish noble, Albert Lasque, palatine of Siradia [? Sieradz]
-being in England, Dee and Kelly were introduced to him, and accompanied
-him to Poland. He persuaded them to pay a visit to Rodolph, king of
-Bohemia, who, though a weak and credulous man, is said to have become
-disgusted with their pretensions. They had no better success with the
-king of Poland, but were soon after invited by a rich Bohemian noble to
-his castle of Trebona, where they continued for some time in great
-affluence, owing, as they asserted, to their transmuting the baser
-metals into gold. Kelly is said to have been sordid and grasping,
-without honour or principle. Lilly asserts that the reason of many
-failures in the conferences with spirits was because Kelly was very
-vicious, "unto whom the angels were not obedient, or willingly did
-declare [answers to] the questions propounded." Dee and Kelly quarrelled
-and separated in Bohemia; Dee returning to England, while Kelly remained
-at Prague. He died in 1595. In 1595 the Queen appointed Dee warden of
-Manchester College, he being then sixty-eight years of age. He resided
-at Manchester nine years, quitting it in 1604 for his old abode at
-Mortlake, where he died in 1608, aged eighty-one, in great poverty, and
-leaving a numerous family and a great many printed works and forty
-unpublished writings behind him. The catalogue of Dee's library at
-Mortlake shows that it was rich in the works of preceding astrologers
-and alchemists, especially those of Roger Bacon, Raymond Lully, Albertus
-Magnus, Arnold de Villa Nova, &c.
-
-John Booker, a celebrated astrologer of the seventeenth century, was the
-son of John Bowker (commonly pronounced Booker), of Manchester, and was
-born 23rd March, 1601. He was educated at the Manchester Grammar School,
-where he acquired some acquaintance with Latin. From childhood he showed
-an inclination for astrology, and amused himself with studying almanacks
-and other books on that subject. After serving some time to a
-haberdasher in London, he practised as a writing-master at Hadley,
-Middlesex; and was subsequently clerk for some time to the aldermen at
-Guildhall. Becoming famous by his studies, he was appointed Licenser of
-Mathematical Publications, which then included all those relating to the
-"celestial sciences." Lilly tells us that he once thought him the
-greatest astrologer in the world; but he afterwards came to think
-himself a much greater man. George Wharton, who had been one of his
-astrological acquaintances, quarrelled with him, and in consequence
-published at Oxford in 1644, in answer to one of Booker's pamphlets,
-what he called "Mercurio-C[oe]lica-Mastyx; or an Anti-caveat to all such
-as have heretofore had the misfortune to be cheated and deluded by the
-great and treacherous impostor, John Booker; in an answer to his
-frivolous pamphlet, entitled 'Mercurius-C[oe]licus, or a Caveat to all
-the People of England.'" Booker died of dysentery in April, 1667, and
-was buried in St. James's Church, Duke's Place, London, where the
-following monument was erected to him by Ashmole, who was one of his
-greatest admirers:--"Ne oblivione conteretur Urna Johannis Bookeri,
-Astrologi, qui Fatis cessit 6 idus Aprilis, A.D. 1667. Hoc illi posuit
-amoris Monumentum, Elias Ashmole, Armiger." Lilly, in his _Life and
-Times_, gives the following character of Booker:--
-
-"He was a great proficient in astrology, whose excellent verses upon
-the twelve months, framed according to the configurations of each month,
-being blest with success according to his predictions, procured him much
-reputation all over England. He was a very honest man; abhorred any
-deceit in the art he studied; had a curious fancy in judging of thefts;
-and was successful in resolving love questions. He was no mean
-proficient in astronomy; understood much of physic; was a great admirer
-of the antimonial cup; not unlearned in chemistry, which he loved, but
-did not practise; and since his decease I have seen a nativity of his
-performance, exactly directed, and judged with as much learning as from
-astrology can be expected. His library of books came short of the
-world's approbation, and were sold by his widow to Elias Ashmole, Esq.,
-who most generously gave far more than they were worth."
-
-Lilly and Booker were frequently consulted during the differences
-between the king and the parliamentary army, and were once invited by
-General Fairfax, and sent in a coach-and-four to head quarters at
-Windsor, to give their opinions on [_i.e._, their predictions as to] the
-prosecution of the war. Booker became famous for a prediction on the
-solar eclipse of 1613, in which year both the king of Bohemia and
-Gustavus, king of Sweden, died. Booker's works (chiefly tracts or
-pamphlets) were about fifteen or sixteen in number. The only work now
-worth notice is his _Bloody Irish Almanack_ (London, 1646, quarto),
-which contains some memorable particulars relative to the war in
-Ireland.[27]
-
-Another Lancashire astrologer was Charles Leadbetter, who was born at
-Cronton, near Prescot, and was the author of a _Treatise on Eclipses of
-the Sun and Moon, commencing A.D. 1715, and ending A.D. 1749_; in which
-he gives the horoscope of every eclipse of importance; and, from the
-aspects of the stars, predicts the principal occurrences that may be
-expected within limited periods. He failed, however, to predict the
-Rebellion of 1715, or that of 1745; and though under the years 1720 and
-1721 he predicated "Sea Fights and Death of Fish," no hint of the "South
-Sea Bubble," the great event of those years, can be found amongst his
-prophecies. He entertained no doubt of an "eclipse of the moon, moving
-subjects to seduction [? sedition], servants to disobedience, and wives
-to a disorder against their husbands." Yet Leadbetter's Works on
-Astronomy, &c., were held in able repute, and he taught the "Arts and
-Sciences Mathematical" with much success, "at the Hand and Pen, Cock
-Lane, near Shore Ditch, London."
-
-If we close here our notices of Lancashire Astrologers, it is not
-because we suppose the class to be wholly extinct. But those to whom we
-have so far referred, were well acquainted with astronomy, and erred
-only in superadding the delusions of astrology to the truths of that
-real science. The class still remaining in Lancashire, chiefly in
-country districts, are (with very few exceptions) greatly inferior in
-knowledge, and, mixing up the arts of the so-called sorcerer or conjuror
-with the deductions of the so-called "astral science" (of which they are
-blundering smatterers, often ignorant of the very elements of
-astronomy), they do not merit the name of astrologers, but should be
-classed with the numerous "wise men," "cunning women," and other
-varieties of fortune-tellers, who have not even the negative merit of
-being self-deluded by the phenomena of a supposed science; but are in
-their way mere charlatans and cheats, knowingly cozening their credulous
-dupes of as much money as they can extort. Some notices of this class
-will be found in later pages.
-
-
-BELLS.
-
-It is not with Bells generally, but only with Church Bells, and not with
-all their uses, but only such of them as are superstitious, that we are
-called upon to deal here. The large church bells are said to have been
-invented by Paulinus, Bishop of Nola, in Campania (whence the low Latin
-name of Campana), about A.D. 400. Two hundred years afterwards they
-appear to have been in great use in churches. Pope John XIII., in A.D.
-968, consecrated a very large newly-cast bell in the Lateran Church at
-Rome, giving it the name of John. This is the first instance known of
-what has since been called "the baptising of bells," a Roman Catholic
-superstition of which vestiges remain in England in the names of great
-bells, as "Tom of Lincoln," "Great Tom of Oxford," &c. The priests
-anciently rung them themselves. Amongst their superstitious uses, were
-to drive away lightning and thunder; to chase evil spirits from persons
-and places; to expedite childbirth, when women were in labour; and the
-original use of the soul-bell or passing-bell was to drive away any
-demon that might seek to take possession of the soul of the deceased.
-Grose says that the passing-bell was anciently rung for two purposes:
-one, to bespeak the prayers of all good Christians for a soul just
-departing; the other, to drive away the evil spirits who stood at the
-bed's foot and about the house, ready to seize their prey, or at least
-to molest and terrify the soul in its passage. By the ringing of the
-bell they were kept aloof, and the soul, like a hunted hare, gained the
-start, or had what sportsmen call "law." Hence the high charge for
-tolling the great bell of the church, which, being louder, the evil
-spirits must go further off to be clear of its sound, by which the poor
-soul got so much the more start of them; besides, being heard further
-off, it would likewise procure the dying man a greater number of
-prayers. Till about 1830, it was customary at Roman Catholic funerals in
-many parts of Lancashire, to ring a merry peal on the bells, as soon as
-the interment was over. Doubtless the greater the clang of the bells,
-the further the flight of the fiends waiting to seize the soul of the
-departed. There are some monkish rhymes in Latin on the uses of church
-bells, some of which are retained in the following doggerel:--
-
- Men's deaths I tell By doleful knell;
- Lightning and thunder I break asunder;
- On Sabbath all To church I call;
- The sleepy head I raise from bed;
- The winds so fierce I do disperse;
- Men's cruel rage I do assuage.
-
-The following verses (the spelling modernized) further illustrate the
-subject:[28]--
-
- "If that the thunder chance to roar, and stormy tempest shake,
- A wonder is it for to see the wretches how they quake;
- How that no faith at all they have, nor trust in any thing,
- The clerk doth all the bells forthwith at once in steeple ring;
- With wondrous sound and deeper far than he was wont before,
- Till in the lofty heavens dark the thunders bray no more.
- For in these christen'd bells they think doth lie much pow'r and might
- As able is the tempest great and storm to vanquish quite.
-
- I saw myself at Nurnberg once, a town in Toring coast,
- A bell that with this title bold herself did proudly boast:
- By name I 'Mary' called am, with sound I put to flight
- The thunder-cracks and hurtful storms, and every wicked sprite.
- Such things when as these bells can do, no wonder certainly
- It is, if that the papists to their tolling always fly,
- When hail, or any raging storm, or tempest comes in sight,
- Or thunderbolts, or lightning fierce, that every place doth smite."
-
-Wynkin de Worde[29] tells us that bells are rung during thunder-storms,
-to the end that the fiends and wicked spirits should be abashed, and
-flee, and cease the moving of the tempest.[30] Bells appear to have had
-an inherent power against evil spirits, but this power was held to be
-greatly increased by the bells being christened. There is a custom in
-some Lancashire parishes, in ringing the passing-bell, to conclude its
-tolling with nine knells or strokes of the clapper, for a man, six for a
-woman, and three for a child; the vestiges of an ancient Roman Catholic
-injunction.[31] In an Old English Homily for Trinity Sunday,[32] it is
-stated that "the form of the Trinity was found in man; that was, Adam
-our forefather, on earth, one person, and Eve of Adam, the second
-person; and of them both was the third person. At the death of a man
-three bells should be rung, as his knell, in worship of the Trinity, and
-for a woman, who was the second person of the Trinity, two bells should
-be rung." Two couplets on the passing-bell may be inserted here:--
-
- "When the bell begins to toll,
- Lord have mercy on the soul!
-
- When thou dost hear a toll or knell
- Then think upon _thy_ passing-bell."[33]
-
-The great bell which used to be rung on Shrove-Tuesday to call the
-people together for the purpose of confessing their sins, or to be
-"shriven," was called the "Pancake Bell," and some have regarded it
-simply as a signal for the people to begin frying their pancakes. This
-custom prevails still in some parts of Lancashire, and in many country
-places throughout the North of England. Another bell, rung in some
-places as the congregation quits the church on Sunday, is popularly
-known among country people as the "pudding-bell," they supposing that
-its use is to warn those at home to get the dinner ready, as, in homely
-phrase, "pudding-time has come." A Lancashire clergyman[34] states that
-this bell is still rung in some of the old Lancashire parish churches;
-but he does not suggest any more probable reason for tolling this bell.
-The Curfew Bell [_couvre feu_, cover-fire] is commonly believed to be of
-Norman origin; a law having been made by William the Conqueror that all
-people should put out their fires and lights at the eight o'clock
-(evening) bell, and go to bed. In one place the sexton of a parish was
-required to lie in the church steeple, and at eight o'clock every night
-to ring the curfew for a quarter of an hour. The curfew-bell is still
-rung at Burnley, Colne, Blackburn, Padiham, and indeed in most of the
-older towns and many of the villages of Lancashire. It has nearly lost
-its ancient name, and is a remarkable instance of the persistence of an
-old custom or usage, long after all its significance or value has
-ceased. It is now merely called "the eight o'clock bell." A morning
-bell, rung anciently at four, now more commonly at six o'clock, is also
-to be heard in Burnley and other places, and is called "the six o'clock
-bell." Of what maybe called "the vocal ghosts of bells" many stories
-might be told. Opposite the Cross-slack, on the sands near Blackpool,
-out at sea, once stood the church and cemetery of Kilgrimol, long since
-submerged. Many tales are told of benighted wanderers near this spot
-being terrified with the sound of bells pealing dismal chimes o'er the
-murmuring sea.[35]
-
-
-BEAL-TINE OR BELTANE FIRES; RELICS OF BAAL WORSHIP.
-
-Among the dim traces of an extinct worship of Bel, or Baal, the ancient
-sun-god, perceptible still among Celtic peoples, especially in Ireland
-and Scotland, are the three festival periods when fires are kindled on
-eminences in honour of the sun. The _Bel_, or _Belus_, the chief deity
-of the Babylonians and the Assyrians, seems to have been identical with
-the _Baal_ of the Ph[oe]nicians and Carthaginians. The Chaldee _Bel_ and
-the Hebrew _Baal_ alike mean "Lord;" and under these names worship was
-paid by the old Asiatics to the sun, whose light and heat-giving
-properties were typified by fires kindled on the tops of high hills. In
-parts of Lancashire, especially in the Fylde, these traces of a heathen
-cult still linger. "From the great heaps of stones on eminences, called
-Cairns, from the Toot-hills (_i.e._, the hills dedicated to the worship
-of the Celtic god, Tot, or Teut, or Teutates, the same with the Egyptian
-Thoth), and the Belenian eminences, whereon was worshipped Bel, or
-Belus, or Belenus, the sun-god; from these three kinds of heights the
-grand sacred fires of the _Bel-Tine_ flamed thrice a year, at three of
-the great festivals of the Druids, in honour of Beal, or the Sun--viz.,
-on the eve of May-day, on Midsummer Eve, and on the eve of the 1st
-November. Two such fires were kindled by one another on May-day Eve in
-every village of the nation, as well throughout all Gaul as in Britain,
-Ireland, and the outlying lesser islands, between which fires the men
-and the beasts to be sacrificed were to pass; from whence came the
-proverb, 'Between Bel's two fires,' meaning one in a great strait, not
-knowing how to extricate himself. One of the fires was on the cairn, and
-the other on the ground. On the eve of the 1st of November all the
-people, out of a religious persuasion instilled into them by the Druids,
-extinguished their fires. Then every master of a family was religiously
-obliged to take home a portion of the consecrated fire, and to kindle
-the fire anew in his house, which for the ensuing year was to be lucky
-and prosperous. Any man who had not paid all his last year's dues to the
-Druids was neither to have a spark of this holy fire from the cairns,
-nor dared any of his neighbours let him take the benefit of theirs,
-under pain of excommunication; which, as managed by the Druids, was
-worse than death. If, therefore, he would live the winter out, he must
-pay the Druids' dues by the last day of October. The Midsummer fires and
-sacrifices were to obtain a blessing on the fruits of the earth, now
-becoming ready for gathering; as those on the 1st of May, that they
-might prosperously grow; and those on the last of October were a
-thanksgiving for finishing their harvest. But in all of them regard was
-had to the several degrees of increase and decrease in the heat of the
-sun. At the cairn fires it was customary for the lord of the place, or
-his son, or some other person of distinction, to take the entrails of
-the sacrificed animal into his hands, and walking bare-foot over the
-coals thrice, after the flames had ceased, to carry them to the Druid,
-who waited in a whole skin at the altar. If the fire-treader escaped
-harmless, it was reckoned a good omen, and welcomed with loud
-acclamations; but if he received any hurt, it was deemed unlucky both to
-the community and to himself."[36] In Ireland, May-day is called _la na
-Beal tina_, and its eve, _neen na Beal tina_--_i.e._, the day and eve of
-Beal's fire, from its having been in heathen times consecrated to the
-god Beal, or Belus. The ceremony practised on May-day Eve, of making the
-cows leap over lighted straw or faggots, has been generally traced to
-the worship of this deity.[37]
-
-The Irish have ever been worshippers of fire and of Baal, and are so to
-this day. The chief festival in honour of the sun and fire is upon the
-21st [24th] June, when the sun arrives at the summer solstice, or rather
-begins its retrograde motion. "At the house where I was entertained, in
-the summer of 1782, it was told me that we should see at midnight the
-most singular sight in Ireland, which was _the lighting of fires in
-honour of the sun_. Accordingly, exactly at midnight, the fires began to
-appear; and, going up to the leads of the house, which had a
-widely-extended view, I saw, on a radius of thirty miles all around, the
-fires burning on every eminence. I learned from undoubted authority that
-the people danced round the fires, and at the close went through these
-fires, and made their sons and daughters, together with their cattle,
-pass the fire; and the whole was conducted with religious
-solemnity."[38] Bonfires are still made on Midsummer Eve in the northern
-parts of England and in Wales. The 1st of November was considered among
-the ancient Welsh as the conclusion of summer, and was celebrated with
-bonfires, accompanied with ceremonies suitable to these events, and some
-parts of Wales still retain these customs. Dr. Jamieson, in his
-_Dictionary of the Scottish Language_, mentions a festival called
-_Beltane_ or _Beltein_, annually held in Scotland on Old May Day (May
-13th). A town in Perthshire is called _Tillee Beltein_--_i.e._, the
-eminence or high place of the fire of Baal. Near it are two Druidical
-Temples of upright stones, with a well adjacent to one of them, still
-held in great veneration for its sanctity. The doctor describes the
-drawing of bits of a cake, one part of which is made perfectly black
-with charcoal, and he who draws the black bit is considered as "devoted
-to Baal, and is obliged to leap three times through the flame." Pennant,
-in his _Tour in Scotland_, gives a like account, with other ceremonies.
-The custom existed in the Isle of Man on the eve of the 1st of May, of
-lighting _two_ fires on a hill-top, in honour of the pagan god Baal, and
-of driving cattle between those fires, as an antidote against murrain or
-any pestilent distemper for the year following. It was also customary to
-light these fires on St. John's Eve (June 23rd), and up to the present
-time a stranger is surprised to see on this day, as evening approaches,
-fires springing up in all directions around him, accompanied with the
-blowing of horns and other rejoicings.[39] Macpherson notices the
-_Beltein_ ceremonies in Ireland, and adds, "Beltein is also observed in
-Lancashire." On Horwich Moor are two heaps of stones, or cairns, which
-are called by the country people "The Wilder Lads." It is believed that
-on May Day Eve the Druids made prodigious fires on cairns, situated as
-these are, on lofty eminences, which being every one in sight of some
-other like fire, symbolized a universal celebration. These fires were in
-honour of _Beal_, or _Bealan_, latinized into _Belenus_, by which name
-the Gauls and their colonies denoted the sun; and to this time the
-first day of May is by the Irish called _La Bealtine_, or the Day of
-Belen's Fire. It bears a like name among the Highlanders of Scotland,
-and in the Isle of Man.[40]
-
-The last evening in October was called the "Teanlay Night," or "The Fast
-of All Souls." At the close of that day, till of late years, the hills
-which encircle the Fylde shone brightly with many a bonfire; the mosses
-of Marton, &c., rivalling them with their fires, kindled for the avowed
-object of succouring their friends, whose souls were supposed to be
-detained in purgatory. A field near Poulton in which the mummery of the
-"Teanlay" was once celebrated (a circle of men standing with bundles of
-straw, raised on high with forks), is named "Purgatory" by the old
-inhabitants. Formerly this custom was not confined to one village or
-town of the Fylde district, but was generally practised as a sacred
-ceremony.[41]
-
-
-BOGGARTS, GHOSTS, AND HAUNTED PLACES.
-
-What is a Boggart? A sort of ghost or sprite. But what is the meaning of
-the word Boggart? Brand says that "in the northern parts of England,
-ghost is pronounced _gheist_ and _guest_. Hence _bar-guest_, or
-_bar-gheist_. Many streets are haunted by a guest, who assumes many
-strange appearances, as a mastiff-dog, &c. It is a corruption of the
-Anglo-Saxon _gast_, spiritus, anima." Brand might have added that _bar_
-is a term for gate in the north, and that all the gates of York are
-named "bars," so that a _bar-gheist_ is literally a gate-ghost; and many
-are the tales of strange appearances suddenly seen perched on the top of
-a gate or fence, whence they sometimes leaped upon the shoulders of the
-scared passenger. Drake, in his _Eboracum_, says (Appendix, p. 7), "I
-have been so frightened with stories of the _barguest_ when I was a
-child, that I cannot help throwing away an etymology upon it. I suppose
-it comes from Anglo-Saxon _burh_, a town, and _gast_, a ghost, and so
-signifies a town sprite. N.B.--_Guest_ is in the Belgic and Teutonic
-softened into _gheist_ and _geyst_." The "Boggart Hole" therefore means
-the hollow haunted by the bar-gheist or gate-ghost.
-
-
-BOGGART HOLE CLOUGH.
-
-"Not far from the little snug, smoky village of Blakeley or Blackley,
-there lies one of the most romantic of dells, rejoicing in a state of
-singular seclusion, and in the oddest of Lancashire names, to wit, the
-'Boggart Hole.' [In the present generation, by pleonasm, the place is
-named 'Boggart Hole Clough.'] Rich in every requisite for picturesque
-beauty and poetical association, it is impossible for me (who am neither
-a painter nor a poet) to describe this dell as it should be described;
-and I will, therefore, only beg of thee, gentle reader, who,
-peradventure, mayst not have lingered in this classical neighbourhood,
-to fancy a deep, deep, dell, its steep sides fringed down with hazel,
-and beech, and fern, and thick undergrowth, and clothed at the bottom
-with the richest and greenest sward in the world. You descend, clinging
-to the trees, and scrambling as best you may, and now you stand on
-haunted ground! Tread softly, for this is the Boggart's Clough, and see,
-in yonder dark corner, and beneath the projecting mossy stone, where
-that dusky sullen cave yawns before us, like a bit of Salvator's best,
-there lurks that strange elf, the sly and mischievous Boggart. Bounce! I
-see him coming; oh no, it was only a hare bounding from her form; there
-it goes--there!"--Such is the introduction to a tale of a boggart, told
-by Crofton Croker, in Roby's _Traditions of Lancashire_; but which, if
-memory serve us faithfully, is but a localized version of a story told
-of an Irish sprite, and also of a Scotch brownie; for in all three tales
-when the farmer and his family are "flitting" in order to get away from
-the nocturnal disturbance, the sprite pops up his head from the cart,
-exclaiming, "Ay, neighbour, we're flitting!" Tradition, which has
-preserved the name of the clough selected by the Lancashire boggart for
-his domicile, has failed to record any particular pranks of this
-individual elf, and we can only notice this charming little clough, as
-conveying by its popular name the only remaining vestige of its lost
-traditions. Perhaps the best story of this clough is that graphically
-told by Bamford[42] of three friends seeking by a charm (consisting in
-gathering three grains of St. John's fern seed there), to win for one of
-them the love of a damsel who was indifferent to him.
-
-
-BOGGARTS OR GHOSTS IN OLD HALLS.
-
-There is scarcely an old house, or hall, of any antiquity in Lancashire,
-that cannot boast of that proud distinction over the houses of
-yesterday, a ghost or boggart. _Radcliffe Tower_ was haunted by a black
-dog; perhaps in commemoration of the Fair Ellen of Radcliffe, who, by
-order of her stepmother, was murdered by the master cook, and cut up
-small, and of her flesh a venison pasty made for her father's dinner!
-
-_Smithells Hall_, near Bolton, was formerly haunted by the ghost of the
-martyr George Marsh, whose stamped footstep indenting a flagstone, is
-still shown there.
-
-_Ince Hall_ stands about a mile from Wigan, on the left-hand of the high
-road to Bolton. It is a very conspicuous object, its ancient and
-well-preserved front--one of those black and white half-timbered façades
-now almost confined to the two counties palatine of Lancashire and
-Cheshire--generally attracting the notice and inquiry of travellers.
-About a mile to the south-east stands another place of the same name,
-once belonging to the Gerards of Bryn. The manor is now the property of
-Charles Walmsley, Esq., of Westwood, near Wigan. The two mansions _Ince
-Hall_ and _Ince Manor House_, are sometimes confounded together in
-topographical inquiries; and it is not now certain to which of them
-properly belongs a tradition about a forged will and a ghost, on which
-Mr. Roby has founded a very graphic story, in his _Traditions of
-Lancashire_. There are the Boggart of _Clegg Hall_, near Rochdale; the
-_Clayton Hall_ Boggart, Droylsden; the _Clock House_ Boggart, in the
-same neighbourhood; the _Thackergate_ Boggart, near Alderdale; and many
-others: indeed they are too numerous for us to attempt a full
-enumeration. Mr. Higson observes[43] that few sombre or out-of-the-way
-places, retired nooks and corners, or sequestered by-paths, escaped the
-reputation of being haunted. Many domiciles had their presiding boggart,
-and _feeorin'_ [fairies] swarmed at every turn of the dark old lanes,
-and arch-boggarts held revel at every "three-road-end." After dusk, each
-rustle of the leaves, or sigh of the night wind through the branches, to
-the timid wayfarer heralded the instant and unceremonious appearance of
-old wizards and witches, "Nut Nans," and "Clapcans," or the terrific
-exploits of headless trunks, alias "men beawt yeds," or other
-traditionary "sperrits," hobgoblins, and sprites, or the startling
-semblances of black dogs, phantoms, and other indescribable apparitions.
-Aqueous nymphs or _nixies_, yclept "Grindylow," and "Jenny Green Teeth,"
-lurked at the bottom of pits, and with their long, sinewy arms dragged
-in and drowned children who ventured too near. On autumnal evenings, the
-flickering flame (carburetted hydrogen, spontaneously ignited) of the
-"Corpse Candle," "Will-o'-th'-Wisp," or "Jack" or "Peg-a-Lantern" (for
-the sex was not clearly ascertained), performed his or her fantastic and
-impossible jumps in the plashy meadows near Edge Lane, to the terror of
-many a simple-minded rustic. Fairies, also, were believed to commit many
-depredations; such as eating the children's porridge, nocturnally riding
-out the horses, loosing the cows in the shippon, or churning the milk
-whilst "calving," by the fireside, and stealing the butter; and hence,
-behind many a door, as yet observable in Clayton, both of dwelling and
-shippon, was carefully nailed a worn horse-shoe, believed to be a potent
-counter-charm or talisman against their freaks and fancies. There were
-certain localities in the township of Droylsden notorious as the
-rendezvous or favourite promenades of boggarts and feeorin', which after
-nightfall few persons could muster pluck sufficient to linger in, or
-even pass by, for--
-
- "Grey superstition's whisper dread,
- Debarr'd the spot to vulgar tread."
-
-Manifestly pre-eminent was "th' owd Green Lone," which "Jem Hill, th'
-king o' Dreighlesdin," used to assert "swaarmt wi' fairees, witches, un'
-boggerts, un' which nob'dy could mester bur hissel'." The boggart
-located at Thackergate, near Alderdale, has well-nigh scared many a
-sober person out of his senses. Herds of four-footed boggarts used to
-issue from a pit at East End, in form resembling "great big dhogs, wi'
-great glarin' een, as big as tay-cups." The boggart at the
-croft-tenter's lodge (South) Clock-house, as fancy dictated, stalked
-through the chamber and stripped the bedclothes off the sleepers; or,
-assuming gigantic proportions and snow-white vestments, perched in the
-solemn yew-tree, a startling object by contrast. At last, being
-exorcised by an array of divines, it was _laid_ for a time, beneath its
-favourite tree. A field-path from Fairfield to Ashton Hill-lane was
-nightly traversed by a being of another world, mostly representing a
-shadowy lady, draped according to whim, either in a loose white robe, or
-in rustling black silk. For a certain distance she glided in advance of
-the pedestrian, and then, by suddenly vanishing, most likely left his
-hair standing on end. At one of the Greenside farms a murder was said to
-have been committed in the shippon; and the exact spot was supposed to
-be indicated by the impossibility of securely fastening a cow in one
-particular boose; for, however carefully its occupant was chained
-overnight, next morning she was sure to be found at large, and once was
-actually discovered on the shippon balks. Thither, it was believed, the
-cow had been carried by supernatural agency; but, be that as it may, it
-was necessary to lower her cautiously down, with the aid of ropes and
-blocks. At a cottage adjoining, a boggart varied its amusements by
-drumming on the old oaken chest, still preserved; or, growing
-emboldened, shook the hangings of the bed, or rustled amongst the
-clothes; the alarmed occupants sometimes in despair rolling up the
-coverlet, and unavailingly whirling it at their invisible tormentor. At
-a neighbouring farm-house, amongst other vagaries, the boggart would
-snatch up the infant, whilst asleep between its parents, and, without
-awakening them, would harmlessly deposit it on the hearthstone,
-downstairs. "Clayton Ho'" [Hall] was of course honoured with a boggart,
-which at dead of night diversified its pranks by snatching the clothes
-from the beds, trailing heavy iron weights on the floors, or rattling
-ponderous chains through the crazy apartments. These pranks becoming
-insufferable, the help of a clergyman from the parish church was
-obtained; and fortunately, with the aid of counter-spells and
-incantations, he succeeded in _laying_ the spirit for ever, declaring
-that,
-
- "Whilst ivy climbs and holly is green,
- Clayton Hall Boggart shall no more be seen."
-
-Even yet one room in the mansion is named "the Bloody Chamber," from
-some supposed stains of human gore on the oaken floor planks; which,
-however, in reality are only natural red tinges of the wood, denoting
-the presence of iron. Even since the formation of the new road, J.
-W----, the last of the ancient race of boggart-seers in the township,
-used to combat with feeorin' between East End and Droylsden toll-gate;
-but as he died a few years ago without bequeathing his gift, he
-(happily) carried with him his mantle to the grave. At a period just
-within memory, oft, after sunset, has the weary and tardy pedestrian
-quickened his speed on approaching some lonely place, by remembering how
-its tutelar spirit or Boggart could assume at will the shape of a
-rabbit, dog, bear, or still more fearful form. On its appearance, of
-course, the wayfarer fled in affright, and from fear and unwonted
-exertion, often reached home utterly exhausted. Next day the story would
-be widely circulated through the thinly populated district, detailing at
-length (and of course gathering minuteness and improvement in its
-transmission), how "Owd Yethurt o' Grunsho," or "Lung Tum woife," "th'
-neet afore wur welly ta'en by a great black Boggart, wi' great lung
-hurms, un' a whiskin' tail, un' yure as black as soot, un' rowlin' e'en
-as big as saucers." The decadence of all these old superstitions is to
-be attributed to a variety of causes. Straight, well-paved roads;
-increased intellectual activity in useful channels, informing the minds
-of one locality with the ideas of another, the publication of scientific
-works; and lastly, according to one aged unbeliever, the introduction of
-"Owd Ned [the steam-engine], un' lung chimblies; fact'ry folk havin'
-summat else t'mind nur wanderin' ghosts un' rollickin' sperrits." The
-same authority archly declared as a clincher, "There's no Boggarts neaw,
-un' iv ther' were, folk han grown so wacken, they'd soon catch 'em."[44]
-
-
-HOUSE BOGGARTS, OR LABOURING GOBLINS.
-
-These humbler classes of boggarts are by turns both useful and
-troublesome to the farmers of the district where they choose to reside.
-Syke Lumb Farm, near Blackburn, is reputed to be still visited by one
-of these anomalous beings, and many of his mad pranks are still talked
-of and believed in the neighbourhood. When in a good humour, this noted
-goblin will milk the cows, pull the hay, fodder the cattle, harness the
-horses, load the carts, and stack the crops. When irritated by the
-utterance of some unguarded expression or mark of disrespect, either
-from the farmer or his servants, the cream-mugs are smashed to atoms; no
-butter can be obtained by churning; the horses and other cattle are
-turned loose or driven into the woods; two cows will sometimes be found
-fastened in the same stall; no hay can be pulled from the mow; and all
-the while the wicked imp sits grinning with delight upon one of the
-cross-beams in the barn. At other times the horses are unable to draw
-the empty carts across the farm-yard; if loaded, they are upset; whilst
-the cattle tremble with fear, not at any visible cause. Nor do the
-inmates of the house experience any better or gentler usage. During the
-night the clothes are said to be violently torn from off the beds of the
-offending parties, whilst invisible hands drag these individuals down
-the stone stairs by the legs, one step at a time, after a more
-uncomfortable manner than we need describe. Hothershall Hall, near
-Ribchester, was formerly the scene of similar exploits; but the goblin
-is understood to have been "laid" under the roots of a large laurel tree
-at the end of the house, and will not be able to molest the family so
-long as the tree exists. It is a common opinion in that part of the
-country that the roots have to be moistened with milk on certain
-occasions, in order to prolong its existence, and also to preserve the
-power of the spell under which the goblin is laid. None but the Roman
-Catholic priesthood are supposed to have the power of "laying an evil
-spirit," and hence they have always the honour to be cited in our local
-legends. Sometimes, too, they have the credit of outwitting the goblins;
-and many an old farm residence has the reputation of having thus been
-freed from these imps of darkness till they can spin a rope from the
-sands of the Ribble. The mansion at Towneley does not escape the
-imputation of having its "_Boggart_," although its visits are now
-limited to once in seven years, when its thirst for vengeance has to be
-satisfied by the untimely death of one of the residents at the Hall. A
-Sir John Towneley is supposed to have injured the poor of the district,
-nearly four hundred years ago, by "laying-in" a considerable portion of
-common to his park, and, as a punishment for this offence, his soul is
-said to haunt the scenes of his oppression. The peasantry still aver
-"that the old knight's spirit, being unable to rest, wanders about the
-mansion, and may be heard over the very parts taken in, crying, in most
-piteous tones--
-
- "Be warned! Lay out! Be warned! Lay out!
- Around Hore-law and Hollin-hey clough:
- To her children give back the widow's cot,
- For you and yours there is still enough."[45]
-
-The popular story of "The Boggart Flitting" is common to both Lancashire
-and Yorkshire; and indeed to most of the nations in the North of Europe.
-
-Of boggarts the Rev. William Thornber observes,[46] that there were
-several different kinds, having their haunts in that part of the Fylde
-near Blackpool; as, for instance, the wandering ghost of the homicide or
-the suicide; that of the steward of injustice, or that of the victim of
-a cruel murder; again, the lubber-fiends, the horse-boggarts, and the
-house-boggarts, or industrious, yet mischievous imps, haunting
-dwellings. He names, "The headless Boggart of White-gate Lane," as a
-sample of the first class. So was "The Boggart of Staining Hall," near
-Blackpool, said to be the wandering ghost of a Scotchman who was
-murdered there near a tree, which has since marked the deed by perfuming
-the soil around with a sweet odour of thyme. Of another kind were those
-whose appearance was the forerunner of death in some families. The
-Walmsleys, of Poulton-le-Fylde, he adds, were haunted by a boggart of
-this description, always making its appearance with alarming noises
-before the decease of one of the family.
-
-Of the lubber-fiends, house-boggarts, or brownies, so strikingly
-described by Milton,[47] Mr. Thornber mentions the ancient one of
-Rayscar and Inskip, which at times kindly housed the grain, collected
-the horses, and got them ready for the market; but at other times played
-the most mischievous pranks. The famous "Boggart of Hackensall Hall"
-had the appearance of a huge horse, which was very industrious if
-treated with kindness. Every night it was indulged with a fire, before
-which it was frequently seen reclining; and when deprived of this
-indulgence by neglect, it expressed its anger by fearful outcries.
-
-
-HORNBY PARK MISTRESS AND MARGARET BRACKIN.
-
-The following story is told and believed by some persons in Hornby. The
-Park Mistress may be supposed to be the ghost of Lady Harrington, who
-committed murder three hundred years ago. Margaret Brackin was born in
-1745, and died in 1795. The dialect is that of the locality:--
-
- "In days that oud folks tell on still,
- Meg Brackin went up Windy Bank;
- Shou lated kinlin' on the hill,
- Till owr t' Lake Mountains t' sun it sank.
-
- Nat lang at efter t' sun was set,
- And shou hed fill'd her brat wi' sticks,
- Shou sid aside at t' Park wood yett,
- A woman stan'in mang the wicks.
-
- T' leaves on t' trees, they owm'ered t' land,
- And fadin' was the summer light,
- When Marget sid that woman stand
- Donn'd like a ghoost o' oor i' white.
-
- Marget was fear'd, but spak and ex'd,
- 'Hey Missis! let me gang wi' ye,
- I hope as that ye'll nut be vext,
- But it is gitten dark and dree.'
-
- T' Park Mistress e'en shin'd o' wi' leet;
- Shou whyatly cam te Marget's side;
- T' gerss didn't bend underneath her feet;
- Shou seem'd in t' air te float and glide.
-
- As soon's shou cam whare Marget stood,
- Shou gript a tight houd on her hand;
- Shou led her first intul t' Park wood,
- Then back and forret o' owr t' land.
-
- They kept na road, they kept na path,
- They went thro' brackins, scrogs, and briar,
- Marget shou soon was out of breath,
- But t' lady didn't seem te tire.
-
- They baath com down te Wenning's brink,
- And Marget's throat was dry wi' dread,
- But shou dursn't ex te stop and drink,
- Saa forret still that woman led.
-
- Owr shillar and rough staans they trod,
- Intu t' Wenning, then out fra t' stream;
- Surlie their walkin' wasn't snod,
- T' way they travell'd was naan saa weam.
-
- Marget lous'd t' strings of her brat,
- And trail'd it gerss and bushes through,
- Till deg'd and damp and wet it gat;
- Then suck'd it out for t' cooling dew.
-
- Fra Weaver's Ayr they went up t' wood,
- Now gaain' straight and then aslant,
- They niver stopt, they niver stood,
- But raac'd up t' brow saa rough and brant.
-
- Marget could niver gradely say
- Where nesht wi' t' ghoost shou went that neet;
- On Windy Bank, when it was day,
- They fun' her liggin, spent wi' freet.
-
- Marget hed been stout and throddy,
- But t' walk she tuk that summer neet,
- Left lile fatness on her body;
- At efter shou was thin and leet."
-
-
-BOGGARTS IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY.
-
-Having fallen into conversation with a working man on our road to Holme
-Chapel, we asked him if people in those parts were now ever annoyed by
-beings of another world. Affecting the _esprit fort_, he boldly
-answered, "Noa! the country's too full o' folk;" while his whole manner,
-and especially his countenance, as plainly said "Yes!" A boy who stood
-near was more honest. "O, yes!" he exclaimed, turning pale; "the Boggart
-has driven William Clarke out of his house; he flitted last Friday."
-"Why," I asked; "what did the Boggart do?" "O, he wouldn't let 'em
-sleep; he stripp'd off the clothes." "Was that all?" "I canna' say,"
-answered the lad, in a tone which showed he was afraid to repeat all he
-had heard; "but they're gone, and the house is empty. You can go and see
-for yoursel', if you loike. Will's a plasterer, and the house is in
-Burnley Wood, on Brown Hills."[48]
-
-Edwin Waugh, in his story of "_The Grave of Grislehurst Boggart_,"[49]
-says, the most notable boggart of the hilly district towards Blackstone
-Edge, was the Clegg Ho' Boggart, still the theme of many a winter's tale
-among the people of the hills above Clegg Hall. The proverb, "Aw 'm
-heere agen, like Clegg Ho' Boggart," is common there, and in all the
-surrounding villages.... Boggarts appear, however, to have been more
-numerous than they are now upon the country side, when working people
-wove what was called "one lamb's wool" in a day; but when it came to
-pass that they had to weave "three lambs' wools" in a day, and the
-cotton trade arose, boggarts, and fairies, and feeorin' of all kinds,
-began to flee away from the clatter of shuttles. As to the Grislehurst
-Boggart, here is part of the story as told to Waugh, or by him:--"Whau
-it isn't aboon a fortnit sin' th' farmer's wife at the end theer yerd
-seed summat i' th' dyhed time o' th' neet; an' hoo war welly thrut eawt
-o' bed, too, besides--so then" ... "Th' pranks 'at it's played abeawt
-this plaze at time an' time, 'ud flay ony wick soul to yer tell on ...
-unyawkin' th' byes, an' turnin' carts an' things o'er i' th' deep neet
-time; an' shiftin' stuff up and deawn th' heawse when folk are i' bed;
-it's rayther flaysome yo may depend."
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] See Thorpe's _Northern Mythology_, vol. i. pp. 118-231.
-
-[2] See Mallet's _Northern Antiquities_, Keightley's _Mythology of
-Greece and Rome_, and Kelly's _Indo-European Tradition and Folk-lore_.
-
-[3] Keightley's _Fairy Mythology_, pp. 2, 3.
-
-[4] Roby's _Traditions of Lancashire_, p. xiv.
-
-[5] It may be stated that this introductory essay is abridged from two
-papers read before the Historical Society of Lancashire and Cheshire, in
-1859 and 1860, which were written long before the writer saw any of the
-almost identical general deductions and conclusions in Dr. Dasent's
-introduction to his _Popular Tales from the Norse_.
-
-[6] This popular opinion appears to be very ancient and wide-spread; for
-it has been noticed by Moses as prevailing in Egypt.--Exodus xi. 5-7.
-
-[7] The use of the old style in effect, is not yet extinct in
-Lancashire. The writer knows an old man, R. H., of Habergham, about 77
-years of age, who always reckons the changes of the seasons in this
-manner. He alleges the practice of his grandfather and father in support
-of his method; and states with much confidence that--"Perliment didn't
-change t' seeasuns wen thay chang'd t' day o't' munth."
-
-[8] _Conybeare_, p. 242.
-
-[9] Charnock's _Breviary of Natural Philosophy_ in Ashmole's _Theatrum
-Chemicum_, p. 297.
-
-[10] _Companion to Almanac_ for 1837, p. 22.
-
-[11] Maier's _Symbola Ameæ Mensæ_.
-
-[12] Thomson's _Annals of Philosophy_, n. s., vol. vi. p. 241.
-
-[13] Ben Jonson, in his play of the _Alchemist_, has the following
-lines:--
-
- "But when you see th' effects of the Great Medium,
- Of which one part projected on a hundred
- Of Mercury, or Venus, or the Moon,
- Shall turn it to as many of the Sun;
- Nay to a thousand, so ad infinitum,
- You will believe me."
-
-[14] Godwin's _Lives of Necromancers_, Art. Dee. Dr. Dee's _Diary_
-(Camden Soc.) contains many references to his alchemical pursuits.--See
-pp. 7, 22, 25, 27, 28, 37, and 63.
-
-[15] Brewster's _Life of Sir Isaac Newton_, vol. ii. p. 376.
-
-[16] Preface to _Bibl. Chem. Curiosa_, quoted by Thomson, p. 18. For a
-list of Boyle's works connected with alchemy, see the _Philosophical
-Epitaphs_, by W. C.
-
-[17] _Pictorial History of England_, vol. ii. p. 207.
-
-[18] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[19] _F[oe]dera_, vol. ix. p. 379.
-
-[20] _Rot. Parl._, vol. v. p. 314_a_.
-
-[21] _Rot. Parl._, vol. v. p. 314_a_.
-
-[22] _Worthies_, &c., p. 122.
-
-[23] For a copy of this patent in the original Latin, see Baines's
-_Lancashire_, vol. i. p. 406.
-
-[24] Pennant's _London_.
-
-[25] _History of his Life and Times._
-
-[26] Lilly's _Life and Times_, p. 224.
-
-[27] Whatton's _Memoir_ in Baines's _Lancashire_, vol. ii. p. 367.
-
-[28] From Barnaby Googe's Translation of the _Regnum Papisticum_ (or
-Popish Kingdom) of Naogeorgus, fol. 41 _b_.
-
-[29] _Golden Legend._
-
-[30] Hone's _Every-Day Book_, p. 141.
-
-[31] See Durand's _Rationale_.
-
-[32] Strutt's _Manners and Customs_, vol. iii. p. 176.
-
-[33] Ray's _Collection of Old English Proverbs_.
-
-[34] P. P., in _Notes and Queries_, vol. ix. p. 569.
-
-[35] Thornber's _History of Blackpool_, p. 342.
-
-[36] Toland's _History of the Druids_.
-
-[37] Hone's _Every-Day Book_, vol. i. p. 594.
-
-[38] _Gentleman's Magazine_, February, 1795.
-
-[39] Mr. William Harrison's notes on Waldron's _Description of the Isle
-of Man_, p. 125.
-
-[40] Hampson's _Medii Ævi Kalendarium_, vol. i. p. 252.
-
-[41] Rev. W. Thornber's _History of Blackpool_.
-
-[42] _Passages in the Life of a Radical_, vol. i. p. 130.
-
-[43] _History of Droylsden_, p. 67.
-
-[44] Mr. John Higson's _Notices of Droylsden_.
-
-[45] See _Pictorial History of Lancashire_, p. 189, and Whitaker's
-_History of Whalley_, p. 342.
-
-[46] _History of Blackpool_, p. 332.
-
-[47] In his _L'Allegro_, where he
-
- "Tells how the drudging goblin sweat
- To earn the cream-bowl duly set,
- When, in one night, ere glimpse of morn,
- His shad'wy flail had thresh'd the corn,
- That ten day-labours could not end;
- Then lies him down the _lubber-fiend_,
- And stretch'd out all the chimney's length,
- Basks at the fire his hairy strength,
- And, cropful, out of doors he flings,
- Ere the first cock his matin rings."
-
-[48] _Pictorial History of Lancashire._
-
-[49] _Sketches of Lancashire Life_, p. 192.
-
-
-
-
-CHARMS AND SPELLS.
-
-
-These may be placed in two classes--those directed against evil beings,
-witchcraft, &c., and those which may be termed in their object curative
-of "all the ills that flesh is heir to." First as to
-
-
-CHARMS AND SPELLS AGAINST EVIL BEINGS.
-
-These are usually supplied for a consideration by the fortune-tellers,
-astrologers, or "wise men" of a neighbourhood. The following is a
-correct copy of one of these documents which was found over the door of
-a house in the neighbourhood of Burnley. Its occupier had experienced
-"ill luck," and he thus sought protection from all evil-doers:--
-
-"Sun, Moon, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, Saturn, Trine, Sextile,
-Dragon's Head, Dragon's Tail, I charge you all to gard this hause from
-all evils spirits whatever, and gard it from all Desorders, and from
-aney thing being taken wrangasly, and give this famaly good Ealth &
-Welth."
-
-Another individual, well known to the writer, was so far convinced that
-certain casualties that happened to his cattle arose from the practice
-of witchcraft, that he unconsciously resorted to Baal-worship, and
-consumed a live calf in the fire, in order to counteract the influences
-of his unknown enemies. At the same time, almost every door about his
-house had its horse-shoe nailed to it as a charm, to protect all within
-it from demons and witches.
-
-
-A CHARM, WRITTEN IN CYPHER, AGAINST WITCHCRAFT AND EVIL SPIRITS.
-
-Early in the nineteenth century, some men engaged in pulling down a
-barn, or shippon, at West Bradford, about two miles north of Clitheroe,
-were attracted by seeing a small square piece of wood fall from one of
-the beams, and from it dropped a paper, folded as a small letter, but
-measuring, when opened, 7-1/4 by 6 inches. A sort of superscription was
-in large and unknown characters, and inside the paper was nearly covered
-with a species of hieroglyphics, mixed with strange symbols; and in the
-top left corner a table or square of thirty-six small squares, filled
-with characters in red ink, the great bulk of the writing being in black
-ink. The charm belongs to Jeremiah Garnett, Esq., of Roefield,
-Clitheroe, and it was first deciphered by his brother, the late Rev.
-Richard Garnett, of the British Museum, in May, 1825. It is this
-gentleman's explanation, with a very few additions and corrections by
-the present writer, the substance of which is now appended:--The table
-in the top corner is a sort of magic square, called by astrologers "The
-Table of the Sun." It consists of six rows of six small squares each,
-and is so arranged that the sum of the figures in every row of six
-squares, whether counted vertically, horizontally, or diagonally,
-amounts to 111, and the sum total of the table to 666--a favourite
-magical number, being that of "the beast."[50] To mystify the thing as
-much as possible the numerals are expressed by letters, or rather by a
-sort of cypher, chiefly formed from the Greek alphabet. Thus 1 is
-represented by _a_; 2 = _e_; 3 = _i_; 4 = _o_; 5 = _u_; 6 = _l_; 7 =
-_m_; 8 = _n_; 9 = _r_; and 0 = _z_. In a tablet, or space at the top of
-the paper, flanking this table, are five mystical characters, or
-symbols, in red ink. The first consists of the symbols of the sun, and
-of the constellation Leo, which, in astrology, is "the sun's own house,"
-and where, of course, he is supposed to have the greatest power. A word
-in black-ink cyphers, under these symbols, is _Machen_, the cabalistic
-name of "the third [or fourth] heaven;" and the Archangel Michael being
-supposed to preside over the sphere [and to be the "Angel of the Lord's
-Day"], his seal, or cypher, is introduced below these symbols--a series
-of joined lines and swirls, like some long word written in one of the
-older English shorthands. [This figure will be found under "The Lord's
-Day," in the Heptameron of one Peter de Abano.] In cyphers below, in
-black ink, is written his name, "Michael." The next cabalistic character
-represents "the _Intelligence_ of the Sun," and over it, in cypher or
-Greek letters, is written "intelligence." Under this is another
-cabalistic symbol, denoting the "Spirit of the Sun," the word "spirit"
-being written within it. In astrology, every planet is supposed to have
-two beings, or spirits, attached to it, and called its Intelligence and
-its Spirit. The last figure (which contains in a sort of quartering the
-word _sigil_, seal) is "the seal of the Sun" himself, in astrological
-language. All these symbols show that the charm was meant to be put in
-operation on a Sunday, that being the day of the Archangel Michael, as
-well as of the sun. These symbols and table occupy the upper third of
-the paper, the remaining two-thirds being filled with the words of the
-charm itself, in fourteen lines, of a sort of cypher-writing, in which
-the five vowels are represented by a sort of arbitrary character, as are
-most of the consonants, g, l, m, n, and p, being written as Greek
-letters. The fourteen lines may be thus rendered in ordinary letters;
-and it may be supposed that whoever pronounces the incantation, makes
-the sign of the cross wherever it is indicated in the writing:--
-
-Line 1. "apanton [or awanton] + hora + camab. + naadgrass + pynavet
-ayias + araptenas.
-
-2. "+ quo + signasque + payns [or pagns ? pagus] + sut gosikl +
-tetragrammaton +
-
-3. "inverma + amo + {th} [apparently an abbreviation for _Theos_, God] +
-dominus + deus + hora + [here a hole in the paper has destroyed a word]
-+ fiat + fiat + fiat +
-
-4. "ut dicitur decimo septimo capitulo Sancti Matthæi a vigesimo carmine
-
-5. "fide demoveatis montes, fiat secundum fidem, si sit, vel fuerit
-
-6. "ut cunque fascinum vel dæmon habitat vel perturbat hanc
-
-7. "personam, vel hunc locum, vel hanc bestiam, adjuro te, abìre
-
-8. "Sine perturbatione, molestia, vel tumultu minime, nomine
-
-9. "Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sanctu. Amen. Pater noster qui es
-
-10. "in c[oe]lis, sanctificetur nomen tuum, veniat regnum tuum, fiat
-voluntas
-
-11. "tuo, sicut in c[oe]lo etiam in terra, panem nostrum quotidianum da
-
-12. "nobis in diem, et remitte nobis peccata nostra, etenim ipsi
-
-13. "remittimus omnibus qui nobis debent; et ne nos inducas in tentat-
-
-14. "-ionem, sed libera nos a malo. Fiat."
-
- * * * * *
-
-It will be seen that the first three lines of this charm are a sort of
-gibberish, with an admixture of Greek and Latin words, constituting in
-itself a charm, supposed to be efficacious in expelling or restraining
-evil spirits. With the fourth line, then, we begin our translation.
-
-"As it is said in the seventeenth chapter of St. Matthew, at the
-twentieth verse, 'By faith ye may remove mountains: be it according to
-[my] faith,'[51] if there is, or ever shall be, witchcraft [or
-enchantment] or evil spirit, that haunts or troubles this person, or
-this place, or this beast [or these cattle], I adjure thee to depart,
-without disturbance, molestation, or trouble in the least, in the name
-of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen." [Then
-follows the Lord's Prayer in Latin, ending with the word "Fiat" (be it
-done), instead of Amen.] These words are endorsed or written outside the
-paper in two lines:--
-
- "Agla + On [or En] Tetragrammaton."
-
-In a charm cited in the _Heptameron, or Mercurial Elements_ of Peter de
-Abano, these are called "the three secret names." The first two are
-names given to the Deity by the Jewish cabalists. The third (which is
-also the last word in the second line of the charm) is one also
-frequently in use amongst Talmudists and Jewish writers, meaning
-literally "four-lettered," as descriptive of the sacred and
-unpronounceable name ("Jehovah," written in Hebrew by four letters). The
-word is here endorsed, as if to authenticate the whole charm, and to
-show that it is the production of an artist who understood his business;
-for "tetragrammaton," and "fiat," are words of such potency, that a
-charm without them would be of no efficacy whatever. The Rev. Richard
-Garnett adds to his account of this charm (in May, 1825):--"I should
-think that the document is of no great antiquity, probably not more than
-thirty or forty years old. It was doubtless manufactured by some country
-'wise man,' a regular dealer in such articles. There are, I believe,
-several persons within twenty miles of Blackburn, who still carry on a
-trade of this sort."
-
- * * * * *
-
-[In the _Heptameron_, already quoted, is "The Conjuration of the Lord's
-Day," which runs thus:--"I conjure and confirm upon you, ye strong and
-holy angels of God ... [here follow various names of angels, including
-those 'who rule in the fourth heaven'], and by the name of his star,
-which is _Sol_, and by his sign, and by the immense name of the living
-God, and by all the names aforesaid--I conjure thee, Michael, O! great
-angel, who art chief ruler of the Lord's Day," &c.].
-
-Amongst other charms against evil may be named that of our ancestors,
-who, when eating eggs, were careful to break the shells, lest the
-witches should use them to their disadvantage. We do the same for a
-similar reason; it is accounted unlucky to leave them whole. They
-avoided cutting their nails on a Friday, because bad luck would follow;
-but we have improved upon their practice, and lay down the whole theory
-as follows:--
-
- "Cut your nails on a Monday, cut them for news;
- Cut them on Tuesday, a new pair of shoes;
- Cut them on Wednesday, cut them for health;
- Cut them on Thursday, cut them for wealth;
- Cut them on Friday, cut them for woe;
- Cut them on Saturday, a journey you'll go;
- Cut them on Sunday, you cut them for evil,
- For all the next week you'll be ruled by the Devil."
-
-Most grandmothers will exclaim, "God bless you!" when they hear a child
-sneeze, and they sum up the philosophy of the subject with the following
-lines, which used to delight the writer in days of his childhood:--
-
- "Sneeze on a Monday, you sneeze for danger;
- Sneeze on a Tuesday, you kiss a stranger;
- Sneeze on a Wednesday, you sneeze for a letter;
- Sneeze on a Thursday, for something better;
- Sneeze on a Friday, you sneeze for sorrow;
- Sneeze on a Saturday, your sweetheart to-morrow;
- Sneeze on a Sunday, your safety seek,
- The Devil will have you the whole of the week."
-
-These lines may be taken either as charms or spells to produce the
-effect predicted; or as omens or warnings of the results to follow. In
-most parts of Lancashire it is customary for children to repeat the
-following invocation every evening on retiring to bed, after saying the
-Lord's Prayer and the Apostles' Creed:--
-
- "Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,
- Bless the bed that I lie on;
- There are four corners to my bed,
- And four angels overspread,
- Two at the feet, two at the head.
-
- If any ill thing me betide,
- Beneath your wings my body hide.
- Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,
- Bless the bed that I lie on. Amen."[52]
-
-The influence of the "_evil eye_" is felt as strongly in this county as
-in any other part of the world, and various means are resorted to in
-order to prevent its effects. "Drawing blood above the mouth" of the
-person suspected is the favourite antidote in the neighbourhood of
-Burnley; and in the district of Craven, a few miles within the borders
-of Yorkshire, a person who was well disposed towards his neighbours is
-believed to have slain a pear-tree which grew opposite his house by
-directing towards it "the first morning glances" of his evil eye.[53]
-Spitting three times in the person's face; turning a live coal on the
-fire; and exclaiming, "The Lord be with us," are other means of averting
-its influence.
-
-In Lancashire our boys spit over their fingers in order to screw up
-their courage to the fighting point, or to give them luck in the battle.
-Sometimes they do this as a sort of asseveration, to attest their
-innocence of some petty crime laid to their charge. Travellers and
-recruits still spit upon a stone and then throw it away, in order to
-insure a prosperous journey. Hucksters, market-people, &c., always spit
-upon the first money they receive in the morning, in order to insure
-ready sale and "good luck" during the day. "Hansell (they say) is always
-lucky when well wet."
-
-The ancients performed certain rites and ceremonies at the changes of
-the moon; and hence that luminary has added some curious items to the
-popular creed. _Old Mother Bunch's Garland_ is an authority on these
-matters, and amongst many other things it teaches expectant females who
-desire to pry into futurity, to cross their hands on the appearance of
-the new moon, and exclaim--
-
- "All hail! new Moon; all hail to thee!
- I pray thee, good Moon, declare to me
- This night who my true love shall be."
-
-We have noticed, in the introductory chapter, various other minor charms
-and spells to avert evil, or "bad luck," and to secure "good luck" or
-fortune for a coming period, usually a year.
-
-
-THE CROW CHARM AND THE LADY-BIRD CHARM.
-
-The following charms are repeated by children throughout Lancashire and
-Yorkshire:--
-
-_Crow Charm._
-
- "Crow, crow, get out of my sight,
- Or else I'll eat thy liver and lights."
-
-_Lady-Bird Charm._
-
- "Lady-bird, lady-bird, eigh [hie] thy way home,
- Thy house is on fire, thy children all roam;
- Except little Nan, who sits in her pan,
- Weaving gold laces as fast as she can."
-
-I remember as a child sitting out of doors on an evening of a warm
-summer or autumn day, and repeating the crow charm to flights of rooks,
-as they winged home to their rookery. The charm was chanted so long as a
-crow remained in sight, their final disappearing being to my mind strong
-proof of the efficacy of the charm. The lady-bird charm is repeated to
-the insect (the _Coccinella septempunctata_ of Linnæus), the common
-Seven-spotted Lady-bird, to be found in every field and garden during
-summer. The lady-bird is placed upon the child's open hand, and the
-charm is repeated until the insect takes to flight. The warmth and
-moisture of the hand no doubt facilitate this, although the child fully
-believes in the moving power of the charm. The lady-bird is also known
-as _lady-cow_, _cow-lady_, and is sometimes addressed as
-"_Cusha-cow-lady_."[54]
-
-One of the present editors has often joined in the lady-bird charm, in
-the East Riding of Yorkshire, where it ran--
-
- "Cusha-coo-lady, fly away home,
- Thy house is a-fire and all thy bairns gone," &c.
-
-
-PIMPERNEL.
-
-According to a MS. on Magic, preserved in Chetham's Library, Manchester,
-"the herb pimpernel is good to prevent witchcraft, as Mother Bumby doth
-affirm;" and the following lines must be used when it is gathered:--
-
- "Herb pimpernel I have thee found
- Growing upon Christ Jesus' ground;
- The same gift the Lord Jesus gave unto thee,
- When He shed his blood upon the tree.
- Arise up, pimpernel, and go with me,
- And God bless me,
- And all that shall wear thee. Amen."
-
-Say this fifteen days together, twice a day; morning early fasting, and
-in the evening full.--(_MS. Ibid._)
-
-
-THE MOUNTAIN ASH, OR WICKEN OR WIGGEN TREE.
-
-The anti-witching properties of this tree are held in very high esteem
-in the northern counties of England. No witch will come near it; and it
-is believed that its smallest twig crossing the path of a witch, will
-effectually stop her career. To prevent the churn being bewitched, so
-that the butter will not come, the churn-staff must be made of the
-wiggen-tree. So cattle must be protected from witchery by sprigs of
-wiggen over or in the shippons. All honest people wishing to have sound
-sleep must keep the witches from their beds by having a branch of wiggen
-at their bed-heads.[55]
-
-The charms against the malevolence of witches and of evil beings were
-very numerous. A horse-shoe nailed to the door protected the family
-domicile; a _hag_-stone, penetrated with a hole, and attached to the key
-of the stable, preserved the horse within from being ridden by the
-witch; and when hung up at the bed-head, was a safeguard to the master
-himself. A hot heater, put into the churn, kept witches and evil beings
-from spoiling the cream or retarding the butter. The baking of dough was
-protected by a cross, and so was the kneading-trough barred against
-fiendly visitation. Another class of charms was of those used by and
-amongst the witches themselves.
-
-In the "Confession of James Device, prisoner at Lancaster," charged
-with being a witch and practicing witchcraft, before "William Sands,
-James Anderton, and Thomas Cowell, Esqrs.," we have the following
-"charm" to get "_drink_ within one hour after saying the said prayer:"--
-
- "Upon Good Friday I will fast while I may,
- Untill I heare them knell
- Our Lord's own bell.
- Lord in his messe
- With his twelve Apostles good;--
- What hath he in his hand?
- Ligh in leath wand:
- What hath he in his other hand?
- Heaven's doore keys.
- Steck, Steck Hell door,
- Let Chrizun child
- Goe to its mother mild.
- What is yonder that casts a light so farrandly?
- Mine own dear Sonne that's naild to the tree.
- He is naild sore by the head and hand;
- And Holy harne Panne.
- Well is that man
- That Friday spell can,
- His child to learne:--
- A cross of Blue and another of Red,
- As Good Lord was to the Roode.
- Gabriel laid him down to sleep
- Upon the ground of Holy weepe:--
- Good Lord came walking by,
- Sleepest thou, wakest thou, Gabriel?
- No, Lord, I am sted with stick and stake,
- That I can neither sleepe nor wake.
- Rise up, Gabriel, and go with me,
- The stick nor the stake shall never deere thee.
- Sweet Jesus. Our Lord. Amen."
-
-But James Device's charm was not the only one brought to light in this
-memorable trial;--the witches themselves were liable to be bewitched by
-others of superior power, nor were their domestic preparations
-altogether free from the malevolent effects of an envious practitioner.
-In these cases _counter charms_ were of frequent necessity, and none of
-these seem to be of greater efficacy than the following one from the
-"Examination of Anne Whittle, _alias_ Chattox [a celebrated Lancashire
-witch], before Roger Nowell, Esq., of Read, April 2nd, 1612." "A charm
-to help _drink_ that is forespoken or bewitched."
-
- "Three biters hast thou bitten.
- The Heart, ill Eye, ill Tongue.
- Three bitter shall be thy Boote,
- Father, Sonne, and Holy Ghost:--a God's name.
- Five Paternosters, five Avies and a Creede,
- In worship of five woundes of our Lorde."
-
-The Scotch appear to have held similar notions on these subjects with
-ourselves, for in Sinclair's "_Satan's Invisible World Discovered_" we
-find the following charm, "To preserve the house and those in it from
-danger at night:"--
-
- "Who sains the house the night?
- They that sains it ilk a night,
- Saint Bryde and her brate;
- Saint Colme and his hat;
- Saint Michael and his spear;
- Keep this house from the weir--
- From running thiefe--
- And burning thiefe--
- And from and ill Rea:--
- That be the gate can gae:--
- And from an ill wight:--
- That be the gate can light.
- Nine reeds about the house;
- Keep it all the night.
- What is that what I see,
- So red, so bright, beyond the sea?
- 'Tis he was pierced through the hands,
- Through the feet, through the throat,
- Through the tongue,
- Through the liver and the lung.
- Well is them that well may
- Fast on Good Friday."
-
-
-CHARMS TO CURE SICKNESS, WOUNDS, CATTLE DISTEMPER, ETC.
-
-Many are the charms and spells which operate against disease or sickness
-in two ways--they either ward it off, if it threaten; or if too late for
-that, they dispel its virulence, and effect a marvellous cure. No
-medical man, we are told, will rub ointment on a wound with the
-forefinger of his right hand, because it is popularly accounted
-venomous. A dead man's hand is said to have the power of curing wens and
-other excrescences of the neck. Three spiders, worn about the neck, will
-prevent the ague. A string with _nine_ knots tied upon it, placed about
-the neck of a child, is reported to be an infallible remedy for the
-whooping-cough. The same effect also follows from passing the child
-_nine_ times round the neck of a she-ass, according to the popular creed
-of the county. Formerly silver rings, made from the hinges of coffins,
-were worn as charms for the cure of fits, or for the prevention of
-cramp, or even of rheumatism. The superstition continues, though the
-metal is of necessity changed, few coffins having now hinges of silver.
-The stranger in Lancashire can be nowhere, in town or country, amongst
-any considerable number of the humbler classes, without seeing on the
-fingers of women chiefly, but occasionally of men, what are called
-galvanized rings, made of two hoops, one of zinc, the other of copper,
-soldered together. Many wear a belt to charm away rheumatism; brimstone
-carried about the person is regarded as a sure remedy against cramp; so
-also is placing the shoes under the bed, the toes peeping outwards.
-These are the modern charms or cure-alls against disease. Fried mice are
-yet given to children in some parts of Lancashire, to cure non-retention
-of urine during sleep.
-
-
-CHARMS FOR THE TOOTHACHE.
-
-"The following," says the Rev. W. Thornber, of Blackpool, "is a foolish
-charm, yet much accredited amongst us [in the Fylde] for the
-toothache:"--
-
- "Peter sat weeping on a marble stone.
- Jesus came near and said, 'What aileth thee, O Peter?'
- He answer'd and said, 'My Lord and my God!'
- He that can say this, and believeth it for my sake,
- Never more shall have the toothache."
-
-Our "wise men" still sell the following charm for the cure of continued
-toothache, but it must be worn inside the vest or stays, and over the
-left breast:--
-
-"Ass Sant Petter sat at the geats of Jerusalm our Blessed Lord and
-Sevour Jesus Crist Pased by and Sead, What Eleth thee hee sead Lord my
-Teeth ecketh hee sead arise and folow mee and thy Teeth shall never Eake
-Eney moor. Fiat + Fiat + Fiat."[56]
-
-
-VERVAIN, FOR WOUNDS, ETC.
-
-A magical MS. in Chetham's Library, Manchester, of the time of Queen
-Elizabeth, supplies the following metrical prayer, to be said in
-gathering this herb:--
-
- "All-hele, thou holy herb, Vervin,
- Growing on the ground;
- In the Mount of Calvary
- There wast thou found;
- Thou helpest many a grief,
- And stanchest many a wound.
- In the name of sweet Jesus
- I take thee from the ground.
- O Lord, effect the same
- That I do now go about."
-
-The following lines, according to the same authority, were to be said
-when pulling it:--
-
- "In the name of God, on Mount Olivet
- First I thee found;
- In the name of Jesus
- I pull thee from the ground."
-
-
-CHARMS TO STOP BLEEDING.
-
-In an ancient 8vo. MS. volume, described by Dr. Whitaker, in his
-_History of Whalley_, entitled _Liber Loci Benedicti de Whalley_,
-commencing with the translation of the convent from Stanlaw (in 1296)
-and ending about the year 1346, are the following monkish charms (in
-Latin) for stopping hæmorrhage:--
-
-"_For staunching bleeding from the Nostrils, or from Wounds, an approved
-remedy._--O God, be Thou merciful to this Thy servant N., nor allow to
-flow from his body more than one drop of blood. So may it please the Son
-of God. So his mother Mary. In the name of the Father, stop, O blood! In
-the name of the Son, stop, O blood! In the name of the Holy Ghost, stop,
-O blood! In the name of the Holy Trinity.
-
-"_To staunch Bleeding._--A soldier of old thrust a lance into the side
-of the Saviour: immediately there flowed thence blood and water,--the
-blood of Redemption, and the water of Baptism. In the name of the Father
-+ may the blood cease. In the name of the Son + may the blood remain. In
-the name of the Holy Ghost + may no more blood flow from the mouth, the
-vein, or the nose."
-
-To particular persons was attached the virtue of stopping bleeding by a
-word; and a woman of Marton, near Blackpool, whose maiden name was
-Bamber, was so celebrated for her success, that she was sought for to
-stop hæmorrhage throughout a district of twenty miles around.
-
-
-TOUCHING FOR THE KING'S EVIL.
-
-The records of the Corporation of Preston contain two votes of money, to
-enable persons to go from Preston to be touched for the evil. Both are
-in the reign of James II. In 1682, the bailiffs were ordered to "pay
-unto James Harrison, bricklayer, 10_s._ towards the carrying of his son
-to London, in order to the procuring of his Majesty's touch." And in
-1687, when James was at Chester, the council passed a vote that "the
-bailiffs pay unto the persons undermentioned each of them 5_s._ towards
-their charge in going to Chester to get his Majesty's touch: Anne,
-daughter of Abel Mope, ---- daughter of Richard Letmore."[57]
-
-
-CURES FOR WARTS.
-
-Steal a piece of meat from a butcher's stall or his basket, and, after
-having well rubbed the parts affected with the stolen morsel, bury it
-under a gateway at four lane ends, or, in case of emergency, in any
-secluded place. All this must be done so secretly as to escape
-detection; and as the portion of meat decays, the warts will disappear.
-This practice is very prevalent in Lancashire, and two of my female
-acquaintances having tried the remedy, stoutly maintain its
-efficacy.[58]
-
-The following superstition prevails in the neighbourhood of Manchester:
-Take a piece of twine, making upon it as many knots as there are warts
-to be removed; touch each wart with the corresponding knot; then bury
-the twine in a moist place, saying at the same time, "There is none to
-redeem it besides thee." As the process of decay goes on [in the twine]
-the warts gradually disappear.[59]
-
-A snail hung upon a thorn is another favourite spell against warts; as
-the snail wastes away, so do the warts. Again, take a bag of stones,
-equal in number with the warts to be destroyed, and throw them over the
-left shoulder; the warts soon quit the thrower. But whoever chances to
-pick up one or more of these stones, takes with them as many of the
-warts, which are thus transferred from the loser to the finder of the
-stones.
-
-
-CURE FOR HYDROCEPHALUS IN CATTLE.
-
-Dr. Whitaker mentions what he designates as "one practical superstition"
-in the district about Pendle, and peculiar to that neighbourhood. "The
-hydrocephalus (he says) is a disease incident to adolescent animals, and
-is supposed by the shepherds and herdsmen to be contagious; but in order
-to arrest the progress of the disease, whenever a young beast had died
-of this complaint, it was usual, and it has, I believe, been practised
-by farmers yet alive, to cut off the head and convey it for interment
-into the nearest part of the adjoining county. Stiperden, a desert plain
-upon the border of Yorkshire, was the place of skulls." Whitaker thinks
-the practice may have originated in some confused and fanciful analogy
-to the case of Azazel (Numbers xvi. 22), an analogy between the removal
-of sin and disease--that as the transgressions of the people were laid
-upon the head of the scape-goat, the diseases of the herd should be laid
-upon the head of the deceased animal.[60]
-
-
-CATTLE DISORDERS.--THE SHREW TREE IN CARNFORTH.
-
-On an elevation in the township of Carnforth, in the parish of Warton,
-called Moothaw [? Moot Hall], the ancient Saxon courts were held. Near
-this place stood the "Shrew Tree" mentioned by Lucas, which, according
-to rustic superstition, received so much virtue from plugging up a
-number of living shrews, or field-mice, in a cavity prepared for their
-reception in the tree, that a twig cut from it, when freely applied to
-the backs of disordered cattle, would cure them of their maladies.[61]
-
-
-CHARMS FOR AGUE.
-
-"Casting out the ague" was but another name for "casting out the devil,"
-for it was his possession of the sufferer that caused the body to shiver
-and shake. One man, of somewhat better education than his neighbours,
-acquired a reputation for thus removing the ague by exorcism, and was
-much resorted to for many years for relief.
-
-
-STINGING OF NETTLES.
-
-This was at once removed by the saying aloud of some charm in doggerel
-verse.
-
-
-JAUNDICE.
-
-Persons in the Fylde district suffering from this disorder were some
-years ago cured at the rate of a shilling per head, by a person living
-at the Fold, who, by some charm or incantation, performed on the urine
-of the afflicted person, suspended in a bottle over the smoke of his
-fire, was believed to effect most wonderful cures.
-
-
-TO PROCURE SLEEP BY CHANGING THE DIRECTION OF THE BED.
-
-There are two superstitions respecting restlessness. One is that it is
-caused by the bed standing north and south, and that it will be cured if
-the bedstead be so moved as to stand east and west. The other goes
-further, and says that to effect a perfect remedy, not only must the
-bedstead range east and west, but that the head must be towards the
-east. One informant stated that this was because the earth revolved from
-west to east, or in an easterly course.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[50] Revelation xiii. 18.
-
-[51] This is not a literal quotation. The verse runs thus in the
-ordinary version: "If ye have faith as a grain of mustard-seed, ye shall
-say to this mountain, Remove hence to yonder place, and it shall
-remove; and nothing shall be impossible to you."
-
-[52] This is noticed by the Rev. W. Thornber in his _History of
-Blackpool_, p. 99; also in the _Oxford Essays_, 1858, p. 127; and the
-late Rev. James Dugan, M.A., T.C.D., informed the writer that the Irish
-midwives in Ulster use a very similar formula when visiting their
-patients. They first mark each corner of the house, on the outside, with
-a cross, and previously to entering repeat the following words:--
-
- "There are four corners to her bed,
- Four angels at her head:
- Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,
- God bless the bed that she lies on.
- New Moon, new Moon, God bless me,
- God bless this house and family."
-
-[53] See Carr's _Craven Glossary_, vol. i. p. 137.--"Look, sir," said
-Mr. Carr's informant, "at that pear-tree, it wor some years back, sir, a
-maast flourishin' tree. Ivvry mornin, as soon as he first oppans the
-door, that he may not cast his ee on onny yan passin' by, he fixes his
-een o' that pear-tree, and ye plainly see how it's deed away."
-
-[54] Mr. Robert Rawlinson in _Notes and Queries_, vol. iv. p. 55.
-
-[55] See Hone's _Table Book_, vol. i. p. 674.
-
-[56] Carr's _Glossary_, vol. ii. p. 264.
-
-[57] Wm. Dobson, in _Notes and Queries_, 2nd series, vol. iv. p. 287.
-
-[58] T. T. W., ibid., vol. ii. p. 68.
-
-[59] H., ibid.
-
-[60] _History of Whalley._
-
-[61] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-
-
-
-THE DEVIL, DEMONS, &c.
-
-
-THE DEVIL.
-
-The power of the devil, his personal appearance, and the possibility of
-bartering the soul for temporary gain, must still be numbered among the
-articles of our popular faith. Repeating the Lord's Prayer backwards is
-said to be the most effectual plan for "raising the devil;" but when
-the terms of the bargain are not satisfactory, his exit can only be
-secured by making the sign of the cross and calling on the name of
-Christ. In the neighbourhood of Blackburn a story prevails that two
-threshers once succeeded in raising him through the barn floor; but on
-their becoming alarmed at their success, he was summarily dismissed by
-means of a vigorous thrashing on the head with the flails. His
-partiality for playing at cards has long been proverbial, both in
-Lancashire and elsewhere. A near relative of the writer firmly believed
-that the devil had once visited their company when they had prolonged
-their play into Sunday. How he joined them they never rightly knew, but
-(as in the Danish legend respecting a similar visit) his presence was
-first suspected in consequence of his extraordinary "run of good luck;"
-and a casual detection of his _cloven foot_ completed the dispersion of
-the players. It is not always, however, that he obtains the advantage;
-for he has more than once been outwitted by a crafty woman or a cunning
-priest. In the Lancashire tradition we find the poor tailor of Chatburn
-stipulating for _three_ wishes, and, on the advice of his wife,
-consulting the "holy father of Salley" in his extremity. When the fatal
-day arrived, he freed himself from the bond by expressing as his last
-wish, that his tormentor "were riding back to his quarters on a dun
-horse, never to plague him more." The devil, it is said, gave a yell
-which was heard to Colne, on finding that he had lost his man. Mr. Roby
-in his _Traditions_, and the author of the _Pictorial History of
-Lancashire_, give humorous engravings of this noted ride; and the sign
-of "The Dule upo' Dun," over the door of the wayside inn, attests the
-popular belief in the local tradition. From these and many other
-instances it is evident that we have derived many of these superstitions
-from the Saxon and Danish settlers in Northumbria. The essential parts
-of each are identical, and as regards these particular bargains, it may
-be added as a curious circumstance, that in no case is the bond held to
-be binding unless it be signed with the blood of the person
-contracting.[62]
-
-Offering fowls to evil spirits appears to have been an ancient and
-wide-spread practice. It was common to sacrifice a cock to the devil.
-Burns, in his "Address to the Deil," says--"Some cock or cat your rage
-must stop." Music and dancing are also associated in our popular
-superstitions with witches, evil spirits, and the devil. The devils, it
-is said, love music, but dread bells, and have a very delicate sense of
-smells. In the _True and Faithful Relation of what passed between Dr.
-Dee and some Spirits_, we learn that the devil appeared to the doctor
-"as an angel in a white robe, holding a bloody cross in his right hand,
-the same hand being also bloody," and in this guise he prayed, and
-"anabaptistically bewailed the wickedness of the world."[63]
-
-
-RAISING THE DEVIL.
-
-The boys at the Burnley Grammar-school are said to have succeeded on one
-occasion in raising the devil. They repeated the Lord's Prayer
-backwards, and performed some incantations by which, as it is said,
-Satan was induced to make his appearance through a stone flag on the
-floor of the school-house. After he had got his head and shoulders well
-out, the boys became alarmed, and began to hammer him down with the
-poker and tongs. With much ado they drove him back; but the _black mark_
-he had left on the flag was shown in proof of his appearance until the
-school-house was repaired, a few years ago, when the floor was boarded
-over, and the flagstone disappeared.
-
-
-THE DEVIL & THE SCHOOLMASTER AT COCKERHAM.
-
-It is said that the arch Spirit of Evil once took up his abode in
-Cockerham, and so scared and disturbed the inhabitants of that quiet
-place, that at length in public meeting, to consider how to free
-themselves from this fiendish persecution, they appointed the
-schoolmaster, as the wisest and cleverest man in the place, to do his
-best to drive the devil away. Using the prescribed incantation at
-midnight, the pedagogue succeeded in raising Satan; but when he saw his
-large horns and tail, saucer eyes, and long claws, he became almost
-speechless. According to the recognised procedure in such cases, the
-devil granted him the privilege of setting three tasks, which if he
-(Satan) accomplished, the schoolmaster became his prey; if he failed, it
-would compel the flight of the demon from Cockerham. The first task, to
-count the number of dewdrops on certain hedges, was soon accomplished;
-and so was the second, to count the number of stalks in a field of
-grain. The third task was then proposed in the following words,
-according to a doggerel version of the tradition:--
-
- "Now make me, dear sir, a rope of yon sand,
- Which will bear washing in Cocker, and not lose a strand."
-
-Speedily the rope was twisted of fine sand, but it would not stand
-washing; so the devil was foiled, and at one stride he stepped over the
-bridge over Broadfleet, at Pilling Moss. The metrical version of the
-legend is scarcely worth printing.
-
-
-OLD NICK.
-
-According to Scandinavian mythology, the supreme god Odin assumes the
-name of Nick, Neck, Nikkar, Nikur, or Hnikar, when he acts as the evil
-or destructive principle. In the character of Nikur, or Hnikudur, a
-Protean water-sprite, he inhabits the lakes and rivers of Scandinavia,
-where he raises sudden storms and tempests, and leads mankind into
-destruction. Nick, or Nickar, being an object of dread to the
-Scandinavians, propitiatory worship was offered to him; and hence it has
-been imagined that the Scandinavian spirit of the waters became, in the
-middle ages, St. Nicholas, the patron of sailors, who invoke his aid in
-storms and tempests. This supposition (which has a degree of probability
-almost amounting to certainty) receives countenance from the great
-devotion still felt by the Gothic nations towards St. Nicholas, to whom
-many churches on the sea-shore are dedicated. The church of St.
-Nicholas, in this situation at Liverpool, was consecrated in 1361; and,
-says Mr. Baines,[64] "in the vicinity there formerly stood a statue of
-St. Nicholas; and when the faith in the intercession of saints was more
-operative than at present, the mariners were wont to present a
-peace-offering for a prosperous voyage on their going out to sea, and a
-wave-offering on their return; but the saint, having lost his votaries,
-has long since disappeared." The Danish Vikings called the Scandinavian
-sea-god _Hold Nickar_, which in time degenerated into the ludicrous
-expression, "Old Nick."[65]
-
-Another writer on this subject says:--We derive the familiar epithet of
-"_Old Nick_" from the Norwegian Nök, the Norse Nikr, or the Swedish
-Neck; and no further proof of their identity is required than a
-comparison between the attributes possessed in common by all these
-supernatural beings. The _Nök_ is said to require a human sacrifice once
-a year, and some one is therefore annually missing in the vicinity of
-the pond or river where this sprite has taken up its abode. The males
-are said to be very partial to young maidens, whom they seize and drag
-under the water; whilst those of the opposite sex are quite as
-attractive and dangerous to the young fishermen who frequent the rivers.
-The German _Nixes_ possess the same attributes. Both sexes have large
-green teeth; and the male wears a green hat, which is frequently
-mistaken by his victims for a tuft of beautiful vegetation. He is said
-to kill without mercy whenever he drags a person down; and a fountain of
-blood, which shoots up from the surface of the water, announces the
-completion of the deed. A perfect identification of this with our own
-popular belief is now easy. Nothing is more common at present than for
-children who reside in the country to be cautioned against venturing too
-near the water's brink, lest "_Green Teeth_" or "_Bloody Bones_" should
-pull them in. "_Old Nick_" is said to lurk under the shady willows which
-overhang the deep water; and the bubbles of gas which may be observed
-escaping from the bottoms of quiet pools are attributed to the movements
-of the water-sprites which lurk beneath.
-
-
-DEMONOLOGY.
-
-A recent writer in _Blackwood's Magazine_ asks if Demonology "was not a
-vague spirit-worship, the ancient religion of the bulk of mankind?"
-"This Demonology" (he continues) "may be said to have been imported into
-Christianity in its early days. It was the universal belief of the Pagan
-world, and not easily to be eradicated; as the early Church accepted
-things pretty much as it found them, and turned them to account;
-teaching that these objects of heathen awe and reverence were fallen
-angels, whose power for evil had been permitted to exist uncontrolled
-till the advent of our Saviour. The early Roman Church elaborately
-imitated, if it did not exceed, the Greeks and Romans in their
-demonology. Every class of men had their guardians, who practically
-represented the _Dii minores_ or _minorum gentium_; the hills and dales
-and woods had their patrons, the successors of the Orcades, Napææ, and
-the Dryades; every kind of disease, from the toothache to the gout, had
-its special healer, and even birds and beasts their spiritual
-protectors." No one who has paid the most passing attention to the
-folk-lore of this country can have failed to note amongst us, even yet,
-the remnants of this curious superstition. In 1531, John Cousell, of
-Cambridge, and John Clarke, of Oxford, two learned clerks, applied for
-and obtained from Henry VIII. a formal license to practise sorcery, and
-to build churches, a quaint combination of evil and antidote. They
-professed power to summon "the sprytes of the ayre," and to make use of
-them generally, and particularly in the discovery of treasure and stolen
-property. Their seventh petition is to build churches, bridges, and
-chapels, and to have cognizance of all sciences. One of their petitions
-refers to a certain "noyntment" to see the sprytes, and to speak with
-them dayly. Strange that Henry VIII. should have granted this license,
-seeing that a statute was passed in his reign, making "witchcraft and
-sorcery felony, without benefit of clergy."[66] Bishop Jewell, preaching
-before Queen Anne, on the marvellous increase of witches and sorcerers,
-after describing how the victims pined away, even unto death, loyally
-concluded his sermon thus, "I pray God they never practise further than
-upon the subject." The following charm or spell against St. Vitus's
-Dance was, and very likely is still, in use in Devonshire. It was
-written on parchment, and carried about by an old woman so afflicted:--
-
- "Shake her, good Devil,
- Shake her once well;
- Then shake her no more,
- Till you shake her in hell."
-
-Some of our laws against sorcery remained unrepealed a little more than
-forty years ago. The Irish law against sorcery was only repealed in
-1831. So late as August, 1863, an old man of eighty was flung into a
-mill-stream in the parish of Little Hedingham, being what is called
-"swimming for a wizard," and he died of his maltreatment. One curious
-book on Demonology is entitled "An Account of Demoniacs, and the power
-of casting out Demons, both in the New Testament, and the four first
-Centuries," by William Whiston, M.A. (London, 1737, 8vo). He observes
-that "The symptoms of these demoniacal distresses were very different
-from the symptoms of other diseases, and even included wild raving,
-irregular convulsions of the body, unnatural contortions of the limbs,
-or dismal malady of the mind, and came upon the unhappy patients by
-terrible fits of paroxysms, to the amazement of the spectators, and the
-horrible affection of the possessed, and included the sorest illness and
-madness in the world." The same symptoms revived in the extraordinary
-epidemic called the _hystero-demonopathy_, which visited Morzine, in
-Savoy, in 1857. The persons afflicted were violently and unnaturally
-convulsed; now rushed phrenetically into the woods, or to the river, now
-were subject to fits of coma; were insensible to pain; believed
-themselves to be haunted by evil spirits; were violent, but in their
-violence injured no one; and exhibited generally symptoms not observed
-in any known disorder.[67] The people of Morzine believed themselves
-possessed by spirits of dead persons, a peculiarity which appears to
-have occurred in many cases during the prevalence of the epidemic.
-
-
-DEMON AND GOBLIN SUPERSTITIONS.
-
-Among the more prominent of the demon superstitions prevalent in
-Lancashire, we may instance that of the _Spectre Huntsman_, which
-occupies so conspicuous a place in the folk-lore of Germany and the
-North. This superstition is still extant in the Gorge of Cliviger, where
-he is believed to hunt a milk-white doe round the Eagle's Crag in the
-Vale of Todmorden, on All-Hallows' Eve. His hounds are said to fly
-yelping through the air on many other occasions, and under the local
-name of "_Gabriel Ratchets_," are supposed to predict death or
-misfortune to all who hear the sounds.[68] The "_Lubber Fiend_," or
-stupid demon, still stretches his hairy length across the hearth-stones
-of the farm-houses in the same district, and the feats of the "_Goblin
-Builders_" form a portion of the popular literature of almost every
-locality. They are said to have removed the foundations of Rochdale
-Church from the banks of the river Roach, up to their present elevated
-position. Samlesbury Church, near Preston, possesses a similar
-tradition. The "_Demon Pig_" not only determined the site of St.
-Oswald's Church, at Warwick, but gave a name to the parish. The
-parochial church at Burnley, it is said, was originally intended to be
-built on the site occupied by the old Saxon Cross in Godly Lane; but,
-however much the masons might have built during the day, both the stones
-and the scaffolding were invariably found where the church now stands,
-on their coming to work next morning. The local legend states that on
-this occasion, also, the goblins took the form of _pigs_, and a rude
-sculpture of such an animal, on the south side of the steeple, lends its
-aid to confirm and perpetuate the story.
-
-Our peasantry retain the notion so prevalent in North Germany, that the
-_Night-mare_ is a demon, which sometimes takes the form of a cat or a
-dog, and they seek to counteract its influence by placing their shoes
-under the bed with the toes outwards, on retiring to rest.
-
-The _Water Sprites_, believed in by our ancestors in the north of
-England, still form a portion of the folk-lore of Lancashire and
-Yorkshire. There is scarcely a stream of any magnitude in either county
-which does not possess a presiding spirit in some part of its course.
-The stepping-stones at Bungerley, near Clitheroe, are said to be haunted
-by a malevolent sprite, who assumes almost as many shapes as Proteus of
-old. He is not known by any particular designation, nor are there any
-traditions to account for his first appearance; but at least _one_ life
-in every _seven_ years is required to appease the anger of the spirit
-of the Ribble at this place. It was at these stepping-stones that King
-Henry VI. was treacherously betrayed by a Talbot of Bashall and others;
-whence may have arisen a tradition of a malevolent spirit at that place.
-
-Our local literature possesses Roby's traditions of "The _Mermaid_ of
-Martin Mere," which has given permanence to the popular notions
-respecting mermen and mermaids. The _Schrat_, or _Schritel_, of the
-German nations, is identical with the more ancient _Skrat_ of the
-Scandinavians. He is noted for making game of persons who are out late
-at night. Occasionally he places himself on a cart, or other vehicle,
-which then becomes so heavy that the horses are unable to move the load.
-They begin to tremble and perspire, as if sensible of the presence of
-something diabolical; but after a short time "_Old Scrat_" slips off
-behind, and disappears with a malicious laugh. In Lancashire we are no
-strangers to Old Scrat and his doings. With many the name is merely a
-synonyme for that of the devil; but our city carters are able to mark
-the distinction, and have besides a goodly store of anecdotes respecting
-the heavy loads which their horses have sometimes been compelled to
-draw, when nothing could be seen except the empty cart. One of them
-assured me that on such occasions his horses reared, and became almost
-frantic; their manes stood erect; and he himself could see the wicked
-imp actually dancing with delight between their ears. Another very
-respectable person affirms that, not many years ago, as a funeral was
-proceeding to church, the coffin became so heavy that it could not be
-carried. On this being made known to a clergyman, who was present, he
-offered up a short prayer, and commanded Old Scrat to take his own. This
-was no sooner done than the excessive weight was felt no more, and the
-corpse was carried forward to the place of interment. Similar
-superstitions prevail in the more northern cities with but slight
-variations; and hence sufficiently indicate their common origin. The
-_Barguest_, or _Barn-ghaist_ of the Teutons, is also reported to be a
-frequent visitor in Lancashire. The appearance of this sprite is
-considered as a certain death-sign, and has obtained the local names of
-"_Trash_" and "_Skriker_." He generally appears to one of the family
-from whom Death is about to select his victim, and is more or less
-visible, according to the distance of the event. I have met with persons
-to whom the barguest [bar-ghaist, _i.e._, gate-ghost] has assumed the
-form of a white cow, or a horse; but on most occasions "Trash" is
-described as having the appearance of a very large dog, with very broad
-feet, shaggy hair, drooping ears, and eyes "as large as saucers." When
-walking, his feet make a loud splashing noise, like old shoes in a miry
-road, and hence the name of "Trash." The appellation "_Skriker_" has
-reference to the screams uttered by the sprite, which are frequently
-heard when the animal is invisible. When followed by any individual he
-begins to walk backwards with his eyes fixed full on his pursuer, and
-vanishes on the slightest momentary inattention. Occasionally he plunges
-into a pool of water, and at times he sinks at the feet of the persons
-to whom he appears with a loud splashing noise, as if a heavy stone were
-thrown into the miry road. Some are reported to have attempted to strike
-him with any weapon they had at hand, but there was no substance to
-receive the blows, although the Skriker kept his ground. He is said to
-frequent the neighbourhood of Burnley at present, and is mostly seen in
-Godly Lane, and about the parish church. But he by no means confines his
-visits to the churchyard, as similar sprites are said to do in other
-parts of England and Wales.[69]
-
-
-DISPOSSESSING A DEMONIAC.
-
-Richard Rothwell, a native of Bolton-le-Moors, born about 1563, a
-minister of the Gospel, ordained by Dr. Whitgift, Archbishop of
-Canterbury, who was called by his biographer, the Rev. Stanley Gower,
-minister of Dorchester--"_Orbis terrarum Anglicarum oculus_" (the eye of
-our English world), is said to have dispossessed one John Fox, near
-Nottingham, of a devil; with whom he had a discourse, by way of question
-and answer, a good while. Such dialogues are said to be frequent amongst
-the Popish exorcists, but being rare amongst Protestants, is the more to
-be observed, and not disbelieved, because vouched by so good a man. Mr.
-Rothwell died at Mansfield, Notts, in 1627, aged sixty-four.[70]
-
-[There is a long account of this contest with the devil in Rothwell's
-_Life_, by Gower, pp. 178-183. After the devil had been driven out of
-him, John Fox was dumb for three years, but afterwards had speech
-restored to him, and wrote a book about the temptations the devil
-haunted him with.]
-
-
-DEMONIACAL POSSESSION IN 1594.
-
-Towards the close of the sixteenth century, seven persons in Lancashire
-were alleged to be "possessed by evil spirits." According to the
-narrative of the Rev. John Darrell, himself a principal actor in the
-scene, there lived in 1594 at Cleworth (now called Clayworth), in the
-parish of Leigh, one Nicholas Starkie, who had only two children, John
-and Ann; the former ten and the latter nine years of age. These
-children, according to Mr. Darrell, became possessed with an evil
-spirit; and John Hartlay, a reputed conjuror, was applied to, at the end
-of from two to three months, to give them relief, which he effected by
-various charms, and the use of a magical circle with four crosses, drawn
-near Mr. Starkie's seat, at Huntroyd, in the parish of Whalley. Hartlay
-was conjuror enough to discover the difference between Mr. Starkie's
-table and his own, and he contrived to fix himself as a constant inmate
-in his benefactor's family for two or three years. Being considered so
-essential to their peace, he advanced in his demands, till Mr. Starkie
-demurred, and a separation took place; but not till five other persons,
-three of them the female wards of Mr. Starkie, and two other females,
-had become "possessed," through the agency of Hartlay, "and it was
-judged in the house that whomsoever he kissed, on them he breathed the
-devil." According to the narrative, all the seven demoniacs sent forth a
-strange and supernatural voice of loud shouting. In this extremity Dr.
-Dee, the Warden of Manchester College, was applied to, to exorcise the
-evil spirits; but he refused to interfere, advising that they should
-call in some godly preachers, with whom he would, if they thought
-proper, consult concerning a public or private fast; at the same time he
-sharply reproved Hartlay for his fraudulent practices. Some remission of
-violence followed, but the evil spirits soon returned, and Mr.
-Starkie's house became a perfect bedlam. John Starkie, the son, was "as
-fierce as a madman, or a mad dog;" his sister Anne was little better;
-Margaret Hardman, a gay, sprightly girl, was also troubled, and aspired
-after all the splendid attire of fashionable life, calling for one gay
-thing after another, and repeatedly telling her "lad," as she called her
-unseen familiar, that she would be finer than him. Ellinor, her younger
-sister, and Ellen Holland, another of Mr. Starkie's wards, were also
-"troubled;" and Margaret Byrom, of Salford, a woman of thirty-three, who
-was on a visit at Cleworth, became giddy, and partook of the general
-malady. The young ladies fell down, as if dead, while they were dancing
-and singing, and "playing the minstrel," and talked at such a rate that
-nobody could be heard but themselves. The preachers being called in,
-according to the advice of Dr. Dee, they inquired how the demoniacs were
-handled. The "possessed" replied that an angel, like a dove, came from
-God, and said that they must follow him to heaven, which way soever he
-would lead them. Margaret Hardman then ran under a bed, and began to
-make a hole, as she said, that her "lad" (or familiar) might get through
-the wall to her; and, amongst other of her feats, she would have leaped
-out of the window. The others were equally extravagant in their
-proceedings, but when they had the use of their feet, the use of their
-tongues was taken away. The girls were so sagacious that they foretold
-when their fits would come on. When they were about any game or sport,
-they seemed quite happy; but any godly exercise was a trouble to them.
-Margaret Byrom was grievously troubled. She thought in her fits that
-something rolled in her inside like a calf, and lay ever on her left
-side; and when it rose up towards her heart, she thought the head and
-nose thereof had been full of nails, wherewith being pricked, she was
-compelled to shriek aloud, with very pain and fear; sometimes she barked
-and howled, and at others she so much quaked that her teeth chattered in
-her head. At the sight of Hartlay she fell down speechless, and saw a
-great black dog, with a monstrous tail and a long chain, running at her
-open-mouthed. Six times within six weeks the spirit would not suffer her
-to eat or drink, and afterwards her senses were taken away, and she was
-as stiff as iron. Two nights before the day of her examination against
-Hartlay, who was committed to Lancaster Castle, the devil appeared to
-her in his likeness, and told her to speak the truth! On the 16th of
-March, Maister George More, pastor of Cawlke, in Derbyshire, and Maister
-John Darrell, afterwards preacher at St. Mary's, in Nottingham, came to
-Cleworth, when they saw the girls grievously tormented. Jane Ashton, the
-servant of Mr. Starkie, howled in a supernatural manner--Hartlay had
-given her kisses, and promised her marriage. The ministers having got
-all the seven into one chamber, gave them spiritual advice; but, on the
-Bible being brought up to them, three or four of them began to scoff,
-and called it--"Bib-le, Bab-le; Bible, Bable." The next morning they
-were got into a large parlour, and laid on couches, when Maister More
-and Maister Dickens, a preacher (and their pastor), along with Maister
-Darrell and thirty other persons, spent the day with them in prayer and
-fasting, and hearing the word of God. All the parties afflicted remained
-in their fits the whole of the day. Towards evening every one of them,
-with voice and hands lifted up, cried to God for mercy, and He was
-pleased to hear them, so that six of them were shortly dispossessed, and
-Jane Ashton in the course of the next day experienced the same
-deliverance. At the moment of dispossession, some of them were miserably
-rent, and the blood gushed out both at the nose and mouth. Margaret
-Byrom said that she felt the spirit come up her throat, when it gave her
-"a sore lug" at the time of quitting her, and went out of the window
-with a flash of fire, she only seeing it. John Starkie said his spirit
-left him, in appearance like a man with a hunch on his back, very
-ill-favoured; Ellinor Hardman's was like an urchin; Margaret Byrom's
-like an ugly black man, with shoulders higher than his head. Two or
-three days afterwards the unclean spirits returned, and would have
-re-entered had they not been resisted. When they could not succeed
-either by bribes or entreaties, they threw some of them [the
-dispossessed] violently down, and deprived others of the use of their
-legs and other members; but the victory was finally obtained by the
-preachers, and all the devils banished from Mr. Starkie's household.
-Meanwhile Hartlay the conjuror, who seems to have been a designing
-knave, after undergoing an examination before two magistrates, was
-committed to Lancaster Castle, where, on the evidence of Mr. Starkie and
-his family, he was convicted of witchcraft, and sentenced to death,
-principally, as it is stated, for drawing the magic circle, which seems
-to have been the least part of his offence, though the most obnoxious to
-the law. In this trial _spectral evidence_ was adduced against the
-prisoner, and the experiment was tried of saying the Lord's Prayer. When
-it no longer served his purpose he endeavoured to divest himself of the
-character of a conjuror, and declared that he was not guilty of the
-crime for which he was doomed to suffer; the law, however, was
-inexorable, and he was brought to execution. On the scaffold he
-persisted in declaring his innocence, but to no purpose; the executioner
-did his duty, and the criminal was suspended. While hanging, the rope
-broke, when Hartlay confessed his guilt; being again tied up, he died,
-the victim of his own craft, and of the infatuation of the age in which
-he lived. On the appearance of Mr. Darrell's book, the _Narrative_ of
-these remarkable events, a long controversy arose on the doctrine of
-Demonology, and it was charged upon him by the Rev. Samuel Harsnet,
-afterwards Bishop of Chichester and Norwich, and Archbishop of York,
-that he made a trade of casting out devils, and that he instructed the
-"possessed" how to conduct themselves, in order to aid him in carrying
-on the imposition. Mr. Darrell was afterwards examined by the Queen's
-Commissioners; and by the full agreement of the whole court, he was
-condemned as a counterfeit, deposed from the ministry, and committed to
-close confinement, there to remain for further punishment. The clergy,
-in order to prevent the scandal brought upon the Church by false
-pretensions to the power of dispossessing demons, soon afterwards
-introduced a new canon into the ecclesiastical law, in these
-terms:--"That no minister or ministers, without license and direction of
-the bishop, under his hand and seal obtained, attempt, upon any pretence
-whatever, either of possession or obsession, by fasting and prayer, to
-cast out any devil or devils, under pain of the imputation of imposture,
-or cozenage, and deposition from the ministry." Some light is cast upon
-the case of Mr. Starkie's household by "A Discourse Concerning the
-Possession and Dispossession of Seven Persons in one Family in
-Lancashire," written by George More, a puritanical minister, who had
-engaged in exorcising devils. This discourse agrees substantially with
-Darrell's narrative, but adds some noteworthy facts: amongst others,
-that he (Mr. More) was a prisoner in the Clinke for nearly two years,
-for justifying and bearing witness to the facts stated by Darrell. He
-also states that Mr. Nicholas Starkie having married a gentlewoman that
-was an inheritrix [Ann, widow of Thurstan Barton, Esq., of Smithells,
-and daughter and sole heiress of John Parr, Esq., of Kempnough, and
-Cleworth, Lancashire], and of whose kindred some were Papists;
-these--partly for religion, and partly because the estate descended but
-to heirs male--prayed for the perishing of her issue, and that four sons
-pined away in a strange manner; but that Mrs. Starkie, learning this
-circumstance, estated her lands on her husband, and _his_ heirs, failing
-issue of her own body; after which a son and daughter were born, who
-prospered _well till_ they became "possessed."[71]
-
-
-DEMONIACAL POSSESSION IN 1689.
-
-Richard Dugdale, called "The Surey Demoniac," was a youth just rising
-into manhood, a gardener, living with his parents at Surey, in the
-parish of Whalley, addicted to posture, and distinguished even at school
-as a posture-master and ventriloquist. During his "possession" he was
-attended by six Dissenting ministers--the Revs. Thomas Jolly, Charles
-Sagar, Nicholas Kershaw, Robert Waddington, Thomas Whalley, and John
-Carrington, who were occasionally assisted at the meetings held to
-exorcise the demon by the Rev. Messrs. Frankland, Pendlebury, and Oliver
-Heywood. According to the narrative, under their sanction, entitled _An
-Account of Satan's entering in and about the Body of Richard Dugdale,
-and of Satan's removal thence through the Lord's blessing of the
-within-mentioned Ministers and People_, when Dugdale was about nineteen
-years of age he was seized with an affliction early in 1689; and from
-the strange fits which violently seized him, he was supposed to be
-possessed by the devil. When the fit was upon him "he shewed great
-despite [says the narrative], against the ordinary of God, and raged as
-if he had been nothing but a devil in Richard's bodily shape; though
-when he was not in his fits he manifested great inclination to the word
-of God and prayer; for the exercise of which in his behalf he desired
-that a day of fasting might be set apart, as the only means from which
-he could expect help, seeing that he had tried all other means, lawful
-and unlawful." Meetings were accordingly appointed of the ministers, to
-which the people crowded in vast numbers. These meetings began on the
-8th May, 1689, and were continued about twice a month till the February
-following. At the first meeting the parents of the demoniac were
-examined by the ministers, and they represented that "at Whalley
-rush-bearing, on the James's tide, in July, 1688, there was a great
-dancing and drinking, when Richard offered himself to the devil, on
-condition that he would make him the best dancer in Lancashire." After
-becoming extremely drunk he went home, where several apparitions
-appeared to him, and presented to him all kinds of dainties and fine
-clothing, with gold and precious things, inviting him at the same time
-to "take his fill of pleasure." In the course of the day some compact,
-or bond, was entered into between him and the devil, after which his
-fits grew frequent and violent. While in these fits his body was often
-hurled about very desperately, and he abused the minister and blasphemed
-his Maker. Sometimes he would fall into dreadful fits; at others he
-would talk Greek and Latin, though untaught; sometimes his voice was
-small and shrill, at others hollow and hideous. Now he was as light as a
-bag of feathers, then as heavy as lead. At one time he upbraided the
-ministers for their neglect, at others he said they had saved him from
-hell. He was weather-wise and money-wise by turns; he could tell when
-there would be rain, and when he should receive presents. Sometimes he
-would vomit stones an inch and a half square, and in others of his
-trances there was a noise in his throat, as if he was singing psalms
-inwardly. But the strongest mark of demoniacal possession consisted in a
-lump, which rose from the thick of his leg, about the size of a mole,
-and did work up like such a creature towards the chest of his body, till
-it reached his breast, when it was as big as a man's fist, and uttered
-strange voices. He opened his mouth at the beginning of his fits so
-often, that it was thought spirits went in and out of him. In agility he
-was unequalled, "especially in dancing, wherein he excelled all that the
-spectators had seen, and all that mere mortals could perform. The
-demoniac would for six or seven times together leap up, so as that part
-of his legs might be seen shaking and quivering above the heads of the
-people, from which heights he oft fell down on his knees, which he long
-shivered and traversed on the ground, at least as nimbly as other men
-can twinkle or sparkle their fingers; thence springing up into his high
-leaps again, and then falling on his feet, which seemed to reach the
-earth but with the gentlest and scarce perceivable touches when he made
-his highest leaps." And yet the divines by whom he was attended most
-unjustly rallied the devil for the want of skill in his pupil. The Rev.
-Mr. Carrington, addressing himself to the devil, says, "Cease dancing,
-Satan, and begone from him. Canst thou dance no better, Satan? Ransack
-the old record of all past times and places in thy memory: canst thou
-not there find out some other way of finer trampling? Pump thine
-invention dry! Cannot that universal seed-plot of subtle wiles and
-stratagems spring up one new method of cutting capers? Is this the top
-of skill and pride, to shuffle feet and brandish knees thus, and to trip
-like a doe, and skip like a squirrel? And wherein differs thy leapings
-from the hoppings of a frog, or bounces of a goat, or friskings of a
-dog, or gesticulations of a monkey? And cannot a palsy shake such a
-loose leg as that? Dost thou not twirl like a calf that has the turn,
-and twitch up thy houghs just like a spring-hault [? spring-galled]
-tit?" In some of his last fits he announced that he must be either
-killed or cured before the 25th March. This, says the deposition of his
-father and mother, and two of his sisters, proved true; for on the 24th
-of that month he had his last fit, the devil being no longer able to
-withstand the means used with so much vigour and perseverance to expel
-him; one of the most effectual of which was a medicine, prescribed, in
-the way of his profession, by Dr. Chew, a medical practitioner in the
-neighbourhood. Mr. Zachary Taylor asserts that the preachers,
-disappointed and mortified at their ill success in Dugdale's case, gave
-it out that some of his connexions were witches, and in contract with
-the devil, and that, they supposed, was the cause why they had not been
-able to relieve him. Under this impression they procured some of the
-family to be searched, that they might see if they had not teats, or the
-devil's mark; and they tried them by the test of saying the Lord's
-Prayer. Some remains of the evil spirit, however, seem still to have
-possessed Richard; for, though after this he had no fits, yet once, when
-he had got too much drink, he was after another manner than drunken
-persons usually are. In confirmation of which feats, not only the eight
-ministers, but twenty respectable inhabitants, affixed their
-attestations to a document prepared for the purpose; and three of the
-magistrates of the district--Hugh, Lord Willoughby [of Parham], Ralph
-Egerton, Esq., and Thos. Braddyll, Esq.--received depositions from the
-attesting parties. This monstrous mass of absurdity, superstition, and
-fraud--for it was beyond doubt a compound of them all--was exposed with
-success by the Rev. Zachary Taylor, the Bishop of Chester's curate at
-Wigan, one of the King's preachers in Lancashire; but the reverend
-divine mixed with his censures too much party asperity, insisting that
-the whole was an artifice of the Nonconformist ministers, in imitation
-of the pretended miracles of the Roman Catholic priests, and likening it
-to the fictions of John Darrell, B.A., which had been practised a
-century before upon the family of Mr. Starkie, in the same county. Of
-the resemblance in many of its parts there can be no doubt; but the
-names of the venerable Oliver Heywood and Thomas Jolly form a sufficient
-guarantee against imposition on their part; and the probability is that
-the ministers were the dupes of a popular superstition in the hands of a
-dissolute and artful family.[72]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[62] See _Transactions of Historical Society of Lancashire and
-Cheshire_.
-
-[63] Casaubon, extracted from Dee's MSS., P. I., p. 22, fol. 1659.
-
-[64] _History of Lancashire_, vol. iv. p. 63.
-
-[65] Hampson's _Medii Ævi Kal._, vol. i. p. 74.
-
-[66] 33 Henry VIII., cap. 8.
-
-[67] "The Devils of Morzine," in the _Cornhill Magazine_, April, 1865.
-
-[68] See Roby's _Traditions of Lancashire_; Homerton's _Isles of Loch
-Awe_ and _Choice Notes: Folk-Lore_, pp. 247-8.
-
-[69] See _Transactions of Lancashire and Cheshire Historical Society_.
-
-[70] _Magna Britannica_, by Rev. M. S. Cox, p. 1303.
-
-[71] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[72] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-
-
-
-DIVINATION.
-
-
-This word, derived from _divinare_, to foretell, denotes a mode of
-foretelling future events, and which, among the ancients, was divided
-into two kinds, natural and artificial. Natural divination was prophecy
-or prediction, the result of supposed inspiration or the divine
-afflatus; artificial divination was effected by certain rites,
-experiments, or observations, as by sacrifices, cakes, flour, wine,
-observation of entrails, flight of birds, lots, verses, omens, position
-of the stars, &c. In modern divination, two modes are in popular
-favour--thrusting a pin or a key between the leaves of a closed Bible,
-and taking the verse the pin or key touches as a direction or omen; and
-the divining-rod, a long forked branch or twig of hazel, which being
-held between the finger and thumb in a particular way, is said to turn
-of itself when held near the earth over any hidden treasure, precious
-metals, or over a spring of water. It has also been used to discover a
-buried body of one murdered.
-
-
-DIVINATION AT MARRIAGES.
-
-The following practices are very prevalent at marriages in the districts
-around Burnley, and they are not noticed in the last edition of Brand's
-_Popular Antiquities_:--1. Put a wedding-ring into the _posset_, and
-after serving it out, the unmarried person whose cup contains the ring
-will be the first of the company to be married. 2. Make a common flat
-cake of flour, water, currants, &c., and put therein a wedding-ring and
-a sixpence. When the company are about to retire on the wedding-day the
-cake must be broken, and distributed amongst the unmarried females. She
-who gets the ring in her portion of the cake will shortly be married,
-and the one who gets the sixpence will die an old maid.[73]
-
-
-DIVINATION BY BIBLE AND KEY.
-
-When some choice specimen of the "Lancashire Witches" thinks it
-necessary to decide upon selecting a suitor from among the number of her
-admirers, she not unfrequently calls in the aid of the Bible and a key
-to assist in deciding her choice. Having opened the Bible at the passage
-in Ruth: "Whither thou goest will I go," &c., and having carefully
-placed the wards of the key upon the verses, she ties the book firmly
-with a piece of cord, and having mentioned the name of an admirer, she
-very solemnly repeats the passage in question, at the same time holding
-the Bible suspended _by joining the ends of her little fingers_ inserted
-under the handle of the key. If the key retain its position during the
-repetition the person whose name has been mentioned is considered to be
-rejected; and so another name is tried, till the book turns round and
-falls through the fingers, which is held to be a sure token the name
-just mentioned is that of an individual who will certainly marry her. I
-have a Bible in my possession which bears evidence of having seen much
-service of this description.[74]
-
-
-ANOTHER LANCASHIRE FORM OF DIVINATION.
-
-When a Lancashire damsel desires to know what sort of a husband she will
-have, on New Year's Eve she pours some melted lead into a glass of
-water, and observes what forms the drops assume. When they resemble
-scissors, she concludes that she must rest satisfied with a tailor; if
-they appear in the form of a hammer, he will be a smith or a carpenter,
-and so on of others. The writer has met with many instances of this
-class, in which the examples given did not admit of easy contradiction.
-
-
-DIVINATION BY THE DYING.
-
-Dying persons, especially if they have been distinguished for piety when
-in health, are considered to possess, for a short time, the spirit of
-prophecy. Hence many persons are then anxious to see them, in order that
-they may divine the _future_ by means of their oracular words. They also
-_know_ persons who have died before them. This is a curious remnant of
-the old Greek and Roman belief. Homer makes Hector foretell the death of
-Achilles, _Iliad_, v. 355. Virgil causes Orodes to foretell the death
-of Mezentius, _Æneid_, x. 739. Cicero also furnishes another instance,
-_De Divin._ lib. ii.
-
-
-SECOND-SIGHT.
-
-Though this faculty of seeing into the future has usually been regarded
-as limited to Scotland, and there chiefly possessed by natives of the
-Highlands, there have been individuals in Lancashire who have laid claim
-to the possession of this species of foresight. Amongst those in the
-Fylde district was a man named Cardwell, of Marton, near Blackpool, who
-foretold deaths and evil events from his vision of things to come. Men
-of superior ability were credulous enough to visit him, and to give
-implicit faith to his marvellous stories. The real form of second-sight
-is the seeing of the wraith, spirit, or ghost of one about to die; and
-in one notable instance Cardwell's second-sight failed him utterly. On
-seeing something in a vision, he concluded that his own child was about
-to die, and so strong was his own faith in this delusion that he carried
-sand to the churchyard to be ready for its grave. The death, however,
-did not happen: the child grew to maturity, and retaining robust health,
-lived for many years afterwards.
-
-
-SPIRITS OF THE DYING AND THE DEAD.
-
-1. Persons born during twilight are supposed to be able to _see_
-spirits, and to know who of their acquaintance will die next.
-
-2. Some say that this property also belongs to those who happen to be
-born _exactly_ at twelve o'clock at night.
-
-3. The spirits of persons about to die, especially if the persons be in
-distant lands, are supposed to return to their friends, and thus predict
-the calamity. While the spirit is thus _away_, the person is supposed to
-be in a _swoon_, and unaware of what is passing. His _desire_ to see his
-friends is also necessary; he must have been _thinking_ of them. I am
-not aware that these spirits ever _speak_.
-
-4. If no one in a family can _see_ a spirit, most can hear them, and
-hence strange noises are supposed to indicate death or misfortune to
-distant friends.
-
-
-CASTING LOTS, ETC.
-
-This is a species of divination or consulting of fate by omen. Great
-faith is placed by most in casting lots. Putting numbers in a box or bag
-is the common practice, and then drawing them out at random. Scripture
-was once quoted to the writer in proof that this mode of deciding
-doubtful matters was of God's appointment, and therefore could not
-fail. "The lot is cast into the bag, but the _disposal_ thereof is the
-Lord's." (Prov. xvi. 33; 1. Sam. xiv. 41.) When boys do not wish to
-divide anything they decide "who must take all" by drawing "short-cuts."
-A number of straws, pieces of twine, &c., of different lengths, are held
-by one not interested; each boy draws one, and he who gets the _longest_
-is entitled to the whole.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[73] T. T. W., in _Notes and Queries_, vol. ii. p. 117.
-
-[74] T. T. W., in _Notes and Queries_, vol. ii. p. 5.
-
-
-
-
-MISCELLANEOUS FOLK-LORE.
-
-
-DRUIDICAL ROCK BASINS.
-
-Dr. Borlase, in his _Antiquities of Cornwall_, notices the existence of
-Druidical Rock Basins, which appear to have been scooped out of the
-granite rocks and boulders which lie on the tops of the hills in the
-county. Several such cavities in stones are found on Brimham Rocks,
-near Knaresborough, and they have also been found at Plumpton and
-Rigton, in Yorkshire,[75] and on Stanton Moor, in Derbyshire. The writer
-first drew attention to the fact of similar Druidical remains existing
-in Lancashire in a paper read before the Historical Society of
-Lancashire and Cheshire, in December, 1864. They are found in
-considerable numbers around Boulsworth, Gorple, Todmorden, and on the
-hills which separate Lancashire from Yorkshire between these places.
-Commencing the enumeration of the groups of boulders, &c., containing
-rock basins, with the slopes of Boulsworth, about seven miles from
-Burnley, we have first the Standing Stones, mostly single blocks of
-millstone grit, at short distances from each other on the north-western
-side of the hill. One is locally termed the Buttock Stone, and near it
-is a block which has a circular cavity scooped out on its flat upper
-surface. Not far from these are the Joiner Stones, the Abbot Stone, the
-Weather Stones, and the Law Lad Stones [? from _llad_, British,
-sacrifices]. Next come the Great and Little Saucer Stones, so named from
-the cavities scooped out upon them. The Little Chair Stones, the Fox
-Stones, and the Broad Head Stones lie at no great distance, each group
-containing numerous like cavities. Several of these groups are locally
-named from resemblance to animals or other objects, as the Grey Stones
-and the Steeple Stones on Barn Hill, and one spur of Boulsworth is
-called Wycoller Ark, as resembling a farmer's chest or ark. On Warcock
-Hill several groups of natural rocks and boulders are locally named
-Dave or Dew Stones. On the surface of one immense Dave Stone boulder is
-a perfect hemispherical cavity, ten inches in diameter. The surface of
-another contains an oblong basin of larger dimensions, with a long
-grooved channel leading from its curved contour towards the edge of the
-stone. On a third there are four circular cavities of varying
-dimensions, the largest in the centre, and three others surrounding it,
-but none of these is more than a few inches in diameter. At the Bride
-Stones, near Todmorden, thirteen cavities were counted on one block, and
-eleven on another. All the basins here and elsewhere are formed on the
-_flat_ surfaces of the blocks; their upper surfaces being always
-parallel to the lamination of the stone. Along Widdop Moor we find the
-Grey Stones, the Fold Hole Stones, the Clattering Stones, and the
-Rigging Stones; the last named from occupying the rig or ridge of the
-hills in this locality. Amongst the Bride Stones is an immense mass of
-rock which might almost be classed among the rocking stones. It is about
-twenty-five feet in height, at least twelve feet across its broadest
-part, and rests on a base only about two feet in diameter. The Todmorden
-group contains the Hawk Stones, on Stansfield Moor, not far from
-Stiperden Cross, on the line of the Long Causeway (a Roman road); the
-Bride Stones, near Windy Harbour; the Chisley Stones, near Keelham; and
-Hoar Law, not far from Ashenhurst Royd and Todmorden. The rock basins on
-these boulders are very numerous, and of all sizes, from a few inches in
-diameter and depth to upwards of two feet. The elliptical axes of some
-of these basins did not appear to the writer to have been caused by the
-action of wind or water, or to follow any regular law. Lastly, taking
-for a centre, Gorple,[76] about five miles south-east of Burnley is
-another extensive group of naked rocks and boulders. Close to the
-solitary farm-house there are the Gorple Stones; and at a short distance
-the Hanging Stones form conspicuous objects in the sombre landscape. On
-Thistleden Dean are the Upper, Middle, and Lower Whinberry Stones, so
-named from the "whinberry" shrubs, with which this moor abounds. The
-Higher and Lower Boggart Stones come next, and these are followed by the
-Wicken Clough, and other minor groups of stones. Above Gorple Bottom is
-another set of grey stones; and these are followed by the Upper, Middle,
-and Lower Hanging Stones, on Shuttleworth Moor.[77] The rock basins here
-are very numerous, and mostly well defined. There are forty-three
-cavities in these Gorple, Gorple Gate, and Hanging Stones, ranging from
-four to forty inches in length, from four to twenty-five in breadth, and
-from two to thirteen inches in depth.
-
-Dr. Borlase confidently asserts that the ancient Druids used these rock
-basins for baptismal and sacrificial purposes--a conjecture which the
-authors of the _Beauties of Derbyshire_ admit to be probable; and so
-does Higgins in his elaborate work on the _Celtic Druids_. The
-supposition is supported by the fact of their occurring in such numbers
-mostly _on the tops of hills_, in so many counties, and in such
-different materials as the granite and the millstone-grit
-formations.[78] Whether they have been formed by natural or artificial
-means is still a matter of dispute. On the whole the writer's opinion
-is, that the rock basins of Scilly, Cornwall, Derbyshire, Yorkshire, and
-East Lancashire are partly natural, and partly artificial; the former
-being comparatively few, and easily distinguished by their varying
-depths and forms.[79] Whether wholly or partially natural or artificial,
-he thinks it safe to conclude that they have been appropriated by the
-Druids to their religious worship, as furnishing the means by which they
-could offer their sacrifices and perform their ablutions. They would
-also suffice for baptism, and preserve the rain or the dew from being
-polluted by touching the earth. The Tolmen on the neighbouring hills[80]
-may be taken as an additional reason for associating Druidical worship
-with such remains. These contain small basins on the summits, which
-differ in no respect from those here enumerated. They have, therefore,
-most probably been used for similar purposes. Those above described form
-a curious chapter in the oldest folk-lore of Lancashire.
-
-
-ELVES AND FAIRIES.
-
- "Like elves and fairies in a ring."--_Macbeth._
-
-England has ever been full of the favourite haunts of those pleasantest
-of all the supernatural sprites of childhood and superstition--elves and
-fairies. Volumes might be filled with the stories of their feats and
-pranks in all parts of England; and our greatest poet has for ever
-embalmed this superstition in the richest hues of poetic imagery and
-fancy--especially in his _Midsummer Night's Dream_. The _Fairies_, or
-"Hill Folk," yet live amongst the rural people of Lancashire. Antique
-tobacco-pipes, "formerly belonging to the fairies," are still
-occasionally found in the corners of newly-ploughed fields. They
-themselves still gambol on the grassy meads at dewy eve, and their
-revels are yet believed to be witnessed at times by some privileged
-inhabitants of our "calm sequestered vales." It is generally stated
-that, in order to see one of these diminutive beings, the use of
-ointments, four-leaved clover, or other specific preparations, is
-necessary; but a near relative of the writer, not more imbued with
-superstition than the majority, firmly believed that he once saw a real
-dwarf or fairy, without the use of any incantation. He had been amusing
-himself one summer evening on the top of Mellor Moor, near Blackburn,
-close to the remains of the Roman encampment, when his attention was
-arrested by the appearance of a dwarf-like man, attired in full hunting
-costume, with top-boots and spurs, a green jacket, red hairy cap, and a
-thick hunting whip in his hand. He ran briskly along the moor for a
-considerable distance, when, leaping over a low stone wall, he darted
-down a steep declivity, and was lost to sight. The popular opinion of
-the neighbourhood is, that an underground city exists at this place;
-that an earthquake swallowed up the encampment, and that on certain days
-in the year the hill folk may be heard ringing their bells, and
-indulging in various festivities. Considerable quantities of stone,
-which still remain around the ditches of this rectangular place, may
-have suggested the ideas of a city and an earthquake. On other occasions
-the fairies are supposed to exhibit themselves in military array on the
-mountain sides; their evolutions conforming in every respect to the
-movements of modern troops. Such appearances are believed to portend the
-approach of civil commotions, and are said to have been more than
-usually common about the time of the rebellion in 1745-6. This would
-suggest an explanation of a more rational character. [Doubtless the
-mirage, Fata Morgana, or Spectral appearances of the Hartz mountains.]
-
-One Lancashire Fairy tale runs thus:--
-
-Two men went poaching, and having placed nets, or rather sacks, over
-what they supposed to be rabbit holes, but which were in reality
-fairies' houses, the fairies rushed into the sacks, and the poachers
-(believing them to be rabbits), content with their prey, marched
-homewards again. One fairy missing another in the sack, called out (the
-story was told in the broad Lancashire dialect)--"Dick" (dignified name
-for a fairy), "where art thou?" To which fairy Dick replied,--
-
- "In a sack,
- On a back,
- Riding up Barley Brow."
-
-The story has a good moral ending; for the men were so frightened that
-they never poached again.[81]
-
-The Rev. William Thornber[82] characterizes the elves and fairies as
-kind, good-natured creatures, at times seeking the assistance of
-mortals, and in return, liberally rewarding them. They have a favourite
-spot between Hardhorn and Staining, at a cold spring of water called
-"Fairies' Well" to this day. Most amusing stories of fairies are told
-around that district. A poor woman, when filling her pitcher at the well
-just named, in order to bathe the weak eyes of her infant child, was
-mildly accosted by a handsome man, who presented her with a box of
-ointment, and told her it would be a specific remedy. She was grateful
-for the gift, but love for her child made her somewhat mistrustful; so
-she first applied the ointment to one of her own eyes. Shortly
-afterwards, she saw her benefactor at Preston, stealing corn from the
-mouths of the sacks open for sale, and, much to his amazement, accosted
-him. On his inquiry how she could recognise him, since he was invisible
-to all else around, she told him how she had used his ointment, and
-pointed to the powerful eye; when he immediately struck it out. A
-milkmaid, observing a jug and a sixpence placed at her side by some
-invisible being, filled the jug with milk, and took the money; this was
-repeated for weeks, till, overjoyed with her good fortune, she could not
-refrain from imparting it to her lover; but the jug and sixpence never
-appeared again. A ploughman when engaged in his daily labour, heard a
-plaintive cry, "I have broken my _speet_."[83] Hastily turning round,
-the ploughman beheld a lady, holding in her hand a broken _spittle_, a
-hammer, and nails, and beckoning him to repair it. He did so, and
-instantly received a handsome reward; and then the lady vanished,
-apparently sinking into the earth.
-
-
-FOLK-LORE.
-
-Under this general head we bring together a few scattered notices not
-naturally falling under any precise classification, but all showing the
-nature and character of common and popular notions, beliefs, and
-superstitions. Where, however, the subject will admit of it, many
-examples of this Folk-lore will be found in later pages, under the
-general head of "Superstitions."
-
-
-FOLK-LORE OF ECCLES AND THE NEIGHBOURHOOD.
-
-A very curious book exhibits some of the usages of our ancestors in this
-part of the county, early in the reign of James I., entitled _The Way to
-the True Church ... directed to all that seek for Resolution; and
-especially to all his loving Countrymen of Lancashire, by John White,
-Minister of God's Word at Eccles_. [White was vicar of Eccles only a few
-months--from May, 1609.] The fifth edition or "impression" is a folio,
-printed at London, 1624, but the Preface is dated Oct. 29th, 1608. White
-complains of "the prodigious ignorance" which he found among his
-parishioners when he entered upon his ministrations, and he proceeds
-thus to tell his own tale:--"I will only mention what I saw and learned,
-dwelling among them, concerning the saying of their prayers; for what
-man is he whose heart trembles not to simple people so far seduced [or
-so ill-taught] that they know not how to pronounce or say their daily
-prayers; or so to pray that all that hear them shall be filled with
-laughter? And while, superstitiously, they refuse to pray in their own
-language with understanding, they speak that which their leaders [Roman
-Catholic priests] may blush to hear. These examples I have observed from
-the common people:
-
-"'_The Creed._
-
-"'Creezum zuum patrum onitentem Creatorum ejus anicum, Dominum nostrum
-qui sum sops, virgini Mariæ, crixus fixus, Ponchi Pilati audubitiers,
-morti by Sonday, father a fernes, scelerest unjudicarum, finis a
-mortibus. Creezum spirituum sanctum, eccli Catholi, remissurum
-peccaturum, communiorum obliviorum, bitam et turnam again.'
-
-"'_The Little Creed._
-
- "'Little creed, can I need
- Kneele before our Ladies' knee;
- Candlelight, candles burne,
- Our Ladie pray'd to her dear Sonne
- That we all to heaven might come.
- Little creed. Amen.'
-
-"This that followeth they call--
-
-"'_The White Paternoster._
-
- "'White Paternoster, Saint Peter's brother,
- What hast i' th' t' one hand? White book leaves.
- What hast i' th' t' other hand? Heaven yate keys.
- Open heaven yates, and steyk [shut] hell yates:
- And let every crysome child creep to it own mother.
- White Paternoster, Amen.'
-
-"'_Another Prayer._
-
- "'I bless me with God and the rood,
- With his sweet flesh and precious blood;
- With his cross and his creed,
- With his length and his breed,
- From my toe to my crown,
- And all my body up and down,
- From my back to my breast,
- My five wits be my rest;
- God let never ill come at ill,
- But through Jesus' own will,
- Sweet Jesus, Lord, Amen.'
-
-"Many also use to wear vervain against blasts; and, when they gather it
-for this purpose, first they cross the herb with their hand, and then
-they bless it thus:--
-
- "'Hallowed be thou, Vervain,
- As thou growest on the ground,
- For in the Mount of Calvary,
- There thou wast first found.
- Thou healedst our Saviour Jesus Christ,
- And staunchedst his bleeding wound;
- In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost,
- I take thee from the ground.'
-
-"And so they pluck it up and wear it. Their prayers and traditions of
-this sort are infinite, and the ceremonies they use in their actions are
-nothing inferior to the Gentiles in number and strangeness. Which any
-man may easily observe that converseth with them."[84]
-
-
-TREE BARNACLES; OR, GEESE HATCHED FROM SEA-SHELLS.
-
-The learned and venerable John Gerarde, author or translator of _A
-History of Plants, or Herball_; first published in folio in 1597, has
-the following marvellous story respecting barnacle-shells growing on
-trees, and giving birth to young geese; not as a thing which some
-wonder-monger had related to him, but as what he had seen with his own
-eyes, and the truth of which he could, therefore, and does, most
-solemnly avouch.
-
-"There are found in the north parts of Scotland, and the isles adjacent
-called Orcades, certain trees, whereon do grow certain shell-fishes, of
-a white colour, tending to russet; wherein are contained little living
-creatures; which shells in time of maturity do open, and out of them
-grow those little living things; which, falling into the water, do
-become fowls, whom we call barnacles, in the North of England brant
-geese, and in Lancashire tree geese; but the others that do fall upon
-the land perish and do come to nothing. Thus much by the writings of
-others, and also from the mouths of people of those parts, which may
-very well accord with truth. But _what our eyes have seen and hands have
-touched, we shall declare_. There is a small island in Lancashire called
-The Pile of Foulders [or Peel of Fouldrey] wherein are found the broken
-pieces of old and bruised ships, some whereof have been cast thither by
-shipwreck, and also the trunks or bodies, with the branches, of old
-rotten trees, cast up there likewise; whereon is found a certain spume
-or froth, that in time breedeth unto certain shells, in shape like those
-of the mussel, but sharper pointed, and of a whitish colour; wherein is
-contained a thing in form like a lace of silk, finely woven as it were
-together, as of a whitish colour, one end whereof is fastened unto the
-inside of the shell, even as the fish of oysters and mussels are. The
-other end is made fast unto the belly of a rude masse or lump, which in
-time cometh to the shape and form of a bird; when it is perfectly formed
-the shell gapeth open, and the first thing that appeareth is the
-foresaid lace or string; next come the legs of the bird hanging out; and
-as it groweth greater it openeth the shell by degrees, till at length it
-is all come forth and hangeth only by the bill. In short space after it
-cometh to full maturity and falleth into the sea, where it gathereth
-feathers and groweth to a fowl, bigger than a mallard and lesser than a
-goose; and black legs and bill, or beak, and feathers black and white,
-spotted in such a manner as is our magpie (called in some places a
-pie-annet), which [not the magpie, but the barnacle-hatched fowl] the
-people of Lancashire call by no other name than a tree goose; which
-place aforesaid, and all those parts adjoining, do so much abound
-therewith, that one of the best is bought for 3_d._; For the truth
-hereof, if any doubt, may it please them to repair to me, and I shall
-satisfy them by the testimony of good witnesses(!).... They spawn as it
-were in March and April; the geese are formed in May and June, and come
-to fulness of feathers in the month after." "There is another sort
-hereof, the history of which is _true, and of mine own knowledge_; for
-travelling upon the shores of our English coast between Dover and
-Romney, I found the trunk of an old rotten tree, which (with some help
-that I procured by fishermen's wives, that were there attending their
-husbands' return from the sea) we drew out of the water upon dry land.
-On this rotten tree I found growing many thousands of long crimson
-bladders, in shape like unto puddings newly filled, before they be
-sodden, which were very clear and shining; at the nether end whereof did
-grow a shell-fish, fashioned somewhat like a small mussel, but much
-whiter, resembling a shell-fish that groweth upon the rocks about
-Guernsey and Jersey, called a limpet. Many of these shells I brought
-with me to London, which, after I had opened, I found in them living
-things, without form or shape; in others, which were nearer come to
-ripeness, I found living things that were very naked, in shape like a
-bird; in others, the birds covered with soft down, the shell half open,
-and the bird ready to fall out, which no doubt were the fowls called
-barnacles.... That which I have seen with my eyes and handled with my
-hands, I dare confidently avouch and boldly put down for verity.... We
-conclude and end our present volume with this wonder of God. For which
-God's name be ever honoured and praised." This author figures the
-_Britannica Conchæ Anatifera_, or the breed of barnacles; the woodcut
-representing a tree growing by the sea, with leaves like mussel shells,
-opening, and living creatures emerging; while others, swimming about in
-the sea beneath, are perfect goslings! Well may the old herbalist call
-this "one of the marvels of this land; we may say of the world." Dr.
-Charles Leigh, in his _Natural History of Lancashire_, gravely labours
-to refute the notion that barnacles grow into geese, as had been
-asserted by Speed and others.
-
-Sir J. Emerson Tennent, writing in _Notes and Queries_ (vol. viii. p.
-223), referring to Porta's _Natural Magic_ for the vulgar error that not
-only in Scotland, but in the river Thames, "there is a kind of
-shell-fish which get out of their shells and grow to be ducks, or
-such-like birds," observes that this tradition is very ancient, Porta,
-the author, having died in 1515. In _Hudibras_ is an allusion to those--
-
- "Who from the most refin'd of saints,
- As naturally grow miscreants,
- As _barnacles_ turn Soland geese,
- In th' islands of the Orcades."
-
-The story (says Sir James) has its origin in the peculiar formation of
-the little mollusc which inhabits the multivalve shell, the _Pentalasmi
-Anatifera_, which by a fleshy peduncle attaches itself by one end to the
-bottoms of ships or floating timber, whilst from the other there
-protrudes a bunch of curling and fringe-like cirrhi, by the agitation of
-which it attracts and collects its food. These cirrhi so much resemble
-feathers, as to have suggested the leading idea of a bird's tail; and
-hence the construction of the remainder of the fable, which is given
-with grave minuteness in _The Herball, or General Historie of Plants_,
-gathered by John Gerarde, Master in Chirurgie (London, 1597). After
-quoting the account, Sir James adds, that Gerarde, who is doubtless
-Butler's authority, says elsewhere, "that in the north parts of
-Scotland, and the islands called Orcades, there are certain trees
-whereon these tree geese and barnacles abound." The conversion of the
-fish into a bird, however fabulous, would be scarcely more astounding
-than the metamorphosis which it actually undergoes, the young of the
-little animal having no feature to identify it with its final
-development. In its early stage (see Carpenter's _Physiology_, i. 52) it
-has a form not unlike that of the crab, "possessing eyes and powers of
-free motion: but afterwards becoming fixed to one spot for the remainder
-of its life, it loses its eyes, and forms a shell, which, though
-composed of various pieces, has nothing in common with the jointed shell
-of the crab." Mr. T. J. Buckton (_Notes and Queries_, vol. viii. p.
-224) says that Drayton (1613), in his _Polyolbion_, p. iii., in
-connexion with the river Dee, speaks of--
-
- "Th' anatomised fish, and fowls from planchers sprung,"
-
-to which a note is appended in Southey's edition (p. 609), that such
-fowls were "_barnacles_, a bird breeding upon old ships." In the
-_Entertaining Library_, "Habits of Birds," (pp. 363-379), the whole
-story of this extraordinary ignorance of natural history is amply
-developed. The barnacle-shells which I once saw in a sea-port attached
-to a vessel just arrived from the Mediterranean had the brilliant
-appearance at a distance of flowers in bloom. (See _Penny Cyclopædia_,
-article "Cirripeda," vii. 206, reversing the woodcut). The foot of the
-_Lepas Anatifera_ (Linn.), appeared to me like the stalk of a plant
-growing from the ship's side. The shell had the semblance of a calyx,
-and the flower consisted of the fingers (_tentacula_) of the shell-fish,
-"of which twelve project in an elegant curve, and are used by it for
-making prey of small fish." The very ancient error was to mistake the
-foot of the shell-fish for the neck of a goose, the shell for its head,
-and the _tentacula_ for a tuft of feathers. As to the body, _non est
-inventus_. The Barnacle Goose is a well-known bird; and these shell-fish
-bearing, as seen out of the water, resemblance to the goose's neck,
-were ignorantly, and without investigation, confounded with geese
-themselves. In France, the barnacle goose may be eaten on fast-days, by
-virtue of this old belief in its fishy origin. From a passage in the
-_Memoirs of Lady Fanshaw_, it appears that Sir Kenelm Digby, at the
-table of the Governor of Calais, declared that barnacles, a bird in
-Jersey, was first a shell-fish to appearance, and from that, sticking
-upon old wood, became in time a goose! An advertisement of June, 1807,
-sets forth that the "Wonderful curiosity called the Goose Tree, Barnacle
-Tree, or Tree bearing geese, taken up at sea on the 12th January, 1807,
-by Captain Bytheway, and was more than twenty men could raise out of the
-water--may be seen at the Exhibition Rooms, Spring Gardens, from ten
-o'clock in the morning till ten at night, every day. The Barnacles which
-form the present exhibition possess a neck upwards of two feet in
-length, resembling the windpipe of a chicken; each shell contains five
-pieces, and notwithstanding the many thousands which hang to eight
-inches of the tree, part of the fowl may be seen from each shell. Sir
-Robert Moxay, in the _Wonders of Nature and Art_, speaking of this
-singularly curious production, says, that in every shell he opened he
-found a perfect sea-fowl[!], with a bill like that of a goose, feet like
-those of water-fowl, and the feathers all plainly formed." (_Ibid._, p.
-300.)
-
-
-WARTS FROM WASHING IN EGG-WATER.
-
-It is commonly held that washing the hands in water in which eggs have
-been boiled will produce a plentiful crop of warts. Not long ago two
-young and intelligent ladies stated that they had inadvertently washed
-their hands and arms in egg-water, and in each case this had been
-followed by large numbers of warts. This sequence they affirmed to be a
-consequence, and the warts were shown as an ocular demonstration of the
-unpleasant results of such lavation.
-
-
-FORTUNE-TELLING.--WISE MEN AND CUNNING WOMEN, ETC.
-
-There is scarcely a town of any magnitude in Lancashire, or in one or
-two adjacent counties, which does not possess its local "fortune-teller"
-or pretender to a knowledge of astrology, and to a power of predicting
-the future events of life, under the talismanic name of "fortune," to a
-large and credulous number of applicants. The fortune-teller of the
-nineteenth century professes to be able to "cast nativities" and to
-"rule the planets." If, as is not unfrequently the case, he be a medical
-botanist, he gathers his herbs when the proper planet is "in the
-ascendant." Some of these impostors also profess to "charge the crystal"
-(_i.e._, to look into a globular or egg-shaped glass), and thereby to
-solve the gravest questions respecting the future fortunes of those who
-consult them. Nor is this by any means an unprofitable pursuit. The
-writer is aware of several instances in which "casting nativities," &c.,
-has proved a golden harvest to the professor. One individual gave up a
-well-paid occupation in order that he might devote himself wholly to the
-still more lucrative practice of astrology and fortune-telling. He not
-only predicted future events by means of the stars, but he gave heads of
-families advice as to the recovery of stolen property and the detection
-of the thief; while impatient maidens he counselled how to bring shy or
-dilatory lovers to the point. Another practitioner added to these
-practices the construction of sun-dials, in which he was very
-ingenious, and thereby amassed considerable property after a long and
-successful career. Instances are very common that credulity is not
-confined to the ignorant or uneducated classes. An intelligent and
-well-meaning lady once very seriously cautioned the writer against
-diving into the secrets of astrology, as, she said, that pursuit had
-"turned the head" of one of her acquaintance. She not only had a firm
-faith in the truth of all astrological predictions, but (from
-apprehension engendered by this faith) she would not on any account
-suffer any of these practitioners to predict her fortune, nor would she
-on any account consult them. It seems that on one occasion she did
-commit herself so far as to go to "a wise man," whom we will call Mr.
-I., in company with Miss J., whose marriage with Mr. K. was then
-somewhat doubtful; and she afterwards solemnly affirmed that the
-astrologer told her all her fortune. She described him as first
-carefully drawing the requisite diagram, showing the state of the
-heavens at the hour of Miss J.'s birth; and after "charging his glass"
-he declared that the marriage would take place within a few months;
-"but," he added, "he was also very sorry to inform her that she would
-die young." Both these events did really happen within a limited period;
-and of course the lady's belief in the truth of astrological prediction
-was very powerfully strengthened and confirmed. Some time after these
-events, this identical Mr. I. was brought before the magistrates in
-petty sessions, charged with obtaining money under false pretences; with
-practising astrology, palmistry, &c., and he only narrowly escaped
-imprisonment through some technical error in the charge or summons. It
-was said that the charge was a vindictive one--hence there was great
-rejoicing amongst his friends when it was dismissed; but the inspector
-of police who had charge of the case did not hesitate to declare that
-there were many persons then present who had paid Mr. I. money for his
-predictions.
-
-Another specimen of the fortune-teller we may notice from a rural
-district. In the hamlet of Roe Green, in the township of Worsley, in a
-humble cottage, a few years ago lived a man who held the position of
-overseer or head of one class of workmen in the employ of the
-Bridgewater Trust. In the language of the locality, "Owd Rollison
-[Rawlinson] was a _gaffer_." But to this regular avocation he added the
-profession of fortune-telling, and in the evenings many were the
-applicants for a little knowledge of future events from the villages and
-hamlets for miles around. His stock-in-trade consisted of various books
-on astrology, &c., and of two magic glasses or crystals, one a small
-globular mass of common white glass, with a short stem by which to hold
-it; the other was about the size and shape of a large hen's egg, but
-without any stem or handle. His whole apparatus was for some months in
-the possession of the writer, and a list of his books may serve to show
-the sort of literature held in esteem amongst this class of planet
-rulers. 1. _The Three Books of Occult Philosophy_ of Henry Cornelius
-Agrippa, translated by J. Freake (London, 1651, pp. 583).[85] 2. Lilly's
-_Christian Astrology_, in three books (London, 1659, pp. 832). 3. John
-Gadbury's _Thesaurus Astrologiæ_ (Westminster, 1674, pp. 272). 4. _The
-Star_, by Ebn Shemaya (London, 1839, pp. 203). Zadkiel's _Grammar of
-Astrology_ (London, 1849, pp. 178): in this volume were also bound up
-"Tables for Calculating Nativities," by Zadkiel (London, 1850, pp. 64).
-6. _A Plea for Urania_ (London, 1854, pp. 387).
-
-One or two MS. books, apparently blank copy-books, which had been used
-to draw diagrams, or, as the phrase goes, to "construct horoscopes," or
-"erect schemes," or "cast nativities," showed that "Owd Rollison" had
-dabbled a little in a sort of Astrology; but the rudeness of these
-attempts betrayed him to be but a mere tyro in the "celestial science."
-He had also a reputation for selling "charms" against the various ills
-that flesh is heir to; amongst others, one to stop hæmorrhage. One
-countryman told the writer that he remembered, when a boy, that his
-uncle having a very severe hæmorrhage, so that he was believed to be
-bleeding to death, this boy was told to run off as hard as he could to
-Owd Rollison to get something to stop the bleeding. He soon received a
-small piece of parchment containing sundry unintelligible characters
-upon it, which was to be sewed up in a small bag and worn continually,
-so that the bag should rest on the skin just over the heart. This was
-done, the bleeding stopped, and the man recovered. Another person, who
-had been a sort of confidant of the wise man, told the writer that at
-one period Rawlinson went at regular intervals, and on stated days, to
-Manchester, where at a quiet public-house he met other "wise men," and
-they assembled in an upper chamber, with locked door, and sometimes
-remained for hours in deliberation. Of the subject of such deliberations
-the informant said he knew nothing, for he was never admitted; he had
-the honour of remaining outside the door as watchman, guard, or
-sentinel, to prevent any prying listeners from approaching. He
-conjectured that what they were about was "magic and such like;" but
-more he knew not. "Owd Rollison" kept his situation under the
-Bridgewater Trust until his death, at a ripe old age; and though he left
-several sons and a daughter, the mantle of his astrological or
-fortune-telling wisdom does not seem to have fallen on any of them.
-
-Much might be stated respecting the practice of the art of
-fortune-telling by wandering gipsies, especially in that branch of it
-termed palmistry--predicting the future from an examination of the
-"lines" of the palm of the left hand, each of which, in the jargon of
-palmists, has its own peculiar character and name, as the line of life,
-of fortune, &c.; but as these wanderers are not indigenous to
-Lancashire, but may be found in every county in England, it may suffice
-thus to name them. Of the old women who tell fortunes by cards chiefly,
-to silly women who are always wanting to know whether their future
-husband is to be denoted by the King of Hearts (a true-loving swain) or
-by the Monarch of Diamonds (as indicative of great wealth), it is enough
-to say that they may be found by scores or hundreds in every town in
-Lancashire.
-
-
-MAGIC AND MAGICIANS.
-
-Our forefathers had a strong faith in the power of magic, and even
-divided the knowledge of it into two opposite kinds--viz., "white
-magic," which was acquired from the communications of the archangels and
-angels, or at least from some of the good spirits who were allowed to
-aid human beings by their supernatural power in deeds of beneficence;
-and black magic, or "the black art," also termed "necromancy," which was
-derived from dealings with the devil, or at least from commerce with
-his imps, or the evil spirits of wicked dead men. At one period the
-terms magician and conjuror had the same meaning--one who conjured, by
-magical power, spirits and demons to appear and do his bidding. Conjuror
-has since become a name for a professor of _legerdemain_ or
-sleight-of-hand.
-
-
-EDWARD KELLY, THE SEER.
-
-Edward Kelly, whose dealings in the Black Art, it is said, would fill a
-volume, was born at Worcester, and had been an apothecary. We have
-elsewhere noticed his doings as an alchemist. He was for a considerable
-time the companion and associate of "Dr." John Dee, performing for him
-the office of "Seer," by looking into the doctor's crystal or stone, a
-faculty not possessed by Dee, who in consequence was obliged to have
-recourse to Kelly for the revelations he has published respecting the
-world of spirits. These curious transactions may be found in Casaubon's
-work, entitled, _A True and Faithful Relation of what Passed for many
-years between Dr. John Dee and some Spirits_--opening out another dark
-page in the history of imposture and credulity. Dee says that he was
-brought into unison with Kelly by the mediation of the angel Uriel.
-Afterwards he found himself deceived by him, in his opinion that these
-spirits which ministered unto him were messengers of the Deity. They had
-had several quarrels before; but when Dee found Kelly degenerating into
-the worst species of the magic art, for the purposes of avarice and
-fraud, he broke off all connexion with him, and would never afterwards
-be seen in his company. Kelly, being discountenanced by the doctor,
-betook himself to the meanest practices of magic, in all which money and
-the works of the devil appear to have been his chief aim. Many wicked
-and abominable transactions are recorded of him.
-
-In Lilly's Memoirs are the following passages relating to this
-Seer:--"Kelly outwent the Doctor, viz., about the Elixir and the
-Philosopher's Stone, which neither he nor his master attained by their
-own labour and industry. It was in this manner that Kelly obtained it,
-as I had it related from an ancient minister, who knew the certainty
-thereof from an old English merchant, resident in Germany, at what time
-both Kelly and Dee were there. Dee and Kelly, being on the confines of
-the Emperor's dominions, in a city where resided many English merchants,
-with whom they had much familiarity, there happened an old friar to come
-to Dr. Dee's lodgings, knocking at the door. Dee peeped down stairs:
-'Kelly,' says he, 'tell the old man I am not at home.' Kelly did so. The
-friar said, 'I will take another time to wait upon him.' Some few days
-after, he came again. Dee ordered Kelly, if it were the same person, to
-deny him again. He did so; at which the friar was very angry. 'Tell thy
-master I came to speak with him, and to do him good; because he is a
-great scholar, and famous: but now tell him, he put forth a book, and
-dedicated it to the Emperor. It is called _Monas Hieroglyphicas_. He
-understands it not. I wrote it myself. I came to instruct him therein,
-and in some other more profound things. Do thou, Kelly, come along with
-me. I will make thee more famous than thy master Dee.' Kelly was very
-apprehensive of what the friar delivered, and thereupon suddenly
-retired from Dr. Dee, and wholly applied unto the friar, and of him
-either had the Elixir ready made, or the perfect method of its
-preparation and making. The poor friar lived a very short time after:
-whether he died a natural death, or was otherwise poisoned or made away
-by Kelly, the merchant who related this, did not certainly know." "It
-was vulgarly reported that he [Kelly] had a compact with the devil,
-which he out-lived, and was seized at midnight by infernal spirits, who
-carried him off in sight of his family, at the instant he was meditating
-a mischievous design against the minister of the parish, with whom he
-was greatly at enmity."[86]
-
-
-RAISING THE DEAD AT WALTON-LE-DALE.
-
-In the reign of Queen Elizabeth and the year 1560, three judicial
-astrologers met in Preston, for the purpose of raising a corpse by
-incantations. They were Dr. Dee, Warden of Manchester, Edward Kelly, his
-assistant, and "seer," and Paul Wareing, of Dove Cotes, near Clayton
-Brook. Casaubon, in his "True and faithful Account of what passed for
-many years between John Dee and some Spirits," (apparently quoting from
-Weever's _Funeral Monuments_) states that "The aforesaid Master Edward
-Kelly, a person well skilled in judicial astrology, with one Paul
-Wareing (who acted with him in these incantations and all these
-conjurations) and Dr. Dee, went to the churchyard of St. Leonard's, in
-Walton-le-Dale, near Preston, and entered the burial ground exactly at
-midnight, the moon shining brightly, for the purpose of raising the body
-of a person who had been interred there, and who had during his life
-hidden a quantity of money without disclosing the fact previous to his
-death. Having had the grave pointed out to them on the preceding day,
-they opened it, removed the coffin lid, and set to work by various
-exorcisms, until the body became animated, by the spirit entering it
-again. The body then rose out of the grave and stood upright before
-them. It not only satisfied their wicked desires, it is said, but
-delivered several strange predictions concerning persons in the
-neighbourhood, which were literally and exactly fulfilled. Sibley, in
-his _Occult Sciences_, relates a similar account of this transaction,
-and also gives an engraving representing the scene, which took place at
-the midnight hour in the church of Walton. Another account states that
-Dr. Dee was engaged with Kelly in this enterprise, August 12th, 1560,
-and that Paul Wareing, of Clayton Brook, was the other who gave
-assistance in endeavouring to obtain an intercourse with familiar
-spirits."--(_Whittle's Preston._)
-
-
-AN EARL OF DERBY CHARGED WITH KEEPING A CONJUROR.
-
-The loyal and munificent Edward (third) Earl of Derby, notwithstanding
-his great services to Queen Elizabeth, and his long-proved loyalty, was
-maligned and accused of traitorous intentions. The Earl of Huntingdon
-wrote to Sir William Cecil, then the Queen's Secretary of State
-(afterwards Lord Burghley, her Treasurer), a letter, communicating
-suspicions of the Earl of Derby, which the writer asked should be burned
-as soon as read, but which has been preserved (and printed) amongst Lord
-Burghley's _State Papers_ (I. 603.) Modernising the spelling, the letter
-runs thus:--
-
- Sir,--I am bolder to write to you on weighty matters, than I dare be
- to some others; the cause I leave to your consideration, and so to
- you only I am bold to impart that I hear. The matter in short is
- this:--Among the Papists of Lancashire, Cheshire, and the Cosynes
- (?), great hope and expectation there is, that Derby will play as
- foul a part this year as the two Earls did the last year. [See the
- Rising in the North.] I hope better of him for my part, and for my
- respects, both general and particular, I wish him to do better. I
- know he hath hitherto been loyal, and even the last year, as you
- know, gave good testimony of his fidelity, and of his own
- disposition, I think, will do so still; but he may be drawn by evil
- counsel, God knoweth to what. I fear he hath even at this time many
- wicked counsellors, and some too near him. _There is one Browne, a
- conjuror, in his house, kept secretly._ There is also one Uphalle,
- who was a pirate, and had lately his pardon, that could tell
- somewhat, as I hear, if you could get him. He that carried my Lord
- Morley over, was also there within this se'ennight, kept secretly.
- He with his whole family never raged so much against religion as
- they do now, he never came to common prayer for this quarter or this
- year, as I hear, neither doth any of the family, except five or six
- persons. I dare not write what more I hear, because I cannot justify
- and prove it; but this may suffice for you in time to look to it.
- And surely, in my simple opinion, if you send some faithful and wise
- spy, that would dissemble to come from D'Alva, and dissemble popery,
- you might understand all; for if all be true that is said, there is
- a very fond company in the house at this present. I doubt not but
- you can and will use this matter better than I can advise you. Yet
- let me wish you to take heed to which of your companions (though you
- be now but five together) you utter this matter _ne fortè_ it be in
- Lathom sooner than you would have it; for some of you have men about
- you and friends attending on you, &c., that deal not always well. I
- pray God save our Elizabeth and confound all her enemies; and thus I
- take my leave, committing you to God his tuition.
-
- Your assured poor friend,
- H. HUNTYNGDON.
- From Ashby, 24 Aug., 1570.
-
- P.S.--Because none there should know of my letter, I would not send
- it by my servant, but have desired Mr. Ad to deliver it to you in
- secret. When you have read it, I pray you to burn it and forget the
- name of the writer. I pray God I may not hear any more of your
- coming to ----.
-
-There seems to have been no substantial ground for suspecting the
-loyalty of the Earl of Derby, which remained unshaken through another
-ordeal, the conspiracy of the Duke of Norfolk to marry the Queen of
-Scots, and place her on the English throne. But the Bishop of Ross gave
-evidence, that in Mary's design, in 1571, to escape from Sheffield
-Castle to the Continent, she was aided by several Lancashire gentlemen;
-and adds, that she wrote a letter by a little priest of Rolleston's to
-Sir Thomas Stanley. Sir Thomas Gerrard and Rolleston devised a cypher
-for her; and they offered to convey her away, and willed the Bishop to
-ask the Duke of Norfolk's opinion therein. The prelate further stated
-that Hall told him that if the Queen [Mary] would get two men landed in
-Lancashire, Sir Thomas Stanley, and Sir Edward Stanley, along with Sir
-Thomas Gerrard, and Rolleston, would effect her escape to France or
-Flanders, &c. Upon this evidence Sir Thomas Stanley, Sir Thomas Gerrard,
-and Rolleston, were apprehended, and committed to the Tower as state
-prisoners.[87]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[75] Allen's _History of Yorkshire_, vol. iii. pp. 421-425.
-
-[76] _Gort_, narrow; _gor_, upper, Brit.; _gór_, blood, A.-S. _Gorple_
-may mean the bloody pile, or the upper pile.
-
-[77] From _Sceot-hull_, afterwards _Scout_ or _Shoot-hill_, and
-_worth_--_i.e._, the farm or hamlet of the projecting ledge or hill.
-
-[78] Dr. Borlase's argument is cumulative. He observes that rock basins
-are always on the _top_, never on the _sides_ of the stones; that the
-ancients sacrificed on rocks; that water was used by them for lustration
-and purification; that snow, rain, or dew, was preferred by them to
-running water; that it was not permitted to touch the earth; that the
-Druids practised similar rites, and held rain or snow-water to be holy;
-and they attributed a healing virtue to the gods inhabiting rocks; that
-their priests stood upon rocks to wash, sprinkle, and drink, &c. All
-these considerations, he conceives, favour his opinion that rock basins
-were _used_, if not _formed_, by the Druids.
-
-[79] See Watson's _History of Halifax_, pp. 27-36.
-
-[80] Professor Hunt is of the same opinion. See his recent work on the
-_Drolls of Cornwall_, vol. i. pp. 186-228.
-
-[81] T. G. C., in _Notes and Queries_, vol. vii. p. 177.
-
-[82] In his _History of Blackpool_, pp. 333-4.
-
-[83] Speet, spit, or spittle, are names in Lancashire for a spade.
-
-[84] L. B., in _Notes and Queries_, vol. viii. p. 613.--_Bibliographical
-Notice of the Works of the Learned and Rev. Divine, John White, D.D.,
-&c._ London, 1624; in _Chet. Soc. Books_, vol. xxxviii. p. 52.
-
-[85] There is another curious volume, which professes to contain a
-fourth book of Agrippa; but it is spurious. It includes five
-treatises--viz., 1. Henry Cornelius Agrippa's Fourth Book on Occult
-Philosophy and Geomancy; 2. The Magical Elements of Peter de Abano; 3.
-The Astronomical Geomancy of Gerard Cremonensis; 4. Isagoge, or the
-Nature of Spirits, by Geo. Victorius Villinganus, M.D.; and 5. Arbatel
-of Magick. Translated into English by Robert Turner, Philomathées.
-(London, 1665, 8vo, pp. 266.) Another version of this book appeared in
-1783, 8vo. It would lead us too far to describe the strange contents of
-this book, which contains long lists of the names of good and evil
-spirits, and symbols representing their characters; also symbols of the
-archangels and angels, their sigils, planets, signs, &c.
-
-[86] See Roby's _Traditions of Lancashire_.
-
-[87] (_Lord Burghley's Papers_, vol. ii., p. 771.) The death of Edward
-Earl of Derby, "with whom (says Camden) the glory of hospitality hath in
-a manner been laid asleep," took place on the 24th October, 1572.
-
-
-
-
-MIRACLES, OR MIRACULOUS STORIES.
-
-
-An age of credulity is naturally rich in miracles. Superstition is ever
-prone to explain the mysterious, or to account for the questionable, by
-hunting for some supernatural cause; and hence the popular love for and
-strong faith in the miraculous. No church erected before the Reformation
-but had its miraculous legend; no well or spring of a remote antiquity
-but had its tradition, either connected with its origin or with its
-marvellous and miraculous powers of healing. The miracle of a past age,
-preserved to the present in the form of a legend, is equally entitled to
-a place in our Folk-Lore.
-
-
-MIRACLES BY A DEAD DUKE OF LANCASTER AND KING.
-
-One of the Harleian Manuscripts (Cod. 423), found amongst the papers of
-Fox the Martyrologist, and entitled "De Miraculis Beatissimi Militis Xpi
-Henrici Vj." (Of the Miracles of the Most blessed Knight of Christ,
-Henry VI.), consisting of about 150 closely written pages, contains an
-account of a vast number of reputed miracles performed by this weak and
-credulous monarch (who long hoped to pay his large debts by the aid of
-two alchemists!) and of which the following specimens will doubtless
-suffice for our readers:--How Richard Whytby, priest of St. Michael's,
-was long ill of a fever, and at last miraculously cured by journeying to
-the tomb of Henry VI. John, called Robynson, who had been blind ten
-years, recovered his sight by visiting Henry's tomb. How Henry
-Lancaster, afflicted in fever, was miraculously cured in three days by
-the appearance of the blessed prince Henry VI. in the sky. How a girl
-called Joan Knyght, who was nearly killed with a bone sticking in her
-throat, and considered dead, on the bystanders invoking Henry VI.,
-vomited the bone and was restored to health. If these superstitions
-wanted a crowning absurdity, that is not wanting in the fact that Henry
-VII. actually sent an embassy to Rome, to importune the newly-elected
-Pope Julius II. to canonize Henry VI. as a saint! His holiness referred
-the matter to certain cardinals, to take the verification of the
-deceased monarch's holy acts and miracles; but these were not
-sufficiently obvious to entitle him to the dignity of the calendar, and
-the negotiation was abandoned in despair.[88]
-
-Mr. Monckton Milnes, M.P. (now Lord Houghton), in an interesting letter
-in _Notes and Queries_, I. 181, asks for information respecting this
-popular "saint," to whom the Church, however, denied canonization. He
-refers to Brady for an account of the miracle performed at the tomb of
-Thomas Earl of Lancaster, and of the picture or image of the Earl
-exhibited in St. Paul's, London, and the object of many offerings. Brady
-cites the opinion of an ecclesiastic, who doubted the propriety of this
-devotion being encouraged by the Church; the Earl, besides his political
-offences, having been a notorious evil-liver. In June 1327, a "King's
-letter" (of Edward III.) was given to Robert de Weryngton, authorizing
-him and his agents to collect alms throughout the Kingdom for the
-purpose of building a chapel on the hill where the Earl was beheaded;
-and praying all prelates and authorities to give him aid and heed. This
-sanction gave rise to imposture; and in the following December a
-proclamation appeared, ordering the arrest and punishment of
-unauthorized persons collecting money under this pretence and taking it
-for their own use. The chapel was constructed, and officiated in till
-the dissolution of the monasteries; the image in St. Paul's was always
-regarded with especial affection, and the cognomen of "_Saint_ Thomas of
-Lancaster" was generally accepted and understood. Five hundred years
-after the execution of the Earl of Lancaster [in 1822], a large stone
-coffin, massive and roughly hewn, was found in a field that belonged of
-old to the Priory of Pomfret, but at least a quarter of a mile distant
-from the hill where the chapel stood. Within was the skeleton of a
-full-grown man, partially preserved; the skull lay between the thighs.
-There is no record of the decapitation of any person at Pontefract of
-sufficient dignity to have been interred in a manner showing so much
-care for the preservation of the body, except the Earl of Lancaster. The
-coffin may have been removed here at the time the opposite party forbade
-its veneration, from motives of precaution for its safety.--R. M.
-M.--[The Editor of _Notes and Queries_ adds, that "The Office of St.
-Thomas of Lancaster," which begins "_Gaude, Thoma, ducum decus, lucerna
-Lancastriæ_," is printed in the volume of "_Political Songs_" edited by
-Mr. Wright for the Camden Society, from a royal MS. in the British
-Museum, _MS. Reg. 12_. Another correspondent, we believe Mr. James
-Thompson of Leicester, states that at the dissolution of the monasteries
-in that town, several relics of St. Thomas (who was Earl of Leicester,
-as well as of Lancaster) were exhibited; amongst others his felt hat,
-which was considered a great remedy for the headache!]
-
-
-A MIRACULOUS FOOTPRINT IN BRINDLE CHURCH.
-
-Beneath the eastern gable of the chancel lies a huge stone coffin, with
-a cavity for the head, but its history is unknown. In the wall just
-above it is a small indentation, resembling the form of a foot, which,
-according to tradition, was made by the high-heeled shoe of a Popish
-disputant, who, in the ardour of debate, wished, if the doctrine he
-advanced was not true, that his foot might sink into the stone, "upon
-which the reforming stone instantly softened, and buried the papistical
-foot;" much in the same way, no doubt, as the flag in Smithells Hall
-received the print of the foot of George Marsh, the martyr.[89]
-
-
-THE FOOTPRINT AT SMITHELLS OF GEORGE MARSH, THE MARTYR.
-
-George Marsh, one of the three Lancashire martyrs in the reign of Queen
-Mary, was the son of Mr. George Marsh, a yeoman of Dean, and was born
-about 1575. He was educated at the Bolton Free Grammar School, and for a
-time followed farming, and, marrying at twenty-five, settled there till
-the death of his wife; when, placing his children with his father, he
-became a student at Cambridge University, was ordained, and was
-appointed curate of All-Hallows, Bread-street, London. He continued for
-some time preaching the reformed doctrines, and zealously supporting the
-Protestant faith, both in London and Lancashire; and while in his native
-county, in March 1555, he learned that he had been sought after by the
-servants of Mr. Barton of Smithells Hall, a magistrate; on which he went
-thither voluntarily, and was examined before Mr. Barton. In a passage
-near the door of the dining-room is a cavity in a flag, bearing some
-resemblance to the print of a man's foot, and this cavity is said by
-tradition to have been caused by the martyr stamping his foot to confirm
-his testimony, and it is shown to this day as a miraculous memorial of
-the holy man. The story goes, that "being provoked by the taunts and
-persecutions of his examiners, he stamped with his foot upon a stone,
-and, looking up to Heaven, appealed to God for the justness of his
-cause; and prayed that there might remain in that place a constant
-memorial of the wickedness and injustice of his enemies." It is said
-that about the beginning of the eighteenth century this stone was
-removed by two or three young men, of the family of Barton, then living
-at the hall, during the absence of their parents; that they cast it into
-the clough behind the hall; but all the inmates of the house were so
-much disturbed that same night by alarming noises, that they could not
-rest. Inquiry led to confession, the stone was replaced, and the noises
-ceased. It is also stated that in 1732, a guest (John Butterworth, of
-Manchester,) sleeping alone in the Green Chamber at Smithells Hall, saw
-an apparition, in the dress of a minister with bands, and a book in his
-hand. The ghost of Marsh (for so it was pronounced to be) disappeared
-through the door-way, and on the owner of Smithells hearing the story,
-he directed that divine service (long discontinued) should be resumed at
-the hall chapel every Sunday. Such are some of the stories told about
-Smithells Hall; and there is hardly an old hall in the country that has
-not one or more such traditions floating about its neighbourhood. It is
-as if ghostly visitants scorned to honour with their presence any house
-below the dignity of a hall. In this case, it may be observed that
-neither in Marsh's own account of what passed at Smithells, nor in Mr.
-Whatton's Biographical notice of him in Baines's _History of
-Lancashire_, is any mention made of the miraculous footprint. But in a
-volume of four or five tracts printed at Bolton (no year stated) the
-third tract is "The Life and Martyrdom of George Marshe," &c. "Also, the
-particulars respecting the print of a foot on the flag shewn at
-Smithills Hall, near Bolton;" which latter is signed "W. D.," and dated
-"August 22, 1787." Amongst other discrepancies, it may be observed that
-W. D. makes Marsh's interrogator "Sir Roger Barton;" while Marsh, a
-native of the immediate neighbourhood invariably writes of him as "Mr.
-Barton."
-
-
-A LEGEND OF CARTMEL CHURCH.
-
-Better than six hundred years ago (runs the story) some monks came over
-to Lancashire from another country; and, finding all this part of the
-kingdom covered with wood, they resolved to build a monastery in some
-part of Cartmel Forest. In their rambles, they found a hill which
-commanded a prospect so beautiful and extensive that they were quite
-charmed with it. They marked out a piece of ground on the summit, and
-were preparing to build the church, when a voice spoke to them out of
-the air, saying "Not there, but in a valley, between two rivers, where
-the one runs north, and the other south." Astonished at this strange
-command, they marvelled where the valley could be, for they had never
-seen a valley where two rivers ran in contrary directions. They set out
-to seek this singular valley, and travelled throughout the North of
-England, but in vain. Wearied with their fruitless search, they were
-returning to the hill where they had heard the strange voice. In passing
-through a valley covered with wood, they came to a small river, the
-stream of which ran north. They waded through it, and shortly after
-found another, the stream of which ran south. They placed the church
-midway between the two streams, upon a little island, of hard ground, in
-the midst of a morass; dedicating it to St. Mary. They also built a
-small chapel on the hill where they had heard the voice, which they
-dedicated to St. Bernard. The chapel has long since disappeared, but the
-hill is still called Mount Bernard.[90]
-
-
-THE PROPHET ELIAS, A LANCASHIRE FANATIC.
-
-In 1562, a native of Manchester who called himself Elias, but whose real
-name was Ellys, pretended to possess the spirit of prophecy. He went to
-London, where he made some proselytes, uttering his "warning voice" in
-the public places. James Pilkington, D.D., a native of Rivington, in
-Lancashire, and an eminent Protestant divine, who was raised by Queen
-Elizabeth in 1560 to the See of Durham, preached before the Queen at
-Greenwich, against the supposed mission of this Manchester fanatic. The
-Bishop of London, three days afterwards, ordered the northern prophet to
-be put in the pillory in Cheapside. He was thence committed to
-Bridewell, where he died in or about 1565.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[88] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[89] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[90] See _Lonsdale Magazine_, February, 1821.
-
-
-
-
-OMENS AND PREDICATIONS.
-
-
-An intense desire to know future events, besides being the great
-encouragement of astrologers, sorcerers, and magicians, wise men,
-cunning women, fortune-tellers, &c., has given rise to a large class of
-small circumstances which are regarded as indicative of coming good or
-bad luck, of good or evil fortune, to the observer or the person
-experiencing their influence. Hence, nothing is more common than to hear
-amongst uneducated and credulous people predications from the most
-trivial occurrences of daily life. A winding-sheet in the candle,
-spilling the salt, crossing knives, and various other trifles, are omens
-of evil to thousands of lore-folk to this day. Should one of your
-children fall sick when on a visit at a friend's house, it is held to be
-sure to entail bad luck on that family for the rest of the year, if you
-stay over New Year's-day. Persons have been known to travel sixty miles
-with a sick child rather than run the risk. A flake of soot on the bars
-of the grate is said to indicate the approach of a stranger; a bright
-spark on the wick of a candle, or a long piece of stalk in the tea-cup,
-betokens a similar event. When the fire burns briskly, some lover smirks
-or is good-humoured. A cinder thrown out of the fire by a jet of gas
-from burning coals, is looked upon as a coffin, if its hollow be long;
-as a purse of gold, if the cavity be roundish. Crickets in a house are
-said to indicate good fortune; but should they forsake the chimney
-corner, it is a sure sign of coming misfortunes.
-
-In the neighbourhood of Lancaster I know ladies who consider it "lucky"
-to find _old iron_: a horse-shoe or rusty nail is carefully conveyed
-home and hoarded up. It is also considered lucky if you see the _head_
-of the first lamb in spring; to present his _tail_ is the certain
-harbinger of misfortune. It is also said that if you have money in your
-pocket the first time you hear the cuckoo, you will never be without all
-the year.[91]
-
-In Lancashire we still dislike the moaning or hooting of owls and the
-croaking of ravens, as much as the Romans did of old. In a large class
-of our population few would yet defy evil fate, by beginning a journey
-or any important undertaking, or marrying, on a Friday; on which day
-Lancashire, like other sailors, have a strong repugnance to beginning a
-voyage. This day of the week is regarded as of evil augury, because it
-was the day (Good Friday) when our Saviour's blood was shed. The
-auguries of dreams are so numerous, that a large class of chap-books are
-still to be found circulating in country places, from _Mother Shipton_
-to _Napoleon's Book of Fate_. Few young women in the country, farmers'
-daughters and servants, were without a favourite "Dream-Book." Again,
-the farmer or cottager deems it necessary, in order to secure a crop of
-onions, to sow the seed on St. Gregory's-day [March 12] named
-"Gregory-gret-Onion," (_i.e._, Gregory the Great). Amongst the more
-pardonable longings to raise the veil of futurity are those of village
-maidens (and not a few of those in towns too, and of all ranks) to get a
-peep at the figure of the husband whom the future has in store for her.
-On All-Hallows' Eve she strews the ashes which are to take the form of
-one or more letters of her lover's name; she throws hemp-seed over her
-shoulder and timidly glances to see who follows her. On the fast of St.
-Agnes she watches a small candle called a "pig-tail," to see the passing
-image of her future husband. The up-turned tea-cup, for its leaves, or
-the coffee-cup for its "grounds;" the pack of cards, with the desired
-King of Hearts or Diamonds, the sputterings and spurtings of a
-tallow-candle, all furnished to the omen-instructed damsel some sign by
-which to read the future, and to arrive at a knowledge of her lot in
-life, as to husband, children, fortune, &c. When leaving home to begin a
-journey, or to commence any future enterprise, it is deemed an
-important observance, necessary to insure good luck, to walk
-"withershins" (_i.e._, as the weather or sun shines). In many country
-places this is always observed by a bridal party when advancing to the
-altar to have the marriage solemnized, and, of course, one particular
-aisle of the church is the only fortunate or lucky one to proceed by.
-Some, however, say that to walk "widdershins" is to take a direction
-contrary to the course of the sun, _i.e._, from right to left.[92] Some
-persons more credulous than humane, will shut up a poor cat in the oven,
-to ensure their own good luck. Days have long been parcelled out between
-lucky and unlucky, for any important undertaking, as a journey, taking a
-partner in business or for life, buying land, or even for such trivial
-matters as blood-letting, taking physic, cutting the hair, or paring
-nails. Again, the moon's age is an important element in securing future
-weal or woe. For the first year of an infant's life many mothers will
-not have its hair or nails cut, and when the year is gone these
-operations must be performed when the moon is so many days old, to
-ensure good results. A tooth, as soon as it has been drawn, should be
-sprinkled with salt, and thrown into the fire; if it be lost, no rest or
-peace will be enjoyed till it is found again. The following are a few
-omens drawn from observing peculiarities about animals:--
-
-
-CATS.
-
-1. If a cat tear at the cushions, carpets, &c., with its claws, it is
-considered to be a sign of wind. Hence we say, "the cat is raising the
-wind." 2. If a cat in washing its face draw its paw quite over its
-forehead, it is a sign of fair weather. If not so, it betokens speedy
-rain. 3. Allowing cats to sleep with you is considered very unhealthy.
-They are said to "draw your health away." 4. Those who play much with
-cats have never good health. A cat's hair is said to be indigestible,
-and you will die if one get into your stomach. 5. It is counted unlucky
-to allow cats to die in a house. Hence when they begin to be ill they
-are usually drowned. A case of this kind occurred in Burnley a short
-time ago. 6. If a kitten come to a house, it is counted a lucky omen.
-
-
-DOGS.
-
-1. Dogs are said to sit down and howl before the door when any one is
-about to be sick, or die. A death is considered _certain_ if the dog
-return as often as driven away. 2. Dogs are hence considered to be
-somehow acquainted with the spirit world, "or else," as one said, "how
-should they know when a person is going to die?" This is firmly
-believed in about Mellor and Blackburn. In Burnley and neighbourhood
-equally so at present. 3. The _life_ of a dog is sometimes said to be
-_bound up_ with that of its master or mistress. When either _dies_ the
-other cannot _live_. Is this a remnant of the old belief in the
-transmigration of souls? 4. The whining of a favourite dog is considered
-by many to betoken calamity to the family to which it belongs.
-
-
-LAMBS.
-
-It is very lucky for lambs to have their faces towards you when you
-first see them in Spring. The omen is much more favourable when they are
-looking towards the east.
-
-
-BIRDS.
-
-To kill or ill-use swallows, wrens, redbreasts, &c., is accounted
-unfortunate; for these all frequent our houses for good. There is a
-stanza common among us which declares that
-
- "A Cock Robin and a Jenny Wren
- Are God Almighty's cock and hen;
- A Spink and a Sparrow
- Are the Devil's bow and arrow."
-
-Birds are supposed by some to be somehow cognizant of what is about to
-happen. A _jackdaw_ is always an unwelcome visitor, if it alight on the
-window-sill of a sick chamber. A _white dove_ is thought to be a
-favourable omen; its presence betokens recovery to the person within, or
-it is _an angel in that form_ ready to convey the soul of a dying person
-to heaven. I once knew a Wesleyan Methodist who was of opinion that
-"forgiveness of sins" was assured to her by a small bird, which flew
-across her path when she had long been praying for a token of this kind.
-When a _Canary-bird_ sings cheerfully, all is well with the family that
-keeps it; when it becomes silent, and remains so, there is calamity in
-store for that household. If you hear the _cuckoo_ shout towards the
-east, for the first time in any year, and have gold, silver, and copper
-coin in your pockets, you will never want money during that year.
-
-
-SWALLOWS.
-
-1. If swallows, or martins, begin to build their nests about a house or
-barn, it is looked upon as predicating good luck to the occupier. "The
-_more_ birds the _better_ luck." 2. On the contrary, when they forsake a
-haunt, the occupiers become apprehensive of misfortune. Hence farmers
-will always protect such birds, and often ill-use boys who may be
-stoning them, or attempting to rob their nests.
-
-
-MAGPIES.
-
-There are, at least in Lancashire and Yorkshire, many curious
-superstitions connected with this bird. Its appearance _singly_ is still
-regarded in both these counties by many even of the educated
-representatives of the last generation, as an evil omen, and some of the
-customs supposed to break the charm are curious. One is simply to raise
-the hat as in salutation, another to sign the cross on the breast, and
-to make the same sign by crossing the thumbs. This last custom is
-confined to Yorkshire, and I know one elderly gentleman who not only
-crosses his thumbs, but spits over them when in that position, a
-practice which was, he says, common in his youth. The superstition
-applies only to a single magpie, according to the old nursery legend:--
-
- "One for sorrow,
- Two for mirth,
- Three for a wedding,
- And four for a birth."[93]
-
-I met a person the other day who solemnly assured me that he had seen a
-'pynot' as he came along the road; but he had made the figure of a cross
-on the mire in the road, in order to avert the evil omen.[94]
-
-In Lancashire they say:--
-
- "One for anger,
- Two for mirth,
- Three for a wedding,
- Four for a birth,
- Five for rich,
- Six for poor,
- Seven for a witch:
- I can tell you no more."[95]
-
-But in Tim Bobbin it is expressly said that two magpies are indicative
-of ill-fortune:--"I saigh two rott'n pynots, hong 'um, that wur a sign
-of bad fashin; for I heerd my gronny say hoo'd as leef o' seen two Owd
-Harries os two pynots."[96] "I shall catch none to-day," we heard a man
-advanced in life, exclaim in a melancholy tone, who was angling in the
-river Ribble. "Why?" we asked, "the day is not inauspicious." "No; but
-do you not see that magpie?" In fact _pynots_, that is, magpies,
-according to an old Lancashire superstition, are considered birds of
-ill-omen. In spring it is considered by old-fashioned anglers unlucky to
-see a single magpie; but two are a favourable auspice, because in cold
-weather one bird only leaves the nest in search of food, the other
-remaining to keep the eggs or the young ones warm; but when both are out
-together, the weather is warm, mild, and favourable for fishing.[97]
-
-
-DREAMS.
-
-This might well form a great division of itself, in any work on
-Folk-lore. Yet a little reflection will serve to show that it is only
-one branch, though a very large one, of the general subject of "Omens."
-Dreams are regarded by the superstitious simply for what they predicate
-as about to happen; in other words, they are important to the credulous
-only as _omens_ of coming events. Itinerant hawkers and small village
-shops drive a considerable trade in "Dream Books," or "Books of Fate,"
-which profess to interpret every dream and to explain every omen,
-whether of good or evil import. Of the great variety and extent of
-"Dream-Book literature" we cannot treat, for want of space. Hawkers and
-small shops sell a vast quantity of penny dream-books in Lancashire. One
-of the oldest specimens of these chap-books we have met with is a little
-32mo. volume, entitled "_Mother Shipton's Legacy_, or a favourite
-Fortune-book, in which is given a pleasing interpretation of dreams, and
-a collection of prophetic verses, moral and entertaining." (York, 1797,
-price 4_d._) Cap. I. treats of Lucky and Unlucky Days; II. of Moles on
-the Person; III. Miscellaneous; IV. Dreams; and V. a Magical Table. A
-few specimens of the dream portion may suffice:--To dream of joy denotes
-grief; of fine clothes, poverty; of sweetmeats, a whipping; of flying,
-falling down; of fire, anger; of serpents, private enemies; of money,
-loss; of weeping, joy; of bathing, ease from pain; of kissing, strife;
-of feasting, want; of many people, affliction; of singing, sorrow; of
-changing abode, sudden news; of fishing, good luck; of death, marriage;
-of finding money, bad luck; of gold, death; of embracing, death; of
-being bald, misfortune; of a long nose, death; of growing fat, wealth;
-of drinking water, good entertainment; of the sun rising, preferment; of
-flashes of fire, sudden death; of being among tombs, riches by the death
-of relations; of your teeth falling out, losses; of a lean ox, famine;
-of a fine garden, much pleasure.
-
- [_Moral._]
-
- Though plain and palpable each subject seems,
- Yet do not put your trust too much in dreams;
- Events may happen, which in dreams you see,
- And yet as often quite contrary be:
- This learned hint observe, for Shipton's sake--
- Dreams are but interludes which fancies make.
-
-Many persons persuade themselves into the belief that events are
-revealed to them in dreams. Those who can neither _see_ nor _hear_
-spirits generally presume to have this faculty. _One_ dream is not taken
-much notice of, but if the dream be repeated substantially _three_
-times, the events of the dreams are supposed to be sure to come to pass.
-Some _see_ all the circumstances as _realities_ in their dreams, others
-only have dim recollections; they _hear_ all but do not _see_ the
-persons. This agrees with the supposed _prophetical_ dreams of the
-ancient Greeks and Romans. (_Homer_, _Virgil_, _Ovid_, &c.) Morning
-dreams are more to be relied on than those of any other time. Those of
-the morning twilight are most valued. Horrid dreams, or those in which
-the dreamer feels very uneasy, are supposed to predict bad luck, or
-misfortune to the family. "Dreams," they say, "always go by contraries."
-There is a very general belief in dreams among the people of Lancashire.
-The following are a few not hitherto noticed by the writer:--1. Dreaming
-of _misfortune_ betokens _prosperity_.
-
- "Content and happy may they be
- Who dream of cold adversity;
- To married man and married wife
- It promises a happy life."
-
-2. To dream of sickness betokens _marriage_ to young persons. 3.
-Dreaming of being before an altar indicates sorrow and misfortune. 4. To
-see angels is a sure sign of coming happiness. 5. When you dream of
-being angry with any one, you may count that person amongst your best
-friends. 6. To dream of catching fish is very unfortunate; every fish
-you take betokens the death of some valued friend. 7. Dreaming about
-balls, dances, &c., indicates coming good fortune. To the young we may
-say:--
-
- "Who dreams of being at a ball,
- No cause have they for fear;
- For soon they will united be
- To those they hold most dear."
-
-8. When persons dream of losing their hair, it is a sign of loss of
-health, friends, or property. 9. If a person dream of losing _one_, or
-_more_, of his teeth, it is a sign that he will lose _one_, or _more_,
-lawsuits which he may happen to be engaged in. I knew a person who had a
-case in our county court. The case was to come on on the Thursday; but
-on Wednesday night he dreamt he had lost a tooth. On the case being
-decided against him, he appealed to his dream as a sure indication of
-his non-success. 10. Dreaming of bees is counted lucky, because they are
-industrious.
-
- "Happy the man who dreaming sees
- The little humble busy bees
- Fly humming round their hive."
-
-If the bees sting you, it is a sign of bad luck, crosses and
-difficulties. 11. Dreaming of marriage, brides, &c., is a sign of death,
-or long sickness. 12. To dream of a candle burning _brightly_ betokens
-health, prosperity; and _vice versâ_. 13. Dreaming of cats betokens
-treachery; but if you kill the cat you will have revenge. 14. To dream
-of seeing a _coffin_ is unlucky; but to dream of seeing a _corpse_
-betokens a speedy marriage. 15. Dreaming of _death_ betokens long life
-and happiness. 16. To dream that you are _dirty_ implies sickness for a
-longer or shorter period. 17. If you dream of being _drowned_ you will
-experience some loss. 18. To dream of _falling_ indicates loss. 19. To
-dream of _flying_ implies that you will not succeed in accomplishing
-high things. 20. If you dream of the water in a river being very _clear_
-you will have good luck; if the water be _muddy_ you will have
-misfortune. 21. When a widow dreams of seeing her husband, it is a sure
-sign that she will soon have an eligible offer. 22. If you dream that
-you are daubed with ink, you may be sure that some one is _writing_ evil
-of you. 23. Dreaming of going on a journey indicates a change in your
-circumstances. 24. To dream of flying kites, or playing with bunches of
-keys, betokens prosperity and advancement in business. 25. To dream of
-cutting yourself, or of being infested with lice, indicates misfortune
-or disease. 26. It is very fortunate to dream of milk. 27. To dream of
-being naked indicates shame and misfortune. 28. To dream of the nose
-bleeding is a very sure sign of misfortune and loss. 29. Dreaming of
-seeing the ocean in a calm state betokens steadiness of circumstances;
-and _vice versâ_. 30. To dream of rats indicates difficulties; of snow,
-prosperity and success; of a wedding, death; and of a widow, that your
-husband, wife, or lover, will desert you.
-
-All the preceding, and many more, are well-known to every Lancashire lad
-and lass.
-
-
-THE MOON.
-
-Our farmers predict fair weather, or the reverse, according as the new
-moon "lies on her back," or "stands upright." It is also very unlucky
-for anyone to look at the new moon, for the first time, through the
-window.
-
-
-HÆVER OR HIVER.
-
-A "quarter" of the heavens, or compass, or direction; "a lucky hæver" is
-a fortunate or desirable direction. The origin of this word is somewhat
-difficult of explanation; nor is it certain whether its proper etymon
-has yet been ascertained. It is still in common use among some of the
-farmers in East Lancashire, and was much more frequently used some
-thirty or forty years ago. "What _hæver_ is the wind in this morning?"
-was a common inquiry when any prediction respecting the weather for the
-day was about to be hazarded. "I don't expect much rain," would probably
-be the reply, "the wind is in a good _hæver_." There is generally most
-rain in these parts of Lancashire when the wind blows from the south or
-south-west; and hence if the wind came from the eastward continued rain
-was not to be expected.
-
-Most persons have a notion that the East is the most sacred point of the
-compass. The Star of the Nativity was seen in the east; the chancel, or
-most holy portion of a church is placed at the east; and the dead are
-buried so as to rise with their faces towards the east on the morning of
-the resurrection. These considerations have been applied to the _hæver_
-from which the wind may blow; and hence the proverb occasionally met
-with among those who live in the neighbourhood of Mellor and Ramsgreave,
-near Blackburn, to the effect that "the East is a lucky _hæver_."
-
-A writer who signs himself "F. C. H." in _Notes and Queries_, 3rd
-series, vol. vii. p. 310, asks whether _hæver_ is not "a peculiar
-pronunciation of ever, so that the above inquiry would be in plain
-English, _whatever_ is the wind in this morning?" This derivation
-appears both too fanciful and insufficient; for when we consider that
-Lancashire formed part of the Danelagh, and was long a Danish kingdom,
-and that its dialect contains a large admixture of Danish words; we are
-naturally led to examine whether such a term may not be found in the
-Danish language. On examination this proves to be the fact, for "Hive,"
-(pronounced "heeve," as "high" is pronounced "hee,") is the verb "to
-blow;" and hence "hiver" or "hæver," as applied to the place whence the
-wind is blowing. This derivation appears to be both natural and
-sufficient, since it fully accounts for the use of this peculiar term;
-which, by the way, is not found in Halliwell's _Dictionary of Archaic
-Words_, or in Wright's more recent work on the same subject.
-
-
-DEASIL OR WIDERSINNIS.
-
-These are Celtic names for going round by way of ensuring good fortune.
-The former name is derived from the Gaelic _deas_ or _des_, the right
-hand, and _Syl_, the sun, and denotes a motion from east to west, or
-according to the apparent motion of the sun; and is a custom of high
-antiquity in religious ceremonies. In the western isles fire was carried
-in the right hand in this course, about the house, corn, cattle, &c.,
-about women before they were churched, and children before they were
-baptized. So the fishermen rowed the boat about first sun-wise to ensure
-a lucky voyage. On the other hand, the Highland _Wider-sinnis_ (whence
-the Lancashire _Wither-shins_) was from left to right or west to east,
-or opposed to the course of the sun, a course used in magical
-ceremonies, and said to be the mode of salutation given by witches and
-warlocks to the devil.[98]--(See page 140 _suprâ_.)
-
-
-OMENS OF WEATHER FOR NEW YEAR'S-DAY.
-
-In a Saxon MS. we find that "If the Kalends, or first of January, fall
-on the Lord's-day, then will the winter be good, pleasant and warm."[99]
-Another Saxon MS. in the Cotton Library contains the omens to the
-following effect:--"If the Kalends of January be on the moon's day
-(Monday) then there will be a severe and confused winter, a good spring,
-windy summer, and a rueful year, in which there will be much sickness.
-If the Kalends fall on Tuesday, then the winter will be dreary and
-severe, a windy heat and rainy summer, and many women will die; ships
-will voyage in danger, and kings and princes will die. If on Wednesday,
-there will be a hard winter and bad spring; but a good summer. The
-fruits of the earth will be much beaten down, honey will be scarce, and
-young men will die. If on Thursday, there will be a good winter, windy
-spring, good summer, and abundance of the fruits of the earth, and the
-plough will be over the earth; but sheep and children will die. If on
-Friday, there will be a variable winter, good spring and summer, with
-great abundance, and sheep's eyes will be tender in the year. If on
-Saturday, there will be a snowy winter, blowing spring, and rainy
-summer; earth fruits will labour, sheep perish, old men die, and other
-men be sick; the eyes of many will be tender, and fires will be
-prevalent in the course of the year. If the Kalends fall on Sunday,
-there will be a good winter, windy spring, and dry summer; and a very
-good year this year will be; sheep will increase, there will be much
-honey, and plenty and peace will be upon the earth."[100]
-
-
-DEATH TICK OR DEATH WATCH.
-
-The death tick is not yet forgotten in the district around Burnley. Very
-recently the insect has disturbed the imagination of a young lady, and
-its ticks have led to more than one gloomy conjecture. It is a curious
-circumstance that the _real_ death tick must only tick _three_ times on
-each occasion.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[91] T. D., in _Notes and Queries_.
-
-[92] See Halliwell's _Archaic Dictionary_, in voce.
-
-[93] E. B., (Liverpool) in _Notes and Queries_, 3rd series, vol. ix. p.
-187.
-
-[94] T. T. W.
-
-[95] Another version has the last four lines thus:--
-
- "Five for a fiddle,
- Six for a dance,
- Seven for England,
- Eight for France."
-
-[96] J. O. Halliwell's _Nursery Rhymes_.
-
-[97] _Pictorial History of Lancashire._
-
-[98] Hampson's _Medii Ævi Kalend._, vol. I. 255.
-
-[99] Hickes's _Thesaurus_, II. 194.
-
-[100] _Bibl. Cott. MSS. Tiberius, A._ III., fol. 39 b., and 40.
-
-
-
-
-SUPERSTITIONS, GENERAL AND MISCELLANEOUS.
-
-
-There are great numbers of small superstitions, beliefs, and practices
-which we must place under this general head. Before entering on these at
-length, we may briefly notice the fact in many cases, the probability in
-a still greater number, that the origin of superstitions still held to
-the popular heart, is to be found in other countries and in remote
-times. Indeed Folk-lore superstitions may be said to be the _débris_ of
-ancient mythologies; it may be of Egypt or India, Greece or Rome,
-Germany or Scandinavia. Many of the following superstitions have been
-already glanced at or briefly referred to in the introductory chapter.
-
-
-POPULAR SUPERSTITIONS.
-
-Lancashire, like all other counties, has its own peculiar superstitions,
-manners, and customs, which find no parallels in those of other
-localities. It has also, no doubt, many local observances, current
-opinions, old proverbs, and vulgar ditties, which are held and taken in
-common with the inhabitants of a greater extent of country, and differ
-merely in minor particulars,--the necessary result of imperfect oral
-transmission. The following are a few of these local superstitions:--
-
-1. If a person's hair, when thrown into the fire, burns brightly, it is
-a sure sign that the individual will live long. The brighter the flame,
-the longer life; and _vice versâ_.
-
-2. A young person lightly stirs the fire with the poker to test the
-humour of a lover. If the fire blaze brightly, the lover is
-good-humoured; and _vice versâ_.
-
-3. A crooked sixpence, or a copper coin with a hole through, is
-accounted a _lucky_ coin.
-
-4. Cutting or paring the nails of the hands or feet, on a Friday or
-Sunday, is very unlucky.
-
-5. If a person's _left_ ear burn, or feel hot, somebody is praising the
-party; if the _right_ ear burn, then it is a sure sign that some one is
-speaking evil of the person.
-
-6. Children are frequently cautioned by their parents not to walk
-_backwards_ when going an errand; it is a sure sign that they will be
-unfortunate in their objects.
-
-7. Belief in witchcraft is still strong in many of the rural districts.
-Many believe that others have the power to bewitch cows, sheep, horses,
-and even persons to whom the witch has an antipathy. One respectable
-farmer assured me that his horse was bewitched into a stable through a
-loophole twelve inches by three! The fact, he said, was beyond doubt,
-for he had locked the stable-door himself when the horse was in the
-field, and had kept the key in his pocket. Soon afterwards a party of
-farmers went through the process known as "burning the witch out," or
-"killing the witch" as some express it; the person suspected soon died,
-and the neighbourhood became free from his evil doings.
-
-8. A horse-shoe is still nailed behind many doors to counteract the
-effects of witchcraft. A _hagstone_ with a hole through, tied to the key
-of the stable-door, protects the horses, and, if hung up at the bed's
-head, the farmer also.
-
-9. A hot iron put into the cream during the process of churning, expels
-the witch from the churn. Dough in preparation for the baker is
-protected by being marked with the figure of a cross.
-
-10. Warts are cured by being rubbed over with a black snail; but the
-snail must afterwards be impaled upon a hawthorn. If a bag, containing
-as many pebbles as a person has warts, be tossed over the _left_
-shoulder, it will transfer the warts to whomsoever is unfortunate enough
-to pick up the bag.
-
-11. If black snails are seized by the horns and tossed over the _left_
-shoulder, the process will ensure good luck to the person who performs
-it.
-
-12. Profuse bleeding is said to be instantly stopped by certain persons,
-who pretend to possess the secret of a certain form of words or charm.
-
-13. The power of bewitching, producing evil to persons by _wishing_ it,
-&c., is supposed to be transmitted from one possessor to another when
-one of the parties is about to die.
-
-14. Cramp is effectually prevented by placing the shoes with the toes
-just peeping from beneath the coverlet; or by tying the garter round the
-_left_ leg, below the knee.
-
-15. Charmed rings are worn by many for the cure of dyspepsia; and so
-also are charmed belts for the cure of rheumatism.
-
-16. A red-haired person is supposed to bring ill-luck, if he be the
-first to enter a house on New Year's Day. Black-haired persons [are on
-the contrary deemed so lucky that they] are rewarded with liquor or
-small gratuities for "taking in the New Year" to the principal houses in
-their respective neighbourhoods.
-
-17. If any householder's fire does not burn _through_ the night of New
-Year's Eve, it betokens bad luck through the ensuing year. If any one
-allow another to take a live coal, or to light a candle, on that eve,
-the bad luck extends to the grantor.[101]
-
-Amongst other Lancashire popular superstitions are the following:--
-
-That a man must never "go a courting" on a Friday. If an unlucky fellow
-is caught with his lady-love on that day, he is followed home by a band
-of musicians, playing on pokers, tongs, pan-lids, &c., unless he can rid
-himself of his tormentors by giving them money for drink.
-
-That whooping-cough will never be taken by any child that has ridden
-upon a bear. The old bearward's profits arose in great part from the
-money given by parents whose children had had a ride. The writer knows
-of cases in which the charm is said to have been effectual.
-
-That whooping-cough may be cured by tying a hairy caterpillar in a small
-bag round the child's neck, and as the caterpillar dies the cough goes.
-
-That Good Friday is the best day of all the year to begin weaning
-children, which ought, if possible, to be put off till that day.
-
-That May cats are unlucky, and will suck the breath of infants.
-
-That crickets are lucky about a house, and will do no harm to those who
-use them well; but that they eat holes in the worsted stockings of such
-members of the family as kill them. I was assured of this on the
-experience of a respectable farmer's family.
-
-That ghosts or boggarts haunt certain neighbourhoods. There is scarcely
-a dell in my vicinity where a running stream crosses a road by a small
-bridge or stone plat, where such may not be seen. Wells, ponds, gates,
-&c., have often this bad repute. I have heard of a calf with "eyes like
-saucers," a woman without a head, a white greyhound, a column of white
-foam like a large sugar loaf in the midst of a pond, or group of little
-cats, &c., as the shape of the boggart; and sometimes it took that of a
-lady, who jumped behind hapless passengers on horseback. It is supposed
-that a Romish priest can lay them, and that it is best to cheat them to
-consent to being laid "while hollies are green." Hollies being
-evergreens, the ghosts can reappear no more.[102]
-
-Mr. J. Eastwood, of Ecclesfield, adds to T. T. W.'s seventeen
-superstitions the following six:--
-
-1. If a cock near the door crows with his face towards it, it is a sure
-prediction of the arrival of a stranger.
-
-2. If the cat frisk about the house in an unusually lively manner, windy
-or stormy weather is approaching.
-
-3. If a dog howl under the window at night, a death will shortly happen
-in the house.
-
-4. If a _female_ be the first to enter a house on Christmas or New
-Year's Day, she brings ill-luck to the house for the coming year.
-
-5. For whooping-cough, pass the child nine times over the back and under
-the belly of an ass. (This ceremony I once witnessed, but cannot vouch
-for its having had the desired effect.)
-
-6. For warts, rub them with a cinder, and this tied up in paper, and
-dropped where four roads meet [_i.e._, where two roads cross] will
-transfer the warts to whoever opens the parcel.[103]
-
-
-BONES OF ST. LAWRENCE, AT CHORLEY.
-
-In the parish church of Chorley, within the porch of the chancel, which
-belongs to the Standish family of Duxbury, _four_ bones were shown,
-apparently thigh bones, said to have belonged to Saint Lawrence, the
-patron saint, which were brought over from Normandy by Sir Rowland
-Standish, in 1442, along with the head of that saint, which skull has,
-amongst the _Harl. MSS._,[104] a certificate of a vicar of Croston, to
-which Chorley was then subject, preserved with the arms of the knight
-(azure, 3 plates) rudely tricked:--"Be it known to all men that I,
-Thomas Tarlton [or Talbot] vicar of the church of Croston, beareth
-witness and certify, that Mr. James Standish, of Duxbury, hath delivered
-a relique of St. Laurence's head unto the church of Chorley, the which
-Sir Rowland of Standish, knight, brother of the said James, and Jane his
-wife, brought out of Normandy, to the worship of God and St. Lawrence,
-for the profit and avail of the said church; to the intent that the
-foresaid Sir Rowland Standish, and Dame Jane his wife, with their
-predecessors and successors, may be in the said church perpetually
-prayed for. And in witness of the which to this my present writing I
-have set my seal. Written at Croston aforesaid, the 2nd day of March, in
-the year of our Lord God, 1442." [20 Hen. VI.][105] St. Lawrence's Day
-is August 10. As his martyrdom was said to be roasting alive upon a
-gridiron, it is not clear how his thigh bones should be preserved. But
-when we find there are _four_ of them, the miraculous character of the
-relics is at once exhibited.
-
-
-THE DEAD MAN'S HAND.
-
-At Bryn Hall, now demolished, once the seat of the Gerards, was a Roman
-Catholic Chapel and a priest, who continued long after the family had
-departed, having in his custody "The Dead Man's Hand," which is still
-kept by the same or another priest, now residing at Garswood. Preserved
-with great care, in a white silk bag, it is still resorted to by many
-diseased persons, and wonderful cures are said to have been wrought by
-this saintly relic. It is said to be the hand of Father Arrowsmith,--a
-priest who is stated to have been put to death at Lancaster for his
-religion, in the time of William III. The story goes, that when about to
-suffer, he desired his spiritual attendant to cut off his right hand,
-which should then have the power to work miraculous cures on those who
-had faith to believe in its efficacy. Not many years ago, a female sick
-of the small-pox had this dead hand lying in bed with her every night
-for six weeks, in order to effect her recovery, which took place.[106] A
-poor lad, living in Withy Grove, Manchester, afflicted with scrofulous
-sores, was rubbed with it; and though it had been said he was
-miraculously restored, on inquiry the assertion was found incorrect,
-inasmuch as he died in about a fortnight after the operation.[107] Not
-less devoid of truth is the tradition that Arrowsmith was hanged for
-"witnessing a good confession."
-
-Having been found guilty of a rape (says Mr. Roby), in all probability
-this story of his martyrdom, and of the miraculous attestation to the
-truth of the cause for which he suffered, were contrived for the purpose
-of preventing the scandal that would have come upon the church through
-the delinquency of an unworthy member. A subordinate tradition
-accompanies that already related. It is said that one of the family of
-the Kenyons attended as under-sheriff at the execution, and that he
-refused the culprit some trifling favour at the gallows; whereupon
-Arrowsmith denounced a curse upon him,--to wit, that whilst the family
-could boast of an heir, so long they should never want a cripple; which
-prediction was supposed by the credulous to have been literally
-fulfilled.[108] Mr. Roby, professing to give the _fact_ upon which he
-founded one of his tales, accuses the unfortunate priest of rape, and
-states that he was executed for that crime in the reign of William III.
-All this Mr. Roby gives as from himself, and mentions a curse pronounced
-by Father Arrowsmith upon the under-sheriff who executed him, in the
-reign of William III. Now Arrowsmith was hung, under sanction of an
-atrocious law, for no other reason but because he had taken orders as a
-Catholic priest, and had endeavoured to prevail upon others to be of his
-own faith. For this offence, and for this offence alone, in 1628,--in
-the reign not of William III., but of Charles I.,--he was tried at
-Lancashire Assizes, and hanged, drawn, and quartered, in the same year
-that Edmund Ashton, Esq., was sheriff. Mr. Roby must have seen what was
-the real state of the case in the same history of Lancashire[109] as
-that which he repeatedly quotes.[110]
-
-The hand of Arrowsmith, having been cut off after his death, was brought
-to Bryn Hall, where it was used by the superstitious to heal the sick,
-sometimes by the touch, and at others by friction: faith, however, is
-essential to success, and a lack of the necessary quality in the
-patient, rather than any decrease in the healing emission from the
-relic, is made to account for the disappointment which awaits the
-superstitious votaries of this fanatical operation. The "dead man's
-hand," or, as the Irish harvestmen are accustomed to call it, "the holy
-hand," was removed from Bryn to Garswood, and subsequently to the
-priest's house at Ashton, near Lancaster, where it remains in possession
-of the priest, if the light and knowledge of the present age have not
-consigned it to the earth.[111] A Roman Catholic publication, issued in
-1737, signed by nineteen witnesses, seventeen of whom were Protestants
-(the names being withheld, however, as it is alleged, for prudential
-reasons), attest, that in 1736, a boy of twelve years, the son of Caryl
-Hawarden, of Appleton-within-Widness, county of Lancaster, was cured of
-what appeared to be a fatal malady by the application of Father
-Arrowsmith's hand, which, according to the narrative, was effected in
-the following manner:--The boy had been ill fifteen months, and was at
-length deprived of the use of his limbs, with loss of his memory, and
-impaired sight. In this condition, which the physicians had declared
-hopeless, it was suggested to his parents, that as wonderful cures had
-been effected by the hand of "the martyred saint," it was advisable to
-try its effects upon their afflicted child. The "holy hand" was
-accordingly procured from Bryn, packed in a box, and wrapped in linen.
-Mrs. Hawarden having explained to the invalid her hopes and intentions,
-applied the back part of the dead hand to his back, stroking it down
-each side the backbone, and making the sign of the cross, which she
-accompanied with a fervent prayer that Jesus Christ would aid it with
-his blessing. Having twice repeated this operation, the patient, who had
-before been utterly helpless, rose from his seat, and walked about the
-house, to the surprise of seven persons who had witnessed the "miracle."
-From that day the boy's pains left him, his memory was restored, and his
-health became re-established! The witnesses add, that the boy, on being
-afterwards interrogated, said that he _believed_ the hand would do him
-good, and that upon its first touch he felt something give a short or
-sudden motion from his back to the end of his toes![112]
-
-Another account states that Father Edmund Arrowsmith, of the Society of
-Jesus, was a native of Haydock, in the parish of Winwick, and was born
-in 1585. In 1605 he entered the Roman Catholic College of Douay, where
-he was educated, and in 1612 he was ordained priest. His father's name
-was Robert Arrowsmith, and his mother, Margery, was a lady of the
-ancient family of the Gerards. In 1613 Father Arrowsmith was sent upon
-the English mission, and in 1628 (4th Charles I.) was apprehended and
-brought to Lancaster on the charge of being a priest, contrary to the
-laws of the realm. He was tried, sentenced to death, and executed on the
-28th of August, 1628, his last words being "Bone Jesu!" He was
-afterwards cut down, embowelled, and quartered. His head was set upon a
-pole or stake amongst the pinnacles of Lancaster Castle, and his
-quarters were hung upon four separate places of the same building. The
-hand of the martyr, having been cut off after his death, was brought to
-Bryn Hall [amongst his maternal relatives], where it was preserved as a
-precious relic, and by the application of which numerous miraculous
-cures are said to have been effected. "The holy hand" was removed from
-Bryn to Garswood [in Ashton, a seat of the Gerards], and subsequently to
-the priest's house at Ashton-in-Makerfield, where it still remains.[113]
-While the relic remained at Garswood, it was under the care of the
-Gerards' family-chaplain for the time being, and a fee was charged for
-its application to all who were able to pay, and this money was bestowed
-in charity on the needy or distressed. It is believed that no fee is now
-charged. The late Sir John Gerard had no faith in its efficacy, and many
-ludicrous anecdotes are current in the neighbourhood of pilgrims having
-been rather roughly handled by some of his servants, who were as
-incredulous as himself;--such as getting a good beating with a wooden
-hand (used for stretching gloves), and other heavy weapons; so that the
-patients rapidly retraced their steps, without having had the
-application of the "holy hand." The applicants usually provide
-themselves with a quantity of calico or flannel, which the priest of St.
-Oswald's, Ashton, causes to come in contact with the "dead hand;" the
-cloth is then applied to the part affected. Many instances are recorded
-of persons coming upon crutches or with sticks, having been suddenly so
-far restored as to be able to leave behind them these helps, as
-memorials, and return home, walking and leaping; praising the priest for
-his charity; the holy hand, for being the means of obtaining a cure; and
-God for giving such power to the dead hand. Persons have been known to
-come from Ireland, and other distant parts, to be cured. Some of these
-return home with a large piece of the cloth which has been in contact
-with the hand. This they tear into shreds, and dispose of them to the
-credulous neighbours who have not the means of undertaking so long a
-pilgrimage. About four years ago (writes our informant), I saw a poor
-maniac being dragged along by two or three of her relatives, and howling
-most piteously. I asked what they were going to do with her, when one of
-them (apparently her mother) replied: "And sure enough, master, we're
-taking her to the priest, to be rubbed with the holy hand, that the
-devil may leave her." A short time afterwards I saw them returning, but
-the rubbing had not been effectual. A policeman assisted to remove the
-struggling maniac to a neighbouring house, till a conveyance could be
-got to take her to Newton Bridge railway station.[114]
-
-
-NINETEENTH CENTURY SUPERSTITION.
-
-Will it be credited that thousands of people have, during the past week,
-crowded a certain road in the village of Melling, near Ormskirk, to
-inspect a sycamore tree, which has burst its bark, and the sap protrudes
-in a shape resembling a man's head? Rumour spread abroad that it was the
-re-appearance of Palmer, who "had come again, because he was buried
-without a coffin!" Some inns in the neighbourhood of this singular tree
-reaped a rich harvest.[115]
-
-
-PENDLE FOREST SUPERSTITION.
-
-Pendle Forest, in the neighbourhood of Burnley, has long been notorious
-for its witches. [After referring to the cases of alleged witchcraft in
-the beginning of the 17th century, the writer continues:] Two hundred
-years have since passed away, and yet the old opinions survive; for it
-is notorious that throughout the Forest the farmers still endeavour to
-
- "Chase the evil spirits away by dint
- Of sickle, horse-shoe, and hollow flint."
-
-Clay or wax images, pierced through with pins and needles, are
-occasionally met with in churchyards and gardens, where they have been
-placed for the purpose of causing the death of the persons they
-represent. Consumptive patients and paralytics are frequently said to be
-bewitched; and the common Lancashire proverb, "Draw blood of a witch,
-and she cannot harm you," has been many times practically verified upon
-quarrelsome females within my own experience. In extreme cases the
-"witch-killer" is resorted to, and implicit faith in his powers is not a
-rare item in the popular creed. Such a person usually combines the
-practice of Astrology with his other avocations. He casts nativities;
-gives advice respecting stolen property; tells fortunes; and writes out
-"charms" for the protection of those who may consult him.... Even the
-wives of clergymen have been known to consult "wise men" on doubtful
-matters respecting which they desired more satisfactory
-information.--_T. T. W._
-
-
-EAST LANCASHIRE SUPERSTITION.
-
-Strong minds often are unable to escape the thraldom of tradition and
-custom, with the help of liberal education and social intercourse. How
-then are the solitary farmers on the skirts of moorland wastes, to free
-themselves from hereditary superstition? The strength of such traditions
-is often secret and unacknowledged. It nevertheless influences the life;
-it lurks out of sight, ready to assert its power in any great crisis of
-our being. It is a homage to the unseen and the unknown, in fearful
-contradiction with the teaching of Christianity, for it creates, like
-the religion of the Jezzidies, a ritual of propitiation to malignant
-powers, instead of the prayer of faith to the All-merciful. The solitude
-of the life in the moorland farm-houses does not, however, foster the
-influence of superstitious madness, perhaps, so much as the wild, stormy
-climate, which holds its blustering reign through six months of every
-year, in this region of morass and fog, dark clough, and craggy chasm.
-Night shuts in early. The sun has gone down through a portentous gulf of
-clouds which have seemed to swallow up the day in a pit of darkness. The
-great sycamores stagger in the blast which rushes from the distant sea.
-The wind moans through the night like a troubled spirit, shakes the
-house as though it demanded admittance from the storm, and rushes down
-the huge chimney (built two centuries ago for the log fires, and large,
-hot heap of wood ashes), driving down a cloud of smoke and soot, as
-though by some wicked cantrip the witches careering in the storm would
-scatter the embers and fire the building. The lone watcher by some sick
-bed, shudders as the casements are battered by the tempest; or the bough
-of some tree, or a branch of ivy, strikes the panes like the hand of
-some unseen thing fumbling at the casement latch; or, awake from pain or
-care, restless with fever or fatigue, or troubled with superstitious
-horror, the lone shepherd waits for the day, as for a reprieve to
-conscious guilt, and even trembles while he mutters some charm to
-exorcise the evil that rides exulting on the storm. A year of ill-luck
-comes. The ewes are barren; the cows drop their untimely calves, though
-crooked sickles and lucky stones have been hung in the shippons. The
-milk is "bynged," or will not churn, though a hot poker has been used to
-spoil the witchery. The horses escape from the stable at night, though
-there is a horse-shoe over the door, and the hinds say they were
-carefully "heawsed an' fettled, and t'dooers o weel latched, bur
-t'feeorin (fairies) han 'ticed 'em eawt o' t' leawphooles, an' flown wi'
-em' o'er t'stone dykes, wi' o t'yates tynt (gates shut), an' clapp'd 'em
-reet i' t' meadow, or t' corn, just wheer tey shudna be." As the year
-advances, with such misadventures, apprehension grows. Is there some
-evil eye on the house? Will the hay be spoiled in the field? Will the
-oats ripen, or must they be cut green and given to the cattle? Or, if
-they ripen, will the stormy autumn wrap its mantle of mist and rain so
-closely about them, that they cannot be housed before they have
-sprouted, or have spoiled? The cold, bitter damp benumbs the strength of
-the feeble. Appetite and health fail; a fear creeps into the life. Fate
-seems to have dragged the sufferer into a vault of gloom, to whisper
-foreboding and inspire dread. These traditions of mischief wrought by
-malignant men inheriting the wicked craft and vindictive spite of the
-sorcerers, are uttered at the fireside, or if not so uttered, are
-brooded upon by a disturbed fancy.[116]
-
-
-SUPERSTITIOUS FEARS AND CRUELTIES.
-
-John Webster, the great exposer of shams and denouncer of superstitions
-in his day, and author of the "_Discovery of pretended Witchcraft_,"
-speaking of a clear head and sound judgment as necessary to competent
-witnesses, says:--"They ought to be of a sound judgment, and not of a
-vitiated and distempered phantasy, nor of a melancholic constitution;
-for these will take a bush to be a bugbear, and a black sheep to be a
-demon; the noise of the wild swans flying high in the night, to be
-spirits; or, as they call them here in the north, 'Gabriel Ratchets;'
-the calling of a daker hen in the meadow, to be the Whistlers; the
-howlings of the female fox in a gill or clough for the male, to be the
-cry of fairies." The Gabriel Ratchets seem to be the same with the
-German Rachtvogel or Rachtraven. The word and the superstition are still
-known in Lancashire, though in a sense somewhat different; for the
-Gabriel Ratchets are supposed to be something like litters of puppies
-yelping in the air. Ratch is certainly a name for a dog in general (see
-_Junius, in voce_). The whistlers are supposed to be the green or
-whistling plovers, which fly very high in the night, uttering their
-characteristic note. Speaking of the practices of witch-finders, Webster
-says:--"By such wicked means and unchristian practices, divers innocent
-persons have lost their lives; and these wicked rogues wanted not
-greater persons (even of the ministry too) that did authorize and
-encourage them in their diabolical courses. And the like in my time
-happened here in Lancashire, where divers, both men and women, were
-accused of supposed witchcraft, and were so unchristianly and inhumanly
-handled, as to be stripped stark naked and laid upon tables and beds to
-be searched for their supposed witch-marks; so barbarous and cruel acts
-doth diabolical instigation, working upon ignorance and superstition,
-produce."[117]
-
-
-SUPERSTITIOUS BELIEFS IN MANCHESTER IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY.
-
-At no period in the history of Manchester was there a greater
-disposition to believe in witchcraft, demoniacal possession, and the
-occult sciences, than at the close of the sixteenth century. The seer,
-Edward Kelly, was ranging through the country, practising the black art.
-Dr. Dee, the friend and associate of this impostor, had recently
-obtained the appointment of warden of the Collegiate Church of
-Manchester, by favour of his royal patroness, Queen Elizabeth, herself a
-believer in his astrological calculations; and the fame of the strange
-doings [the alleged demoniacal possession of seven persons] in the
-family of Mr. Starkie, had spread far and wide. The new warden was
-really a learned man, of the most inquisitive mind, addicted to chemical
-pursuits, not wholly unconnected with those of alchemy, and not
-altogether detached from the practice of necromancy and magic,
-notwithstanding his positive asseverations to the contrary, in his
-petition to King James. His life was full of vicissitudes; though
-enjoying the patronage of princes, he was always involved in
-embarrassments, and was at length obliged to relinquish his church
-preferment at Manchester, owing to the differences that existed between
-himself and his ecclesiastical brethren. It does not appear that during
-his residence in Lancashire he encouraged the deceptions of the
-exorcists. On the contrary he refused to become a party in the pretended
-attempt to cast out devils at Cleworth, and he strongly rebuked Hartlay,
-the conjuror, who was afterwards executed at Lancaster for his
-disgraceful practices.
-
-
-WELLS AND SPRINGS.
-
-Water, everywhere a prime necessity of life, is pre-eminently so in the
-hot and arid plains and stony deserts of Asia and Africa. We need not be
-surprised, therefore, to find that in all the ancient Eastern cults and
-mythologies, springs and wells were held in reverence, as holy and
-sacred gifts to man from the Great Spirit of the universe. The great
-Indo-European tide of migration, rolling ever westward, bore on its
-bosom these graceful superstitions, which were eagerly adopted by the
-old church of Christendom; and there is scarcely an ancient well of any
-consequence in the United Kingdom which has not been solemnly dedicated
-to some saint in the Roman Catholic calendar.
-
-WELLS NEAR LIVERPOOL.--At Wavertree, near Liverpool, is a well bearing
-the following inscription, "Qui non dat quod habet, dæmon infra videt:
-1414" (Who giveth not what he hath, the devil below, seeth--or, if the
-last word be not _videt_ but _ridet_--laughs). Tradition says that at
-one period there was a cross above it, inscribed "Deus dedit, homo
-bibit" (God gave it, man drinks it); and that all travellers gave alms
-on drinking. If they omitted to do so, a devil who was chained at the
-bottom of the well, laughed. A monastic building stood near, and the
-occupants received the contributions.[118] A well at Everton, near
-Liverpool, has the reputation of being haunted, a fratricide having been
-committed there; but it is not mentioned in the local history of Syer,
-which merely says,--"The water for this well is procured by direct
-access to the liquid itself, through the medium of a few stone steps: it
-is free to the public, and seldom dry." Being formerly in a lonely
-situation, it was a haunt of pickpockets and other disorderly
-characters. It is now built over, and in a few years the short
-subterranean passage leading to the well will be forgotten.[119]
-
-PEGGY'S WELL.--Peggy's Well is near the Ribble, in a field below Waddow
-Hall, not far from Brunckerley stepping-stones, in attempting to cross
-by which several lives have been lost, when the river was swollen by a
-rapid rise, which even a day's rain will produce. These calamities, as
-well as any other fatal accidents that occur in the neighbourhood, are
-usually attributed to Peggy, the evil spirit of the well. There is a
-mutilated stone figure by the well, which has been the subject of many
-strange tales and apprehensions. It was placed there when turned out of
-the house at Waddow, to allay the terrors of the domestics, who durst
-not continue under the same roof with this mis-shapen figure. It was
-then broken, either from accident or design, and the head, some time
-ago, as is understood, was in one of the attic chambers at Waddow. Who
-Peggy of the Well was, tradition doth not inform us.
-
-The writer of the _Pictorial History of Lancashire_ states that going to
-Waddow Hall he inquired after the headless stone statue known as "Peg o'
-th' Well;" and a neat, intelligent young woman, one of the domestics,
-showed him Peggy's head on the pantry table, and the trunk by a well in
-an adjacent field. He gives the following as the substance of the
-tradition:--The old religion had been supplanted in most parts of the
-country, yet had left memorials of itself and its rites in no few
-places, nor least in those which were in the vicinity of an old Catholic
-family, or a monastic institution. Some such relic may Peggy have
-originally been. The scrupulous proprietors of Waddow Hall regarded the
-innocuous image with distrust and aversion; nor did they think
-themselves otherwise than justified in ascribing to Peggy all the evils
-and mischances that befel in the house. If a storm struck and damaged
-the house, Peggy was the author of the damage. If the wind whistled or
-moaned through the ill-fitting doors and casements, it was "Peggy at her
-work," requiring to be appeased, else some sad accident was sure to
-come. On one occasion Master Starkie--so was the host named--returned
-home very late with a broken leg. He had been hunting that day, and,
-report said, made too free with the ale afterwards. But, as usual, Peggy
-bore the blame: for some dissatisfaction she had waylaid the master of
-the house and caused his horse to fall. Even this was forgiven. A short
-time afterwards a Puritan preacher was overtaken by a fresh in the
-river, in attempting to cross over on the stepping-stones which lay just
-above the Hall, the very stones on which poor King Henry (VI.) was
-captured. Now, Mrs. Starkie had a great attachment to those preachers,
-and had indeed sent for the one in question, for him to exorcise and
-dispossess her youngest son, a boy of ten years of age, who was
-grievously afflicted with a demon, or, as was suspected, tormented by
-Peggy. "Why does he not come?" asked the lady, as she sat that night in
-her best apparel, before a blazing fire and near a well-furnished table.
-"The storm seems to get worse. Hark! heard ye no cry? Yes! there again.
-Oh, if the dear man be in the river! Run all of ye to his rescue." In a
-few minutes two trusty men-servants returned, panting under the huge
-weight of the dripping parson. He told his tale. "'Tis Peg," she
-suddenly exclaimed, "at her old tricks! This way, all!" She hurried from
-the apartment, rushed into the garden, where Peggy stood quiet enough
-near a spring, and with one blow of an axe, which she had seized in her
-passage, severed Peggy's head from her body.
-
-ST. HELEN'S WELL IN BRINDLE.--Dr. Kuerden in one of his MSS., describing
-the parish of Brindle in Leyland, states that "Over against Swansey
-House, a little towards the hill, standeth an ancient fabric, once the
-manor-house of Brindle, where hath been a chapel belonging to the same;
-and a little above it, a spring of very clear water, rushing straight
-upwards into the midst of a fair fountain, walled square about in stone
-and flagged in the bottom, very transparent to be seen, and a strong
-stream issuing out of the same. This fountain is called St. Ellen's
-Well, to which place the vulgar neighbouring people of the Red Letter
-[_i.e._, Roman Catholics] do much resort with pretended devotion on each
-year upon St. Ellins-day--[St. Helen's-day is either on May 21, August
-18, or September 3, the two first being days of a queen, and the last of
-an empress saint]--where and when, out of a foolish ceremony, they offer
-or throw into the well, pins, which there being left, may be seen a long
-time after by any visitor of the fountain."[120]
-
-ST. HELEN'S WELL, NEAR SEFTON.--Mr. Hampson[121] notices the
-superstition of casting pins or pebbles into wells, and observing the
-circles formed thereby on the surface of the agitated water, and also
-whether the water were troubled or preserved its clearness and
-transparency; from which appearances they drew omens or inferences as to
-future events. He adds: "I have frequently seen the bottom of St.
-Helen's Well, near Sefton, Lancashire, almost covered with pins, which,
-I suppose, must have been thrown in for the like purposes."
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[101] T. T. W., in _Notes and Queries_, iii. 55.
-
-[102] P. P., in _Notes and Queries_, iii. 516.
-
-[103] _Notes and Queries_, iii. p. 516.
-
-[104] Harl. MSS. Cod. 2042, fol. 239 a.
-
-[105] Harl. MSS. Cod. 2042, fol. 239.
-
-[106] Mr. Roby derived this statement from Thomas Barritt, the
-antiquary, who in one of his MSS. writes--"I was in company with a woman
-who had lain with a relation of hers sick of the small-pox. During all
-the time they had this hand lying with them every night, on purpose to
-effect a safe recovery of the afflicted person." Barritt does not say,
-however, that the recovery took place.
-
-[107] This story Mr. Roby derived from the same MSS. of Barritt, and
-also the statement of the real crime for which Arrowsmith was executed,
-and his alleged prophecy as to the Kenyons. Barritt says the dead hand
-was brought to Manchester about the time of the troubles in 1745, to
-cure a poor Papist lad, who came with Hill.
-
-[108] See Roby's _Traditions of Lancashire_.
-
-[109] Baines's _Lancashire_, vol. iii. p. 638.
-
-[110] _Pictorial History of Lancashire._
-
-[111] Mannex's _Hist. and Topog. of Lancashire_.
-
-[112] Baines's _History of Lancashire_, vol. iii. pp. 638-9.
-
-[113] Mannex's _History and Topography of Lancashire_.
-
-[114] From a Correspondent.
-
-[115] The _Tablet_, July 26, 1856.
-
-[116] Scarsdale.
-
-[117] Dr. Whitaker's _History of Whalley_.
-
-[118] Mr. Baines, in his _History of Lancashire_ (vol. iii. p. 760),
-says that in Wavertree is an ancient well with a rude, unintelligible
-inscription, of the date of 1414, which is thus _charitably_ rendered by
-the villagers:--
-
- "He that hath, and won't bestow,
- The Devil will reckon with him below."
-
-Or,
-
- "He who here does not bestow,
- The Devil laughs at him below."
-
-[119] "Agmond," in _Notes and Queries_, vol. vi. p. 305.
-
-[120] Baines's _History of Lancashire_, vol. iii. p. 497.
-
-[121] _Medii Ævi Kalendarium._
-
-
-
-
-WITCHES AND WITCHCRAFT.
-
-
-In the lore of these subjects no county in England is richer than
-Lancashire. The subject is a large one, and may even be said to include
-all the cases of demoniacal possession described in the earlier pages of
-this volume, since all these alleged possessions were the result of
-malice and (so-called) witchcraft. Indeed it is not easy to separate
-these two superstitious beliefs in their practical operation; witchcraft
-being the supposed cause, and demoniacal possession the imagined effect.
-The reader will find much, bearing on both branches of the subject,
-under both titles.
-
-
-WITCHCRAFT IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY.
-
-The first distinct charge of witchcraft in any way connected with this
-county, is that of the wife of the good Duke Humphrey, Eleanor, Duchess
-of Gloucester, the associate of Roger Bolingbroke, the priest and
-necromancer, and Margery Jourdain, the witch of Eye. The Duke of
-Gloucester, uncle and protector to the king, having become obnoxious to
-the predominant party, they got up in 1441 a strange prosecution. The
-Duchess of Gloucester, Eleanor, the daughter of Lord Cobham, a lady of
-haughty carriage and ambitious mind, being attached to the prevailing
-superstitions of the day, was accused of the crime of witchcraft "for
-that she, by sorcery and enchantment, intended to destroy the king, to
-the intent to advance and promote her husband to the crown."[122] It was
-alleged against her and her associates, Sir Roger Bolingbroke, a priest,
-and chaplain to the Duke, (who was addicted to astrology,) and Margery
-Jourdain, the witch of Eye, that they had in their possession a wax
-figure of the king, which they melted by a magical device before a slow
-fire, with the intention of wasting away his force and vigour by
-insensible degrees. The imbecile mind of Henry was sensibly affected by
-this wicked invention; and the Duchess of Gloucester, on being brought
-to trial (in St. Stephen's Chapel, before the Archbishop of Canterbury)
-and found guilty of the design to destroy the king and his ministers by
-the agency of witchcraft, was sentenced to do public penance in three
-places within the city of London, and to suffer perpetual imprisonment.
-Her confederates were condemned to death and executed, Margery Jourdain
-being burnt to death in Smithfield. The duchess, after enduring the
-ignominy of her public penance, rendered peculiarly severe by the
-exalted state from which she had fallen, was banished to the Isle of
-Man, where she was placed under the ward of Sir Thomas Stanley. On the
-way to her place of exile, she was confined for some time, first in
-Leeds Castle, and afterwards in the Castle of Liverpool;[123] the
-earliest and the noblest witch on record within the county of Lancaster.
-Another account states that amongst those arrested as accomplices of the
-duchess were a priest and canon of St. Stephen's, Westminster, named
-Southwell, and another priest named John Hum or Hume. Roger Bolingbroke,
-the learned astronomer and astrologer (who died protesting his ignorance
-of all evil intentions), was drawn and quartered at Tyburn; Southwell
-died in prison before the time of execution; and John Hum received the
-royal pardon. The worst thing proved against the duchess was that she
-had sought for love-philters to secure the constancy of her
-husband.[124] Shakspere, in the _Second Part of King Henry VI._, Act 1,
-Scene 4, represents the duchess, Margery Jourdain, Hume, Southwell, and
-Bolingbroke, as engaged in raising an evil spirit in the Duke of
-Gloucester's garden, when they are surprised and seized by the Dukes of
-York and Buckingham and their guards. The duchess, after remaining in
-the Isle of Man some years, was transferred to Calais, under the ward of
-Sir John Steward, knight, and there died.
-
-
-THE FAMOUS HISTORY OF THE LANCASHIRE WITCHES:
-
- Containing the manner of their becoming such; their enchantments,
- spells, revels, merry pranks, raising of storms and tempests, riding
- on winds, &c. The entertainments and frolics which have happened
- among them. With the loves and humours of Roger and Dorothy. Also, a
- Treatise of Witches in general, conducive to mirth and recreation.
- The like never before published.[125]
-
- CHAPTER I.--_The Lancashire Witch's Tentation, and of the Devil's
- appearing to her in sundry shapes, and giving her money._
-
- Lancashire is a famous and noted place, abounding with rivers,
- hills, woods, pastures, and pleasant towns, many of which are of
- great antiquity. It has also been famous for witches, and the
- strange pranks they played. Therefore, since the name of Lancashire
- Witches has been so frequent in the mouths of old and young, and
- many imperfect stories have been rumoured abroad, it would
- doubtless tend to the satisfaction of the reader, to give some
- account of them in their merry sports and pastimes.
-
- Some time since lived one Mother Cuthbert, in a little hovel at the
- bottom of a hill, called Wood-and-Mountain Hill, in Lancashire.
- This woman had two lusty daughters, who both carded and spun for
- their living, yet was very poor; which made them often repine at
- and lament their want. One day, as Mother Cuthbert was sauntering
- about the hill-side, picking the wool off the bushes, out started a
- thing like a rabbit, which ran about two or three times, and then
- changed into a hound, and afterwards into a man, which made the old
- beldame to tremble, yet she had no power to run away. So, putting a
- purse of money in her hand, and charging her to be there the next
- day, he immediately vanished away, and old Mother Cuthbert returned
- home, being somewhat disturbed between jealousy and fear.
-
-Such is the first chapter of this marvellous story, which, it is clear,
-is a fiction based upon real narratives. It relates the witcheries of
-Mother Cuthbert and her two daughters, Margery and Cicely, under the
-auspices of an arch-witch, "Mother Grady, the Witch of Penmure
-[Penmaen-mawr] a great mountain of Wales." Here is "_The Description of
-a Spell._--A spell is a piece of paper written with magical characters,
-fixed in a critical season of the moon, and conjunction of the planets;
-or sometimes by repeating mystical words. Of these there are many
-sorts." As showing what was the popular notion as to witches, take the
-following:--"About this time great search was made after witches and
-many were apprehended, but most of them gave the hangman and the gaoler
-the slip; though some hold that when a witch is taken she hath no power
-to avoid justice. It happened, as some of them were going in a cart to
-be tried, a coach passed by, in which appeared a person like a judge,
-who, calling to one, bid her be of good comfort, for neither she nor any
-of her companions should be harmed. In that night all the prison locks
-flew open, and they made their escape; and many, when they had been cast
-into the water for a trial, have swam like a cork. One of them boasted
-she could go over the sea in an egg-shell. It is held on all hands they
-adore the devil, and become his bond-slaves, to have for a term of years
-their pleasure and revenge. And indeed many of them are more mischievous
-than others in laming and destroying cattle, and in drowning ships at
-sea, by raising storms. But the Lancashire witches, we see, chiefly
-divert themselves in merriment, and are therefore found to be more
-sociable than the rest." The closing chapter in this chap-book, contains
-"A short description of the famous Lapland Witches."
-
-
-DR. DEE CHARGED WITH WITCHCRAFT.
-
-On the usual proclamation of a general pardon, on the accession of James
-I., the crime of witchcraft was specially excepted from the general
-amnesty; and the credulous King's belief in this superstition encouraged
-witch-finders and numerous accusations in all parts of the country.
-Amongst others, it was remembered that Dr. Dee, then warden of the
-Collegiate Church of Manchester, had in the preceding reign predicted a
-fortunate day for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth, and had also
-undertaken to render innocuous the waxen effigy of that Queen, found in
-Lincoln's Inn-fields. He was also known to have made various
-predictions, to be the possessor of a magic crystal or stone,[126] and
-to have held a close intimacy with Edward Kelly, _alias_ Talbot, a noted
-seer, conjuror and necromancer of the time. Accordingly Dr. Dee was
-formally accused of practising witchcraft, and a petition from him,
-dated 5th January, 1604, (preserved in the _Lansdowne MSS._, Cod. 161,)
-praying to be freed from this revolting imputation, even at the risk of
-a trial for his life, sufficiently indicates the horror excited by the
-charge. The doctor's petition sets forth that "It has been affirmed that
-your Majesty's supplicant was the conjuror belonging to the most
-honourable privy council of your Majesty's predecessor of famous memory,
-Queen Elizabeth, and that he is, or hath been, a caller or invocator of
-devils or damned spirits. These slanders, which have tended to his utter
-undoing, can no longer be endured; and if, on trial, he is found guilty
-of the offence imputed to him, he offers himself willingly to the
-punishment of death, yea, either to be stoned to death, or to be buried
-quick, or to be burned unmercifully." He seems to have escaped
-scatheless, save in reputation; and in 1594, when applied to for the
-purpose of exorcising seven demons who held possession of five females
-and two of the children of Mr. Nicholas Starkie, of Leigh, he refused to
-interfere; advising they should call in some godly preachers, with whom
-he would, if they thought proper, consult concerning a public or private
-fast. He also sharply reproved Hartlay, a conjuror, for his practices in
-this case.
-
-
-THE LANCASHIRE WITCHES.
-
- Come, gallant sisters, come along,
- Let's meet the devil ten thousand strong;
- Upon the whales' and dolphins' backs,
- Let's try to choak the sea with wracks,
- Spring leaks, and sink them down to rights.
- [_Line wanting._]
- And then we'll scud away to shour,
- And try what tricks we can play more.
-
- Blow houses down, ye jolly dames,
- Or burn them up in fiery flames;
- Let's rowse up mortals from their sleep,
- And send them packing to the deep,
- Let's strike them dead with thunder-stones,
- With lightning search [? scorch] to skin and bones;
- For winds and storms, by sea and land,
- You may dispose, you may command.
-
- Sometimes in dismal caves we lie,
- Or in the air aloft we flie;
- Sometimes we caper o'er the main,
- Thunders and lightnings we disdain;
- Sometimes we tumble churches down,
- And level castles with the ground;
- We fire whole cities, and destroy
- Whole armies, if they us annoy.
-
- We strangle infants in the womb,
- And raise the dead out of their tomb;
- We haunt the palaces of kings,
- And play such pranks and pretty things
- And this is all our chief delight,
- To do all mischief in despight;
- And when we've done, to shift away,
- Untoucht, unseen, by night or day.
-
- When imps do * * *
- We make them act unlucky feats;
- In puppets' wax, sharp needles' points
- We stick, to torture limbs and joints.
- With frogs' and toads' most poys'nous gore
- Our grizly limbs we 'noint all o'er,
- And straight away, away we go,
- Sparing no mortal, friend or foe.
-
- We'll sell you winds, and ev'ry charm
- Or venomous drug that may do harm;
- For beasts or fowls we have our spells
- Laid up in store in our dark cells;
- For there the devils used to meet,
- And dance with horns and cloven feet;
- And when we've done, we frisk about,
- And through the world play revel-rout.
-
- We ride on cows' and horses' backs,
- O'er lakes and rivers play nice knacks;
- We grasp the moon and scale the sun,
- And stop the planets as they run.
- We kindle comets' whizzing flames,
- And whistle for the winds by names;
- And for our pastimes and mad freaks,
- 'Mongst stars we play at barley-breaks.[127]
-
- We are ambassadors of state,
- And know the mysteries of fate;
- In Pluto's bosom there we ly,
- To learn each mortal's destiny.
- As oracles their fortunes show,
- If they be born to wealth or wo,
- The spinning Sisters' hands we guide,
- And in all this we take a pride.
-
- To Lapland, Finland, we do skice,
- Sliding on seas and rocks of ice,
- T' old beldames there, our sisters kind,
- We do impart our hellish mind;
- We take their seals and hands in blood
- For ever to renounce all good.
- And then, as they in dens do lurk,
- We set the ugly jades a-work.
-
- We know the treasures and the stores
- Lock'd up in caves with brazen doors;
- Gold and silver, sparkling stones,
- We pile on heaps, like dead men's bones.
- There the devils brood and hover,
- Keep guards, that none should them discover;
- Put upon all the coasts of hell,
- 'Tis we, 'tis we, stand sentinel.
-
-
-SUPERSTITIOUS FEAR OF WITCHCRAFT.
-
-During the sixteenth century whole districts in some parts of Lancashire
-seemed contaminated with the presence of witches; men and beasts were
-supposed to languish under their charm, and the delusion which preyed
-alike on the learned and the vulgar did not allow any family to suppose
-that they were beyond the reach of the witch's power. Was the family
-visited by sickness? It was believed to be the work of an invisible
-agency, which in secret wasted the image made in clay before the fire,
-or crumbled its various parts into dust. Did the cattle sicken and die?
-The witch and the wizard were the authors of the calamity. Did the yeast
-refuse to ferment, either in the bread or the beer? It was the
-consequence of a "bad wish." Did the butter refuse to _come_? The
-"familiar" was in the churn. Did the ship founder at sea? The gale or
-hurricane was blown by the lungless hag who had scarcely sufficient
-breath to cool her own pottage. Did the Ribble overflow its banks? The
-floods descended from the congregated sisterhood at Malkin tower. The
-blight of the season, which consigned the crops of the farmer to
-destruction, was the saliva of the enchantress, or distillations from
-the blear-eyed dame who flew by night over the field on mischief bent.
-To refuse an alms to a haggard mendicant, was to incur maledictions soon
-manifest in afflictions of body, mind, and estate, in loss of cattle and
-other property, of health, and sometimes even of life itself. To escape
-from evils like these no sacrifice was thought too great. Superstitions
-begat cruelty and injustice; the poor and the rich were equally
-interested in obtaining a deliverance; and the magistrate in his
-mansion, no less than the peasant in his cot, was deeply interested in
-abating the universal affliction. The Lancashire witches were
-principally fortune-tellers and conjurors. The alleged securities
-against witchcraft were numerous, the most popular being the horse-shoe;
-hence we see in Lancashire so many thresholds ornamented with this
-counter-charm. Under these circumstances the situation of the reputed
-witch was not more enviable than that of the individuals or families
-over whom she exerted her influence. Linked by a species of infernal
-compact to an imaginary imp, she was shunned as a common pest, or
-caressed only on the same principle which leads some Indian tribes to
-pay homage to the devil. The reputed witches themselves were frequently
-disowned by their families, feared and detested by their neighbours, and
-hunted by the dogs as pernicious monsters. When apprehended they were
-cast into ponds in the belief that witches swim; so that to sink or swim
-was almost equally perilous to them; they were punctured by bodkins to
-discover the witch imp or devil marks; they were subjected to hunger and
-kept in perpetual motion till confessions were obtained from a
-distracted mind. On their trials they were listened to with incredulity
-and horror, and consigned to the gallows with as little pity as the
-basest of malefactors. Their imaginary crimes created a thirst for their
-blood; and people of all stations, from the highest to the lowest,
-attended their trials at Lancaster with an intensity of interest that
-such mischievous persons, now divested of their sting, naturally
-excited. It has been said that witchcraft and kingcraft in England came
-in and went out with the Stuarts. This is not true. The doctrine of
-necromancy was in universal belief in the fourteenth and fifteenth
-centuries, and there was not perhaps a man in Lancashire who doubted its
-existence. The belief in witchcraft and in demoniacal possession was
-confined to no particular sect or persuasion; the Roman Catholics, the
-members of the Church of England, the Presbyterians, Independents, and
-even the Methodists (though a sect of more recent standing) have all
-fallen into this delusion; and yet each denomination has upbraided the
-other with gross superstition, and not unfrequently with wilful fraud.
-It is due, however, to the ministers of the Established Church to say
-that they were among the first of our public writers to denounce the
-belief in witchcraft with all its attendant mischiefs; and the names of
-Dr. Harsnett, afterwards Archbishop of York, of Dr. John Webster (who
-detected Robinson, the Lancashire witch-hunter), of Zach. Taylor, one of
-the king's preachers for Lancashire, and of Dr. Hutchinson, the chaplain
-in ordinary to George I., are all entitled to the public gratitude for
-their efforts to explode these pernicious superstitions. For upwards of
-a century the sanguinary and superstitious laws of James I. disgraced
-the English statute-book; but in the ninth year of George II. (1735) a
-law was enacted repealing the statute of James I., and prohibiting any
-prosecution, suit, or proceeding against any person for witchcraft,
-sorcery, enchantment, or conjuration. In this way the doctrine of
-witchcraft, with all its attendant errors, was finally exploded, except
-among the most ignorant of the vulgar.[128]
-
-
-A HOUSEHOLD BEWITCHED.
-
-(From the _Late Lancashire Witches_, a comedy, by Thomas Heywood.)
-
- My Uncle has of late become the sole
- Discourse of all the country; for a man respected
- As master of a govern'd family;
- The house (as if the ridge were fix'd below,
- And groundsills lifted up to make the roof),
- All now's turn'd topsy turvy
- In such a retrograde, preposterous way
- As seldom hath been heard of, I think never.
- The good man
- In all obedience kneels unto his Son;
- He, with an austere brow, commands his Father.
- The Wife presumes not in the Daughter's sight
- Without a prepared curtsey; the Girl, she
- Expects it as a duty, chides her mother,
- Who quakes and trembles at each word she speaks;
- And what's as strange, the Maid, she domineers
- O'er her young Mistress, who is awed by her.
- The Son, to whom the Father creeps and bends,
- Stands in as much fear of the groom, his Man!
- All in such rare disorder, that in some
- As it breeds pity, and in others wonder,
- So in the most part laughter. It is thought
- This comes by WITCHCRAFT!
-
-
-THE LANCASHIRE WITCHES OF 1612.
-
-King James VI. of Scotland, in 1594 (nine years before he ascended the
-English throne as James I.), wrote and published his disgracefully
-credulous and cruel treatise, entitled "Dæmonologie," containing
-statements as to the making of witches, and their practice of
-witchcraft, which, _if true_, would only prove their revealer to be deep
-in the councils of Satan, and a regular member or attendant of
-assemblages of witches. The royal witch-hater held that, as witchcraft
-is an act of treason against the prince, the evidence of barnes
-[children] or wives [weak women], or ever so defamed persons [_i.e._, of
-character however infamous], may serve for sufficient witnesses against
-them; for [he asks], who but witches can be provers, and so witnesses of
-the doings of witches? Besides evidence, "there are two other good helps
-that may be used for their trial; the one is the finding of their
-_mark_, and then trying the insensibleness thereof; the other is
-floating on the water" [or drowning], &c. Having thus opened the door by
-admitting the loosest evidence and the most absurd tests for the most
-unjust convictions, the royal fanatic adds, that all witches [_i.e._,
-persons thus convicted] ought to be put to death, without distinction of
-age, sex, or rank. This "British Solomon" ascended the English throne in
-1603, and, as might have been expected, witch-finders soon plied their
-infamous vocation with success. The wild and desolate parts of the
-parish of Whalley furnished a fitting scene for witch assemblies, and it
-was alleged that such meetings were held at Malkin Tower, in Pendle
-Forest, within that parish. At the assizes at Lancaster in the autumn of
-1612, twenty persons, of whom sixteen were women of various ages, were
-committed for trial, and most of them tried for witchcraft. Their names
-were--1. Elizabeth Southerne, widow, _alias_ "Old Demdike" (aged eighty
-or more); 2. Elizabeth Device [probably Davies], _alias_ "Young
-Demdike," her daughter; 3. James Device, son of No. 2; 4. Alizon Device,
-daughter of No. 2; 5. Anne Whittle, widow, _alias_ "Chattox," _alias_
-Chatterbox [more probably Chadwicks], the rival witch of "Old Demdike"
-(and, like her, eighty or more years of age); 6. Anne Redferne, daughter
-of No. 5; 7. Alice Nutter; 8. Katherine Hewytt, _alias_ "Mould-heels;"
-9. Jane Bulcock, of the Moss End; 10. John Bulcock, her son; 11. Isabel
-Robey; and 12. Margaret Pearson, of Padiham. No. 12 was tried first for
-murder by witchcraft; 2nd for bewitching a neighbour; 3rd for bewitching
-a horse; and, being acquitted of the two former charges, was sentenced
-for the last to stand upon the pillory in the markets of Clitheroe,
-Padiham, Colne, and Lancaster for four successive market days, with a
-printed paper upon her head, stating her offence. The twelve persons
-already named were styled "Witches of Pendle Forest." The following
-eight were called "Witches of Samlesbury:"--13. Jennet Bierley; 14.
-Ellen Bierley; 15. Jane Southworth; 16. John Ramsden; 17. Elizabeth
-Astley; 18. Alice Gray; 19. Isabel Sidegraves; and 20. Lawrence Haye.
-The last four were all discharged without trial. The sensation produced
-by these trials was immense, not only in this, but throughout
-neighbouring counties, and Thomas Potts, Esq., the clerk of the court,
-was directed by the judges of assize, Sir Edward Bromley, Knt., and Sir
-James Altham, Knt., to collect and publish the evidence and other
-documents connected with the trial, under the revision of the judges
-themselves; and Potts's "Discovery of Witches," originally published in
-1613, has been reprinted by the Chetham Society (vol. vi.), under the
-editorship of its president, Mr. James Crossley, F.S.A. According to
-Potts, Old Mother Demdike, the principal actress in the tragedy, was a
-general agent for the devil in all these parts; no man escaping her or
-her furies that ever gave them occasion of offence, or denied them
-anything they stood in need of. The justices of the peace in this part
-of the country, Roger Nowell and Nicholas Bannister, having learned that
-Malkin Tower [Malkin is a north-country name for a hare], in the Forest
-of Pendle, the residence of Old Demdike and her daughter, was the resort
-of the witches, ventured to arrest their head and another of her
-followers, and to commit them to Lancaster Castle. Amongst the rest of
-the voluntary confessions made by the witches, that of Dame Demdike is
-preserved. She confessed that, about twenty years ago, as she was coming
-home from begging, she was met near Gould's Hey, in the forest of
-Pendle, by a spirit or devil in the shape of a boy, the one half of his
-coat black and the other brown, who told her to stop, and said that if
-she would give him her soul, she should have anything she wished for.
-She asked his name, and was told _Tib_. She consented, from the hope of
-gain, to give him her soul. For several years she had no occasion to
-make any application to her evil spirit; but one Sunday morning, having
-a little child upon her knee, and she being in a slumber, the spirit
-appeared to her in the likeness of a brown dog, and forced himself upon
-her knee, and begun to suck her blood under her left arm, on which she
-exclaimed, "Jesus! save me!" and the brown dog vanished, leaving her
-almost stark mad for eight weeks. On another occasion she was led, being
-blind, to the house of Richard Baldwyn, to obtain payment for the
-services her daughter had performed at his mill, when Baldwyn fell into
-a passion, and bid them to get off his ground, calling them w----s and
-witches, and saying he would burn the one and hang the other. On this,
-_Tib_ appeared, and they concerted matters to revenge themselves on
-Baldwyn; how, is not stated. This poor mendicant pretender to the powers
-of witchcraft, in her examination stated that the surest way of taking a
-man's life by witchcraft is to make a picture of clay, like unto the
-shape of the person meant to be killed, and when they would have the
-object of their vengeance suffer in any particular part of his body, to
-take a thorn or pin and prick it into that part of the effigy; and when
-they would have any of the body to consume away, then to burn that part
-of the figure; and when they would have the whole body to consume, then
-to burn the clay image; by which means the afflicted will die. The
-substance of the examinations of the so-called witches and others, may
-be given as follows:--Old Demdike persuaded her daughter, Elizabeth
-Device, to sell herself to the devil, which she did, and in turn
-initiated her daughter, Alizon Device, in these infernal arts. When the
-old witch had been sent to Lancaster Castle, a grand convocation of
-seventeen witches and three wizards was held at Malkin Tower on Good
-Friday, at which it was determined to kill Mr. M'Covell, the governor of
-the castle, and to blow up the building, to enable the witches to make
-their escape. The other two objects of this convocation were to christen
-the familiar of Alizon Device, one of the witches in the castle, and
-also to bewitch and murder Mr. Lister, a gentleman of Westby-in-Craven,
-Yorkshire. The business being ended, the witches, in quitting the
-meeting, walked out of the barn, named Malkin Tower, in their proper
-shapes, but on reaching the door, each mounted his or her spirit, which
-was in the form of a young horse, and quickly vanished. Before the
-assizes, Old Demdike, worn out by age and trouble, died in prison. The
-others were brought to trial. The first person arraigned before Sir
-Edward Bromley, who presided in the criminal court, was Ann Whittle,
-_alias_ "Chattox," who is described by Potts as a very old, withered,
-spent, and decrepit creature, eighty years of age, and nearly blind, a
-dangerous witch, of very long countenance, always opposed to Old
-Demdike, for whom the one favoured, the other hated deadly, and they
-accused each other in their examinations. This witch was more
-mischievous to men's goods than to themselves; her lips ever chattered
-as she walked (hence, probably, her name of Chattox or Chatterbox), but
-no one knew what she said. Her abode was in the Forest of Pendle,
-amongst the company of other witches, where the woollen trade was
-carried on, she having been in her younger days a wool-carder. She was
-indicted for having exercised various wicked and devilish arts called
-witchcrafts, enchantments, charms and sorceries, upon one Robert Nutter,
-of Greenhead, in the Forest of Pendle, and with having, by force
-thereof, feloniously killed him. To establish this charge her own
-examination was read, from which it appeared that fourteen or fifteen
-years ago, a thing like "a Christian man" had importuned her to sell her
-soul to the devil, and that she had done so, giving to her familiar the
-name of _Fancy_. On account of an insult offered to her daughter,
-Redfern, by Robert Nutter, they two conspired to place a bad wish upon
-Nutter, of which he died. It was further deposed against her that John
-Device had agreed to give Old Chattox a dole of meal yearly if she would
-not hurt him, and that when he ceased to make this annual tribute, he
-took to his bed and died. She was further charged with having bewitched
-the drink of John Moore, and also with having, without using the churn,
-produced a quantity of butter from a dish of skimmed milk! In the face
-of this evidence, and no longer anxious about her own life, she
-acknowledged her guilt, but humbly prayed the judges to be merciful to
-her daughter, Anne Redfern; but her prayer was in vain. Against
-Elizabeth Device, the testimony of her own daughter, a child nine years
-of age, was received; and the way in which her evidence was given,
-instead of filling the court with horror, seems to have excited their
-applause and admiration. Her familiar had the form of a dog and was
-called _Bull_, and by his agency she bewitched to death John and James
-Robinson and James Mitton; the first having called her a strumpet, and
-the last having refused to give Old Demdike a penny when she asked him
-for charity. To render her daughter proficient in the art, the prisoner
-taught her two prayers, by one of which she cured the bewitched, and by
-the other procured drink. The person of Elizabeth Device, as described
-by Potts, seems witch-like. "She was branded (says he) with a
-preposterous mark in nature; her left eye standing lower than her right;
-the one looking down and the other up at the same time." Her process of
-destruction was by modelling clay or marl figures, and wasting her
-victims away along with them. James Device was convicted principally on
-the evidence of his child-sister, of bewitching and killing Mrs. Ann
-Towneley, the wife of Mr. Henry Towneley, of the Carr, by means of a
-picture of clay; and both he and his sister were witnesses against their
-mother. This wizard (James Device), whose spirit was called _Dandy_, is
-described as a poor, decrepit boy, apparently of weak intellect, and so
-infirm, that it was found necessary to hold him up in court on his
-trial.
-
-Upon evidence of this kind no fewer than ten of these unfortunate people
-were found guilty at Lancaster, and sentenced to suffer death. Eight
-others were acquitted; why, it is not easy to see, for the evidence
-appears to have been equally strong, or rather equally weak and absurd,
-against all. The ten persons sentenced were--Ann Whittle _alias_
-"Chattox," Elizabeth Device, James Device, Anne Redfern, Alice Nutter,
-Catherine Hewytt, John Bulcock, Jane Bulcock, Alizon Device, and Isabel
-Robey.
-
-The judge, Sir Edward Bromley, in passing sentence on the convicted
-prisoners, said, "You, of all people, have the least cause of complaint;
-since on the trial for your lives there hath been much care and pains
-taken; and what persons of your nature and condition were ever arraigned
-and tried with so much solemnity? The court hath had great care to
-receive nothing in evidence against you but matter of fact(!)[129] As
-you stand simply (your offence and bloody practices not considered)
-your fate would rather move compassion than exasperate any man; for whom
-would not the ruin of so many poor creatures at one time touch, as in
-appearance simple, and of little understanding? But the blood of these
-innocent children, and others his Majesty's subjects whom cruelly and
-barbarously you have murdered and cut off, cries unto the Lord for
-vengeance. It is impossible that you, who are stained with so much
-innocent blood, should either prosper or continue in this world, or
-receive reward in the next." Having thus shut the door of hope, both as
-to this life and the future, the judge proceeded to urge the wretched
-victims of superstition to repentance! and concluded by sentencing them
-all to be hanged. They were executed at Lancaster on the 20th of August,
-1612, for having bewitched to death "by devilish practices and hellish
-means" no fewer than sixteen inhabitants of the Forest of Pendle. These
-were, 1. Robert Nutter, of Greenhead. 2. Richard Assheton, son of
-Richard Assheton, Esq., of Downham. 3. A child of Richard Baldwin, of
-Westhead, in the Forest of Pendle. 4. John Device, or Davies, of Pendle.
-5. Ann Nutter, daughter of Anthony Nutter, of Pendle. 6. A child of John
-Moor, of Higham. 7. Hugh Moor, of Pendle. 8. John Robinson, _alias_
-Swyer. 9. James Robinson. 10. Henry Mytton, of Rough Lee. 11. Ann
-Towneley, wife of Henry Towneley, of Carr Hall, gentleman. 12. John
-Duckworth. 13. John Hargreaves, of Goldshaw Booth. 14. Blaize
-Hargreaves, of Higham. 15. Christopher Nutter. 16. Ann Folds, near
-Colne. John Law, a pedlar, was also bewitched, so as to lose the use of
-his limbs, by Alizon Device, because he refused to give her some pins
-without money, when requested to do so by her on his way from Colne.
-Alizon Device herself _was a beggar by profession_, and the evidence
-sufficiently proved that Law's affliction was nothing more than what
-would now be termed paralysis of the lower extremities.
-
-In his _Introduction_ to _Potts's Discovery of Witches_, Mr. Crossley
-observes that "the main interest in reviewing this miserable band of
-victims will be felt to centre in Alice Nutter. Wealthy, well conducted,
-well connected, and placed probably on an equality with most of the
-neighbouring families, and the magistrate before whom she was brought
-and by whom she was committed, she deserves to be distinguished from the
-companions with whom she suffered, and to attract an attention which has
-never yet been directed to her. That James Device, on whose evidence she
-was convicted, was instructed to accuse her by her own nearest
-relatives, and that the magistrate, Roger Nowell, entered actively as a
-confederate into the conspiracy, from a grudge entertained against her
-on account of a long-disputed boundary, are allegations which tradition
-has preserved, but the truth or falsehood of which, at this distance of
-time, it is scarcely possible satisfactorily to examine. Her mansion,
-Rough Lee, is still standing, a very substantial and rather fine
-specimen of the houses of the inferior gentry, _temp._ James I., but now
-divided into cottages."
-
-
-THE SAMLESBURY WITCHES.
-
-The trials of these persons took place at the same assizes, and before
-the same judge. Against Jane and Ellen Bierley and Jane Southworth, all
-of Samlesbury, charged with having bewitched Grace Sowerbutts there, the
-only material evidence was that of Grace Sowerbutts herself, a girl of
-licentious and vagrant habits, who swore that these women (one of them
-being her grandmother), did draw her by the hair of the head and lay her
-upon the top of a hay-mow, and did take her senses and memory from her;
-that they appeared to her sometimes in their own likeness, and sometimes
-like a black dog. She declared that they by their arts had induced her
-to join their sisterhood; and that they were met from time to time by
-"four black things going upright and yet not like men in the face," who
-conveyed them across the Ribble, where they danced with them, &c. The
-prisoners were also charged with bewitching and slaying a child of
-Thomas Walshman's, by placing a nail in its navel; and after its burial,
-they took up the corpse, when they ate part of the flesh, and made an
-"_unxious_ ointment" by boiling the bones. This was more than even the
-capacious credulity of the judge and jury could digest. The Samlesbury
-witches were, therefore, acquitted, and a seminary priest named Thompson
-_alias_ Southworth, was suspected by two of the county magistrates [the
-Rev. William Leigh and Edward Chisnall, Esq.,] to whom the affair was
-afterwards referred, of having instigated Sowerbutts to make the charge;
-but this imputation was not supported by any satisfactory evidence.
-
-
-WITCHCRAFT AT MIDDLETON.
-
-About 1630, a man named Utley, a reputed wizard, was tried, found
-guilty, and hanged, at Lancaster, for having bewitched to death,
-Richard, the son of Ralph Assheton, Esq., of Downham, and Lord of
-Middleton.[130]
-
-
-WITCHCRAFT IN 1633-34.
-
-In 1633, a number of poor and ignorant people, inhabitants of Pendle
-Forest, or the neighbourhood, were apprehended, upon the information of
-a boy named Edmund Robinson, and charged with witchcraft. The following
-is a copy of Robinson's deposition:--
-
- "The examination of Edmund Robinson, son of Edmund Robinson, of
- Pendle Forest, mason, taken at Padiham, before Richard Shuttleworth
- [of Gawthorpe, Esq., then forty-seven or forty-eight] and John
- Starkie, Esq. [one of the seven demoniacs of Cleworth, in 1595] two
- of his Majesty's Justices of the Peace, within the county of
- Lancaster, 10th of February, A.D. 1633 [1634]. Who informeth upon
- oath (being examined concerning the great outrages of the witches),
- and saith, that upon All Saints' Day last past [Nov. 1, 1633], he,
- this informer, being with one Henry Parker, a next door neighbour to
- him, in Wheatley-lane, desired the said Parker to give him leave to
- get some bulloes [? bullace], which he did. In which time of getting
- bulloes, he saw two greyhounds, viz., a black and a brown one, come
- running over the next field towards him; he verily thinking the one
- of them to be Mr. Nutter's, and the other to be Mr. Robinson's, the
- said Mr. Nutter and Mr. Robinson having then such like. And the said
- greyhounds came to him and fawned on him, they having about their
- necks either of them a collar, and to either of which collars was
- tied a string, which collars, as this informant affirmeth, did shine
- like gold; and he thinking that some either of Mr. Nutter's or Mr.
- Robinson's family should have followed them, but seeing nobody to
- follow them, he took the said greyhounds, thinking to hunt with
- them, and presently a hare rise [rose] very near before him, at the
- sight of which he cried 'Loo! loo!' but the dogs would not run.
- Whereupon being very angry he took them, and with the strings that
- were at their collars, tied either of them to a little bush on the
- next hedge, and with a rod that he had in his hand he beat them. And
- instead of the black greyhound, one Dickonson wife stood up (a
- neighbour), whom this informer knoweth; and instead of the brown
- greyhound a little boy, whom this informer knoweth not. At which
- sight this informer being afraid, endeavoured to run away, but being
- stayed by the woman, viz., by Dickonson's wife, she put her hand
- into her pocket and pulled out a piece of silver much like to a fair
- shilling, and offered to give him to hold his tongue, and not to
- tell, which he refused, saying, 'Nay, thou art a witch.' Whereupon
- she put her hand into her pocket again, and pulled out a string like
- unto a bridle, that jingled, which she put upon the little boy's
- head that stood up in the brown greyhound's stead; whereupon the
- said boy stood up a white horse. Then immediately the said
- Dickonson's wife took this informer before her upon the said horse
- and carried him to a new house called Hoare-stones, being about a
- quarter of a mile off; whither when they were come there were divers
- persons about the door, and he saw divers others come riding upon
- horses of several colours towards the said house, which tied their
- horses to a hedge near to the said house, and which persons went
- into the said house, to the number of three score or thereabouts, as
- this informer thinketh, where they had a fire and meat roasting,
- and some other meat stirring in the house, whereof a young woman,
- whom he, this informer, knoweth not, gave him flesh and bread upon a
- trencher, and drink in a glass, which, after the first taste, he
- refused, and would have no more, and said it was nought. And
- presently after, seeing divers of the company going to a barn
- adjoining, he followed after, and there he saw six of them kneeling,
- and pulling at six several ropes, which were fastened or tied to the
- top of the house, at or with which pulling came then in this
- informer's sight flesh smoking, butter in lumps, and milk as it were
- syling [skimming or straining] from the said ropes, all which fell
- into basins which were placed under the said ropes. And after that
- these six had done, there came other six, which did likewise; and
- during all the time of their so pulling, they made such foul faces
- that feared this informer, so as he was glad to steal out and run
- home; whom, when they wanted, some of their company came running
- after him, near to a place in a highway called Boggard-hole, where
- this informer met two horsemen, at the sight whereof the said
- persons left following him; and the foremost of which persons that
- followed him, he knoweth to be one Loynd wife, which said wife,
- together with one Dickonson wife, and one Janet Davies, he hath seen
- at several times in a croft or close adjoining to his father's
- house, which put him in a great fear. And further this informer
- saith, upon Thursday after New Year's Day last past, he saw the said
- Loynd wife sitting upon a cross piece of wood being near the chimney
- of his father's dwelling-house: and he, calling to her, said, 'Come
- down, thou Loynd wife,' and immediately the said Loynd wife went up
- out of his sight. And further, this informer saith, that after he
- was come from the company aforesaid to his father's house, being
- towards evening, his father bade him go fetch home two kine to seal
- [cows to yoke], and in the way, in a field called the Ollers
- [_i.e._, Alders,] he chanced to hap upon a boy who began to quarrel
- with him, and they fought so together till this informer had his
- ears made very bloody by fighting; and looking down, he saw the boy
- had a cloven foot, at which sight he was afraid, and ran away from
- him to seek the kine. And in the way he saw a light like a lantern,
- towards which he made haste, supposing it to be carried by some of
- Mr. Robinson's people; but when he came to the place he only found a
- woman standing on a bridge, whom, when he saw her, he knew to be
- Loynd wife, and knowing her he turned back again, and immediately he
- met with the aforesaid boy, from whom he offered to run; which boy
- gave him a blow on the back, which caused him to cry. And he further
- saith, that when he was in the barn, he saw three women take three
- pictures from off the beam, in the which pictures many thorns, or
- such like things, sticked; and that Loynd wife took one of the said
- pictures down; but the other two women that took the other two
- pictures down he knoweth not. And being further asked what persons
- were at the meeting aforesaid, he nominated these persons hereafter
- mentioned; viz., Dickonson wife, Henry Priestly wife and her son,
- Alice Hargreaves, widow, Jennet Davies, William Davies, the wife of
- Henry Jacks and her son John, James Hargreaves of Marsden, Miles
- wife of Dicks, James wife, Saunders as he believes, Lawrence wife of
- Saunders, Loynd wife, Boys wife of Barrowford, one Holgate and his
- wife as he believes, Little Robin wife of Leonards of the West
- Close.
-
- "Edmund Robinson of Pendle, father of the said Edmund Robinson, the
- aforesaid informer, upon oath saith, that upon All Saints' Day he
- sent his son, the aforesaid informer, to fetch home two kine to
- seal, and saith that he thought his son stayed longer than he
- should have done, and went to seek him; and in seeking him heard
- him cry very pitifully, and found him so afraid and distracted,
- that he neither knew his father, nor did know where he was, and so
- continued very near a quarter of an hour before he came to himself;
- and he told this informer his father all the particular passages
- that are before declared in the said Edmund Robinson his son's
- information."
-
-Upon such evidence as the above, these poor creatures, chiefly women and
-children, were committed by the two magistrates named, to Lancaster
-Castle, for trial. On their trials at the assizes, a jury, doubtless
-full of prejudice and superstitious fear, found seventeen of them
-guilty. The judge respited the convicts and reported the case to the
-king in council. They were next remitted to the Bishop of Chester (Dr.
-Bridgeman), who certified his opinion of the case, which, however, does
-not appear. Subsequently, four of these poor women, Margaret Johnson,
-Frances Dickonson, Mary Spencer, and the wife of one of the
-Hargreaveses, were sent for to London, and examined, first by the king's
-physicians and surgeons, and afterwards by Charles I. in person. The
-strangest part of this sad story of superstition is that one of the
-four, who underwent examination before the magistrates, trial before "my
-lords the king's justices," a sifting question by the Right Rev. the
-Lord Bishop of Chester, aided, probably, by his chancellor, archdeacons,
-chaplains, proctors, &c., next before the lords of his majesty's privy
-council, and lastly, before his sacred majesty the king himself, whose
-very touch would remove the king's evil,--one of these four women,
-doubtless after much badgering, bullying, and artful questioning,
-actually made a confession of her guilt as a witch. When this was made
-it does not appear; but here is the confession as preserved in
-Dodsworth's Collection of MSS., vol. lxi. p. 47:--
-
- "THE CONFESSION OF MARGARET JOHNSON.--That betwixt seven and eight
- years since, she being in her own house in Marsden in a great
- passion of anger and discontent, and withal pressed with some want,
- there appeared unto her a spirit or devil in the proportion or
- similitude of a man, apparelled in a suit of black, tied about with
- silk points; who offered that if she would give him her soul he
- would supply all her wants, and bring to her whatsoever she did
- need; and at her appointment would in revenge either kill or hurt
- whom or what she desired, were it man or beast. And saith, that
- after a solicitation or two, she contracted and covenanted with the
- said devil for her soul. And that the said devil or spirit bade her
- call him by the name of Mamilian; and when she would have him do
- anything for her, call in 'Mamilian,' and he would be ready to do
- her will. And saith, that in all her talk and confidence she calleth
- her said devil, 'Mamil, my God.' She further saith that the said
- Mamilian, her devil (by her consent) did abuse and defile * * * And
- saith that she was not at the great meeting at Hoare-stones, at the
- Forest of Pendle, upon All Saints' Day, where * * * But saith she
- was at a second meeting the Sunday next after All Saints' Day, at
- the place aforesaid, where there was at the time between thirty and
- forty witches, who did all ride to the said meeting, and the end of
- the meeting was to consult for the killing and hurting of men and
- beasts. And that besides their private familiars or spirits, there
- was one great or grand devil or spirit, more eminent than the rest.
- And if any desire to have a great and more wonderful devil, whereby
- they may have more power to hurt, they may have one such. And saith
- that such witches as have sharp bones given them by the devil to
- prick them, have no paps or dugs whereon the devil may suck; but the
- devil receiveth blood from the place pricked with the bone; and they
- are more grand witches than any that have marks. She also saith,
- that if a witch had but one mark, she hath but one spirit; if two,
- then two spirits; if three, yet but two spirits. And saith that
- their spirits usually have keeping of their bodies. And being
- desired to name such as she knew to be witches, she named, &c. And
- if they would torment a man, they bid their spirit go and torment
- him in any particular place. And that Good Friday is one constant
- day for a yearly general meeting of witches, and that on Good Friday
- last they had a meeting near Pendle water-side. She also saith that
- men witches usually have women spirits, and women witches men
- spirits. And their devil or spirit gives them notice of their
- meeting, and tells them the place where it must be. And saith, if
- they desire to be in any place upon a sudden their devil or spirit
- will, upon a rod, dog, or anything else, presently convey them
- thither; yea, into any room of a man's house. But she saith, it is
- not the substance of their bodies, but their spirit [that] assumeth
- such form and shape as go into such rooms. She also saith that the
- devil (after he begins to suck) will make a pap or dug in a short
- time, and the matter which he sucks is blood. And saith that their
- devils can cause foul weather and storms, and so did at their
- meetings. She also saith that when her devil did come to suck her
- pap, he usually came to her in the likeness of a cat, sometimes of
- one colour and sometimes of another. And that since this trouble
- befel her, her spirit hath left her, and she never saw him since."
-
-One cannot read this farrago of revolting absurdities without
-instinctively feeling that no uneducated woman could have dictated it;
-that it must have been prepared and dressed up for her to attach her
-mark, and that all she did was to make the cross to it, in fear,
-peradventure, of impending tortures. It is at least satisfactory to know
-that all these examinations of the poor women by legal, ecclesiastic,
-and regal authorities had a beneficial result. Strong presumption was
-afforded that the chief witness, the boy Robinson, had been suborned to
-accuse the prisoners falsely; and they were accordingly discharged. The
-boy afterwards confessed that he was suborned. The story excited, at the
-time, so much interest in the public, that in the following year, 1634,
-was acted and published a play entitled "The Witches of Lancashire,"
-which Steevens cites in illustration of Shakspeare's witches. _Dr.
-Whitaker's Whalley._ [Reference is probably made here to Heywood and
-Broome's play of "The late Lancashire Witches" (London, 1634, quarto).
-There was a much later play entitled "The Lancashire Witches," by
-Shadwell (London, 1682)].
-
-
-THE LANCASHIRE WITCHES OF 1633-4.
-
-Sir Wm. Pelham writes, May 16, 1634, to Lord Conway:--"The greatest news
-from the country is of a huge pack of witches, which are lately
-discovered in Lancashire, whereof, 'tis said, 19 are condemned, and that
-there are at least 60 already discovered, and yet daily there are more
-revealed: there are divers of them of good ability, and they have done
-much harm. I hear it is suspected that they had a hand in raising the
-great storm, wherein his Majesty [Charles I.] was in so great danger at
-sea in Scotland." The original is in the State Paper Office.[131]
-
-
-LANCASHIRE WITCH-FINDERS.
-
-Dr. Webster, in his "Display of Witchcraft," depicts the consternation
-and alarm amongst the old and decrepit, from the machinations of the
-witch-finders. Of the boy Robinson, who was a witness on several trials
-of witches, he says--"This said boy was brought into the church at
-Kildwick [in Yorkshire, on the confines of Lancashire], a large parish
-church, where I, being then curate there, was preaching in the
-afternoon, and was set upon a stool to look about him, which moved some
-little disturbance in the congregation for a while. After prayers, I
-enquired what the matter was: the people told me that it was the boy
-that discovered witches; upon which I went to the house where he was to
-stay all night, and here I found him and two very unlikely persons, that
-did conduct him and manage the business. I desired to have some
-discourse with the boy in private, but that they utterly refused. Then,
-in the presence of a great many people, I took the boy near me and said:
-'Good boy, tell me truly and in earnest, didst thou see and hear such
-strange things at the meeting of witches as is reported by many thou
-didst relate?' But the two men, not giving the boy leave to answer, did
-pluck him from me, and said he had been examined by two _able_ justices
-of the peace, and _they did never ask him such a question_. To whom I
-replied, the persons accused had therefore the more wrong." Dr. Webster
-subsequently adds, that "The boy Robinson, in more mature years,
-acknowledged that he had been instructed and suborned to make these
-accusations against the accused persons, by his father and others, and
-that, of course, the whole was a fraud. By such wicked means and
-unchristian practices, divers innocent persons lost their lives; and
-these wicked rogues wanted not greater persons (even of the ministry
-too) that did authorise and encourage them in their diabolical courses;
-and the like in my time happened here in Lancashire, where divers, both
-men and women, were accused of supposed witchcraft, and were so
-unchristianly and inhumanly handled, as to be stript stark naked, and
-laid upon tables and beds to be searched for their supposed witch-marks;
-so barbarous and cruel acts doth diabolical instigation, working upon
-ignorance and superstition, produce."
-
-
-THE FOREST OF PENDLE--THE HAUNT OF THE LANCASHIRE WITCHES.
-
-The Forest of Pendle is a portion of the greater one of
-"Blackburnshire," and is so called from the celebrated mountain of that
-name, over the declivity of which it extends, and stretches in a long
-but interrupted descent of five miles to the Water of Pendle, a barren
-and dreary tract. Dr. Whitaker observes of this and the neighbouring
-forests, and the remark even yet holds good, "that they still bear the
-marks of original barrenness and recent cultivation; that they are still
-distinguished from the ancient freehold tracts around them, by want of
-old houses, old woods, high fences (for these were forbidden by the
-forest laws); by peculiarities of dialect and manners in their
-inhabitants; and lastly, by a general air of poverty which all the
-opulence of manufactures cannot remove." He considers that "at an
-uncertain period during the occupancy of the Lacies, the first principle
-of population (in these forests) commenced;" it was found that these
-wilds, bleak and barren as they were, might be occupied to some
-advantage in breeding young and depasturing lean "cattle, which were
-afterwards fattened in the lower domain. _Vaccaries_, or great upland
-pastures, were laid out for this purpose; _booths_ or mansions erected
-upon them for the residence of herdsmen; and at the same time that herds
-of deer were permitted to range at large as heretofore, _lawnds_, by
-which are meant parks within a forest, were enclosed, in order to chase
-them with greater facility, or by confinement to produce fatter venison.
-Of these lawnds Pendle had New and Old Lawnd, with the contiguous Park
-of Ightenhill." In the early part of the 17th century the inhabitants of
-this district must have been, with few exceptions, a wretchedly poor and
-uncultivated race, having little communication with the occupants of the
-more fertile regions around them, and in whose minds superstition, even
-yet unextinguished, must have had absolute and uncontrollable
-domination. Under the disenchanting influence of steam, still much of
-the old character of its population remains. The "parting genius" of
-superstition still clings to the hoary hill tops and rugged slopes and
-mossy water sides, along which the old forest stretched its length, and
-the voices of ancestral tradition are still heard to speak from the
-depth of its quiet hollows, and along the course of its gurgling
-streams. He who visits Pendle will find that charms are yet generally
-resorted to amongst the lower classes; that there are hares which, in
-their persuasion, never can be caught, and which survive only to baffle
-and confound the huntsman; that each small hamlet has its peculiar and
-gifted personage, whom it is dangerous to offend; that the wise man and
-woman (the white witches of our ancestors) still continue their
-investigations of truth, undisturbed by the rural police or the progress
-of the schoolmaster; that each locality has its haunted house; that
-apparitions still walk their ghostly rounds,--and little would his
-reputation for piety avail that clergyman in the eyes of his
-parishioners, who should refuse to lay those "extravagant and erring
-spirits," when requested, by those liturgic ceremonies which the
-orthodoxy of tradition requires. In the early part of the reign of James
-I., and at the period when his execrable statute against witchcraft
-might have been sharpening its appetite by a temporary fast for the full
-meal of blood by which it was eventually glutted--for as yet it could
-count no recorded victims--two wretched old women with their families
-resided in the Forest of Pendle. Their names were Elizabeth Southernes
-and Ann Whittle, better known, perhaps, in the chronicles of witchcraft
-by the appellations of Old Demdike and Old Chattox [perhaps, Chadwick].
-Both had attained, or reached the verge of the advanced age of eighty,
-and were evidently in a state of extreme poverty, subsisting with their
-families by occasional employment, by mendicancy, but principally,
-perhaps, by the assumption of that unlawful power which commerce with
-spirits of evil was supposed to procure, and of which their sex, life,
-appearance, and peculiarities might seem to the prejudiced neighbourhood
-in the Forest to render them not unsuitable depositaries.[132]
-
-[For the details of the witchcraft alleged to be practised by these old
-crones and their families, with their trials and fate, see an article
-(page 185 _suprâ_) in the present volume, entitled "The Lancashire
-Witches of 1612."]
-
-
-PENDLE HILL AND ITS WITCHES.
-
-(From Rev. Richard James's _Iter Lancastrense_.)
-
- "Penigent, Pendle Hill, and Ingleborough,
- Three such hills be not in all England thorough."[133]
-
- I long to climb up Pendle[134]: Pendle stands
- Round cop, surveying all the wild moor lands,
- And Malkin's Tower,[135] a little cottage, where
- Report makes caitiff witches meet, to swear
- Their homage to the devil, and contrive
- The deaths of men and beasts. Let who will dive
- Into this baneful search, I wonder much
- If judges' sentence with belief on such
- Doth pass: then sure, they would not for lewd gain
- Bad clients favour, or put good to pain
- Of long pursuit; for terror of the fiend
- Or love of God, they would give causes end
- With equal justice. Yet I do confess
- Needs must strange fancies poor old wives possess,
- Who in those desert, misty moors do live,
- Hungry and cold, and scarce see priest to give
- Them ghostly counsel. Churches far do stand
- In laymen's hands, and chapels have no land
- To cherish learned curates,[136] though Sir John
- Do preach for four pounds unto Haslingden.
- Such yearly rent, with right of begging corn,
- Makes John a sharer in my Lady's horn:
- He drinks and prays, and forty years this life
- Leading at home, keeps children and a wife.[137]
- These are the wonders of our careless days:
- Small store serves him who for the people prays.
-
-
-WITCHCRAFT ABOUT 1654.
-
-Dr. Webster, in his _Display of Witchcraft_, dated February 23, 1673,
-mentions two cases somewhat vaguely, in the following terms:--"I myself
-have known two supposed witches to be put to death at Lancaster, within
-these eighteen years [_i.e._, between 1654 and 1673] that did utterly
-deny any league or covenant with the devil, or even to have seen any
-visible devil at all; and may not the confessions of those (who both
-died penitent) be as well credited as the confessions of those that were
-brought to such confessions by force, fraud, or cunning persuasion and
-allurement?"
-
-
-A LIVERPOOL WITCH IN 1667.
-
-In the MS. _Rental of Sir Edward More_ (p. 62), dated in the year 1667,
-it is gravely recorded that one of his tenants residing in
-Castle-street, Liverpool, was a witch, descended from a witch, and
-inheriting the faculty of witchcraft in common with her maiden
-sister:--"Widow Bridge, a poor old woman, her own sister Margaret Ley,
-being arraigned for a witch, confessed she was one, and when she was
-asked how long she had so been, replied, since the death of her mother,
-who died thirty years agone, and at her decease she had nothing to leave
-her and this widow Bridge, that were sisters, but her two spirits, and
-named then the elder spirit to this widow, and the other spirit to her,
-the said Margaret Ley. God bless me and all mine from such legacies.
-Amen."[138]
-
-
-THE WITCH OF SINGLETON.
-
-The village of Singleton [in the Fylde] is remarkable only for having
-been the residence of "Mag Shelton," a famous witch in her day. Her
-food, we are told, was _haggis_ (at that time commonly used in the
-district) made of boiled groats, mixed with thyme or parsley. Many are
-the wild tales related of her dealings in the black art. The cows of her
-neighbours were constantly milked by her; the pitcher in which she
-conveyed the stolen milk away, walking before her in the shape of a
-goose. Under this disguise her depredations were carried on till a
-neighbour, suspecting the trick, struck the seeming goose, and lo!
-immediately it was changed into a broken pitcher, and the vaccine liquor
-flowed. Once only was this witch foiled by a powerful spell, the
-contrivance of a maiden, who, having seated her in a chair, before a
-large fire, and stuck a bodkin, crossed with two weaver's healds, about
-her person, thus fixed her irremovably to her seat.[139]
-
-
-WITCHCRAFT AT CHOWBENT IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.
-
-In the beginning of this [the eighteenth] century, one Katherine
-Walkden, an old woman of the township of Atherton, Chowbent, was
-committed to Lancaster as a witch. She was examined at Hulton Hall,
-where the magistrate then resided, by a jury of matrons, by whom a
-private teat was discovered, and upon this and other evidence (I suppose
-of equal importance) her _mittimus_ was made out, but she died in gaol
-before the ensuing assizes.[140]
-
-
-KILLING A WITCH.
-
-Some years ago I formed the acquaintance of an elderly gentleman who had
-retired from business, after amassing an ample fortune by the
-manufacture of cotton. He was possessed of a considerable amount of
-general information--had studied the world by which he was
-surrounded--and was a leading member of the Wesleyan connexion. The
-faith element, however, predominated amongst his religious principles,
-and hence both he and his family were firm believers in witchcraft. On
-one occasion, according to my informant, both he and the neighbouring
-farmers suffered much from loss of cattle, and from the unproductiveness
-of their sheep. The cream was _bynged_ [soured] in the churn, and would
-bring forth no butter. Their cows died mad in the shippons, and no
-farrier could be found who was able to fix upon the diseases which
-afflicted them. Horses were bewitched out of their stables through the
-loopholes, after the doors had been safely locked, and were frequently
-found strayed to a considerable distance when they ought to have been
-safe in their stalls. Lucky-stones had lost their virtues; horse-shoes
-nailed behind the doors were of little use; and sickles hung across the
-beams had no effect in averting the malevolence of the evil-doer. At
-length suspicion rested upon an old man, a noted astrologer and
-fortune-teller, who resided near New Church, in Rossendale, and it was
-determined to put an end both to their ill-fortune and his career, by
-performing the requisite ceremonials for "killing a witch." It was a
-cold November evening when the process commenced. A thick fog covered
-the valleys, and the wild winds whistled across the dreary moors. The
-farmers, however, were not deterred. They met at the house of one of
-their number, whose cattle were then supposed to be under the influence
-of the wizard; and having procured a live cock-chicken, they stuck him
-full of pins and burnt him alive, whilst repeating some magical
-incantation. A cake was also made of oatmeal, mixed with the urine of
-those bewitched, and, after having been marked with the name of the
-person suspected, was then burnt in a similar manner.... The wind
-suddenly rose to a tempest and threatened the destruction of the house.
-Dreadful moanings as of some one in intense agony, were heard without,
-whilst a sense of horror seized upon all within. At the moment when the
-storm was at the wildest, the wizard knocked at the door, and in piteous
-tones desired admittance. They had previously been warned by the "wise
-man" whom they had consulted, that such would be the case, and had been
-charged not to yield to their feelings of humanity by allowing him to
-enter. Had they done so, he would have regained all his influence, for
-the virtue of the spell would have been dissolved. Again and again did
-he implore them to open the door, and pleaded the bitterness of the
-wintry blast, but no one answered from within. They were deaf to all his
-entreaties, and at last the wizard wended his way across the moors as
-best he could. The spell, therefore, was enabled to have its full
-effect, and within a week the Rossendale wizard was locked in the cold
-embrace of death.[141]
-
-
-A RECENT WITCH, NEAR BURNLEY.
-
-Not many years ago there resided in the neighbourhood of Burnley an old
-woman, whose malevolent practices were supposed to render themselves
-manifest by the injuries she inflicted on her neighbours' cattle; and
-many a lucky-stone, many a stout horse-shoe and rusty sickle may now be
-found behind the doors or hung from the beams in the cow-houses and
-stables belonging to the farmers in that locality, which date their
-suspension from the time when this "witch" in reputation held the
-country-side in awe. Not one of her neighbours ever dared to offend her
-openly; and if she at any time preferred a request, it was granted at
-all hazards, regardless of inconvenience and expense. If, in some
-thoughtless moment, any one spoke slightingly, either of her or her
-powers, a corresponding penalty was threatened as soon as it reached her
-ears, and the loss of cattle, personal health, or a general "run of bad
-luck" soon led the offending party to think seriously of making peace
-with his powerful tormentor. As time wore on, she herself sickened and
-died; but before she could "shuffle off this mortal coil" she must needs
-_transfer her familiar spirit_ to some trusty successor. An intimate
-acquaintance from a neighbouring township was consequently sent for in
-all haste, and on her arrival was immediately closeted with her dying
-friend. What passed between them has never fully transpired, but it is
-confidently affirmed that at the close of the interview this associate
-_received the witch's last breath into her mouth, and with it the
-familiar spirit_. The dreaded woman thus ceased to exist, but her powers
-for good or evil were transferred to her companion; and on passing along
-the road from Burnley to Blackburn, we can point out a farm-house at no
-great distance, with whose thrifty matron no one will yet dare to
-quarrel.
-
-
-"LATING" OR "LEETING" WITCHES.
-
-All-Hallows' Eve, Hallowe'en, &c. (from the old English _halwen_,
-saints), denote the vigil and day of All Saints, October 31 and November
-1, a season abounding in superstitious observances. It was firmly
-believed in Lancashire that the witches assembled on this night at their
-general rendezvous in the Forest of Pendle,--a ruined and desolate
-farm-house, called the _Malkin Tower_ (_Malkin_ being the name of a
-familiar demon in Middleton's old play of _The Witch_; derived from
-_maca_, an equal, a companion). This superstition led to another, that
-of _lighting_, _lating_, or _leeting_ the witches (from _leoht_, A.-S.
-light). It was believed that if a lighted candle were carried about the
-fells or hills from eleven to twelve o'clock at night, and burned all
-that time steadily, it had so far triumphed over the evil power of the
-witches, who, as they passed to the Malkin Tower, would employ their
-utmost efforts to extinguish the light, and the person whom it
-represented might safely defy their malice during the season; but if, by
-any accident the candle went out, it was an omen of evil to the luckless
-wight for whom the experiment was made. It was also deemed inauspicious
-to cross the threshold of that person until after the return from
-_leeting_, and not then unless the candle had preserved its light. Mr.
-Milner describes this ceremony as having been recently performed.[142]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[122] Hall's _Chronicle_.
-
-[123] William of Worcester's _Annales Rerum Anglicarum_, pp. 460-61.
-
-[124] _Pictorial History of England_, vol. ii. p. 81; also Hall's
-_Chronicle_.
-
-[125] This is the title-page of an old 12mo chap-book, the date of
-publication of which is not shown.
-
-[126] This was sold by auction only a few years ago.
-
-[127] For Sir Philip Sidney's poetical description of this old game, see
-his _Arcadia_, or Brand's _Popular Antiquities_ (Ed. 1841, vol. ii. p.
-236).
-
-[128] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-[129] To prove the guilt of one of the prisoners, evidence was received
-that it was the opinion of a man not in court, that she had turned his
-beer sour. To prove the charge of murder, it was thought sufficient to
-attest that the sick person had declared his belief that he owed his
-approaching death to the maledictions of the prisoner. The bleeding of
-the corpse on the touch of Jennet Preston, was received as an
-incontrovertible evidence of guilt. It would be nearer the truth to say
-that nothing but fiction was received in evidence.
-
-[130] Dr. Whitaker's _Whalley_, p. 528.
-
-[131] W. N. S., in _Notes and Queries_, 2nd series, vol. iv. p. 365.
-
-[132] Mr. James Crossley's introduction to _Potts's Discovery of
-Witches_.
-
-[133] This is an old local proverb, amongst the Yorkshire proverbs in
-Grose's _Provincial Glossary_. Ray gives it thus:--
-
- "Ingleborough, Pendle, and Penigent,
- Are the highest hills between Scotland and Trent."
-
-[134] Pendle Hill, or _Pen hull_ (_i.e._, the head hill) is situated on
-the borders of Lancashire, in the northern part of Whalley, and rises
-about 1800 feet above the level of the sea. The views from the summit
-are very extensive, including the Irish sea on one side, and York
-Minster (at a distance of nearly sixty miles) on the other.
-Notwithstanding the boast of the old proverb above, there are several
-hills round it of higher elevation.
-
-[135] Malkin Tower, in the Forest of Pendle, and on the declivity of
-Pendle Hill, was the place where, according to vulgar belief, a sort of
-assembly or convention of reputed witches took place on Good Friday in
-1612, which was attended by seventeen pretended witches and three
-wizards, who were afterwards brought to trial at Lancaster Assizes, and
-ten of these unfortunate creatures being found guilty, were executed.
-
-[136] The laymen here referred to were not the patrons, but the persons
-officiating, who were called readers, and had no orders. Nearly every
-chapel in the parish of Whalley was destitute of land in 1636.
-
-[137] The Sir John was probably John Butterworth, clerk, curate of
-Haslingden about this period. "Sir John" was a designation frequently
-applied to an illiterate priest. The old allowance to the priest in
-Haslingden, according to Bishop Gastrell, was 4_l._ Formerly parish
-clerks (and perhaps the priests of poor cures also) claimed once a year
-a bowl of corn from each parishioner of substance.
-
-[138] The _Moore Rental_, p. 62.
-
-[139] Rev. W. Thornber's _History of Blackpool_, p. 308.
-
-[140] _MS. Description of Atherton and Chowbent in 1787_, by Dorning
-Rasbotham, Esq.
-
-[141] See _Transactions of Lancashire and Cheshire Historical Society_.
-
-[142] _Year Book_, part xiii. col. 1558.
-
-
-
-
-PART II.
-
-
-
-
-LOCAL CUSTOMS AND USAGES AT VARIOUS SEASONS.
-
-
-Every greater or lesser festival of the church had its popular no less
-than its ecclesiastical observances. The three great events of human
-birth, marriage, and death, with their church rites of baptism, wedding,
-and burial, naturally draw towards them many customs and usages deemed
-fitting to such occasions. There are many customs in connexion with the
-free and the inferior tenants of manors, and their services to the
-manorial lord. Another class of customs will be found in observance in
-agricultural districts amongst the owners, occupiers, and labourers of
-farms and the peasantry generally. Lastly, as has been observed of the
-English generally, every great occasion, collective or individual, must
-have its festal celebration by eating and drinking in assembly. The
-viands and the beverages proper to particular occasions, therefore,
-constitute a not unimportant part of the local customs and usages of the
-people; and hence demand a place in a volume of Folk-Lore. To these
-subjects the present Part of this book is appropriated, and it is
-believed that they will be found not less strikingly illustrative of the
-manners and habits of the people of Lancashire, than the Superstitious
-Beliefs and Practices recorded in the first Part of this little work.
-
-
-CHURCH AND SEASON FESTIVALS.
-
-The feasts of dedication of parish churches to their particular
-tutelary saints, of course are much too numerous to be more than named
-in a work of this nature. The eve of such anniversary was the yearly
-wake [or watching] of the parishioners; and originally booths were
-erected in the churchyards, and feasting, dancing, and other revelry
-continued throughout the night. The parishioners attended divine service
-on the feast day, and the rest of that day was then devoted to popular
-festivities. So great grew the excesses committed during these prolonged
-orgies, that at length it became necessary to close the churches against
-the pageants and mummeries performed in them at these anniversaries, and
-the churchyards against the noisy, disorderly, and tumultuous
-merry-makings of the people. Thenceforth the great seat of the revels
-was transferred from the church and its graveyard, to the village green
-or the town market-place, or some space of open ground, large enough for
-popular assemblages to enjoy the favourite sports and pastimes of the
-period. Such were the general character and features of the wakes and
-feasts of country parishes, changing only with the name of the patron
-saint, the date of the celebration. But the great festivals of the
-church, celebrated alike in city and town, in village and hamlet,
-wherever a church "pointed its spire to heaven," were held with more
-general display, as uniting the ceremonials and rites of the church,
-with the popular festivities outside the sacred precincts. Of these
-great festivals the chief were New Year's Day, Twelfth Night (Jan. 5),
-Shrove or Pancake Tuesday, Ash-Wednesday or the first day of Lent,
-Mid-Lent or Mothering Sunday, Palm Sunday, Good Friday, Easter,
-Whitsuntide or Pentecost, May-Day, Midsummer Day (St. John's Eve and
-Day, June 23 and 24), Michaelmas Day (Sept. 29), and Christmas Day, with
-the Eve of the New Year. Of these we propose to notice various customs
-and practices as observed in Lancashire from the beginning to the close
-of the year.
-
-
-NEW YEAR'S DAY.
-
-In the church calendar this day is the festival of the Circumcision; in
-the Roman church it is the day of no fewer than seven saints. But it is
-much more honoured as a popular festival. Many families in Lancashire
-sit up on New Year's Eve till after twelve o'clock midnight, and then
-drink "a happy New Year" to each other over a cheerful glass. The church
-bells, too, in merry peals ring out the Old Year, and ring in the New.
-In the olden time the wassail-bowl, the spiced ale called "lamb's wool,"
-and currant bread and cheese, were the viands and liquor in vogue on New
-Year's Eve and Day. A turkey is still a favourite dish at dinner on New
-Year's Day.
-
-
-FIRE ON NEW YEAR'S EVE.
-
-My maid, who comes from the neighbourhood of Pendle, informs me that an
-unlucky old woman in her native village, having allowed her fire to go
-out on New Year's Eve, had to wait till one o'clock on the following day
-before any neighbour would supply her with a light.[143]
-
-
-NEW YEAR'S LUCK.
-
-Should a female, or a light-haired male, be the first to enter a house
-on the morning of New Year's Day, it is supposed to bring bad luck for
-the whole of the year then commencing. Various precautions are taken to
-prevent this misfortune: hence many male persons with black or dark
-hair, are in the habit of going from house to house, on that day, "to
-take the New Year in;" for which they are treated with liquor, and
-presented with a small gratuity. So far is the apprehension carried,
-that some families will not open the door to any one until satisfied by
-the voice that he is likely to bring the house a year's good luck by
-entering it. Then, the most kindly and charitable woman in a
-neighbourhood will sternly refuse to give any one a light on the morning
-of New Year's Day, as most unlucky to the one who gives away light.
-
-
-NEW YEAR'S FIRST CALLER.
-
-For years past, an old lady, a friend of mine, has regularly reminded me
-to pay her an early visit on New Year's Day; in short, to be her first
-caller, and to "let the New Year in." I have done this for years, except
-on one occasion. When I, who am of fair complexion, have been her first
-visitor, she has enjoyed happy and prosperous years; but on the occasion
-I missed, some dark-complexioned, black-haired gentleman
-called;--sickness and trouble, and commercial disasters, were the
-result.[144] [This is at variance with the preceding paragraph as to
-the favourite colour of the hair, &c. Perhaps this differs in different
-localities; but of this at least we are assured, that any male, dark or
-fair, is regarded as a much more lucky "letter-in" of the New Year, than
-any girl or woman, be she blonde or brunette.]
-
-In Lancashire, even in the larger towns, it is considered at this time
-of day particularly fortunate if "a black man" (meaning one of a dark
-complexion) be the first person that enters the house on New Year's
-Day.[145]
-
-
-NEW YEAR'S DAY AND OLD CHRISTMAS DAY.
-
-Some persons still keep Old Christmas Day. They always look for a change
-of weather on that day, and never on the 25th December. The common
-people have long begun their year with the 1st of January. The Act of
-1752, so far as they were concerned, only caused the Civil and the
-Ecclesiastical Year to begin together. In Hopton's _Year Book_ for A.D.
-1612, he thus speaks of _January 1st_:--"January. New-yeares day in the
-morning being red, portends great tempest and warre."
-
-
-AULD WIFE HAKES.
-
-Christmas and New Year's tea parties and dances are called "Auld Wife
-Hakes" in the Furness district of Lancashire. The word _hake_ is never
-used in the central part of the county.[146] Can this be from _hacken_
-(? from _hacking_, chopping small), a pudding made in the maw of a sheep
-or hog. It was formerly a standard dish at Christmas, and is mentioned
-by N. Fairfax, _Bulk and Selvedge_, 1674, p. 159.[147] [To _hake_, is to
-sneak, or loiter about.]
-
-
-NEW YEAR'S GIFTS AND WISHES.
-
-It was formerly a universal custom to make presents, especially from
-superiors to dependents, and _vice versâ_. Now the custom is chiefly
-confined to parents and elders giving to children or young persons. The
-practice of making presents on New Year's Day existed among the Romans,
-and also amongst the Saxons; from one or both of which peoples we have
-doubtless derived it. The salutation or greeting on New Year's Day is
-also of great antiquity. Pieces of Roman pottery have been found
-inscribed "A happy new year to you," and one inscriber wishes the like
-to himself and his son. In country districts, the homely phrase is: "A
-happy New Year t'ye, and monny on 'em." In more polished society, and in
-correspondence, "I wish you a happy New Year," or "The compliments of
-the season to you."
-
-
-SHROVETIDE.
-
-This name, given to the last few days before Lent, is from its being the
-custom for the people to go to the priest to be _shriven_, _i.e._, to
-make their confession, before entering on the great fast of Lent, which
-begins on Ash-Wednesday. _Tide_ is the old Anglo-Saxon word for time,
-and it is still retained in Whitsuntide. After the people had made the
-confession required by the ancient discipline of the church, they were
-permitted to indulge in festive amusements, though restricted from
-partaking of any repasts beyond the usual substitutes for flesh: hence
-the Latin and continental name _Carnaval_,--literally "Carne, vale,"
-"Flesh, farewell." In Lancashire and other Northern counties, three days
-in this week had their peculiar dishes, viz.: "Collop Monday," "Pancake
-Tuesday," and "Fritters Wednesday." Originally, collops were simply
-slices of bread, but these were long ago discarded for slices or rashers
-of bacon. Fritters were thick, soft cakes, made from flour batter, with
-or without sliced apples intermixed. Shrovetide was anciently a great
-time for cock-throwing and cock-fighting, and indeed of many other loose
-and cruel diversions, arising from the indulgences formerly granted by
-the church, to compensate for the long season of fasting and humiliation
-which commenced on Ash-Wednesday. As Selden observes--"What the church
-debars us on one day, she gives us leave to take on another; first we
-feast, and then we fast; there is a carnival, and then a Lent."
-
-
-SHROVE-TUESDAY, OR PANCAKE TUESDAY.
-
-The tossing of pancakes (and in some places fritters) on this day was a
-source of harmless mirth, and is still practised in the rural parts of
-Lancashire and Cheshire, with its ancient accompaniments:--
-
- "It is the day whereon the rich and poor,
- Are chiefly feasted on the self-same dish,
- When every paunch till it can hold no more,
- Is fritter-filled, as well as heart can wish;
- And every man and maid do take their turn
- And toss their pancakes up for fear they burn,
- And all the kitchen doth with laughter sound,
- To see the pancakes fall upon the ground."[148]
-
-Another writer gives this injunction:--
-
- "Maids, fritters and pancakes enow see ye make,
- Let Slut have one pancake for company's sake."[149]
-
-
-COCK-THROWING AND COCK-FIGHTING.
-
-Cock-fighting was a barbarous pastime of high antiquity, being practised
-by the Greeks and Romans. In England it may be traced back to the
-twelfth century, when it appears to have been a childish or boyish
-sport. FitzStephen, in his description of London in the time of Henry
-II., says: "Every year, on the morning of Shrove-Tuesday, the schoolboys
-of the city of London, and of other cities and great towns, bring game
-cocks to their masters, and in the fore-part of the day, till
-dinner-time, are permitted to amuse themselves with seeing them fight."
-The school was the cock-pit, and the master the comptroller or director
-of the pastime. The victor, or hero of the school, who had won the
-greatest number of fights was carried about upon a pole by two of his
-companions. He held the cock in his hands, and was followed by other
-boys bearing flags, &c. Cock-throwing was a sport equally cruel; but
-only one cock was needed. The poor bird was tied to a peg or stake, by a
-string, sometimes long, sometimes short, and the boys from a certain
-distance, in turn, threw a stick at the cock. The victor in this case
-was he whose missile killed the poor bird. Amongst the recognised
-payments by the boys at the old Free Grammar Schools, was a penny yearly
-to the master for the privilege of cock-fighting or cock-throwing on
-Shrove-Tuesday. The statutes of the Manchester Free Grammar School, made
-about 1525, show a creditable desire to abolish these barbarous sports.
-One of these statutes, as to the fees of the master, provides that "he
-shall teach freely and indifferently [not carelessly, but impartially]
-every child and scholar coming to the same school, without any money or
-other reward taking there-for, as cock-penny, victor-penny," &c. Another
-is still more explicit:--"The scholars of the same school shall use no
-cock-fights, nor other unlawful games, and riding about for victors,
-&c., which be to the great let [hindrance] of virtue, and to charge and
-cost of the scholars, and of their friends." At a much later period,
-however, the scholars seem to have been allowed, on Easter Monday, to
-have archery practice at a target, one of the prizes being a
-dunghill-cock; but this was abolished by the late Dr. Smith, when high
-master.
-
-
-COCK-FIGHTING ABOUT BLACKBURN.
-
-About thirty years ago cock-fighting formed a common pastime about
-Mellor and Blackburn. A blacksmith, named Miller, used to keep a large
-number of cocks for fighting purposes. He was said to have "sold himself
-to the devil" in order to have money enough for betting; and it was
-remarked that he rarely won! If the practice is still followed, it is
-done _in secret_; but the number of game-cocks one sees kept by
-"sporting characters" can scarcely admit of any other inference.
-
-
-COCK-PENNY AT CLITHEROE.
-
-In the Clitheroe Grammar School an annual present at Shrovetide is
-expected from the scholars, varying in amount according to the
-circumstances of the parents. With the exception of this _cock-penny_,
-the school is free. The origin of this custom it is now difficult to
-trace. Shrove-Tuesday, indeed, was a sad day for cocks. Cock-fighting
-and throwing at cocks were among its barbarous sports. Schoolboys used
-to bring game-cocks to the master, and delight themselves in
-cock-fighting all the forenoon. In Scotland, the masters presided at the
-fight, and claimed the runaway cocks called "forgers" [? 'fugees] as
-their perquisites. The "cock-penny" may have been the substitute devised
-by a less cruel age for the ordinary gratuity.[150]
-
-
-COCK-FIGHTING AT BURNLEY.
-
-The head master of Burnley Grammar School used to derive a portion of
-his income from "cock-pence" paid to him by his pupils at Shrovetide.
-This has been disused for half a century. Latterly it degenerated into a
-"clubbing together" of pence by the pupils for the purpose of providing
-themselves with materials for a carouse. This was, therefore, at last
-prohibited.
-
-
-SHROVETIDE CUSTOMS IN THE FYLDE.
-
-Shrove-Tuesday was also called "Pancake Day," pancakes being the
-principal delicacy of the day. At eleven o'clock in the forenoon, the
-"pancake bell" rang at Poulton church, and operations were immediately
-commenced. Great was the fun in "tossing" or turning the pancake by a
-sudden jerk of the pan; while the appetites of the urchins never
-flagged. Amongst the sports on Shrove-Tuesday, was pre-eminently
-cock-fighting; though bull and bear baiting were also among the rude and
-savage pastimes of the season.[151] In Poulton, on Shrove-Tuesday, the
-pancake bell still warns the apprentice to quit his work, not indeed to
-go to the confessional and be _shriven_, but to prepare for the feast of
-the day.[152]
-
-
-LENT.--ASH-WEDNESDAY.
-
-The forty days' fast at the beginning of spring, in commemoration of the
-temptation and fast of our Saviour in the wilderness, was called Lent,
-from the Saxon name for Spring, _lengten-tide_. The fast, as prescribed
-by the church, consisted in abstaining from flesh, eggs, preparations of
-milk, and wine, and in making only one meal, and that in the evening.
-Fish was not forbidden, though many restricted themselves to pulse and
-fruit. Ash-Wednesday, the first day in Lent, was one of severe
-discipline in the Roman church; and to remind the faithful, at the
-beginning of the long penitential fast, that men are but "dust and
-ashes," the priest, with ashes of the wood of the palm-tree, marked the
-sign of the cross on the forehead of each confessing worshipper; whence
-the name. Since the Reformation the observance of Lent by fasting is not
-general in Lancashire.
-
-
-MID-LENT SUNDAY, OR "MOTHERING SUNDAY."
-
-The fourth or middle Sunday between Quadragesima (the first Sunday in
-Lent) and Easter Sunday. It was of old called _Dominica Refectionis_, or
-the Sunday of Refreshment, from the gospel of the day treating of the
-miraculous feeding of the five thousand. It was originally called
-"Mothering Sunday," from the ancient usage of visiting the mother or
-cathedral churches of the dioceses, when Lent or Easter offerings were
-made. The public processions have been discontinued ever since the
-middle of the thirteenth century; but the name of Mothering Sunday is
-still retained, a custom having been substituted amongst the people of
-Lancashire, Cheshire, Yorkshire, and other counties, of those who have
-left the paternal roof visiting their natural mother, and presenting to
-her small tokens of their filial affection, in money, trinkets,
-frumenty, or cakes. In some parts of Lancashire, the particular kind of
-cakes have long been fixed by old custom, being what are called
-"simnels," or, in the dialect of the district, "simlins;" and with these
-sweet-cakes, it was, and in places is still, the custom to drink warm,
-spiced ale, called "bragot." Another viand especially eaten on Mid-Lent
-Sunday was that of fig or fag-pies.
-
-
-SIMNEL CAKES.
-
-In days of yore, there was a little alleviation of the severities of
-Lent permitted to the faithful, in the shape of a cake called "Simnel."
-Two English towns claim the honour of its origin,--Shrewsbury and
-Devizes. The first makes its simnel in the form of a warden-pie, the
-crust being of saffron and very thick; the last has no crust, is
-star-shaped, and the saffron is mixed with a mass of currants, spice,
-and candied lemon. Bury, in Lancashire, is almost world-famous for its
-simnels and its bragot (or spiced sweet ale), on Mothering Sunday, or
-Mid-Lent. As to the name, Dr. Cowell, in his _Law Directory or
-Interpreter_ (folio, 1727), derives _simnell_ (Lat. _siminellus_), from
-the Latin _simila_, the finest part of the flour: "_panis
-similageneus_," simnel bread,--"still in use, especially in Lent." The
-English _simnel_ was the purest white bread, as in the Book of Battle
-Abbey: "Panem regiæ mensæ apsum, qui _simenel_ vulgo vocatur." (Bread
-fit for the royal table, which is commonly called _simenel_.) Dr. Cowell
-adds that it was sometimes called _simnellus_, as in the "Annals of the
-Church of Winchester," under the year 1042, "conventus centum
-_simnellos_" (the convent 100 _simnels_). He also quotes the statute of
-51 Henry III. (1266-7), which enacts that "bread made into a _simnel_
-should weigh two shillings less than wastel bread;" and also an old
-manuscript of the customs of the House of Farendon (where it is called
-"bread of symenel"), to the same effect. Wastel was the finest sort of
-bread. Herrick, who was born in 1591, and died in 1674 (?) has the
-following in his _Hesperides_:--
-
- TO DIANEME.
- A Ceremony in Gloucester.
-
- I'll to thee a _Simnell_ bring
- 'Gainst thou go'st a _mothering_;
- So that when she blesseth thee,
- Half that blessing thou'lt give me.
-
-Bailey, in his Dictionary (folio 1764), says _simnel_ is probably
-derived from the Latin _simila_, fine flour, and means, "a sort of cake
-or bun, made of fine flour, spice, &c." It will thus appear that
-_simnel_ cakes can boast a much higher antiquity than the reign of Henry
-VII. (Lambert _Simnel_ probably taking his name from them, as a baker,
-and not giving his name to them), and that they were not originally
-confined to any particular time or place.[153]
-
-In the _Dictionarius_ of John de Garlande, compiled at Paris in the
-thirteenth century, the word _simineus_ or _simnels_, is used as the
-equivalent to the Latin _placentæ_, which are described as cakes exposed
-in the windows of the hucksters, to sell to the scholars of the
-University and others.[154]
-
-
-BURY.
-
-There is an ancient celebration in Bury, on Mid-Lent Sunday, there
-called "Simblin Sunday," when large cakes called "simblins" (_i.e._,
-simnels), are sold generally in the town, and the shops are kept open
-the whole day, except during Divine Service, for the purpose of vending
-this mysterious aliment.[155] These cakes are a compound of currants,
-candied lemon, sugar, and spice, sandwich-wise, between crust of short
-or puff paste. They are in great request at the period, not only in
-Bury, but in Manchester and most of the surrounding towns. A still
-richer kind, approaching the bride-cake in character, are called "Almond
-Simnels."
-
-
-BRAGOT-SUNDAY.
-
-Formerly it was the practice in Leigh to use a beverage on Mid-Lent
-Sunday, called "bragot," consisting of a kind of spiced ale; and also
-for the boys to indulge themselves by persecuting the women on their way
-to church, by secretly hooking a piece of coloured cloth to their gowns.
-A similar custom prevails in Portugal, at Carnival time, when many
-persons that walk the streets on the three last days of the Intrudo,
-have a long paper train hooked to their dress behind, on which the
-populace set up the cry of "Raboleve," which is continued till the butt
-of the joke is divested of his "tail." As to "Bragot," or more properly
-"Braget" Sunday, it is a name given in Lancashire to the fourth Sunday
-in Lent, which is in other places called "Mothering Sunday." Both
-appellations arise out of the same custom. Voluntary oblations, called
-_Quadragesimalia_ (from the Latin name of Lent, signifying forty days),
-were formerly paid by the inhabitants of a diocese to the Mother
-Cathedral Church, and at this time prevailed the custom of processions
-to the Cathedral on Mid-Lent Sunday. On the discontinuance of
-processions, the practice of "mothering," or visiting parents, began;
-and the spiced ale used on these occasions was called _braget_, from the
-British _bragawd_, the name of a kind of metheglin. Whitaker[156]
-observes that this description of liquor was called "Welsh ale" by the
-Saxons. Since his time, the liquor drunk on this day is principally
-_mulled ale_, of which there is a large consumption in Lancashire on
-Mid-Lent Sunday.[157]
-
-
-FAG-PIE SUNDAY.
-
-Fig-pies--(made of dry figs, sugar, treacle, spice, &c., and by some
-described as "luscious," by others as "of a sickly taste")--or, as they
-are locally termed, "fag-pies," are, or were at least till recently,
-eaten in Lancashire on a Sunday in Lent [? Mid-Lent Sunday], thence
-called "Fag-pie Sunday."[158]
-
-In the neighbourhood of Burnley Fag-pie Sunday is the second Sunday
-before Easter, or that which comes between Mid-Lent and Palm Sunday.
-About Blackburn fig-pies are always prepared for Mid-Lent Sunday, and
-visits are usually made to friends' houses in order to partake of the
-luxury.
-
-
-GOOD FRIDAY.
-
-This name is believed to be an adoption of the old German _Gute_ or
-_Gottes Freytag_, Good or God's Friday, so called on the same principle
-that Easter Day in England was at no very remote period called "God's
-Day." The length of the Church Services in ancient times, on this day,
-occasioned it to be called Long Friday. In most parts of Lancashire,
-buns with crosses stamped upon them, and hence called "cross buns," are
-eaten on this day at breakfast; and it is in many places believed that a
-cross bun, preserved from one Good Friday to another, will effectually
-prevent an attack of the whooping-cough. Some writers declare that our
-cross buns at Easter are only the cakes which our pagan Saxon
-forefathers ate in honour of their goddess Eostre, and from which the
-Christian clergy, who were unable to prevent people from eating them,
-sought to expel the paganism by marking them with the cross. On the
-Monday before Good Friday the youths about Poulton-le-Fylde and its
-neighbourhood congregate in strange dresses, and visit their friends'
-houses, playing antics, on which occasion they are styled "the Jolly
-Lads."[159] It is stated that in some places in Lancashire, Good Friday
-is termed "Cracklin' Friday," as on that day it is a custom for children
-to go with a small basket to different houses, to beg small wheaten
-cakes, which are something like the Jews' Passover bread; but made
-shorter or richer, by having butter or lard mixed with the flour. "Take
-with thee loaves and cracknels." (1 Kings xiv.)
-
-
-EASTER.
-
-This name is clearly traced to that of Eostre, a goddess to whom the
-Saxons and other Northern nations sacrificed in the month of April, in
-which our Easter usually falls. Easter Sunday is held as the day of our
-Lord's resurrection. Connected with this great festival of the Church
-are various local rites and customs, pageants and festivities; such as
-_pace_ or _Pasche_ [_i.e._, Easter] egging, lifting or heaving, Ball
-play, the game of the ring, guisings or disguisings, fancy cakes, "old
-hob," "old Ball," or hobby horse, &c.
-
-Easter-Day is a moveable feast, appointed to be held on the first Sunday
-after the full moon immediately following the 21st of March; but if the
-moon happen to be at the full on a Sunday, then Easter is held on the
-following Sunday and not on the day of the full moon. Thus, Easter-Day
-cannot fall earlier than the 22nd of March, nor later than the 25th of
-April, in any year.
-
-
-PASCHE, PACE, OR EASTER EGGS.
-
-In Lancashire and Cheshire children go round the village and beg eggs
-for the Easter dinner, accompanying their solicitation by a short song,
-the burthen of which is addressed to the farmer's dame, asking for "an
-egg, bacon, cheese, or an apple, or any good thing that will make us
-merry;" and ending with
-
- And I pray you, good dame, an Easter egg.
-
-In the North of Lancashire, Cumberland, Westmorland, and other parts of
-the North of England, boys beg on Easter Eve eggs to play with, and
-beggars ask for them to eat. These eggs are hardened by boiling and
-tinged with the juice of herbs, broom-flowers, &c. The eggs being thus
-prepared, the boys go out and play with them in the fields, rolling them
-up and down like bowls, or throwing them up like balls into the
-air.[160]
-
-
-PACE EGGING IN BLACKBURN.
-
-The old custom of "pace egging" is still observed in Blackburn. It is an
-observance limited to the week before Easter-Day, and is said to be
-traceable up to the theology and philosophy of the Egyptians, Persians,
-Gauls, Greeks, and Romans; among all of whom an egg was an emblem of the
-universe, the production of the Supreme Divinity. The Christians
-adopted the egg as an emblem of the resurrection, since it contains the
-elements of a future life.
-
-The immediate occasion of the observance may have been in the resumption
-on the part of our forefathers of eggs as a food at Easter on the
-termination of Lent; hence the origin of the term _pace_ or _pasque_
-[rather from _Pasche_] that is, Easter egg. In a curious roll of the
-expenses of the household of Edward I., communicated to the Society of
-Antiquaries, is the following item in the accounts for Easter Sunday:
-"For four hundred and a half of eggs, eighteen pence." The following
-prayer, found in the ritual of Pope Paul V., composed for the use of
-England, Ireland, and Scotland, illustrates the meaning of the custom:
-"Bless, O Lord, we beseech thee, this Thy creation of eggs, that it may
-become a wholesome sustenance to Thy faithful servants, eating it in
-thankfulness to Thee, on account of the resurrection of our Lord." In
-Blackburn at the present day, pace egging commences on the Monday and
-finishes on the Thursday before the Easter-week. Young men in groups
-varying in number from three to twenty, dressed in various fantastic
-garbs, and wearing masks--some of the groups accompanied by a player or
-two on the violin--go from house to house singing, dancing, and
-capering. At most places they are liberally treated with wine, punch, or
-ale, dealt out to them by the host or hostess. The young men strive to
-disguise their walk and voice; and the persons whom they visit use their
-efforts on the other hand to discover who they are; in which mutual
-endeavour many and ludicrous mistakes are made. Here you will see
-Macbeth and a fox-hunter arm in arm; Richard the Third and a black
-footman in familiar converse; a quack doctor and a bishop smoking their
-pipes and quaffing their "half and half;" a gentleman and an
-oyster-seller; an admiral and an Irish umbrella-mender; in short, every
-variety of character, some exceedingly well-dressed, and the characters
-well sustained. A few years ago parties of this description were much
-subject to annoyance from a gang of fellows styled the "Carr-laners,"
-(so-called, because living in Carr-lane, Blackburn,) armed with
-bludgeons, who endeavoured to despoil the pace-eggers. Numerous fights,
-with the usual concomitants of broken eggs and various contusions, were
-amongst the results. This lawless gang of ruffians is now broken up, and
-the serious affrays between different gangs of pace-eggers have become
-of comparatively rare occurrence. An accident, however, which ended
-fatally, occurred last year [? 1842]. Two parties had come into
-collision, and during the affray one of the young men had his skull
-fractured, and death ensued. Besides parties of the sort we have
-attempted to describe, children, both male and female, with little
-baskets in their hands, dressed in all the tinsel-coloured paper,
-ribbons, and "doll rags" which they can command, go up and down from
-house to house; at some receiving pence, at others eggs, at others
-gingerbread, some of which is called _hot_ gingerbread, having in it a
-mixture of ginger and Cayenne, causing the most ridiculous contortions
-of feature in the unfortunate being who partakes of it. Houses are
-literally besieged by these juvenile troops from morning till night.
-"God's sake! a pace-egg," is the continual cry. There is no particular
-tune, but various versions of pace-egging and other songs are sung. The
-eggs obtained by the juveniles are very frequently boiled and dyed in
-logwood and other dyes, on the Easter Sunday, and rolled in the fields
-one egg at another till broken. Great quantities of mulled ale are drunk
-in this district on Easter Sunday. The actors do not take the eggs with
-them; they are given at the places where they call. The actors are
-mostly males; but in the course of one's peregrinations on one of these
-evenings it is not unusual to discover one or two of the fair sex in
-male habiliments, and supporting the character admirably. This old
-custom of pace-egging was again observed this year [? 1843]
-notwithstanding the fatal accidents we have mentioned, without any
-molestation from the authorities, and without any accident
-occurring.[161]
-
-
-PACE OR PEACE EGGING IN EAST LANCASHIRE.
-
-The week before Easter is a busy one for the boys and girls in East
-Lancashire. They generally deck themselves up in ribbons and fantastic
-dresses, and go about the country begging for money or eggs.
-Occasionally they go out singly, and then are very careful to provide
-themselves with a neat little basket, lined with moss. Halfpence or
-eggs, or even small cakes of gingerbread, are alike thankfully received.
-Sometimes the grown young men are very elaborately dressed in ribbons,
-and ornamented with watches and other jewellery. They then go out in
-groups of five or six, and are attended by a "fool" or "tosspot," with
-his face blackened. Some of them play on musical instruments while the
-rest dance. Occasionally young women join in the sport, and then the
-_men_ are dressed in women's clothing, and the _women_ in men's.
-
-
-EASTER SPORTS AT THE MANCHESTER FREE GRAMMAR SCHOOL.
-
-A gentleman, using the initials G. H. F., some years ago communicated to
-a local paper the following facts relative to the sports of the scholars
-at Easter in the early part of the nineteenth century:--"On Easter
-Monday the senior scholars had a treat and various festivities. On the
-morning of that day, masters and scholars assembled in the school-room,
-with a band of music, banners, &c. One essential thing was a target, in
-a square frame, to which were suspended one or more pairs of silver
-buckles, constituting the chief archery prize, the second being a good
-dunghill-cock. These were the only prizes, and they were duly contended
-for by the scholars, the whole being probably devised in the old times,
-with a view to keep the youth of Manchester in the practice of the old
-English archery, which on the invention of gunpowder and fire-arms fell
-rapidly into desuetude. The gay procession thus provided, the scholars,
-bearing their bows and arrows, set out from the Grammar School, headed
-by some reverend gentleman of the Collegiate church, by the masters of
-the school, the churchwardens, &c.--the band playing some popular airs
-of the day--and took its route by Long Millgate, to Hunt's Bank, and
-along the Walkers' [_i.e._, fullers'] Croft, to some gardens, where it
-was then the custom for artizans on Sunday mornings to buy 'a penny
-posy.' Here the targets were set up, and the 'artillery practice,' as
-it was the fashion to call archery, commenced. At its close the prizes
-were awarded, and the procession returned in the same order, along
-Hunt's Bank, the Apple Market, Fennel Street, Hanging Ditch, and Old
-Millgate, to the Bull's Head, in the Market Place,--in those days a very
-celebrated house, where the junior boys were treated with
-_frumenty_--wheat stewed, and then boiled in milk with raisins,
-currants, and spices, till it forms a thick, porridge-like mess,
-exceedingly palatable to young folk. The masters and assistants, and the
-senior scholars, partook of roast beef, plum pudding, &c. The abolition
-of this Easter Monday custom, said to have been by Dr. Smith, was by no
-means relished by the Grammar School boys."
-
-
-"LIFTING" OR "HEAVING" AT EASTER.
-
-This singular custom formerly prevailed in Manchester, and it is now
-common in the neighbourhood of Liverpool, in the parish of Whalley, at
-Warrington, Bolton, and in some other parts of Lancashire, especially in
-rural districts, though it is by no means general, and in some places is
-quite unknown. A Manchester man, in 1784, thus describes it:--"_Lifting_
-was originally designed to represent our Saviour's resurrection. The men
-lift the women on Easter Monday, and the women the men on Tuesday. One
-or more take hold of each leg, and one or more of each arm, near the
-body, and lift the person up, in a horizontal position, three times. It
-is a rude, indecent, and dangerous diversion, practised chiefly by the
-lower class of people. Our magistrates constantly prohibit it by the
-bellman, but it subsists at the end of the town; and the women have of
-late years converted it into a money job. I believe it is chiefly
-confined to these northern counties."
-
-The following [translated] extract from a document entitled _Liber
-Contrarotulatoris Hospicii_, 13 Edward I. [1225], shows the antiquity of
-the custom:--"To the Ladies of the Queen's Chamber, 15th of May; seven
-ladies and damsels of the queen, because they took [or lifted] the king
-in his bed, on the morrow of Easter, and made him pay fine for the peace
-of the king, which he made of his gift by the hand of Hugh de Cerr [or
-Kerr], Esq., to the lady of Weston, £14."[162]
-
-On Easter Monday, between Radcliffe and Bolton, we saw a number of
-females surround a male, whom they mastered, and fairly lifted aloft in
-the air. It was a merry scene. What humour in the faces of these
-Lancashire witches! What a hearty laugh! What gratification in their
-eyes! The next day would bring reprisals: the girls would then be the
-party to be subjected to this rude treatment.[163]
-
-
-EASTER GAME OF THE RING.
-
-In his _History of Lancashire_, Mr. Baines states that the Easter Game
-of the Ring, little known in other parts of Lancashire, prevails at
-Padiham, in the parish of Whalley, on the Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday in
-Easter week; when young people, having formed themselves into a ring,
-tap each other repeatedly with a stick, after the manner of the holiday
-folks at Greenwich. The stick may be a slight difference; but the game
-of Easter ring, with taps of the hand, or the dropping of a handkerchief
-at the foot, the writer has seen played at Easter and at Whitsuntide in
-many villages and hamlets round Manchester.
-
-
-PLAYING "OLD BALL."
-
-This is an Easter custom. A huge and rude representation of a horse's
-head is made; the eyes are formed of the bottoms of old broken wine or
-other "black bottles"; the lower and upper jaws have large nails put in
-them to serve as teeth; the lower jaw is made to move by a contrivance
-fixed at its back end, to be operated on by the man who plays "Old
-Ball." There is a stick, on which the head rests, which is handled and
-used by the operator, to move "Old Ball" about, and as a rest. Fixed to
-the whole is a sheet of rough sacking-cloth, under which the operator
-puts himself, and at the end of which is a tail. The operator then gets
-into his position, so as to make the whole as like a horse as possible.
-He opens the mouth by means of the contrivance before spoken of. Through
-the opening he can see the crowd, and he runs first at one and then
-another, neighing like a horse, kicking, rising on his hind legs,
-performing all descriptions of gambols, and running after the crowd; the
-consequence is, the women scream, the children are frightened, and all
-is one scene of the most ridiculous and boisterous mirth. This was
-played by sundry "Old Balls" some five years ago, at the pace-egging
-time, at Blackburn; but it has gradually fallen into disuse. This year
-[? 1843] our informant has not heard it even mentioned. [It is still
-continued in various parts of Lancashire, amongst others at Swinton,
-Worsley, &c.] The idea of this rude game may have been taken from the
-hobby-horse in the ancient Christmas mummings.--_Pictorial History of
-Lancashire._ [From the editor of the above work calling this "playing
-the old ball," and never marking the word ball by a capital B, he seems
-to have supposed it meant a spherical ball; whereas "Old Ball"
-throughout Lancashire is a favourite name for a cart-horse,--See a
-further notice of "Old Ball" under Christmas.--EDS.]
-
-
-ACTING WITH "BALL."
-
-This is a curious practice, and is often substituted for "pace-egging."
-The bones of a horse's head are fixed in their natural position by means
-of wires. The bottoms of glass bottles do duty for eyes; and the head is
-covered with the skin of a calf. A handle is then fixed in the upper
-portion of the head, and the whole skull is supported on a stout pole
-shod with an iron hoop. A sack is then made to fit the skull neatly, and
-to hang low enough down so as to hide the person who plays "Ball." The
-sack, or cover, is also provided with a tail so as to look as nearly
-like a horse's tail as possible. Some five or six then take "Ball" about
-the country and play him where they can obtain leave. Sometimes a
-doggrel song is sung, while "Ball" prances about and snaps at the
-company. As soon as the song is finished, "Ball" plays his most
-boisterous pranks, and frequently hurts some of the company by snapping
-their fingers between his teeth when they are defending themselves from
-his attacks. The writer has seen ladies so alarmed as to faint and go
-into hysterics:--on this account "Ball" is now nearly extinct in the
-neighbourhoods of Blackburn, Burnley, &c.
-
-
-EASTER CUSTOMS IN THE FYLDE.
-
-Children and young people as Easter approached, claimed their
-"pace-eggs" [from Pasche, the old term for Easter] as a privileged "dow"
-[dole]. On the afternoon of Easter Sunday the young of both sexes amused
-themselves in the meadows with these eggs, which they had dyed by the
-yellow blossoms of the "whin," or of other colours by dyeing materials.
-Others performed a kind of Morris or Moorish dance or play, called
-"_Ignagning_," which some have supposed to be in honour of St. Ignatius;
-but more probably its derivation is from "_ignis Agnæ_," a virgin and
-martyr who suffered at the stake about this time of the year.
-"Ignagning," says the Rev. William Thornber,[164] "has almost fallen
-into disuse, and a band of boys, termed 'Jolly Lads,' has succeeded,
-who, instead of reciting the combat of the Turk and St. George, the
-champion of England, the death of the former, and his restoration to
-life by the far-travelled doctor, now sing of the noble deeds of Nelson
-and Collingwood; retaining, however, the freaks and jokes of 'Old
-Toss-pot,' the fool of the party, who still jingles the small bells hung
-about his dress." Easter Monday was a great day for the young people of
-the neighbourhood going to the yearly fair at Poulton. Happy was the
-maiden who could outvie her youthful acquaintance in exhibiting a
-greater number of "white cakes," the gifts of admiring youths; thereby
-proving beyond dispute the superior effects of her charms. Then the
-excitement and exertion of the dance! At that time dancing consisted in
-the feet beating time to a fiddle, playing a jig in double quick time;
-one damsel succeeding another, and striving to outdo her companions in
-her power of continuing this violent exercise, for much honour was
-attached to success in this respect, the bystanders meanwhile
-encouraging their favourites, as sportsmen do their dogs, with voice and
-clapping of hands. Such was--
-
- "The dancing pair that simply sought renown,
- By holding out, to tire each other down."
-
-On Good Friday a jorum of _browis_ and roasted wheat or _frumenty_ was
-the treat for dinner; white _jannocks_, introduced by the Flemish
-refugees, and _throdkins_[165] were also then eaten with great zest by
-the hungry labourer.[166]
-
-
-MAY-DAY CUSTOMS.
-
-The Romans commenced the festival of Flora on the 28th April, and
-continued it through several days in May, with various ceremonies and
-rejoicings, and offerings of spring flowers and the branches of trees in
-bloom, which, through the accommodation of the Romish church to the
-pagan usages, remain to us as May-day celebrations to the present time.
-It was formerly a custom in Cheshire [and Lancashire] for young men to
-place birchen boughs on May-day over the doors of their mistresses, and
-mark the residence of a scold by an alder bough. There is an old rhyme
-which mentions peculiar boughs for various tempers, as an owler (alder)
-for a scolder, a nut for a slut, &c. Ormerod thinks the practice is
-disused; but he mentions that in the main street of Weverham are two
-May-poles, which are decorated on May-day with all due attention to the
-ancient solemnity; the sides are hung with garlands, and the top
-terminated by a birch, or other tall slender tree with its leaves on;
-the bark being peeled off and the stem spliced to the pole, so as to
-give the appearance of one tree from the summit.[167] The principal
-characteristics of May-day celebrations and festivities are of rejoicing
-that the reign of winter is at an end, and that of early summer with its
-floral beauties, has come. The hawthorn furnishes its white blossoms in
-profusion; and the tall May-poles, gaily decorated with garlands of
-leaves and flowers, and festoons of ribbons of the brightest colours,
-are centres of attraction on the village green, for the youth of both
-sexes to dance the May-pole dance, hand-in-hand, in a ring.
-
-
-MAY SONGS.
-
-Amongst the old customs of rural Lancashire and Cheshire is that of a
-small party of minstrels or carollers going round from house to house
-during the last few evenings of April, and singing a number of verses,
-expressive of rejoicing that "cold winter is driven away," and that the
-season is "drawing near to the merry month of May." The singers are
-generally accompanied by one or two musical instruments, a violin and
-clarionet for instance, and the tunes are very quaint and peculiar. Of
-course for their good wishes for the master of the house, with his
-"chain of gold," for the mistress, with "gold along her breast," and the
-children "in rich attire," a trifling gift in money is made.[168]
-
-
-MAY-DAY EVE.
-
-The evening before May-day is termed "Mischief Night" by the young
-people of Burnley and the surrounding district. All kinds of mischief
-are then perpetrated. Formerly shopkeepers' sign-boards were exchanged;
-"John Smith, grocer," finding his name and vocation changed, by the sign
-over his door, to "Thomas Jones, tailor," and _vice versâ_; but the
-police have put an end to these practical jokes. Young men and women,
-however, still continue to play each other tricks, by placing branches
-of trees, shrubs, or flowers under each others' windows, or before their
-doors. All these have a symbolical meaning, as significant, if not
-always as complimentary, as "the Language of Flowers." Thus, "a thorn"
-implies "scorn;" "wicken" (the mountain ash) "my dear chicken;" a
-"bramble," for one who likes to "ramble," &c. Much ill-feeling is at
-times engendered by this custom.
-
-
-MAY-DAY CUSTOM.
-
-On the 1st of May the following custom is observed in some parts of
-Lancashire, though now very nearly obsolete. Late on the preceding
-night, or early on that morning, small branches of trees are placed at
-the doors of houses in which reside any marriageable girls. They are
-emblematical of the character of the maidens, and have a well-understood
-language of their own, which is rhythmical. Some speak flatteringly;
-others quite the reverse; the latter being used when the character of
-the person for whom it is intended is not quite "above suspicion." A
-malicious rustic wag may sometimes put a branch of the latter
-description where it is not deserved; but I believe this is an
-exception. I only remember a few of the various trees which are laid
-under contribution for this purpose. _Wicken_ is the local name for
-mountain ash.
-
-_Wicken_, sweet chicken.
-
-_Oak_, for a joke.
-
-_Gorse, in bloom_, rhymes with "at noon" (I omit the epithet given here
-to an unchaste woman) and used for a notorious delinquent.[169]
-
-
-PENDLETON AND PENDLEBURY MAY-POLE AND GAMES.
-
-The people of these townships for centuries celebrated May-day (a relic
-of the ancient heathen festival of the goddess Flora) by the May-pole,
-to which the watchful care of Charles I. and his royal progenitor
-extended, when they printed in their proclamation and "Book of Sports,"
-that after the end of divine service on Sundays, their "good people be
-not disturbed, letted, nor discharged from the having of May-games, and
-the setting up of the May-poles," &c. The ancient practice was to erect
-the pole on May-day, and to surround it with a number of verdant boughs,
-brought from "Blakeley Forest," which were decked usually with garlands
-and flowers, and around which the people assembled to dance and
-celebrate their May-games. "Pendleton Pole" is of much higher antiquity
-than the Reformation; for in the will of Thomas del Bothe, who died 47
-Edw. III. (1373) the sum of 30_s._ is bequeathed towards making the
-causeway at Pendleton near "le Poll." In the time of the Commonwealth
-the Pendleton Pole was taken down, in virtue of an ordinance of
-Parliament against May-poles, and such other "heathenish vanities;" but
-it was re-erected at the Restoration, and still presents its lofty head,
-surmounted by a Royal Crown; though much of the spacious field of the
-ancient May-games is now occupied by buildings [in 1780 the township
-was little more than a fold of cottages, with its May-pole and green],
-and much of the spirit of the rural sports of our ancestors has
-subsided. In Pasquil's "_Palinodia_," (published in 1654) the decay of
-May-games two centuries ago, is recorded and lamented:--
-
- "Happy the age, and harmless were the days
- (For then true love and amity was found);
- When every village did a May-pole raise,
- And Whitsun ales and May-games did abound,
- And all the lusty younkers in a rout,
- With merry lasses, danced the rod about;
- Then friendship to their banquets bid the guests,
- And poor men fared the better for their feasts.
-
- The lords of castles, manors, towns, and towers,
- Rejoiced when they beheld the farmers flourish,
- And would come down unto the summer bowers,
- To see the country gallants dance the Morice.
- . . . . .
- But since the summer poles were overthrown,
- And all good sports and merriments decay'd,
- How times and men are changed, so well is known,
- It were but labour lost if more were said."
-
-
-MAY CUSTOM IN SPOTLAND.
-
-A custom of high antiquity and of primitive simplicity prevails in the
-district of Spotland, in the parish of Rochdale. On the first Sunday in
-May the young people of the surrounding country assemble at Knott Hill
-yearly, for the purpose of presenting to each other their mutual
-greetings and congratulations on the arrival of this cheering season,
-and of pledging each other in the pure beverage which flows from the
-mountain springs.[170]
-
-
-MAY-DAY CUSTOMS IN THE FYLDE.
-
-On the morning of the first day of May, many a May-bough[171] ornamented
-the villages and towns of the Fylde, inserted by some mischievous
-youngsters, at the risk of life or limb, in the chimney-tops of their
-neighbours' houses. Then came a most imposing piece of pageantry, that
-of "bringing-in May;" when a king and queen, with their royal attendants
-and rustic band of music, mummers, &c., attracted the attention and
-admiration of the country side. May-day with its pageants, sports,
-games, dances, garlands, and May-poles, was peculiarly a season of
-hilarity, merry-making, and good humour. The pageant of "bringing-in
-May," was a favourite pastime at Poulton about fifty years ago [_i.e._,
-about 1787]; the causeways were strewed with flowers, and at the door of
-the house of each respectable inhabitant, sweetmeats, ale, and even
-wine, were handed about as a treat and refreshment to the young, who
-were thus affording them amusement. By degrees the pageant ceased; a
-vigorous attempt, however, was made to revive it in 1818, with all its
-honours; but the age-worn custom proved to be utterly incapable of
-resuscitation. Another writer,[172] however, states that at
-Poulton-le-Fylde and in its neighbourhood, some of the customs of the
-olden time are still observed. Very recently May-day was ushered in with
-a dance round the May-pole, and the lavish exhibition of garlands and
-merriment.
-
-
-THE MAY-POLE OF LOSTOCK.
-
-The May-pole of Lostock, a village near Bolton, is probably the most
-ancient upon record. It is mentioned in a charter by which the town of
-Westhalchton [? Westhaughton] was granted to the Abbey of Cockersand,
-about the reign of King John. The pole, it appears, had superseded a
-cross, and formed one of the landmarks which defined the boundaries, and
-it must therefore have been a permanent and not an annual erection. The
-words of the charter are:--"De Lostock meypull, ubi crux situ fuit,
-recta linea in austro, usque ad crucem super le Tunge."[173] (From
-Lostock May-pole, where the cross was formerly, in a straight line to
-the south, as far as to the cross upon the Tunge.)
-
-
-ROBIN HOOD AND MAY-GAMES AT BURNLEY, IN 1579.
-
-In a letter from Edmond Assheton, Esq., then a magistrate of Lancashire,
-and aged 75, to William Farington, Esq. (who was also in the commission
-of the peace), dated Manchester, May 12, 1580, the writer thus complains
-of "lewd sports" and sabbath-breaking:--"I am sure, Right Worshipful,
-you have not forgotten the last year stirs at Burnley about Robin Hood
-and the May-games. Now, considering that it is a cause that bringeth no
-good effect, being contrary to the best, therefore a number of the
-justices of the peace herein in Salford Hundred have consulted with the
-[Ecclesiastical] Commission [of Queen Elizabeth] to suppress those lewd
-sports, tending to no other end but to stir up our frail natures to
-wantonness; and mean not to allow neither old custom. Then their excuse
-in coming to the church in time of divine service, for every man may
-well know with what minds, after their embracings, kissings, and
-unchaste beholding of each other, they can come presently prepared to
-prayer. A fit assembly to confer of worse causes, over and besides their
-marching and walking together in the night time. But chiefly because it
-is a profanation of the Sabbath-day, and done in some places in
-contempt of the gospel and the religion established, I pray God it be
-not so at Burnley. It is called in the Scriptures the Lord's Day, and
-was not lawful under the old law to carry a pitcher of water on the
-Sabbath, or to gather sticks, but it was death. Such regard was had in
-the time of the law to keeping holy the Sabbath. And do not we withdraw
-even the practice and use of good and godly works upon the same day?
-Then in reason the other should cease. Tell me, I pray you, if you can
-find in the presence of the foresaid lewd pastimes, good example or
-profit to the commonwealth, the defence of the realm, honour to the
-prince, or to the glory of God? Then, let them continue; otherwise, in
-my opinion, they are to be withdrawn. For to that end I address these
-contents unto you, because we would not deal for any reformation within
-the limits of your walk; and for the better credit of the consent of the
-Commissioners, you may peruse how they mean to proceed against them of
-Burnley who have revived their former follies, if you redress not the
-same.... Your assured always to use, EDMOND ASSHETON. It will not be
-long afore [there] will be order taken for this dancing, either by the
-Privy Council or by the Bishops by their commandment. My meaning is, I
-would have you to do it yourself, which will with one word be brought to
-pass.... If you would set your hand to this precept with us, I think it
-would end these disorders within prescribed."[174]
-
-
-MAY-DAY IN MANCHESTER.
-
-In the now olden days of coaching, this was a great day in Manchester.
-The great coaching establishments, those of the royal mails, north,
-south, east, and west, and all the highflyers, &c., turned out all their
-spare vehicles and horses for a grand procession through the principal
-streets of the town. Many of the mail and other coaches were newly
-painted for the occasion; all the teams were provided with new harness
-and gearing; the coachmen and guards had new uniforms; Jehu wore a great
-cockade of ribbons, and a huge bouquet of flowers, and he handled the
-new ribbons with a dignity and grace peculiar to this almost defunct
-race. The guard, in bright scarlet uniform, blew on his Kent bugle some
-popular tune of the time; and the horses wore cockades and nosegays
-about their heads and ears; almost every coach on this occasion was
-drawn by four horses, their coats shining with an extra polish for
-May-day; and the cavalcade was really a pretty sight on a bright May-day
-morning. Second only to it in decorative splendour, and in horseflesh,
-was the display of lorries, wagons, drays, and carts, with their fine
-draught-horses. Then came the milk-carts, with their drivers in dresses
-covered with ribbons. These equine and asinine glories have passed
-away, extinguished by the rail.
-
-
-QUEEN OF THE MAY, &c.
-
-The custom of choosing a May King and Queen is now disused. May-games,
-and the May-pole, were kept up at the quiet little village of Downham
-when all other places in the neighbourhood had ceased to celebrate
-May-day. Nothing is now made of May-day, if we except the custom of
-carters dressing their horses' heads and tails with ribbons on that day.
-
-
-WHITSUNTIDE.
-
-The Feast of Pentecost, or Whitsuntide, was formerly kept as a high
-church festival, and by the people was celebrated by out-door sports and
-festivities, and especially by the drinking assemblies called
-"Whitsun-Ales." One writer (inquiring whether the custom of "lifting at
-Easter" is a memorial of Christ being raised up from the grave) observes
-that, "there seems to be a trace of the descent of the Holy Ghost on the
-heads of the Apostles, in what passes at Whitsuntide Fair, in some parts
-of Lancashire; where one person holds a stick over the head of another,
-whilst a third, unperceived, strikes the stick, and thus gives a smart
-blow to the first. But this probably is only local."[175] "Whit-week,"
-as it is generally called, has gradually grown to be the great yearly
-holiday of the hundred of Salford, and the manufacturing district of
-which Manchester is the centre. This seems to have arisen from the
-yearly races at Manchester being held from the Wednesday to the Saturday
-inclusive, in that week. After the rise of Sunday-schools, their
-conductors, desiring to keep youth of both sexes from the demoralizing
-recreations of the racecourse, took them to fields in the neighbourhood
-and held anniversary celebrations, tea-parties, &c., in the schools. The
-extension of the railway system has led to "cheap trips" and "school
-excursion trains" during Whitsuntide; which are occasionally taken to
-Wales, the Lakes, and other great distances. Canal boats take large
-numbers of Sunday scholars to Dunham Park, Worsley, &c. Short excursions
-are made in carts, temporarily fitted with seats. It is customary for
-the cotton-mills, &c., to close for Whitsuntide week to give the hands a
-holiday; the men going to the races, &c., and the women visiting
-Manchester on Whit-Saturday, thronging the markets, the Royal Exchange,
-the Infirmary Esplanade, and other public places; and gazing in at the
-"shop windows," whence this day is usually called "Gaping Saturday." The
-collieries, too, are generally closed in Whit-week; and in some the
-underground horses are brought to the surface to have a week's daylight,
-the only time they enjoy it during the year. The mills, coalpits, &c.,
-generally have the requisite repairs of machinery, &c., made during this
-yearly holiday--those at least which would necessitate the stoppage of
-the work at another time.
-
-
-WHIT-TUESDAY.--KING AND QUEEN AT DOWNHAM.
-
-The last rural queen chosen at Downham is still living in Burnley. The
-lot always fell to the prettiest girl in the village, and certainly it
-must be admitted that in this instance they exercised good judgment. A
-committee of young men made the selection; then an iron crown was
-procured and dressed with flowers. The king and queen were ornamented
-with flowers, a procession was then formed, headed by a fiddler. This
-proceeded from the Inn to the front of "Squire Assheton's," Downham
-Hall, and was composed of javelin men, and all the attendants of
-royalty. Chairs were brought out of the Hall for the king and queen, ale
-was handed round, and then a dance was performed on the lawn, the king
-and queen leading off. The procession next passed along through the
-village to the green, where seats were provided for a considerable
-company. Here again the dancing began, the king and queen dancing the
-first set. The afternoon was spent in the usual games, dances, &c. On
-the next night all the young persons met at the inn, on invitation from
-the king and queen--each paid a shilling towards the "Queen's Posset." A
-large posset was then made and handed round to the company. After this
-the evening was spent in dancing and merry-making.
-
-
-ROGATIONS OR GANG DAYS.
-
-These days are so named from the Litanies or Processions of the Church,
-before Holy Thursday or Ascension Day. It was a general custom in
-country parishes to "gang" or go round the boundaries and limits of the
-parish, on one of the three days before Holy Thursday, or the Feast of
-our Lord's Ascension; when the minister, accompanied by his
-churchwardens and parishioners, was wont to deprecate the vengeance of
-God, beg a blessing on the fruits of the earth, and preserve the rights
-and properties of the parish. In some parishes this perambulation took
-place on Ascension Day itself. In a parochial account-book, entitled "A
-Record of the Acts and Doings of the thirty men of the parish of
-Kirkham," Lancashire, is the following entry under the year 1665: "Spent
-on going perambulations on Ascension Day, 1_s._ 6_d._"
-
-
-OATMEAL CHARITY AT INCE.
-
-Under the name of Richardson's Charity, a distribution takes place
-annually on the Feast of the Ascension or Holy Thursday (ten days before
-Whit-Sunday) of _five loads of oatmeal_, each load weighing 240 lb.
-Three loads are given to the poor of the township of Ince, one to the
-poor of Abram, and the other to the poor of Hindley; adjacent
-townships, all in the parish of Wigan. The Charity Commissioners, in
-their twenty-first report, state that the meal is provided by Mr.
-Cowley, of Widnes, the owner of an estate in Ince, formerly the property
-of Edward Richardson, who, as the commissioners were informed, directed
-by his will that this distribution should be made for fifty years from
-the time of his death. The year 1784 was given as the date of this
-benefaction, in the Returns made to Parliament in 1786. Mr. Cowley has
-himself had the disposal of this charity. The charity would, according
-to this statement, legally cease in 1836.
-
-
-NAMES FOR MOONS IN AUTUMN.
-
-In Lancashire, as well as in the South of Scotland and the South of
-Ireland, the moon of September is commonly called "the harvest moon,"
-that of October "the huntsman's moon."[176]
-
-
-"GOOSE-INTENTOS."
-
-In "An Universal Etymological English Dictionary," by N. Bailey, London,
-1745, I read:--"Goose-intentos, a goose claimed by custom by the
-husbandmen in Lancashire, upon the sixteenth Sunday after Pentecost,
-when the old Church prayers ended thus: 'ac bonis operis jugiter
-præstat esse _intentos_.'" These words occur in the old Sarum books, in
-the Collect for the sixteenth Sunday after Pentecost; in the present
-Liturgy, in that for the seventeenth Sunday after Trinity.[177]
-
-Blount, in his _Glossographia_, says that "in Lancashire the husbandmen
-claim it as a due to have a goose-intentos on the sixteenth Sunday after
-Pentecost: which custom takes its origin from the last word of the old
-Church prayer of that day:--'Tua nos Domine, quæ sumus, gratia semper et
-præveniat et sequatur; ac bonis operibus jugiter præstet esse
-_intentos_.' The vulgar people called it 'a goose with ten toes.'"
-Beckwith, in his new edition of Blount's _Fragmenta Antiquitatis_
-(London, 4to, 1815, p. 413), after quoting this passage, remarks:--"But
-besides that the sixteenth Sunday after Pentecost, or after Trinity
-rather, being movable, and seldom falling upon Michaelmas Day, which is
-an immovable feast, the service for that day could very rarely be used
-at Michaelmas, there does not appear to be the most distant allusion to
-a goose in the words of that prayer. Probably no other reason can be
-given for this custom, but that Michaelmas Day was a great festival, and
-geese at that time most plentiful. In Denmark, where the harvest is
-later, every family has a roasted goose for supper on St. Martin's Eve
-[Nov. 10]." It must be borne in mind that the term _husbandman_ was
-formerly applied to persons of a somewhat higher position in life than
-an agricultural labourer, as for instance to the occupier and holder of
-the land. In ancient grants from landlords of manors to their free
-tenants, among other reserved rents, boons, and services, the landlord
-frequently laid claim to a good stubble goose at Michaelmas. After all,
-the connexion between the goose and the collect is not apparent.[178]
-
-
-ALL SOULS' DAY.--NOV. 2.
-
- So named, because in the Church of Rome prayers are offered on this
- day for "all the faithful deceased."
-
-There is a singular custom still kept up at Great Marton, in the Fylde
-district, on this day. In some places it is called "soul-caking," but
-there it is named "psalm-caking,"--from their reciting psalms for which
-they receive cakes. The custom is changing its character also--for in
-place of collecting cakes from house to house, as in the old time, they
-now beg for money. The term "psalm" is evidently a corruption of the old
-word "sal," for soul; the mass or requiem for the dead was called
-"Sal-mas," as late as the reign of Henry VI.
-
-
-GUNPOWDER PLOT AND GUY FAWKES.
-
-The anniversary of the Gunpowder Plot of November 5, 1605, is still more
-or less kept in many parts of Lancashire, in towns by the effigy of Guy
-Fawkes being paraded about the streets, and burnt at night with great
-rejoicing; and by the discharge of small cannon, guns, pistols, &c., and
-of fireworks. In the country the more common celebration is confined to
-huge bonfires, and the firing of pistols and fireworks. In some places,
-especially about Blackburn, Burnley, and that district, as well as in
-villages about Eccles, Worsley, &c., it is customary for boys for some
-days before the 5th of November, to go round to their friends and
-neighbours to beg for coals. They generally take their stand before the
-door, and either say or sing some doggerel, to the following effect:--
-
- "Remember, remember,
- The Fifth of November,
- The gunpowder treason and plot;
- A stick and a stake,
- For King George's sake,
- We hope it will ne'er be forgot."
-
-
-CHRISTMAS.
-
-In the olden time, before the Reformation, Christmas was the highest
-festival of the Church. In some rural parts of Lancashire it is now but
-little regarded, and many of its customs are observed a week later,--on
-the eve and day of the New Year. But still there linger in many places
-some relics of the old observances and festivities, as the carols, the
-frumenty on Christmas Eve, the mummers, with "old Ball," or the
-hobby-horse, and the decoration of churches and dwellings with boughs of
-evergreen shrubs and plants; in the centre of which is still to be
-found, in many country halls and kitchens, and in some also in the
-towns, that mystic bough of the mistletoe, beneath whose white berries,
-it is the custom and licence of the season to steal a kiss from fair
-maidens, and even from matrons "forty, fat, and fair."
-
-
-CREATURES WORSHIPPING ON CHRISTMAS EVE.
-
-I have been told in Lancashire, that at midnight on Christmas Eve the
-cows fall on their knees, and the bees hum the Hundredth Psalm. I am
-unwilling to destroy the poetry of these old superstitions; but their
-origin can, I think, be accounted for. Cows, it is well known, on rising
-from the ground, get up on their knees first; and a person going into
-the shippon at midnight would, no doubt, disturb the occupants, and by
-the time he looked around, they would all be rising on their knees. The
-buzzing of the bees, too, might easily be formed into a tune, and, with
-the Hundredth Psalm running in the head of the listener, fancy would
-supply the rest.[179]
-
-
-CHRISTMAS MUMMING.
-
-Mr. J. O. Halliwell, in his _Nursery Rhymes of England_, relates the
-following as a Christmas custom in Lancashire:--The boys dress
-themselves up with ribands, and perform various pantomimes, after which
-one of them, who has a blackened face, a rough skin coat, and a broom in
-his hand, sings as follows:--
-
- Here come I,
- Little David Doubt;
- If you don't give me money,
- I'll sweep you all out.
- Money I want,
- Money I crave;
- If you don't give me money,
- I'll sweep you all to the grave.
-
-
-THE HOBBY HORSE, OR OLD BALL.
-
-In an old painted window at Betley, Staffordshire, exhibiting in twelve
-diamond-octagon panes, the mummers and morris-dancers of May-day, the
-centre pane below the May-pole represents the old hobby-horse, supposed
-to have once been the King of the May, though now a mere buffoon. The
-hobby (of this window) is a spirited horse of pasteboard, in which the
-master dances and displays tricks of legerdemain, &c. In the horse's
-mouth is stuck a ladle, ornamented with a ribbon; its use being to
-receive the spectators' pecuniary donations. In Lancashire the old
-custom seems to have so far changed, that it is the head of a dead horse
-that is carried about at Christmas, as described amongst the Easter
-customs. "Old Ball" bites everybody it can lay hold of, and holds its
-victims till they buy their release with a few pence.
-
-
-CHRISTMAS CUSTOMS IN THE FYLDE.
-
-The Rev. W. Thornber[180] describes the Christmas gambols and customs in
-the Fylde nearly a century ago, as having been kept up with great
-spirit. The midnight carols of the church-singers[181]--the penny laid
-on the hob by the fireside, the prize of him who came first to the outer
-door, to "let Christmas in,"--the regular round of visits--the treat of
-mince pies[182]--in turn engrossed their attention. Each farm-house and
-hut possessed a pack of cards, which were obtained as an alms from the
-rich, if poverty forbade the purchase. Night after night of Christmas
-was consumed in poring over these dirty and obscured cards. Nor were the
-youngsters excluded from a share in the amusements of this festal
-season. Early, long before dawn, on Christmas morning, young voices
-echoed through streets and lanes, in the words of the old song--
-
- Get up old wives,
- And bake your pies,
- 'Tis Christmas-day in the morning;
- The bells shall ring,
- The birds shall sing,
- Tis Christmas-day in the morning.
-
-Many an evening was beguiled with snap-dragon, bobbing for apples,
-jack-stone, blind-man's buff, forfeits, hot cockles, hunting the
-slipper, hide lose my supper, London Bridge, turning the trencher, and
-other games now little played. Fortune-telling by cards, &c., must not
-be omitted. In the bright frost and moonshine, out-door sports were
-eagerly pursued, guns were in great request, to shoot the shore-birds,
-and many found pleasure in "watching the fleet;" others played at
-foot-ball in the lanes or streets; or engaged in the games of
-prison-bars, tee-touch-wood, thread-my-needle, horse-shoe, leap-frog,
-black-thorn, cad, bandy, honey-pot, hop-scotch, hammer and block, bang
-about and shedding copies. Cymbling for larks[183] was a very common
-pastime; now it is scarcely known by name, and few have retained any of
-the implements or instruments requisite to practise the art. Tradesmen
-presented their customers with the Yule-loaf,[184] or two mould candles
-for the church, or some other Christmas-box. The churches and
-house-windows were decked with evergreens; a superstition derived
-probably from the Druids, who decked their temples and houses with
-evergreens in December, that the Sylvan Spirits might avoid the chilly
-frosts and storms of winter, by settling in their branches. For some
-weeks before Christmas, a band of young men called "Mutes," roused at
-early morn the slumbering to their devotions, or to activity in their
-domestic duties. The beggar at the door, craving an _awmas_ [? alms] or
-_saumas_ [soul-mass] cake, reminded the inmates that charity should be a
-characteristic of the season. The Eve of Christmas Day was named "Flesh
-Day," from the country people flocking to Poulton to buy beef, &c.,
-sufficient to supply the needs of the coming year. On the morning of
-Christmas Day the usual breakfast was of black puddings, with jannock,
-&c.
-
-
-CELEBRATION OF CHRISTMAS AT WYCOLLER HALL.
-
-At Wycoller Hall, the family usually kept open house the twelve days at
-Christmas. The entertainment was [in] a large hall of curious ashlar
-work, [on] a long table, plenty of _frumenty_, like new milk, in a
-morning, made of husked wheat boiled, roasted beef, with a fat goose and
-a pudding, with plenty of good beer for dinner. A round-about
-fire-place, surrounded with stone benches, where the young folks sat and
-cracked nuts, and diverted themselves; and in this manner the sons and
-daughters got matching, without going much from home.[185]
-
-
-CAROLS, &c.
-
-"Carol" is supposed to be derived from _cantare_ to sing, and _rola_, an
-interjection of joy. Amongst our Christmas customs that of carol-singing
-prevails over a great part of Lancashire. It is the old custom of
-celebrating with song the birth of the Saviour, even as the angels are
-said to have sung "Glory to God in the highest," &c., at this great
-event. Almost every European nation has its carols. Our earliest
-Christian forefathers had theirs; one or two Anglo-Norman carols have
-been preserved, and some of every century from the thirteenth to the
-eighteenth. Numerous books containing carols have been printed (one by
-Wynkin de Worde), and it would occupy too much space to insert even the
-most popular of these carols here. A verse of one common to Lancashire
-and Yorkshire must suffice:--
-
- God rest you all, merry gentlemen,
- Let nothing you dismay;
- Remember Christ our Saviour
- Was born on Christmas-day.
-
-The town or the village waitts go about after midnight, waking many a
-sleeper with their homely music, which sounds all the sweeter for being
-heard in the stilly night. Various items of payment to the Manchester
-waitts occur in the Church Leet Books of that manor. A dance tune called
-"The Warrington Waitts" occurs in a printed Tune-Book of 1732. Hand-bell
-ringing, a favourite Lancashire diversion, is much practised about
-Christmas.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[143] Hermentrude, in _Notes and Queries_, 3rd ser., vol. ii. p. 484.
-
-[144] Prestoniensis, in _Notes and Queries_, 2nd ser., vol. ii. p. 326.
-
-[145] Hampson's _Medii Ævi Kalendarium_, vol. i. p. 98.
-
-[146] Prestoniensis, in _Notes and Queries_, 2nd series, vol. iii. p.
-50.
-
-[147] Halliwell's _Archaic and Provincial Dictionary_.
-
-[148] Pasquil's _Palinodia_.
-
-[149] _Ploughman's Feasting Days_, stanza 3.
-
-[150] _Pictorial History of Lancashire._
-
-[151] See Rev. W. Thornber's _History of Blackpool_.
-
-[152] See also, under BELLS, the Pancake Bell.
-
-[153] _Notes and Queries_, 2nd ser., V.
-
-[154] For the Simnel cakes of Shrewsbury, &c., see _Book of Days_, I.
-336.
-
-[155] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-[156] _History of Manchester_, II. 265.
-
-[157] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-[158] H. T. Riley, in _Notes and Queries_, 2nd ser., ii. 320.
-
-[159] _Pictorial History of Lancashire._
-
-[160] Hone's _Every-Day Book_, ii. 450; Brand's _Popular Antiquities,
-&c._
-
-[161] _Pictorial History of Lancashire._
-
-[162] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-[163] _Pictorial History of Lancashire._
-
-[164] _History of Blackpool_, p. 92.
-
-[165] _Browis_ or _brewis_ is broth or pottage; _frumenty_, is hulled
-wheat boiled in milk, and flavoured with cinnamon, sugar, allspice; and
-_jannocks_, oaten bread in large, coarse loaves; _throdkins_, a cake
-made of oatmeal and bacon.
-
-[166] Rev. W. Thornber's _History of Blackpool_.
-
-[167] Hone's _Every-Day Book_, ii. 597.
-
-[168] For the words of these songs, see Harland's _Ballads and Songs of
-Lancashire_, p. 116; and for words and music, Chambers's _Book of Days_,
-i. 546.
-
-[169] A. B., Liverpool, in _Notes and Queries_, v. 581.
-
-[170] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-[171] These boughs, says Mr. Thornber, in his _History of Blackpool_,
-were emblematical of the character of the maiden thus conspicuously
-distinguished; an elder-bough for a scold, one of ash for a swearer, &c.
-
-[172] _Pictorial History of Lancashire._
-
-[173] Dugdale's _Monast. Anglic._, vol. vi. p. 906.
-
-[174] _Farington Papers_, p. 128.
-
-[175] _Gent. Mag._, vol. liii., for July, 1783, p. 578.
-
-[176] M. F., in _Notes and Queries_, 3rd series, ii. 397.
-
-[177] Aquinas, in _Notes and Queries_, 3rd series, v., April 2., 1864.
-
-[178] Ed. _Notes and Queries_.
-
-[179] Wellbank, in _Notes and Queries_, 2nd series, viii. 242.
-
-[180] See _History of Blackpool_.
-
-[181] Here is the specimen of one sung from house to house during
-Christmas:--
-
- We're nather cum to yare hase to beg nor to borrow,
- But we're cum to yare hase to drive away o sorrow;
- A suop o' drink, as yau may think, for we're varra droy,
- We'll tell yau what we're cum for--a piece o' Christmas poye.
-
-[182] The mince-pie, made of a compound of Eastern productions,
-represented the offerings of the wise men who came from far to worship
-the Saviour, bringing spices. Its old English coffin-shape was in
-imitation of the manger in which the infant Jesus was laid.
-
-[183] We have not been able to find any account of this mode of catching
-larks, at least, under the name here given.
-
-[184] The baker formerly gave his customers a baby of paste; and in my
-own recollection a cake, decorated with the head of a lamb, named "the
-Ewe loaf," was the Christmas present of bakers at Poulton. On Christmas
-Eve the houses were illuminated with candles of an enormous size.--W. T.
-
-[185] From a family MS. of the Cunliffes, quoted in Baines's
-_Lancashire_, iii. 244.
-
-
-
-
-EATING AND DRINKING CUSTOMS.
-
-
-In many instances of particular Church Festivals, and of popular
-celebrations, we have already enumerated various viands appropriated to
-special occasions, as the turkey to New Year's Day; the pancake to
-Shrove-Tuesday; the simnel, carlins, bragot, and fig-pie to Mid-Lent
-Sunday; the goose to Michaelmas; frumenty, mince-pies, &c., to
-Christmas. A few remain, however, for notice here:--Eccles cakes,
-Ormskirk gingerbread, Everton toffy, and other sweet cakes have "all
-seasons for their own." The two rival shops in Eccles, on opposite sides
-of Church-street, the one called "The genuine Eccles cake shop, from
-over the way," and the other "The real Eccles cake shop, never removed,"
-so much puzzle the stranger and visitor, that purchases are often made
-at both in order to secure the real, genuine, original article.
-
-
-THE HAVERCAKE LADS.
-
-Formerly the bread eaten by the labouring classes in the parish of
-Rochdale and others in the east of Lancashire was oat-cake, which was
-also pretty generally in use in the west of Yorkshire. A regiment of
-soldiers raised in these two adjoining districts at the beginning of the
-last war took the name of the "Havercake Lads," assuming as their badge
-an oat cake [oats are called havers], which was placed (for the purpose
-of attracting recruits) on the point of the recruiting sergeant's sword.
-Oat bread is still eaten in various manufacturing and hilly districts of
-Lancashire, but not nearly so generally as half a century ago.[186]
-
-
-WOODEN SHOES AND OATEN BREAD OR JANNOCKS.
-
-Both these are said to have been introduced by the Flemish immigrant
-weavers about the year 1567. Their sabots, however, were made entirely
-of wood, lined with a little lamb's skin, to protect the top of the
-foot; while the _clogs_ of the present day have strong leather tops
-[often brass clasps] and thick wooden soles. The kind of bread
-introduced by the Flemings into Bolton and other manufacturing districts
-of Lancashire was made of oatmeal in the form of a loaf, and called
-_jannock_; but the gradual change in manners and improvement in social
-condition have almost banished this food, and wheaten-bread and
-oat-cakes have almost altogether taken its place.
-
-In the _Shepherd's Play_, performed at Chester in 1577, in honour of the
-visit to that city of the Earl of Derby, the third Shepherd says:--
-
- And brave ale of Halton I have,
- And what meat I had to my hire;
- A pudding may no man deprave,
- And a _jannock_ of Lancaster-shire.
-
-Jannock is now used in Leigh more commonly than in most other parts of
-Lancashire. Warrington ale was no less celebrated than Halton ale, and a
-song in praise of the former is printed in Harland's _Lancashire
-Ballads_.[187]
-
-
-PORK PASTIES.
-
-In West Houghton, at the annual feast or wakes, there is a singular
-local custom of making large flat pasties of pork, which are eaten in
-great quantities on the Wakes Sunday, with a liberal accompaniment of
-ale; and people resort to the village from all places for miles round,
-on this Sunday, just as they rush into Bury on Mid-Lent or Mothering
-Sunday to eat simnels and drink bragot ale.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[186] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[187] P. 199.
-
-
-
-
-BIRTH AND BAPTISMAL CUSTOMS.
-
-
-Many of the customs attending child-bearing, churching, and christening
-are not peculiar to Lancashire, but common nearly all over England. The
-term "the lady in the straw," merely meant the lady confined to her bed,
-as all beds were anciently stuffed with straw. It was formerly the
-custom in Lancashire, as elsewhere, for the husband against the birth of
-the child to provide a large cheese and a cake. These were called "the
-groaning" cheese and cake; and throughout the north of England the first
-cut of the sick wife's cheese, or groaning cheese, is taken and laid
-under the pillows of young women to cause them to dream of their lovers.
-Amongst customs now obsolete was the giving a large entertainment at the
-churching. Now it is usually given at the christening.
-
-
-PRESENTS TO WOMEN IN CHILDBED.
-
-In a note on an entry of _Nicholls's Assheton's Journal_, Dr. Whitaker
-and its Editor, the Rev. Canon Raines, say that the custom of making
-presents to women in childbed, is yet called "pr[=e]s[)e]nting" in
-Craven. It is now quite obsolete in South Lancashire, although it
-continued to be observed to the middle of the eighteenth century. In a
-MS. journal of 1706 is an entry "John Leigh brought my wife a
-groaning-cake: gave him 6_d._" Other entries in the same journal show
-that money gifts ranged from 1_s._ 6_d._ to 5_s._ (the last being to the
-minister's wife); besides smaller gifts to maids and midwives, and
-bottles of wine, syrup of ginger, and other creature comforts to the
-person confined.
-
-
-TEA-DRINKING AFTER CHILDBIRTH.
-
-In some parts of North Lancashire it is customary to have a tea-drinking
-after the recovery from childbirth. All the neighbours and friends are
-invited--sometimes many more than can be comfortably accommodated--and
-both tea and rum are plentifully distributed. After tea, each visitor
-pays a shilling towards the expense of the birth feast; and the evening
-is spent in the usual gossip.
-
-
-TURNING THE BED AFTER CHILDBIRTH.
-
-An attendant was making a bed occupied by the mother of a child born a
-few days previously. When she attempted to turn it over, to give it a
-better shaking, the nurse energetically interfered, peremptorily
-forbidding her doing so till a month after the confinement, on the
-ground that it was decidedly unlucky; and said that she never allowed it
-to be done till then, on any account whatever.[188]
-
-
-AN UNBAPTIZED CHILD CANNOT DIE.
-
-The _Morning Herald_ of the 18th June, 1860, notices a case of attempted
-infanticide near Liverpool. The wretched mother, having gained access to
-a gentleman's grounds, laid her child on the ground and covered it with
-sods. The child was happily discovered and its life saved. The mother
-was apprehended and charged with having attempted to murder her child.
-She confessed that she was guilty, and added ["the tender mercies of the
-wicked are cruel"] that she had previously succeeded in getting the
-child baptized, as she believed it could not otherwise have died. This
-is a strange bit of folk-lore.[189]
-
-
-GIFTS TO INFANTS.
-
-It is a custom in some parts of Lancashire, as well as in Yorkshire,
-Northumberland, and other counties, that when an infant first goes out
-of the house, in the arms of the mother or the nurse, in some cases the
-first family visited, in others every neighbour receiving the call,
-presents to or for the infant an egg, some salt, some bread, and in some
-cases a small piece of money. These gifts are to ensure, as the gossips
-avow, that the child shall never want bread, meat, or salt to it, or
-money, throughout life. The old custom of sponsors giving the child
-twelve tea-spoons, called "Apostle Spoons," is now obsolete. The gift of
-a coral with bells, is supposed to have had its origin in a very ancient
-superstition. Coral, according to Pliny, was deemed an amulet against
-fascination; and it was thought to preserve and fasten the teeth. The
-coral-bells (especially if blest by the priest) would scare away evil
-spirits from the child.
-
-
-CHANGELINGS.
-
-There is even yet in some parts of Lancashire a strong dread of the
-fairies or witches coming secretly and exchanging their own ill-favoured
-imps, for the newly born infant; and various charms are used to prevent
-the child from being thus stolen away.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[188] A. B., Liverpool, in _Notes and Queries_, vi. 432.
-
-[189] W. S. Simpson, in _Notes and Queries_, 2nd series, x. p. 184.
-
-
-
-
-BETROTHING AND BRIDAL OR WEDDING CUSTOMS.
-
-
-BETROTHING CUSTOMS.
-
-The common custom of breaking a piece of silver or gold (if it be
-crooked, so much the luckier) between lovers of the humbler classes,
-especially when the man is going to a distance, is believed to have had
-its origin in a sort of betrothal or promise of marriage, much practised
-amongst the ancient Danes, called _Hand-festing_, which is mentioned by
-Ray in his Collection or Glossary of Northumbrian Words. It means
-hand-fastening or binding. In betrothal it was also the custom to change
-rings, formed of two links or hoops, called gemmel rings, from
-_gemelli_, twins.
-
-
-CURIOUS WEDDING CUSTOM.
-
-An ancient custom at weddings of the poorer classes in Lancashire, and
-in some parts of Cumberland, is thus described:--The Lord of the Manor,
-in whose jurisdiction the marriage takes place, allowed the parties a
-piece of ground for a house and garden. All their friends assembled on
-the wedding-day, and the bridegroom having provided a dinner and drink,
-they set to work and constructed a dwelling for the young couple, of
-clay and wood, what is called post and petrel, or wattle and daub. Many
-of these "clay biggins" still remain in the Fylde district and the
-northern parts of Lancashire. The relatives of the pair supplied the
-most necessary part of the furniture, and thus they were enabled to
-"start fair" in the world.[190]
-
-
-COURTING AND WEDDING CUSTOMS IN THE FYLDE.
-
-On the occasion of a marriage, a christening, or a churching, each guest
-either sent or presented some offering of money or food; thus providing
-a sufficient stock of provisions for the entertainment without much, if
-any, cost to the host. The preliminaries before marriage, the addresses
-paid by the swain to his sweetheart after the day's labour was done,
-were styled "the sitting-up," the night being the time allotted to
-courtship, by the kitchen fire, after the other members of the family
-had retired to rest. This "sitting-up" was regularly observed every
-Saturday night if the lover was faithful; if otherwise, the price of the
-"lant" (?) of the forsaken fair was transmitted by her to the rival
-preferred by her inconstant swain. On the wedding-day, when a bride and
-her "groom" left the house to have the marriage rites solemnized, some
-relative or servant threw at or after the smiling pair a "shuffle"
-(_Pantoufle_, an old shoe or slipper)--a custom in its origin said to be
-Jewish--as a preventive of future unhappiness, an omen of good-luck and
-prosperity. At the church-door an idle crowd was always ready for the
-"perry,"--that is, to contest for the dole of scattered half-pence, or
-if disappointed, to deprive the bride of her shawl or shoes, till some
-largess was bestowed. The day was spent in the company of a merry party
-of friends, who, after the ceremony of "throwing the stocking" over the
-bed of the wedded pair was performed, retired to their homes.[191]
-
-
-ANCIENT BRIDAL CUSTOM.--THE BRIDE'S CHAIR AND THE FAIRY HOLE.
-
-On the lower declivity of Warton Crag, in the parish of Warton (which
-abuts on Morecambe Bay and the Westmorland border), commanding a
-beautiful and extended prospect of the bay, a seat called "The Bride's
-Chair" was resorted to on the day of marriage by the brides of the
-village; and in this seat they were enthroned with due solemnity by
-their friends; but the origin and the object of the custom, which has
-now fallen in disuse, are unknown. Not far from Warton Crag are three
-rocking-stones placed in a line, about forty feet asunder, the largest
-stone lying in the middle. A cave is also mentioned by Lucas, named "The
-Fairy Hole," where dwarf spirits called Elves or Fairies, were wont to
-resort.[192]
-
-
-BURNLEY.
-
-An ancient custom prevails at Burnley Grammar School, by which all
-persons married at St. Peter's Church in that town are fined by the
-boys. As soon as a wedding is fixed the parish clerk informs the boys,
-and on the day appointed they depute two of their number to wait upon
-the groomsman and demand a fee. There is no fixed sum named; but enough
-is got to purchase books and maintain a tolerable library for the use of
-the pupils. Former pupils always pay a liberal fine.
-
-
-MARRIAGES AT MANCHESTER PARISH CHURCH.
-
-"Th'owd Church," as the collegiate church of Manchester was provincially
-designated before it attained the dignity of a cathedral, was known and
-celebrated far and wide over the extensive parish. Its altar has
-witnessed the joining together of thousands of happy [and unhappy]
-couples. The fees here being less than those demanded at other churches,
-which had to pay tribute to it, it was of course the most popular
-sanctuary in the whole parish for the solemnization of matrimony. At the
-expiration of Lent (during which the marriage fees are doubled) crowds
-of candidates for nuptial honours present themselves; indeed so numerous
-are they that the ceremony is performed by wholesale on Easter Monday. A
-chaplain of facetious memory [the Rev. Joshua Brookes] is said to have
-on one of these occasions accidentally united the wrong parties. When
-the occurrence was represented to him, his ready reply was, "Pair as you
-go out; you're all married; pair as you go out." This verbal certificate
-appeared to give general satisfaction, and each bridegroom soon found
-his right bride. Sir George Head, in his _Home Tour through the
-Manufacturing Districts, in the summer of 1835_, thus describes what he
-saw of these wholesale Monday marriages:--"I attended the Old Church at
-Manchester one Monday morning, in order to witness the solemnization of
-several marriages, which I had reason to suppose were then and there to
-take place. I had heard on the preceding Sunday the banns proclaimed as
-follows:--'For the first time of asking, 65; for the second time, 72;
-for the third time, 60. Total, 197.' Having been informed that it would
-be expedient to be on the spot at eight in the morning I repaired
-thither at that hour. Operations, however, did not commence before ten.
-The latter is the usual time of proceeding to business, although in
-cases of persons married by licence 8 o'clock is the hour. When all was
-ready and the church doors opened, the clergyman and clerk betook
-themselves to the vestry; and the people who were about to be married,
-and their friends, seated themselves in the body of the church opposite
-the communion table, on benches which were placed there for the purpose.
-Not less than fifty persons were assembled, among whom I took my seat
-quietly, without being noticed. A party who had arrived in a narrow _vis
-à vis_ fly, most exclusively paraded in the meantime up and down (as if
-unwilling to identify themselves with the humbler candidates of
-matrimony) in another part of the church. The people at first took their
-seats in solemn silence, each one inquisitively surveying his neighbour;
-but as the clergyman and clerk were some time in preparation, the men
-first began to whisper one to another and the women to titter, till by
-degrees they all threw off their reserve, and made audible remarks on
-the new comers. There was little _mauvaise honte_ among the women, but
-of the men, poor fellows! some were seriously abashed; while among the
-hymeneal throng there seemed to prevail a sentiment that obtains pretty
-generally among their betters, namely, inclination to put shy people out
-of conceit with themselves. Thus, at the advance of a sheepish-looking
-bridegroom, he was immediately assailed on all sides with 'Come in, man;
-what art thou afraid of? Nobody 'll hurt thee!' And then a general laugh
-went round in a repressed tone, but quite sufficient to confound and
-subdue the new comer. Presently a sudden buzz broke out, 'The
-clergyman's coming;' and all was perfectly silent. About twelve couples
-were to be married; the rest were friends and attendants. The former
-were called upon to arrange themselves all together around the altar.
-The clerk was an adept in his business, and performed the duties of his
-office in a mode admirably calculated to set the people at their ease
-and direct the proceedings. In appointing them to their proper places,
-he addressed each in an intonation of voice perfectly soft and soothing,
-and which carried with it more of encouragement as he made use of no
-appellative but the Christian name of the person spoken to. Thus he
-proceeded:--'Daniel and Ph[oe]be; this way, Daniel, take off your
-gloves, Daniel. William and Anne; no, Anne; here, Anne; t'other side,
-William. John and Mary; here, John; oh! John.' And then addressing them
-all together, 'Now, all of you give your hats to some person to hold.'
-Although the marriage service appeared to me (adds Sir George) to be
-generally addressed to the whole party, the clergyman was scrupulously
-exact in obtaining the accurate responses from each individual."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Many wedding customs, as the bridesmaids and best men, the wedding-ring,
-the nuptial kiss in the church, the bouquet borne in the hand of the
-bride, &c., the scattering of flowers in her path, the throwing of an
-old shoe after her for luck, the giving gloves, &c., are of ancient
-origin, and are the relics of Anglo-Saxon or Danish usages.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[190] Hampson's _Medii Ævi Kalend._ i. 289.
-
-[191] See Rev. W. Thornber's _History of Blackpool_.
-
-[192] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-
-
-
-DYING, DEATH-BED, AND FUNERAL CUSTOMS.
-
-
-DYING HARDLY.
-
-Persons are said to "die hardly," as the phrase is, meaning to be
-unable to expire, when there are pigeons' feathers in the bed. Some will
-not allow dying persons to lie on a feather-bed, because they hold that
-it very much increases their pain and suffering, and actually retards
-their departure. On the other hand, there is a superstitious feeling
-that it is a great misfortune, nay, even a _judgment_, not to die in a
-bed.
-
-
-BURYING IN WOOLLEN.
-
-By a statute of 30 Car. II., stat. I, cap. 3 (1678), entitled "An act
-for the lessening the importation of linen from beyond the seas, and the
-encouragement of the woollen and paper manufactures of the kingdom," it
-is enacted that the curate of every parish shall keep a register, to be
-provided at the charge of the parish, wherein to enter all burials and
-affidavits of persons being buried in woollen; the affidavit to be taken
-by any justice of the peace, mayor, or such like chief officer, in the
-parish where the body was interred; and if there be no officer, then by
-any curate within the city where the corpse was buried (except him in
-whose parish the corpse was buried), who must administer the oath and
-set his hand gratis. No affidavit to be necessary for a person dying of
-the plague. It imposes a fine of £5 for every infringement; one half to
-go to the informer, and the other half to the poor of the parish. This
-act was repealed by the 54 Geo. III. cap. 108 (1814). In the parish of
-Prestwich, the first entry in the book provided for such purposes was in
-August, 1678; and there is no entry later than 1681, which appears also
-to be the limit of the act's observance in the adjacent parish of
-Radcliffe; where the entries immediately follow the record of the burial
-itself in the registers, and not in a separate book as at Prestwich.
-Under the year 1679, is the following entry in the parish register of
-Radcliffe:--
-
-"An orphan of Ralph Mather's, of Radcliffe, was buried the 9th day of
-April, and certified to be wound up in woollen only, under the hand of
-Mr. William Hulme."
-
-In the churchwardens' accounts of Prestwich, for the year 1681, is the
-following item of receipt:--
-
-"Received a fine of James Crompton, for burying his son, and not
-bringing in an affidavit, according to the act for burying in woollen,
-£2 10_s._"[193]
-
-
-FUNERAL DOLE AND ARVAL CAKE.
-
-In Lancashire, the funeral was formerly celebrated with great profusion
-in meats and drinks, to which was added in those of the richer sort,
-what was called a penny dole, or promiscuous distribution of that sum,
-anciently delivered in silver to the poor. The effect of this custom,
-says Lucas (as quoted by Dr. Whitaker[194]) was such, that he had seen
-many "who would rather go seven or eight miles to a penny dole, than
-earn sixpence in the same time by laudable industry." This custom of
-distributing a small money alms or dole at funerals still existed in
-parts of Lancashire within the last fifty years. One sexagenarian
-informant told the writer that, when a lad, he went to the funeral of a
-Mr. D., in the hamlet of Swinton, parish of Eccles, and there was what
-he called "a _dow_, gi'en to every lad and every wench [boy or girl] as
-went, far and near,--a penny a-piece; and them as carrit a choilt
-[carried a child] had tuppence." Usually at country funerals, after the
-interment, the relations first, and next their attendants, threw into
-the grave sprigs of bay, rosemary, or other odoriferous evergreens,
-which had been previously distributed amongst them. In some cases, a
-messenger went round the neighbourhood, "bidding" parties to the
-funeral, and at each house where he gave the invitation, he left a sprig
-of rosemary, &c. After the rites at the grave, the company adjourned to
-a neighbouring public-house, where they were severally presented with a
-cake and ale, which was called an _arval_. This word seems to have
-greatly puzzled Dr. Whitaker. It is the Sueo-Gothic _arföl_, which is a
-compound of _arf_, inheritance, and _öl_, ale,--expressive of a feast
-given by the heir, at the funeral, on succeeding to the estate. The
-feast and its name were imparted to us by the Danes, whose _arfwöl_ is
-described by Olaus Wormius as a solemn banquet, celebrated by kings and
-nobles, in honour of deceased relations, whom they are succeeding.
-
-
-DALTON-IN-FURNESS.
-
-The most singular mode of conducting funerals prevails at this place. A
-full meal of bread and cheese and ale is provided at the funeral house;
-and, after the corpse is interred the parish clerk proclaims, at the
-grave-side, that the company must repair to some appointed public-house.
-Arrived there, they sit down by fours together, and each four is served
-with two quarts of ale.[195] One half of this is paid for by the
-conductor of the funeral, and the other half by the company. While they
-are drinking the ale, the waiter goes round with cakes, serving out one
-to each guest, which he is expected to carry home.[196]
-
-
-OLD FUNERAL CUSTOMS AT WARTON.
-
-A singular practice, which was growing obsolete in the time of Lucas
-(says Dr. Whitaker) once prevailed in the parish of Warton; which was,
-that most householders were furnished with a kind of family pall, or
-finely wrought coverlet, to be laid over the bier when the corpse was
-carried to church. Amongst other funeral customs at Warton, were the
-great feasting and drinking; the funeral dole, distributed to the poor;
-the casting of odoriferous herbs into the grave; and the cake and
-_arval_-ale, already described, pp. 270, 271, _suprâ_.[197]
-
-
-FUNERAL CUSTOMS IN THE FYLDE.
-
-When the last offices of respect to a departed friend or neighbour were
-to be rendered, a whole district, called "their side" of the country,
-was "bidden" or invited to assist in carrying the remains to their
-narrow home. At a stated hour the crowd assembled, not to mourn with
-widowed wife or weeping children, but to consume ale and tobacco, and to
-talk over their farms or trade till all was in readiness to depart for
-the completion of the obsequies. A particular order was observed. From
-the door of his former home, and into, and out of, the church, the
-corpse was carried on the shoulders of four of his relatives--his
-nearest kinsman, the chief mourner, walking in front with the clergyman.
-At the close of the ceremony, after the sprigs of box or rosemary had
-been deposited on the coffin, each person also adding a sprinkling of
-dust, the rough voice of the parish clerk was heard grating harshly in
-that solemn moment, inviting the "bidden" to show further their respect
-to the deceased by partaking of a dinner provided at the village inn.
-How the day terminated may be supposed, and indeed was a matter of sad
-notoriety. Indeed, it was not very unusual to see those who were to
-convey the dead to the sepulchre, tottering from intoxication under
-their sad burden. The best features of these old-time funerals were that
-doles in money were distributed to the aged and the very young; the poor
-were fed, and sometimes warm cloaks or other useful articles of attire
-were given, to be worn in memory of the departed.[198] Fifty-five years
-ago, says Mr. Thornber, writing in 1837, the more respectable portion of
-the inhabitants of Poulton were buried by candle-light--a custom long
-observed by some of the oldest families in the town. It was regarded as
-a sacred duty to expose a lighted candle in the window of every house as
-the corpse passed through the streets towards the church for interment;
-and he was poor indeed who did not pay this tribute of respect to the
-dead. So late as 1813 this church was strewed with rushes.
-
-
-MODE OF BURIAL OF A WIDOW WHO HAD TAKEN RELIGIOUS VOWS.
-
-A daughter of William Balderstone, of Balderstone, in her widowhood,
-makes a will of which the following is the commencement:--"Seventh day
-of January, 1497. I, Dame Jane Pilkington, widow, make and ordain this
-my last will and testament: First, I bequeath my bodye to be buried in
-y^e Nunnes Quire of Monketon, in my habit, holding my hand upon my
-breast, with my ring upon my finger, having taken in my resolves the
-mantel and the ring," &c.[199]
-
-
-FUNERAL CUSTOMS IN EAST LANCASHIRE.
-
-In _Nicholas Assheton's Journal_, he mentions that the corpse of a Mrs.
-Starkie was carried to church by four relatives; there was a sermon, and
-afterwards dinner, forty messes being provided for. On this, Dr.
-Whitaker remarks:--"An ancient usage. The nearest relations always took
-up the corpse at the door; and once more, if the distance was
-considerable, at the church gates. By forty messes, I suppose are to be
-understood so many dishes of meat." The editor (the Rev. Canon Raines)
-adds:--"This custom, which appears to be quite patriarchal, is still
-prevalent in some of the country parishes in South Lancashire. The
-custom of preaching funeral sermons on the day of the burial is now
-exploded, although so recently as 1776 the vicar of one of the largest
-parishes in Lancashire (Rev. John White, B.A., of Blackburn), objected
-to the building of a church in his parish unless he had 'some
-compensation made for the funeral sermons to be preached in it.'[200] I
-should rather understand the forty messes to be dinners provided for
-forty persons, although funerals in Lancashire at this period were
-conducted on a scale of prodigality scarcely to be conceived." [_The
-House and Farm Accounts of the Shuttleworths_ give examples of three
-burial customs--that of a dole to the poor; at one place 40_s._ 7_d._,
-at another 57_s._ 4_d._, at a third 47_s._ 8_d._ (?) a penny to each
-person; that of payment to the clergyman for a funeral sermon, in one
-case 5_s._; and that of providing dinners for the mourners, chiefly for
-those from a distance, in one case twenty-four messes of meat cost
-58_s._ 8_d._; in another instance seventy dined at 6_d._ the mess or
-meal, seventy-six and sixty-five at 5_d._; in all 211 persons attending
-one funeral.--EDS.]
-
-
-BIDDING TO FUNERALS.
-
-Previously to the formation of cemeteries, and the employment of
-omnibus-hearses, it was customary to invite large numbers to attend
-funerals. Guests were invited by _dozens_; and as each entered the house
-where the deceased lay, he was met at the door by a female attendant
-habited in black, and wearing a white apron, who offered him spiced
-liquor from a silver tankard. In the house each person was presented
-with a bun and a slice of currant bread. When the time for closing up
-the coffin arrived, each took his last look at the corpse and presented
-a shilling, or more, to the nearest relative of the deceased; who always
-sat at the head of the coffin for this purpose. In the neighbourhoods of
-Little Hulton, Peel Yate, Walkden Moor, &c., it was till of late years
-the custom for two persons to be nominated as "bidders" of guests to a
-funeral. These went to the various houses of the persons to be invited,
-and presented to each a sprig of rosemary; which the guest wore or
-carried in the hand at the funeral. This inviting or "bidding" was
-usually called "lating" or "lathing;" from the A.-S. verb _Lathian_, to
-invite, bid, or send for.
-
-
-SITUATION AND DIRECTION OF GRAVES.
-
-As churches are built to stand about East and West, the greatest spaces
-in the churchyard are the North and South sides of the church.
-Throughout Lancashire and the North of England there is a universal
-superstition that the south side of the church is the holiest or most
-consecrated ground, and it may be observed that that side of the
-graveyard is generally crowded with grave-stones, or green hillocks of
-turf, while the north side has but few. This is an old superstition,
-which held that the north side of the church was really unhallowed
-ground, fit only to be the last resting place of still-born infants and
-suicides. Then almost all graves are ranged east and west; and in a rare
-tract of the Marprelate series, called "_Martin's Month's Mind_" (1589)
-it is stated that "he would not be laid east and west (for he ever went
-against the hair), but north and south: I think because 'Ab aquilone
-omne malum' (from the north comes all evil), and the south wind ever
-brings corruption with it." The celebrated antiquary Thomas Hearne, left
-orders for his grave to be made straight by a compass, due east and
-west. Sir Thomas Browne[201] observes that "the Persians were buried
-lying north and south; the Megarians and Ph[oe]nicians placed their
-heads to the east; the Athenians, some think, towards the west, which
-Christians still retain; and Bede will have it to be the posture of our
-Saviour." One "Article of Inquiry" in a visitation of the Bishop of Ely
-in 1662, was--"When graves are digged, are they made six feet deep (at
-the least), and east and west?"
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[193] Rev. John Booker, Prestwich, in _Notes and Queries_, v. 543.
-
-[194] _Richmondshire_, ii. 298.
-
-[195] In many instances, in social feasts, four persons were regarded as
-a "mess."
-
-[196] The Rev. Mr. Hodgson's _Description of Westmorland_.
-
-[197] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-[198] Rev. W. Thornber's _History of Blackpool_.
-
-[199] Dr. Whitaker's _Whalley_, addenda.
-
-[200] _Lancashire MSS.--Letters._
-
-[201] In his _Urn Burial_.
-
-
-
-
-CUSTOMS OF MANORS.
-
-
-This subject would require extensive notice, if the materials requisite
-for its elucidation were more numerous and accessible. All prescriptive
-customs of manors have existed beyond what is termed "legal
-memory"--_i.e._, from the reign of Richard I. (1189-1199). Many others,
-relating to the military and other free tenures of the chief tenants of
-manors, and to the socage and inferior or servile tenures, with the
-boons of the cottagers, &c., and the various services attached to these
-different tenures, would make a very curious piece of history of customs
-and usages; but these are usually recorded only in private grants,
-charters, and other deeds, or in copy-rolls and other records of manors,
-not generally accessible. The following are some examples:--
-
-
-THE HONOUR OF KNIGHTHOOD.
-
-In the early ages of our history, the honour of knighthood, with the
-military services to which it was incident under the feudal system, was
-often forced upon the subject. In the year 1278, a writ to the Sheriff
-of Lancashire commanded him to distrain upon all persons seised of land
-of the value of £20 yearly, whether held of the King _in capite_, or of
-any other lords who ought to be knights and were not; and all such were
-ordered forthwith to take out their patent of knighthood. Fourteen years
-after this, a writ was issued, wherein the qualification was raised to
-double the amount; and a writ, dated 6th February, 1292, was issued to
-the Sheriff of Lancashire (with others), proclaiming that all persons
-holding lands in fee, or of inheritance, of the value of £40 per annum,
-must take the order of knighthood before Christmas in that year. The
-crown might relax or vary these services: hence a writ to the Sheriff of
-Lancashire recites "that the commonalty of England, having performed
-good services against the Welsh, the king excuses persons not holding
-lands of the value of £100 yearly from taking the order of knighthood;"
-but all holding above that amount, and not taking the order before the
-Nativity of the Virgin (Sept. 8), were to be distrained upon.
-Subsequently, injunctions were addressed to the Sheriff, commanding him
-to make extents of the lands of those refusing to take the order of
-knighthood, and to hold them for the king until further orders. Another
-writ to the Sheriff of Lancashire, of 6th April, 1305, directs him to
-proclaim that all who should become knights, and are not, must repair to
-London before the following Whit Sunday to receive that distinction, if
-properly qualified.[202]
-
-
-MARITAGIUM.
-
-On the marriage of the Princess Alianora (sister of Edward III.) with
-the Earl of Guelders, an order was issued to the abbot of Furness, and
-to the priors of Burscough, Up-Holland, and Hornby, as well as to the
-abbot of Whalley, and to the priors of Cartmell and Coningshead,
-requesting them to levy the subsidy on their respective houses, towards
-the _Maritagium_, an impost of early times, which ceased with the feudal
-system.[203] This order the priests were slow to obey, in consequence of
-which another letter was issued by the king from Pontefract, reminding
-them of their neglect, and ordering them to communicate their intention
-to the proper authority. No further documents appear on the subject; and
-it may be presumed that this second application produced the desired
-effect.[204]
-
-
-PECULIAR SERVICES AND TENURES.
-
-The following are entries in the "Testa de Nevill," a book supposed to
-have been compiled towards the close of the reign of Edward II. or the
-beginning of that of Edward III., and consequently to exhibit the
-services and tenures existing about the beginning of the 12th
-century:--Thomas and Alicia de Gersingham, by keeping the king's
-[John's] hawks in Lonsdale, till they became strong, when they were to
-be committed to the Sheriff of Lancashire. Luke Pierpoint, by keeping an
-aëry; Adam de Hemelesdale, by constabulary at Crosby. Quenilda de
-Kirkdale, by conducting royal treasure. Richard Fitz Ralph, by
-constabulary at Singleton. John de Oxeclive, by being carpenter at
-Lancaster Castle. Adam Fitz Gilmighel, by being the king's carpenter.
-Roger the carpenter, by being carpenter in Lancaster Castle. Ralph Barun
-or Babrun, by being mason in Lancaster Castle. Walter, son of Walter
-Smith, by forging iron instruments. Roger Gernet, by being chief
-forester. William Gernet, by the service of meeting the king on the
-borders of the city, with his horse and white rod, and conducting him
-into and out of the city. William and Benedict de Gersingham, by the
-sergeantry of keeping the king's aëries of hawks. Gilbert Fitz Orm, by
-paying yearly 3_d._ or some spurs to Benedict Gernet, the heir of Roger
-de Heton, in thanage. Roger de Leycester, by paying 8_s._ and two arrows
-yearly. A great number of persons in thanage: others in drengage. John
-de Thoroldesholme, by larderery; Roger de Skerton, by provostry. Roger
-Fitz John, by making irons for the king's ploughs. Others, by gardenry,
-and by masonry, or the service of finding pot-herbs and leeks for
-Lancaster castle, smith's work, and carpentry; the burgesses of
-Lancaster, by free-burgage and by royal charter. Peter de Mundevill, by
-service of one brachet [a sort of hound] of one colour. The prior of
-Wingal, by he knows not what service. Lady Hillaria Trussebut, by no
-service, and she knows not by what warrant. Henry de Waleton, by being
-head sergeant or bailiff of the Hundred of Derbyshire [_i.e._, West
-Derby]. Galfridus Balistarius [Geoffrey Balistur] by presenting two
-cross-bows to the king. William Fitz William, by presenting one brachet,
-one _velosa_ [? a piece of velvet] and two _lintheamina_ [pieces of
-linen cloth]. Roger Fitz Vivian holds the sergeantry of Heysham, by
-blowing the horn before the king at his entrance into and exit from the
-city of Lancaster. Thomas Gernet, in Heysham, by sounding the horn on
-meeting the king on his arrival in those parts. William Gresle, by
-presenting a bow without string, a quiver, 12 arrows, and a _buzon_ [?
-possibly a quiver or arrow-case]. William Fitz Waukelin, by presenting
-one soar-hawk. Hervi Gorge, by presenting one plough, one _linthola_
-[piece of linen cloth], one _velosa_ [piece of velvet], and one
-_auricular_ [? a veil for the confessional]. Roger and Hugh de
-Auberville, by keeping one hawk. Several religious houses held in pure
-and free and perpetual alms, or what the Normans styled
-"Frank-almoigne." A large number of persons held by donation, in
-consideration of yearly rents, and some of these were nominal, as "a
-pepper-corn, if demanded," "a clove," "a red rose on St. John the
-Baptist's Day" (24th June), "a pair of white gloves or a peny," a
-"Manchester knife," &c.
-
-SMITHELLS.--The mesne manor of Smithells in Sharples, near Bolton, is
-dependent upon the superior manor of Sharples, the lord of which claims
-from the owner of Smithells a pair of gilt spurs annually; and, by a
-very singular and inconvenient custom, the unlimited use of the cellars
-at Smithells Hall for a week in every year.[205]
-
-It does not appear, however, that the lord of Smithells was bound to the
-quantity or to the quality of the liquors with which his cellars were at
-that time to be stored. This feudal claim seems now nearly abandoned, as
-it has not been enforced within the present century.[206]
-
-
-MANOR OF COCKERHAM.--REGULATIONS FOR THE SALE OF ALE.
-
-The customs' dues of this manor appear to have been originally ordained
-by Brother William Geryn, cellarer of the Abbey of Cokersand, in 1326,
-and were confirmed by John the Abbot in 1st Richard III. (1483-4). The
-confirmation is in the English of the period; and among other curious
-ordinances, contains the following regulation as to the price, &c., of
-ale (the spelling is modernised):--"There shall no brewer let no tenant
-for to have ale for their silver out of their house, and such [may] have
-four gallons within their house, so that they bring a vessel with them.
-Ye shall not sell a gallon of ale above a halfpenny when ye may buy a
-quarter of good oats for 2_d._ Ye shall give ale-founders [manorial
-officers also called ale-tasters] a founding-gallon, or else a taste of
-each vessel, and your charge, on pain [penalty] of grievous
-amerciaments."[207]
-
-
-MANORIAL CUSTOMS IN FURNESS.
-
-KIRKBY IRELETH.--In this manor the widow is entitled during her
-widowhood to the moiety of the estate whereof her husband died seised;
-but forfeits her right thereto upon re-marriage or breach of chastity.
-Every tenant, upon being admitted to a tenement, pays to the lord of the
-manor 20 years' quit-rent for a fine. Every entire tenement was formerly
-obliged to keep one horse and harness, for the king's service, on the
-borders or elsewhere. These were called "summer [? sumpter] nags," of
-which 30 were kept in Kirkby. The tenant was also to furnish a boon
-plough and a boon-harrow, that is, a day's ploughing and harrowing; and
-no one is to let his land for any time exceeding 7 years, without
-licence. Tenements in this manor are forfeited to the lord by treason or
-felony. A tenant convicted of wilful perjury forfeits to the lord 20
-years' rent, and for petty larceny, 10 years' rent.
-
-PENNINGTON.--Pennington is the smallest parish in the county, and
-contains fewer streams than any other parish in North Lonsdale. Some
-feudal customs, obsolete in most places, are still observed in the manor
-of Pennington. A tenant on admission pays a fine of 16 years' quit-rent.
-On the death of the lord and on every change of the lord by descent, the
-tenant pays a further fine of 6 years' quit-rent; and a running-fine,
-town-term, or _gressom_, is payable every 7th year. The heir, where
-there is a widow, pays a heriot. Every tenant must plant two trees of
-the same kind for every one that he fells. Formerly every tenant was
-obliged to carry a horse-load once a year to Manchester and half a
-horse-load to Lancaster. In 1318 a dispute between the Pennington family
-and the Abbot of Furness, as to boon services, was thus decided:--"That
-the manor of Pennington was held by the service of 30_s._, and of
-finding yearly, for one day in autumn, a man and woman, sufficient to
-mow at the Grange of Lindale, for every house with a court-yard except
-Sir William de Pennington's capital messuage; the convent to find the
-daily refreshment of each mower while employed, according to ancient
-custom; and Sir William granting that all the tenants of the manor, who
-had or might have ploughs, should plough half an acre of the Abbot's
-Grange at Lindale."[208]
-
-MUCHLAND.--Immediately after the Conquest Aldingham was granted to
-Michael Flandrensis or le Fleming, and his land was called Michael's
-land, to distinguish it from that of the abbey of Furness; spelled often
-Mychel-land and Mychelande, till it got corrupted into Muchland. In the
-manor of Muchland, the tenant on being admitted to his tenement pays to
-the lord of the manor two years' rent over and above the usual annual
-rent. Every tenant paying 40_s._ rent was formerly obliged to find a
-horse and harness for the King's service, on the borders or elsewhere.
-Every tenant who paid 20_s._ a year rent, was to furnish a man harnessed
-for the King's service. Every old tenant paid a _gressom_ of one year's
-rent on the death of the lord, and every new tenant pays two years' rent
-to the next heir. The widow has one-third of the tenement during her
-chaste widowhood. If a tenement is not presented within a year and a day
-after the death of the tenant, or if it be sold, set, or let without
-paying the fine, or _gressom_, for a year and a day, then the lord, if
-there be not good distress upon the grounds, may seize such tenement
-into his hands as a forfeiture, &c.
-
-LOWICK.--Here the customs are much the same as in Kirkby Ireleth, except
-as to forfeitures. The running _gressom_, or town term, is a year's rent
-every seventh year, paid to the lord. There are four house-lookers
-annually appointed for reviewing and assigning timber for necessary
-repairs.
-
-NEVIL HALL.--The admittance fine is two years' rent, over and above the
-accustomed yearly rent. The heriot, on the change of lord, is half a
-year's rent. The running _gressom_, or town-term, is half a year's rent
-every seventh year. Every tenant paying 20_s._ rent was formerly to keep
-a horse harnessed in readiness for the King's service. The widow in this
-manor, if the first wife, to have half the tenement; but if she be a
-latter wife, then only one-third the tenement. A tenant may, whenever he
-pleases, give his tenement to any of his sons; and in default of sons to
-any of his daughters, as he thinks fit. A tenant may let, or mortgage,
-any tenement or part of it for a year, without a licence; and may sell
-his whole tenant-right, or any part of it, with licence from the lord.
-The rents mentioned above are old and immutable rents.[209]
-
-MUCH-URSWICK.--These customs include a fine of 20_d._ to the lord of the
-manor on every change of tenancy, or on the death of the lord; except
-one large house, which paying 4_s._ rent, paid a fine of five times the
-lord's rent, or 5_d._ on the death of the lord, or a change of tenancy.
-The tenant's widow had half the estate during chaste widowhood. The
-tenants were obliged to carry a single horse-load, anciently fish, once
-a year to Mowbreck Hall, near Kirkham; but this service was commuted for
-a small rent called carriage rent. Tenements in this manor, on treason
-or felony by the tenant are forfeited to the lord. A tenant convicted of
-wilful perjury, forfeits to the lord twenty years' rent, and for petty
-larceny, ten years' rent.[210]
-
-THE ROYAL MANOR OF WARTON.--These customs are similar in many respects
-to those of the duchy manors in Furness. In the reign of Elizabeth a
-commission of survey, and a jury of twenty-four, from the neighbouring
-manors, made a return of the customs, which were confirmed by the Court
-of Exchequer. These manorial bye-laws are applicable to customary
-tenants, and relate to the subjects of heirships, performance of suit
-and service, the powers of the steward, the enrolling of tenants, the
-payment of rents, amounts of fines, &c. A fine of two years' rent is to
-be imposed on changes of tenantry; all tenants paying above 20_s._ rent
-were required to maintain a horse and man with armour, tenants paying
-under 20_s._ being commanded to serve in person: these services to be
-strictly and fully executed in cases of need. Each tenant is directed to
-repair his own homestead. In case of the death of a married tenant,
-one-half of the tenement is assigned to the widow, to be held during her
-chaste widowhood, and the other half to the heir or heirs. The crime of
-fornication to be punished with forfeiture. Tenants not to set, let, or
-mortgage for above three years without licence; not to encroach on the
-common without permission. The manor court to have jurisdiction in cases
-of tithe and tenant right; the tenants to be at liberty to take ash
-wood. The tenants are not to be abated in their rents for any loss they
-may suffer in their several proportions of turbary, marsh and common.
-These manorial regulations are now but seldom enforced, and the Court
-Baron of Warton assembles only on rare occasions, not uncommonly after
-intervals of years.[211]
-
-FEUDAL PRIVILEGES OF THE HONOUR AND MANOR OF HORNBY.--These ancient
-privileges comprised free warren, subject to a fine of 10_l._ on
-encroachments on the King's forests; right of market and fair at
-Arkholme and at Hornby; court of view of frank-pledge; sheriff's turn;
-free court of all pleas; assize of bread; soc, sac, tol, and them;
-infangetheof and utfangetheof; hamsocn; leyrwite; murder; acquittance of
-shires and hundreds, lestage [or lastage], aids of sheriffs and their
-bailiffs, and amercements; wardships, and works and enclosures of
-castles, parks, and bridges; and of passage, frontage, stallage, toll,
-paiage, and money given for murder; and right to pontage, stallage,
-hidage, and pickage. All these feudal customs were confirmed in the 12th
-Charles I. (1636) to Henry Parker, Lord Morley and Monteagle.[212]
-
-A number of the above terms require explanation. "Money given for
-murder," implied the fines levied on a district in which a murder had
-been committed, and the criminal not discovered; "the privilege of
-murder" was the power to levy such fines; thus the town or hundred which
-suffered an Englishman, who had killed a Dane there to escape, was to be
-amerced sixty-six marks [44_l._] to the King. _Hamsocn_, is the
-privilege or liberty of a man's own house, its violation is burglary.
-_Leyr_ or _lecher wite_, is the privilege of punishing adultery and
-fornication. Passage is a toll for passing over water, as at a ford or
-ferry; pontage is bridge toll; stallage, a toll for stalls in a market;
-paiage or pavage, is a paving toll. _Sac_, the right of a lord to hold
-pleas in his court, in causes of trespass among his tenants; _soc_, the
-right to administer justice and execute laws; _toll_, the right to levy
-tolls on tenants; _them_, the right to hear, restrain, and judge bondmen
-and villeins, with their children, goods and chattels, &c.
-_Infangetheof_, the lord's privilege to judge any thief taken within his
-fee. _Outfangtheof_, the right of the lord to call men dwelling within
-his manor, and taken for felony outside his fee, to judgment in the
-lord's own court.
-
-
-THE LORD'S YULE FEAST AT ASHTON.
-
-Among the customs of the Manor of Ashton-under-Lyne, as described by the
-late Dr. Hibbert-Ware, was the making of so-called "presents" by the
-tenants-at-will to the lord of the manor, for the sake of partaking in
-the annual feast at the great hall. In the rental of Sir John de
-Assheton, made in November 1422, these presents are claimed as an
-obligatory service from the tenants-at-will, in the following
-terms:--"That they shall give their presents at Yole [Christmas]; every
-present to such a value as is written and set in the rental; and the
-lord shall feed all his said tenants, and their wifes, upon Yole-day at
-the dinner, if they like for to come; but the said tenants and their
-wifes, though it be for their ease not to come, they shall send neither
-man nor woman in their name,--but if [unless] they be their son or their
-daughter dwelling with them,--unto the dinner; for the lord is not
-bounden to feed them all, only the good man and the good wife." In some
-manor-houses of Lancashire, once dedicated to these annual scenes of
-festivity, may be observed an elevation of the floor [or _daïs_] at the
-extremity of the great hall, or, in the place of it, a gallery which
-stretches along one side of the room [many halls have both _daïs_ and
-gallery] to accommodate the lord and his family, so that they might not
-be annoyed by the coarse rustic freedoms which the tenants would be too
-apt to take during the hours of their conviviality. In a hall, then, of
-this kind in the manor-house at Assheton, we may imagine the large Yule
-fire to be kindled; while in a gallery or raised floor Sir John of
-Assheton, his lady, and family, together with his kinsmen, Elland of
-Brighouse, and Sir John the Byron, are feasting apart, yet attentive to
-the frolics or old songs of the company below. It was on these occasions
-that peg-tankards were used, and horns that bore the names of the Saxons
-and Danes, whom the Normans had ousted out of their possessions. Of the
-description of ale that flowed merrily on these occasions we know
-little; but there can be no doubt that it was like King Henry the
-Eighth's ale, which contained neither hops nor brimstone. We may
-suppose, then, that on annual festivals like these, the wooden bowl or
-horn would pass freely through the hands of Sir John of Assheton's
-tenants-at-will; among whom were such personages as Hobbe Adamson, Hobbe
-of the Leghes, William the arrow-smith, Roger the baxter, Roger le
-smith, Jack the spencer, Jack the hind, Elyn Wilkyn daughter, Elyn the
-rose, and the widows Mergot of Staley, Peryn's wife, and Nan of the
-Windy Bank,--all clad in their best hoods, and brown woollen jackets and
-petticoats. The ancient musical instruments used in Lancashire were a
-kind of fiddle, not of the present form, and a stringed instrument
-called the virginals. The provincial songs of that period, few of which
-were less than half-an-hour in length, rehearsed the deeds of Launcelot
-du Lake, and his conquest of the giant Tarquin, at the castle of
-Manchester; Ranulph of Chester, and his wars in the Holy Land; or the
-warlike feats and amorous prowess of the renowned Cheshire hero, Roger
-de Calverley. In order to preserve, as much as possible, the degree of
-decorum that was necessary at such meetings, there was firstly
-introduced a diminutive pair of stone stocks, of about eighteen inches
-in length, for confining within them the fingers of the unruly. This
-instrument was entrusted to the general prefect of manorial festivities
-named the King of Misrule, whose office it was to punish all who
-exceeded his royal notions of decency. Accordingly such a character
-appears among the list of Sir John of Assheton's tenants, under the name
-of Hobbe the king. From these entertainments being supported by the
-contributions of the tenants, they were derisively called _Drink-leans_.
-[_Læn_, A.-S. a loan, a gift, a reward; _Læne_, adj., lean, slender,
-fragile.][213]
-
-
-RIDING THE BLACK LAD AT ASHTON-UNDER-LYNE.
-
-In the rental of Sir John Assheton, knight, of his Manor of
-Ashton-under-Lyne, A.D. 1422, it is stated that two of his sons, Rauf of
-Assheton, and Robyn of Assheton, by grants to them, "have the sour carr
-guld rode and stane rynges for the term of their lives." This donation
-(says Dr. Hibbert-Ware) evidently alludes to the privilege of
-_Guld-riding_, a custom that in Scotland at least is of great antiquity,
-having been intended to prevent lands from being over-run with the
-weeds, which, from their yellow colour, were named _gools_ or _gulds_,
-_i.e._, the corn-marigold, or _Chrysanthemum Segetum_ of Linn. Boethius
-(lib. 10) mentions a law of king Kenneth (probably rather of Alexander
-II.) to prevent the growth of _manaleta_ or _guld_, and to impose a fine
-of oxen on proof of its infraction. The Rev. J. P. Bannerman, in a
-statistical account of the parish of Cargill, in Perthshire, states that
-with a view of extirpating this weed, "after allowing a reasonable time
-for procuring clean seed from other grounds, an act of the Baron Court
-was passed, enforcing an old Act of Parliament to the same effect,
-imposing a fine of 3_s._ 4_d._, or a wether sheep, on the tenants for
-every stock of _gool_ that should be found growing in their corn at a
-particular day; and certain persons styled _gool-riders_ were appointed
-to ride through the fields, search for _gool_, and carry the law into
-execution when they discovered it. Though the fine of a wether sheep is
-now commuted and reduced to a penny, the practice of _gool-riding_ is
-still kept up, and the fine rigidly exacted." To this origin Dr.
-Hibbert-Ware attributes the custom peculiar to Ashton-under-Lyne of
-"Riding the Black Lad." He states that in the days of Sir John of
-Assheton (A.D. 1422) a large portion of low wet land in the vicinity of
-Assheton was named the Sour Carr (carr being synonymous with the Scotch
-word _carse_, and the well-known term _sour_ implying an impoverished
-state of the carr). It had been over-run with corn-marigolds or
-carr-gulds, which were so destructive to the corn that the lord of the
-manor enforced some rigorous measures for their extirpation, similar to
-the carr-guld riding in Perthshire. Ralph of Assheton, Sir John's son by
-a second marriage, and Robin, his brother, were on a certain day in the
-spring [Easter-Monday] invested with the power of riding over the lands
-of the carr, named the _Carr Guld Rode_, of levying fines for all
-_carr-gulds_ that were found among the corn, and, until the penalties
-were paid, of punishing transgressors by putting them into the [finger]
-_stocks_ or _stone rings_, or by incarceration. Ralph Assheton, by his
-alliance with a rich heiress, became the lord of the neighbouring manor
-of Middleton, and soon afterwards received the honour of knighthood;
-being at the same time entrusted with the office of Vice-Constable of
-the kingdom; and it is added, of Lieutenant of the Tower. Invested with
-such authorities, he committed violent excesses in this part of the
-kingdom. Retaining for life the privilege granted him in Ashton of
-Guld-riding, he, on a certain day in spring, made his appearance in the
-manor, clad in black armour (whence his name of the Black Lad or Black
-Boy) mounted on a charger, and attended with a numerous train of his own
-followers, in order to levy the penalty arising from the neglect of
-clearing the land from carr-gulds. The interference of so powerful a
-knight belonging to another township could not but be regarded by the
-tenants of Assheton as the tyrannical intrusion of a stranger; and as
-Sir Ralph, sanctioned by the political power given him by Henry VI.,
-exercised his privilege with the utmost severity, the name of the Black
-Lad is still regarded with sentiments of horror. Tradition has, indeed,
-perpetuated the prayer that was fervently ejaculated for a deliverance
-from his tyranny:--
-
- Sweet Jesu! for thy mercy's sake,
- And for thy bitter passion,
- Save us from the axe of the Tower,
- And from Sir Ralph of Ashton.
-
-Upon the death of the Black Knight, Sir John's heir and successor
-abolished the usage for ever, reserving for the estate a small sum of
-money for the purpose of perpetuating, in an annual ceremony, the
-dreaded annual visits of the Black Boy. This is still kept up. An effigy
-is made of a man in armour; and since Sir Ralph was the son of a second
-marriage (which, for this reason, had been esteemed by the heir of Sir
-John as an unfortunate match) the image is deridingly emblazoned with
-some emblem of the occupation of the first couple that are linked
-together in the course of the year. [Mr. Edwin Butterworth says with the
-initials of their names.] The Black Boy is then fixed on horseback, and,
-after being led in procession round the town, is dismounted, made to
-supply the place of a shooting-butt, and, all fire-arms being in
-requisition for the occasion, he is put to an ignominious death. [The
-origin of Riding the Black Lad, here suggested, is exceedingly
-ingenious; but it seems questionable whether any real data for it are
-given in the single passage cited from the rental of 1422. "The Sour
-Carr Guld Rode and the Stane Ringes" taken as they stand, may mean the
-Guld-ruyding, or ridding, as a piece of land cleared of stumps, &c., was
-called; _ex. gr._ Hunt-royd, Orme-rod, Blake-rod, &c. The Stone Rings
-may be a piece of land so-called. There is no mention of the power to
-levy penalties, nor even of any official riding, but only the
-_rode_,--not road, as it has been interpreted, but ridded land, perhaps
-cleared from gulds and weeds, no less than from stubs, stumps, and
-stones.--EDS.][214]
-
-Mr. Roby, from the above materials, has written a tale of Sir Ralph's
-cruel seizure of a widow's only cow, as the heriot due to him as lord of
-the manor, on the death of her husband. Her half-witted son is said to
-have told Sir Ralph that on his death his master the devil would claim a
-heriot, and that Sir Ralph himself would be given up. On this Sir Ralph
-took fright, and sent back the heriot cow to the poor widow. Another
-tradition exists as to the origin of the custom of "Riding the Black
-Lad," which Mr. Roby thinks may have been fabricated merely to throw off
-the odium attached to the name of Sir Ralph. In the reign of Edward III.
-one Thomas Assheton fought under Queen Philippa in the battle of
-Neville's Cross. Riding through the ranks of the enemy, he bore away the
-royal standard from the Scotch king's tent, who himself was afterwards
-taken prisoner. King Edward, on his return from France, conferred on
-Thomas the honour of knighthood, with the title of "Sir Thomas Assheton
-of Assheton-under-Lyne." To commemorate this singular display of valour,
-Sir Thomas instituted the custom of "Riding the Black Knight or Lad" at
-Assheton, on Easter-Monday; leaving 10_s._ yearly to support it,
-together with his own suit of black velvet, and a coat of mail. Which of
-these accounts of the origin of the custom is correct, there is now no
-evidence to determine.
-
-
-BOON SHEARING.
-
-In the manor of Ashton-under-Lyne, every tenant-at-will was thus
-commanded:--"He that plough has, shall plough two days. He that half
-plough has, shall plough a day, whenever the lord be liever [more
-willing], in wheet-seeding, or in lenton-seeding; and every tenant
-harrow a day with their harrow, in seeding time, when they bin charged.
-And they should cart, every tenant ten cartful of turve from Doneam Moss
-to Assheton, and shere four days in harvest, and cart a day corn." This
-service, so profitable to the lord, was familiarly called boon-work.
-Hence an old adage still retained in the North of England, when a man is
-supposed to be working for nothing, that "he has been served like a
-boon-shearer."[215]
-
-
-THE PRINCIPAL OR HERIOT.
-
-One of the services of Sir John Assheton's tenants-at-will, in the manor
-of Ashton-under-Lyne, in the fifteenth century, as appears by his rental
-of 1422, was that "they should pay a principal at their death, to wit,
-the best beast they have." This was evidently a heriot. As of a military
-vassal, or tenant by knight-service, his horse was the heriot due to his
-lord at death; so the custom became extended to that class of dependents
-who were retained in the lord's employ to perform the busier services of
-the manor. As their property consisted of cattle, or of implements of
-husbandry, the heriot due to the lord was the best beast, cow, or horse,
-of which the tenant might die possessed. This condition being fulfilled,
-every further claim upon the goods of the deceased was remitted. At
-times this expressive relic of ancient military subjection was found
-exceedingly galling. In the manor of Assheton there are many traditional
-stories still remaining on the subject of such principals or heriots. A
-tenant's boy, on the death of his father, was driving an only cow to the
-manor-house of the adjoining demesnes of Dukinfield. He was met by the
-lord of the place, with whose person and rank he was unacquainted, who
-questioned him whither he was taking his beast. "I am driving it as far
-as Dukinfield for the heriot," replied the boy. "My father is dead--we
-are many children--and we have no cow but this. Don't you think the
-devil will take Sir Robert for a heriot, when he dies?" The lad was
-fortunately addressing a humane landlord. "Take the cow back to thy
-mother; I know Sir Robert,--I am going to Dukinfield myself, and will
-make up the matter with him."[216]
-
-
-DENTON RENT-BOONS.
-
-The lands of the Denton estates of the Hollands were held in 1780 by
-seventeen tenants, subject to a rent of 294_l._ 6_s._ 8_d._ The entire
-property was held by lease of lives, and this rental was exclusive of
-fines paid on the renewal of leases. By the terms of their respective
-leases the tenants were also pledged to the payment of certain
-rent-boons, consisting of a dog and a cock, or (at the landlord's
-option) of their equivalent in money--for the dog 10_s._, for the cock
-1_s._; the landlord thus providing for his amusement in hunting and
-cock-fighting in a manner least onerous to himself.[217]
-
-
-A SAXON CONSTABLEWICK.
-
-Until within these few years a relic of Saxon polity more ancient than
-the Domesday Survey existed in the Constablewick of Garstang, which
-continued to our own days, the _freo borh_, _friborg_, or Saxon manor,
-in a very perfect state. The free-burgh consisted of 11 townships,
-surrounding the original lordship to which all but one were subject. The
-reason for establishing this institution is stated in a Saxon law. The
-_Wita_, or counsellors, having considered the impunity with which
-trespasses against neighbours were committed, appointed over every ten
-friborgs, justiciaries whom they denominated _tien heofod_ or "head of
-ten." These (says Dr. Keuerden) handled smaller causes between townsmen
-and neighbours, and according to the degree of the trespass, awarded
-satisfaction; made agreements respecting pastures, meadows and
-corn-lands, and reconciled differences among neighbours. The
-constablewick of Garstang comprised the township of Garstang and ten
-other townships, all of which are styled hamlets in the books of the
-court, and were divided into three portions. Two constables were
-annually elected for this district, and were alternately taken from each
-third portion of the constablewick. The jury were nominated in a similar
-manner. The jury were accustomed to adjourn from the court to an
-eminence called Constable hillock, adjoining the river Wyre, where they
-made choice of the constables by inscribing their names upon slips of
-wood. These officers were empowered to collect the county-rates, and
-serve for all the hamlets. The court was held annually, by direction of
-a steward of the Duke of Hamilton, the superior lord of the wick, till
-1816, when it fell into neglect, and its powers are now exercised in
-such of the townships only as are the property of the Duke. The
-adjournment of the court to the hillock is obviously the remnant of a
-custom far more ancient than the institution of the friborg itself.[218]
-
-
-TALLIAGE OR TALLAGE.
-
-This was a kind of occasional property tax, levied by order of the
-monarch in emergencies, and throughout the kingdom. In the charter
-granted by Randle, Earl of Chester, to the burgesses of Stafford, about
-A.D. 1231, is a clause reserving to him and his heirs reasonable
-tallage, when the King makes or takes tallage of his burgesses
-throughout England. A precisely similar clause is found in Thomas
-Greslet's charter to his burgesses of Mamecestre in 1301. In the 11th
-Henry III. (1226-27) a still earlier talliage was made in Lancashire,
-which enables us to measure the relative importance of the principal
-towns in the county early in the thirteenth century. The impost was
-assessed by Master Alexander de Dorsete and Simon de Hal; and the
-payments were for the towns of Lancaster thirteen marks (£8 13_s._
-4_d._); Liverpool, eleven marks, 7_s._ 8_d._ (£7 14_s._ 4_d._); West
-Derby, seven marks, 7_s._ 8_d._ (£5 1_s._); Preston, fifteen marks,
-6_d._ (£10 0_s._ 6_d._). The tenants in thanage paid ten marks (£6
-13_s._ 4_d._) to have respite, that they might not be talliaged. Baines
-deems it remarkable that Manchester, Stafford, and Wigan were not
-included; but in these old manors it was the lord of the manor who had
-the right to levy talliage within his manor. In 1332 a tallage of
-one-fifteenth was levied by Edward III., to enable him to carry on the
-war against Scotland.[219]
-
-
-ROCHDALE TITHE, EASTER-DUES, MORTUARIES, ETC.
-
-The following is a literal copy of a small hand-bill in possession of
-the writer, which appears to have been printed for distribution among
-the farmers and the parishioners generally, with the purpose of
-supplying information as to the various payments to be made to the
-vicar, or at all events to the parish church:--
-
- An EXTRACT out of the _Parliament Survey_,
- Taken the 10th of _January_ 1620.
-
- The Parish of _Rochdale_ is divided into four Divisions, viz.
- _Hundersfield_, _Spotland_, _Castleton_, and _Butterworth_. There is
- also belonging to the Rectory of _Rochdale_, the Parish Chapel of
- _Saddleworth_, in the County of _York_; and certain Parcels of Glebe
- Lands, lying in _Saddleworth_.
-
- [*3] There is no Tythe Hay paid within the Parish, but a Penny a
- Year every one payeth that holdeth any Lands within the Parish.
-
- No Tythe paid for Eggs, Apples, Hemp, or Flax.
-
- The Manner of receiving the _Easter-Role_ and Mortuarys are
- thus--each Horse payeth a Penny; for every married Man or Widow at
- the Offering, a Penny; every Plough a Penny; every Swarm of Bees a
- Penny; every Cow one Penny; and every Colt, and every Calf, one
- Halfpenny.
-
- For Mortuarys--Every one buried in the Chancel payeth 6_s._ 8_d._
- every one that dieth worth twenty Nobles, in moveable Goods, over
- and above his Debts, payeth 3_s._ 4_d._ if worth 30_l._ payeth
- 6_s._ 8_d._ if worth 40_l._ or upwards, 10_s._--Stat. 21. Hen. 8.
- Chap. 6.
-
- N.B. That House or Smoke, and Garden, hath been substituted in the
- Room of Horse and Plough.
-
- In Closes where there are more than ten Stacks of Corn (or even
- tens) in one Close, _the odd Stacks shall not be tythed_; the
- Land-Owner setting up the Corn in Stacks, may be a good
- Consideration for the same; because of Common Right the Tytheman is
- to take the Corn Tythe in the Sheaf, but when the same is stacked,
- as is customary in many places, the Tytheman may not break any odd
- Stack, for he cannot tythe both by the Stack and Sheaf. And this
- was the Opinion of Serjeants _Poole_ and _Kenyan_, and of Lawyer
- _Wilson_.
-
- No Complaint concerning any small Tythes, &c. shall be determined
- by Justices of Peace, unless the Complaint be made within two Years
- after the same Tythes, &c. become due. Stat. 7. and 8. William 3.
- Chap. 6.
-
-
-FARM AND AGRICULTURAL CELEBRATIONS IN THE FYLDE.
-
-In the olden times almost every great agricultural operation had its
-peculiar festivities; now almost everywhere obsolete. The harvest home,
-its procession and feast, still linger the last of these rural
-celebrations, but shorn of much of its old ceremonial and jollity.
-"Shutting of marling" had also its gala-day. Then a "lord" and a "lady"
-presided at the feast; having been previously drawn out of the marl-pit
-by a strong team of horses, gaily decorated with ribbons, mounted by
-their drivers, who were trimmed out in their best. The procession
-paraded through the village lanes and streets, some of its members
-shaking tin boxes, and soliciting contributions from the bystanders. The
-money collected was expended in good cheer at the feast. Again,
-"Cob-seeding" was a time when mirth and good-nature prevailed. Like the
-"bee" of our American cousins, it was an occasion when all helped every
-one else in turn,--collecting, threshing, winnowing the crop on the
-field; "housing" the seed ready prepared for the market; and when all
-the work of the day was finished, partaking of a substantial supper, and
-closing the evening with many a merry dance on the barn's clay
-floor.[220]
-
-
-DALTON-IN-FURNESS.
-
-Among the ancient customs of Dalton, is the practice of hiring reapers
-on Sundays in time of harvest. Endeavours have been made to abolish it;
-but by the statute of 27 Henry VI. cap. 5, for suppressing
-Sabbath-breaking, four Sundays in harvest time are excepted from the
-prohibition against holding markets and fairs on holydays, and the
-people of Dalton have construed it to the hiring of such servants. Till
-of late years there was at Dalton an annual festival called "The Dalton
-Hunt," in which the gentlemen of the district partook of the sports of
-the field by day, and joined the ladies in the ball-room at night. A
-suite of rooms was erected in the town, and handsomely fitted-up for
-this annual jubilee, which existed as early as the year 1703, as appears
-from the columns of the _London Gazette_, in which it is styled "the
-Dalton Route," and the pen of an elegant contributor to the _Tatler_ has
-imparted to it additional celebrity. To the regret of the beaux and
-belles of the neighbourhood the "route" was discontinued in 1789, and
-has never since been revived.[221]
-
-
-LETTING SHEEP FARMS IN BOWLAND.
-
-One custom, in letting the great sheep-farms in the higher parts of
-Bowland, deserves to be mentioned, as I do not know that it prevails
-anywhere else. It is this: That the flock, often consisting of 2000
-sheep, or more, is the property of the lord, and delivered to the tenant
-by a schedule, subject to the condition of delivering up an equal number
-of the same quality at the expiration of the term. Thus the tenant is
-merely usufructuary of his own stock. The practice was familiar to the
-Roman law, and seems to have arisen from the difficulty of procuring
-tenants who were able to stock farms of such extent.[222]
-
-
-MEDIÆVAL LATIN LAW TERMS.
-
-The old charters and deeds of Manchester, Warrington, and other
-Lancashire towns, contain various words now obsolete, and amongst others
-the words _namare_ and _namium_, which it is not easy to render
-accurately. The first may be translated to seize in pledge, to arrest,
-to distrain; the second is a pledge, or a distress, what is seized by
-distraint. In connexion with the substantive _namium_, the following
-anecdote of the great Sir Thomas More may be told, as illustrative of
-the obscurity of some of these ancient law terms. It is said that Sir
-Thomas, when travelling, arrived at Padua just as a boasting Professor
-had placarded the walls of that University with a challenge to all the
-world to dispute with him on any subject or in any art, and that Sir
-Thomas accepted the challenge, and proposed for his subject this
-question:--
-
- "AN AVERIA CARUCÆ CAPTA IN VETITO NAMIO SINT IRREPLEGIBILIA?"
-
-which, it is almost needless to add, proved such a stumbling-block to
-the challenger, who did not know even the very terms of the question,
-that he surrendered at discretion, and acknowledged himself
-vanquished.[223]
-
-Perhaps the best way to English the puzzling question, would be to
-render it thus:--"Whether plough-cattle, taken in illegal distress, are
-irrepleviable?" But several of the words are susceptible of two
-meanings. Thus _averia_ means goods, as well as cattle; _caruca_, a
-cart, as well as a plough; _namium_, a pledge, as well as a distress. It
-is not to be wondered at that the continental Professor found himself
-unable even to comprehend the terms of this perplexing question.
-
-
-CUSTOMS [DUES] AT WARRINGTON.
-
-Amongst the Tower records are three royal charters bearing date
-respectively 3 Edward II., 15 Edward II., and 12 Edward III. (1309-10,
-1321-2, 1338), and granting, for the purpose of effecting repairs in the
-bridges and pavements, certain temporary customs on articles brought
-into Warrington for sale. In the two first of these charters, a custom
-of one farthing is imposed on every 100 faggots and every 1000 turves;
-and of one halfpenny on every cart-load of wood or wind-blown timber.
-The last of the charters imposes a custom of one penny on every 1000
-faggots, one farthing on every 10,000 turves, one penny on every
-ship-load of turves, and one halfpenny weekly on every cart-load of wood
-and coals [_carbonum_, ? charcoal]. Amongst other articles, a custom was
-imposed on salt, on bacon, on cheese (probably from Cheshire), on
-butter, on lampreys, on salmon, on pelts of sheep, goats, stags, hinds,
-deer, does, hares, rabbits, foxes, cats, and squirrels; on cloths in the
-entire piece; on grice work (_i.e._, fur of the skins of blue weasels);
-on Cordovan leather, on oil in flasks (_lagenas olei_); on hemp, on
-linen webs; on Aylesbury webs and linen; on canvas, Irish cloths,
-Galways and worsteds; on silks, diapered with gold (_de Samite_) and
-tissue; on silks within gold; on sendal [or _cendal_, a kind of silk];
-on cloth of baudekin [silk cloth, interwoven with threads of gold]; on
-gads of maple, and on Aberdeen gads; on every tun of wine (_et
-cinerum_--the ashes of burnt wine lees); on honey; on wool in sacks; on
-tin, brass, copper, iron, and lead; on alum, copperas, argil, and
-verdigris; on onions and garlic; and on stock-fish, salt mullet,
-herrings, and sea-fish, amongst a number of other articles.[224]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[202] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[203] Claus., 7 Edward III., 1333, p. 1, m. 23.
-
-[204] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[205] Dr. Whitaker's _Whalley_.
-
-[206] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-[207] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-[208] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[209] West's _History of Furness_.
-
-[210] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-[211] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-[212] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[213] _Illustration of the Customs of a Manor in the North of England._
-
-[214] Dr. Hibbert-Ware's _Illustration of the Customs of a Manor in the
-North of England_.
-
-[215] Dr. Hibbert-Ware's _Illustration of the Customs of a Manor in the
-North of England_.
-
-[216] _Illustration of the Customs of a Manor in the North of England_,
-by Dr. Hibbert-Ware.
-
-[217] Rev. J. Booker's _Chapel of Denton_.
-
-[218] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[219] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[220] Rev. W. Thornber's _History of Blackpool_.
-
-[221] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[222] Dr. Whitaker's _Whalley_.
-
-[223] Mr. Beamont's _Warrington in the Thirteenth Century_.
-
-[224] Mr. W. Beamont, in _Warrington in 1465_.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
- Agricultural and Farm Celebrations in the Fylde, 298
-
- Alchemists, 23;
- two Lancashire, 30
-
- Alchemy, 23
-
- Ale, price of, 281;
- of Halton, 259;
- Warrington, 259;
- Cockerham, 281
-
- Ale Founders, 281
-
- All-Souls Night, 49
-
- " Day, 251
-
- Apostle Spoons, 262
-
- Arrowsmith, Father, his execution and the dead hand, 158-163
-
- Arval, cake and ale, 270-272
-
- Ascension Day, or Holy Thursday, 249
-
- Ash-Wednesday, 221
-
- Ashton, (Sir Thomas), of Ashton, 30
-
- Ashton-under-Lyne, manorial customs of, 286, 289, 292, 293;
- the Lord's Yule Feast at, 286;
- Riding the Black Lad at, 289
-
- Assheton (Sir John de), 287
-
- " (Sir Ralph de), 290-292
-
- Astrologers, Lancashire, 33
-
- Astrology, 33
-
- Auld Wife Hakes, 216
-
- Averia (cattle, goods), 300, 301
-
- Aylesbury webs and linen, 302
-
-
- Baal Worship, 3-45
-
- Bacon, Customs' dues on, 301
-
- Ball, or "Old Ball," 234, 235
-
- Baptismal Customs, 260
-
- Barguest, bar- or barn-ghaist, 91
-
- Barnacle Geese, 116-121
-
- Bel, Belus, or Baal, 45
-
- Belisama, the River Ribble, 4
-
- Bells, church, 41, 42;
- passing and funeral, 41, 42;
- pancake, 44;
- curfew, 44;
- submarine, 44;
- verses, 42
-
- Beltane or Beltein fires, 3, 45, 47, 48
-
- Betrothing and bridal customs, 263
-
- Bible, for direction, divination, and dreams, 20
-
- Bible and key, 103
-
- Bidding to funerals, 274
-
- Birth and baptismal customs, 260
-
- Black Lad, at Ashton, 289
-
- Bleeding, charms to stop, 77
-
- Boggart, or bogle, 16;
- the name, 49;
- the flitting, 58
-
- Boggart Hole Clough, 50
-
- Boggarts, ghosts, and haunted places, 49;
- various, 58;
- in old halls, 51;
- in the nineteenth century, 61
-
- Bones of St. Lawrence at Chorley, 157
-
- Booker (John), of Manchester, astrologer, 34-38
-
- _Books of Fate_, 145
-
- Boon rents at Denton, 294
-
- Boon shearing at Ashton, 292, 293
-
- Bothe (Thomas del) his will, 241
-
- Bowland, letting sheep, &c., 300
-
- Bragot-Sunday, 225, 258
-
- Bridal bouquet, 268;
- flowers, _ib._
-
- Bride's chair at Warton, 265
-
- Brindle Church, footprint at, 134
-
- Bromley (Sir Edward), judge, 189
-
- Brownies or _lares_, 16
-
- Bryn Hall, the Gerards, and the dead man's hand, 158-163
-
- Bungerley stepping-stones, 90
-
- Burial by candle light, 273;
- of a widow in vows, _ib._
-
- Burnley, the church, 89;
- a witch near, 209;
- wedding customs at, 265
-
- Burying in woollen, 269
-
-
- Cards, 140
-
- Carlins, 258
-
- Carnaval, 217
-
- Carols, Christmas, 257
-
- Carr Gulds, 290
-
- Cartmel Church, Legend of, 137
-
- Cattle Diseases, Charms for, 79
-
- Celebrations, Farm and Agricultural, in the Fylde, 298
-
- Changelings, 263
-
- Charles I., King, 200, 240
-
- Charm, a, in cypher, 63
-
- Charms and spells, 62;
- against evil beings, _ib._;
- against sickness, wounds, &c., 74;
- crow, lady-bird, 70-71;
- to get drink, 72-74;
- against danger by night, 74;
- wounds, 74;
- toothache, 75;
- rheumatism and cramp, 75;
- ague, 80;
- nettle stings, _ib._;
- jaundice, _ib._;
- to get sleep, _ib._
-
- "Chattox, Old," a witch, 186-189
-
- Child, unbaptized, cannot die, 262
-
- Childbed presents, 260
-
- Childbirth, tea-drinking, 261
-
- " turning the bed after, 261
-
- Children, gifts to, 262
-
- Christianizing of pagan gods and festivals, 14
-
- Christmas, 252;
- mumming at, 253;
- carols, 254;
- games, 255;
- mutes, 256
-
- Christmas at Wycoller Hall, 256
-
- " Carols, 254;
- rhymes, 253
-
- Christmas customs in the Fylde, 254;
- games there, 255
-
- Christmas-day, old and new, 20;
- breakfast in the Fylde, 256
-
- Christmas Eve, creatures worshipping, 253;
- called "Flesh-day," 256
-
- " Evergreens, &c., 256
-
- Christmas Frumenty, 252, 256
-
- Christmas hobby-horse, 254
-
- Christmas or Yule Feast, at Ashton-under-Lyne, 286
-
- Church Festivals, 212, _et seq._
-
- Churches and Churchyards, north and south sides of, 275
-
- Cinderella and her slipper, 5
-
- Clayton Hall Boggart, 52
-
- Clegg Hall Boggart, 52
-
- Cleworth, Demoniacs in 1594, 92
-
- Clock-house Boggart, 52
-
- Cob-seeding, 298
-
- Cock-penny, at Clitheroe, 220
-
- Cock-throwing and Cock-fighting, 218;
- about Blackburn, 220;
- at Burnley, _ib._
-
- Cockerham Manor, 281;
- ale in, _ib._
-
- Cokersand Abbey, 281;
- abbot of, _ib._
-
- Collop Monday, 217
-
- Constablewick, a Saxon, 295
-
- Corals with bells, 262
-
- Corpse, carrying the, 272, 274
-
- Courting and Wedding Customs in the Fylde, 264
-
- Cousell and Clarke, conjurors, 86
-
- Cramp Rings, 75
-
- Creed and Little Creed, at Eccles, 114
-
- Cross-buns on Good Friday, 226
-
- Crow Charm, 70
-
- Curfew Bell, 44
-
- Customs of Manors, 276;
- in Furness, 281;
- Ashton, 286, 289
-
- Customs' dues at Warrington, 301
-
- "Cuthbert, Old mother," and her daughters, 177
-
-
- Dalton-in-Furness, funerals at, 271;
- manor, 299;
- hunt and rout, _ib._
-
- Dalton-in-Furness, hiring reapers on Sunday, 299
-
- Danish Traditions, &c., 4, 5
-
- Darrell's (Rev. John) _Narrative_, &c. 93, 96;
- his punishment, 97
-
- Dead and Dying, the, 7
-
- " man's hand, 158, 163
-
- " raising the, 128
-
- Deasil, or Widersinnis, 151
-
- Death tick or Death watch, 152
-
- Dee (Dr. John), 25
-
- " charged with Witchcraft, 178
-
- Deities and demi-gods, 12
-
- "Demdike, Old," a witch, 186;
- "Young Demdike," _ib._
-
- Demon and Goblin Superstitions, 88
-
- Demon Pig, 89
-
- Demoniacal possession in 1594, 92;
- in 1686, 98
-
- Demoniacs, 87;
- dispossessing a, 92;
- at Morzine, 88
-
- Demonology, 86
-
- Denton Rent-boons, 294
-
- Derby (Edward 3rd) Earl of, charged with keeping a Conjuror, 129
-
- Device, Elizabeth and Alizon, witches, 186, 189
-
- Devil, the 16;
- his names, 84-86;
- a card-player, 81;
- raised, 17, 81;
- exorcised, 17, 81
-
- Devil, at Burnley, 83
-
- " and the Tailor of Chatburn, 82;
- and the Dun horse, _ib._;
- and the schoolmaster at Cockerham, 83
-
- Devil, sacrifices to, 82;
- appearances of, _ib._
-
- "Devils of Morzine," (demoniacs) 88
-
- Dispossession of Devils, 93-98
-
- Divination, ancient, 7;
- Lancashire, _ib._
-
- " 102;
- at marriages, 103;
- by Bible and key, _ib._;
- Lancashire form of, 104;
- by the dying, _ib._;
- second-sight, 105;
- spirits of the dying and dead, _ib._;
- by lots, 106
-
- Doles at Weddings, 264;
- at funerals, 270;
- at Swinton, _ib._
-
- Downham, King and Queen at, 248
-
- Dreams, 6, 19, 140, 145-149
-
- Drink-leans, 288
-
- Druidical Rock basins, 106-110
-
- Dugdale, the Surey demoniac, 98
-
- Dukinfield (Sir Robert), and the heriot, 294
-
- Dying, Death-bed, and Funeral Customs, 268
-
- Dying hardly, 268
-
-
- Easter, _Eostre_, 8, 226, 227
-
- " Customs, 227-237;
- Fylde, 236
-
- " Day, 227
-
- " Eggs, 227, 228
-
- " Monday, 233, 237
-
- " "Lifting or heaving," 233;
- game of the ring, 234;
- Sports, 231
-
- Easter sports at the Manchester Free Grammar School, 231
-
- Eating and Drinking Customs, 258
-
- Eccles, ignorance in, 113-115
-
- Eccles cakes, 258
-
- Edward I., King, 27;
- his gift for "lifting," 233
-
- Edward III., King, 28;
- his letter for alms, 133
-
- Edward IV., King, 32
-
- Edward VI., King, 34
-
- Eggs, Pace, Pasche, or Easter, 217, 228;
- in Blackburn, 228, 229;
- in East Lancashire, 231;
- bought for Easter, 229;
- papal prayer, blessing eggs, 229
-
- "Elias, the Prophet," a fanatic, 138
-
- Elizabeth, Queen, 35
-
- Ellen's (St.) Well, in Brindle, 172
-
- Elves and Fairies, 110-113
-
- Everton toffy, 258
-
- Evil Eye, the, 69
-
- Ewe Loaf, the, 256
-
- Exorcism of demons by godly ministers, 95, 98-101
-
-
- Fag-pie (or Fig-pie) Sunday, 226, 258
-
- Fairies, 53;
- and Elves, 106-110
-
- Fairy, a, on Mellor Moor, 111
-
- " Hole, at Warton, 265
-
- " Queen, 16
-
- " Tales, Lancashire, 112, 113
-
- Familiar Spirit, Transfer of a, 210
-
- _Famous History of Witches_, 176
-
- Feeorin (fairies), 53
-
- Fern Seed, 10
-
- Festivals, Church and Season, 212
-
- Finger Stocks of Stone, 288
-
- Flemings' Wooden Shoes and Oaten Bread, 259
-
- "Flesh-Day" (Christmas Eve), 256
-
- Folk-Lore, Eastern, 2-6;
- Greek and Roman, 5, 6;
- Scandinavian, 4, 5;
- various, 113;
- of Eccles and neighbourhood, 113
-
- Footprints at Brindle Church, 134;
- at Smithells Hall, 135
-
- Fortune-Telling, 121-126;
- Story of, 122;
- "Owd Rollison," 123
-
- Frumenty, 262, 256, 258
-
- Funeral Biddings, 274;
- gifts, 275;
- bay, rosemary, &c., 270, 272, 275
-
- Funeral Customs, 268;
- in East Lancashire, 273;
- at Dalton-in-Furness, 271;
- at Warton, 271;
- Fylde, 272
-
- Funeral Doles, 270;
- at Swinton, _ib._;
- various, 274
-
- Funeral Sermons, 274;
- dinners and drinkings, 272
-
- Furness, Manorial Customs, 281, 285
-
- Fylde, The (in Lancashire), _passim_.
-
- " Easter Customs in, 236, 242, 243
-
- " Farm and Agricultural Celebrations in, 298
-
- " Harvest Home, 298;
- "shutting of marling," _ib._;
- cob-seeding, _ib._
-
-
- Gabriel Ratchets, 89, 167
-
- "Gang-Days," or Rogation Days, 248
-
- Garstang, a Saxon Constablewick, 295
-
- Geese, hatched from sea-shells, 116
-
- Gemmel Rings, 263
-
- Gerard (Sir Thomas), 131
-
- " (Sir John), 162
-
- Gerards of Bryn, 158-162
-
- Gifts to Infants, 262
-
- Gloucester (Eleanor), Duchess of, and Witchcraft, 174
-
- Gloves, Wedding, 268
-
- Goblin, Gobelinus, Kobold, Khobalus, &c., 16
-
- Goblin Builders, 89
-
- " Superstitions, 88
-
- Good Friday, 226;
- viands, 226, 237
-
- "Goose-Intentos," 250
-
- Graves, Situation and Direction of, 275
-
- Greek Traditions and Superstitions, 5, 6, 13;
- Mythology, 13
-
- Grendels, The, 17
-
- Grislehurst Boggart, 61
-
- Groaning Cheese and Cake, 260
-
- Guld-Riding, 289
-
- Gunpowder Plot, 251
-
- Guy Fawkes, 251
-
-
- Hackensall Hall Boggart, 59
-
- Hæver or Hiver, 149
-
- Hakes, Auld Wife, 216
-
- Hallowe'en, 3
-
- Halton Ale, 259
-
- Hand-bell Ringing, 258
-
- Hand-festing, 263
-
- Hartlay (John), a Conjuror, 93-96
-
- Harvest Home, 298
-
- Havercake Lads, 258
-
- Helen's (St.) Well in Brindle, 172;
- near Sefton, 173
-
- Henry IV., King, 20
-
- Henry VI., King, 28, 29, 31;
- miracles at his tomb, 132
-
- Henry VII., King, his embassy to Pope Julius II., 132
-
- Henry VIII., King, 87;
- his ale, 287
-
- Heriot or Principal, at Ashton-under-Lyne, 292, 293;
- story of, 294
-
- "Hobbe, the King," at Ashton, 288
-
- Hobby-horse at Christmas, 254
-
- Hornby, Honour and Manor of, 285
-
- " Park Mistress and Margaret Brackin, 59
-
- Horwich Moor, 48
-
- Hothershall Hall, 5
-
- House Boggarts, 56
-
- Household bewitched, 184
-
- Hunchback, story of the, 5
-
- Huntingdon's, Earl of, letter, 130
-
- Hydrocephalus in Cattle, to cure, 79
-
-
- Ignagning, 236
-
- Imps, or Changelings, 263
-
- Ince Hall, 52
-
- Ince Manor House, 52
-
- " Oatmeal Charity at, 249
-
- Indo-European origin of superstitions, 2
-
- Infants, gifts to, 262
-
- Invocation at bedtime, 68, 69
-
-
- Jack and the Bean-Stalk, 5
-
- Jack the Giant-Killer, 5
-
- James I., King, his _Dæmonologie_, 185
-
- Jannocks, 259
-
- Johnson's (Margaret), confession, 198
-
- Jolly Lads, 236
-
- Jourdain (Margery), witch of Eye, 174
-
-
- Kelly (Edward), the Seer, 25, 126
-
- Killing a witch, 208
-
- King and Queen at Downham, 248
-
- King of the May, 254
-
- " of Misrule, 288
-
- King's Evil, touching for, 77
-
- Kirkby Ireleth, Manor of, 281
-
- Knighthood, honour of, 277;
- compulsory in 1278, 1292, and 1305, _ib._
-
- Knives, &c., 18;
- Manchester, 280
-
-
- Labouring Goblins, 56
-
- Lady in the straw, 260
-
- Lady-bird charm, 70, 71
-
- Lancashire musical instruments, 288
-
- " Witches, verses on, 179
-
- Lancaster (Thomas), Earl of, a saint, 133, 134
-
- Lating or Leeting Witches, 210
-
- Law Terms, mediæval Latin, 300
-
- Lawrence, St., his bones at Chorley, 157
-
- Leadbetter (Charles), a Lancashire astrologer, 40
-
- Legend of Cartmel Church, 137
-
- Lent, 221
-
- Local customs and usages at various seasons, 212, _et seq._
-
- Lord's Day conjuration, 67
-
- Lostock May-pole, 243
-
- Lots, casting or drawing, 106
-
- Lowick, Manor of, 283
-
- Lubber Fiend, 59, 89
-
-
- Magic and Magicians, 126
-
- Magpies, 143-145
-
- Malkin Tower, in Pendle Forest, 186, 189, 204, 211
-
- Manchester knife, a, 289
-
- " Church, weddings at, 265
-
- Manorial franchises, &c., 285
-
- Manors, customs of, 276;
- in Furness, 281;
- Ashton-under-Lyne, 286, 289;
- Smithells, 280;
- Cockerham, 281;
- Kirkby Ireleth, _ib._;
- Pennington, 282;
- Muchland, _ib._;
- Lowick, 283;
- Nevill Hall, _ib._;
- Much Urswick, 284;
- Warton, _ib._;
- Hornby, 285;
- Ashton-under-Lyne, 286, 289
-
- Maritagium, custom of, 278
-
- Marsh (Geo.), the martyr, 135-137
-
- Martins, "shifting of," 143
-
- Mary Queen of Scots, 131
-
- May-day Eve, 46, 47, 239
-
- " Customs, 238-246;
- in Spotland, 242;
- in Manchester, 245
-
- May-day Games, decay of, 241;
- at Burnley (1579), 244
-
- May-Poles, 240-243;
- Parliamentary ordinance against, 241
-
- May King and Queen, 246
-
- " Songs, 239
-
- Mermaid of Marton Mere, 90
-
- "Messes" at dinners, &c., 271, 274
-
- Michaelmas Day, 250;
- goose, _ib._, 258
-
- Mid-Lent Sunday, or Mothering Sunday, 222, 225
-
- Mince Pies, 255, 258
-
- Miracles, or Miraculous Stories, 131
-
- " of a dead Duke of Lancaster (King Henry VI.), 132-134
-
- Miraculous cures by a dead man's hand, 158-163
-
- Miraculous footprints in Brindle Church, 134;
- in Smithells Hall, 135
-
- "Mischief Night," 239
-
- Mistletoe, 252
-
- Money gift at funerals, 275
-
- Moon, the, 70;
- omens from, 149;
- names for autumn moons, 250
-
- More (Sir Thomas), Story of, 300
-
- "Mothering Sunday," 222, 225
-
- Mountain Ash, 72
-
- Muchland, Manor of, 282
-
- Much-Urswick, Manor of, 284
-
- Mutes at Christmas, 256
-
- Mythology of Greece and Rome, 13;
- Oriental, _ib._;
- Northern, _ib._
-
-
- Naiades, Nixies, Nisses, 16
-
- Nails, cutting, 68
-
- Nevill Hall, Manor of, 283
-
- New Year's-Day, weather omens, 151;
- Festival, 214;
- and Old Christmas-Day, 212
-
- New-Year's turkey, 258
-
- " Eve, fire on, 214
-
- New-Year's Luck, 214;
- first caller, 215;
- gifts and wishes, 216
-
- Nicholas, St., 85
-
- "Nick, Old" (the devil), 84-86
-
- Night-mare, 89
-
- Northumbrian Superstitions, 9
-
- November 1, All Souls' Day, 251
-
- November 5, Gunpowder Plot, 251
-
- Numbers, odd, 4;
- "3" and "7," _ib._
-
- Nutter (Alice), a wealthy witch, 193
-
-
- Oat Cake, 258;
- Jannocks, 259
-
- Oatmeal charity at Ince, 249
-
- "Old Nick" (the devil), 84-86
-
- "Old Scrat," or Skrat, 90
-
- Omens and Predications, 138, 139
-
- Omens, Dreams, Withershins, Cards, Teacups, &c., 140
-
- Omens--Cats, 141;
- Dogs, Lambs, Birds, 142;
- Swallows, Magpies, _ib._
- Deasil, or Widersinnis, 151;
- weather for New Year's-Day, 151;
- Death tick, or watch, 152
-
- Ormskirk gingerbread, 258
-
-
- Pace or Pasche-egging, 128;
- in Blackburn, _ib._;
- East Lanc., 231
-
- Pagan gods, festivals and temples, changed into Christian saints,
- feasts and churches, 14
-
- Pancake Bell, 44;
- Tuesday, 218
-
- Passing Bell, 44
-
- Paternoster, White, &c., at Eccles, 115
-
- Peel of Fouldrey and Tree-Geese, 116
-
- Peggy's Well, Legend of, 171
-
- Pendle, Forest and Hill of, 202, 204
-
- Pendleton and Pendlebury, May-pole and games, 240, 241
-
- Pentecost, 16th Sunday after, 250
-
- Pentecost (See Whitsuntide).
-
- Persons bewitched, sixteen, 192
-
- Philosopher's Mercury, 23
-
- " Stone, 23
-
- Pigeons' Feathers in beds, 268
-
- Pilkington (Dame Jane), 273
-
- Pimpernel, 71
-
- Pork Pasties, 260
-
- Prayer and Blessing on Eggs, 229
-
- Prayer in Verse against Sir Ralph Ashton, 291
-
- Predications (see Omens).
-
- Presents to Women in Childbed, 260
-
- " to Infants, 262
-
- Prestwich, Burying in Woollen at, 269
-
- Principal or heriot at Ashton, 293
-
- Prophet Elias, a fanatic, 138
-
-
- Queen of the May, 246
-
-
- Radcliffe, Burying in Woollen, 269
-
- Radcliffe Tower, 51
-
- Raising the Dead, 128;
- the Devil, 17, 81
-
- Rent-boons at Denton, 294
-
- Rents, Nominal, 280
-
- Rheumatism, charms to cure, 75
-
- Riding the Black Lad at Ashton, 289
-
- Rings, betrothal or gemmel, 263;
- Wedding, 268
-
- Robins and Wrens, 142
-
- Robinson, Edmund, 195, 201
-
- Rochdale Church, 89
-
- " Tithe, Easter Dues, &c., 297
-
- Rogation Days or Gang Days, 248
-
- Rolleston, Mr., 131
-
- "Rollison, Owd," 123-125
-
- Roman Traditions and Superstitions, 5, 6, 18;
- Mythology, 13
-
-
- Saint Cuthbert's Beads, 15
-
- " John's Eve, 8, 46, 47
-
- " Vitus's Dance, 87
-
- Samlesbury Witches, 194
-
- "Scrat, Old" (or Skrat), 90
-
- Second-sight in Lancashire, 105
-
- Services and Tenures, peculiar, 278
-
- Sheep and Farms in Bowland, 300
-
- Shoes, Old, for luck, 264, 268
-
- Shrew Tree in Carnforth, 79
-
- Shrovetide, 217;
- Tuesday, 218;
- Pancakes, _ib._, 258;
- Sports, 219;
- customs in the Fylde, 221
-
- Sickness, charms to cure, 74
-
- Simnel Cakes, 223;
- at Bury, 224, 258
-
- Sitting-up Courtship, 264
-
- Skriker, 91
-
- Smithells Hall, 51;
- Marsh the Martyr, 135
-
- Smithells, Manor of, custom, 280
-
- Sneezing, 6, 68
-
- Songs, Lancashire, about 1422, 288
-
- Sparrows, 142
-
- Spell, description of a, 177
-
- Spirits of the dying and dead, 105
-
- Spitting on money, &c., 69, 70
-
- Stocks for the fingers, 283
-
- Superstitions in Manchester in the 16th century, 168
-
- Superstitions of Pendle Forest, 164;
- of East Lancashire, 165
-
- Superstitions, popular, 153-157;
- Nineteenth Century, 164
-
- Superstitious beliefs, and practices, 1;
- fears and cruelties, 167
-
- Superstitious fear of Witchcraft, 182
-
-
- Talliage or Tallage, 296;
- of Lancashire towns, &c., _ib._
-
- Teacups, Omens from, 140
-
- Teanlay, or All Souls' Night, 49
-
- Tenants of Ashton-under-Lyne, 288
-
- Tenures and Services, peculiar, 278
-
- Thackergate Boggart, 52
-
- Throwing the Stocking, 264
-
- Toothache, charms to cure, 75
-
- Touching for King's Evil, 77
-
- Towneley, ghost and tradition, 57
-
- Trash or Skriker, 91
-
- Tree Barnacles, or Tree Geese, 116
-
- Turning Bed after Childbirth, 261
-
-
- Unbaptized Child, cannot die, 262
-
- Urswick Much, Manor of, 284
-
- Utley, hanged for witchcraft, 195
-
-
- Vervain, to cure wounds, a rhyming charm, 76, 115;
- against blasts, 115
-
- Victor Penny, 219
-
- Vitus's (St.), Dance, 87
-
-
- Waddow Hall, 171
-
- Waitts, the, 257;
- of Manchester, 257;
- of Warrington, 258
-
- Walton-le-Dale, raising the dead, 128
-
- Warcock Hill, 17
-
- Warrington Ale, 259
-
- Warton, Royal Manor of, 284;
- wedding customs at, 265
-
- Warts, cures for, 78;
- caused by washing in egg-water, 121
-
- Water Sprites, 89
-
- Weather Omens, 141-145, 149-152
-
- Wedding Customs, 263;
- in the Fylde, 264;
- at Warton, 265;
- at Burnley, 265;
- various, 268
-
- Weddings at Manchester Church, 265
-
- Well at Wavertree, 169
-
- Well, Peggy's, 170;
- Legend of, 171
-
- Well, St. Helen's, in Brindle, 172;
- near Sefton, 173
-
- Wells and Springs, dedicated to saints, 169
-
- West Houghton Wakes, 260
-
- Whitsuntide, 246;
- Fair, 246;
- 16th Sunday after, 250
-
- Whitsuntide Ales, 246
-
- " Tuesday, 248
-
- " week, 247
-
- Whooping Cough, 10
-
- Wicken or Wiggen Tree (the mountain ash), 72
-
- Widersinnis, or Deasil, 151;
- Withershins, 140, 151
-
- Widow, Burial of a, 273
-
- Widows, manorial customs, 281-285
-
- Wilder Lads, 48
-
- Will-o'-th'-Wisp, 53
-
- Winwick Church, 89
-
- Wise Men and Cunning Women, 121
-
- Wizards, 87;
- Swimming a, _ib._
-
- Wooden Shoes and Oaten Bread, 259
-
- Woollen, burying in, 269
-
- Wounds, to cure, 74;
- Vervain, 76
-
- Wycoller Hall, Christmas at, 256
-
-
- Yule Loaf, 256
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-John Harland and T. T. Wilkinson
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-Title: Lancashire Folk-lore
- Illustrative of the Superstitious Beliefs and Practices,
- Local Customs and Usages of the People of the County
- Palatine
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-Author: John Harland
- T. T. Wilkinson
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<div class="trn"><b>Transcriber's Note:</b>
Minor spelling and typographical errors have been corrected without note.
@@ -13179,383 +13137,6 @@ by Dr. Hibbert-Ware.</p></div>
<ul><li><span class="smcap">Yule</span> Loaf, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></li>
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+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 41148 ***</div>
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-Project Gutenberg's Lancashire Folk-lore, by John Harland and T. T. Wilkinson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Lancashire Folk-lore
- Illustrative of the Superstitious Beliefs and Practices,
- Local Customs and Usages of the People of the County
- Palatine
-
-Author: John Harland
- T. T. Wilkinson
-
-Release Date: October 23, 2012 [EBook #41148]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LANCASHIRE FOLK-LORE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Shaun Pinder, Stephen Blundell and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note:
-
- Minor spelling and typographical errors have been corrected without
- note. Archaic, dialect and variant spellings remain as printed.
- Greek text has been transliterated and is shown between {braces}.
- Missing chapter titles have been included to match the Contents
- listing for readers' convenience.
-
- Non-standard characters are represented as follows:
- [oe] oe ligature;
- [=e] macron over _e_;
- [)e] breve over _e_;
- [*3] asterism;
- and ^ precedes a superscript character.
-
-
-
-
- LANCASHIRE
- FOLK-LORE:
- ILLUSTRATIVE OF THE
- SUPERSTITIOUS BELIEFS AND PRACTICES,
- LOCAL CUSTOMS AND USAGES
- OF
- THE PEOPLE OF THE COUNTY PALATINE.
-
- COMPILED AND EDITED BY
- JOHN HARLAND, F.S.A.
- AND
- T. T. WILKINSON, F.R.A.S.
-
- [Device]
-
- LONDON:
- FREDERICK WARNE AND CO.
- BEDFORD STREET, COVENT GARDEN.
- NEW YORK: SCRIBNER AND CO.
- 1867.
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- SAVILL AND EDWARDS, PRINTERS, CHANDOS STREET,
- COVENT GARDEN.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-"Folk-lore," though a term that will not be found in our standard
-dictionaries, from Johnson down to Webster, is nevertheless simply a
-modern combination of two genuine old English words--_Folc_, the folk,
-the people, "the common people;" and _Lar_, _Laer_, _Lora_, learning,
-doctrine, precept, law. In the earlier days of our English tongue,
-folk-land, folk-gemote, folk-right, &c., were terms in common use, and
-amongst this class of compound words our fore-elders had _folc-lare_, by
-which they denoted plain, simple teaching suited for the people, what we
-should now call "popular instruction," and hence _folk-lare_ also meant
-a sermon. _Folk-Lore_, in its present signification--and for its general
-acceptance we are largely indebted to the Editor of that valuable
-periodical _Notes and Queries_,--means the notions of the folk or
-people, from childhood upwards, especially their superstitious beliefs
-and practices, as these have been handed down from generation to
-generation, in popular tradition and tale, rhyme, proverb, or saying,
-and it is well termed Folk-Lore in contradistinction to book-lore or
-scholastic learning. It is the unlearned people's inheritance of
-tradition from their ancestors, the modern reflection of ancient faith
-and usage. This Folk-Lore has not been wholly without record in our
-literature. Hone in his delightful _Every-Day Book_, _Year Book_, and
-_Table Book_, has preserved many a choice bit of England's Folk-Lore;
-and his example has been ably followed in Chambers's _Book of Days_.
-Brand's _Popular Antiquities_, Aubrey's _Miscellanies_, Allies's
-_Antiquities and Folk-Lore of Worcestershire_, and other like works,
-have noted down for the information and amusement of future generations
-the prevalent superstitions, and popular customs and usages of the
-people in particular districts, during a past age, and at the present
-time. But the greatest and best depository and record of the Folk-Lore
-of various nations is that excellent periodical _Notes and Queries_,
-from which a charming little volume entitled "_Choice Notes from Notes
-and Queries,--Folk-Lore_," was compiled and published in 1859.
-
-But Lancashire has hitherto been without adequate record, at least in a
-collected form, of its Folk-Lore. This has not been because of any lack
-of such lore. The North of England generally, and Lancashire in
-particular, is remarkably rich in this respect. Possessed and peopled in
-succession by the Celts of ancient Britain, by the Angles and other
-Teutonic peoples, by the Scandinavian races, and by Norman and other
-foreign settlers at early periods,--the result of the respective
-contributions of these various peoples is necessarily a large mass of
-traditionary lore. To bring this together and present it in a collected
-form is the object of this little volume. Its editors have been long
-engaged, apart,--distinctly, and independently of each other,--in
-collecting particulars of the superstitions in belief and practice, and
-of the peculiar customs and usages of the people of Lancashire. One of
-them, born in one of its rural districts, still rich in these respects,
-is thus enabled to remember and to preserve many of those customs and
-usages of his childhood and youth, now rapidly passing into decay, if
-not oblivion. The other, conversant from his earliest remembrances with
-the Folk-Lore of East Yorkshire, and with that of Lancashire for the
-last thirty-five years, is thus enabled to compare the customs and
-usages of both, and to recognise the same essential superstition under
-slightly different forms. Similarity of pursuit having led to personal
-communication, the Editors agreed to combine their respective
-collections; and hence the present volume. They do not pretend herein to
-have exhausted the whole range of Lancashire Folk-Lore; but simply to
-have seized on the more salient features of its superstitious side, and
-those of popular custom and usage. Part I. comprises notices of a great
-number of superstitious beliefs and practices. Part II. treats of
-various local customs and usages, at particular seasons of the year;
-during the great festivals of the church; those connected with birth and
-baptism; betrothal and wedding; dying, death-bed, and funeral customs;
-as well as manorial and feudal tenures, services, and usages.
-
-Should the present volume find favour and acceptance, its Editors may
-venture hereafter to offer another, embracing the fertile and
-interesting subjects of popular pageants, maskings and mummings,
-rushbearings, wakes and fairs, out-door sports and games; punishments,
-legal and popular; legends and traditions; proverbs, popular sayings and
-similes; folk-rhymes, &c. &c.
-
-_September, 1866._
-
-
-But for unavoidable delay, consequent on the preparation of a
-large-paper edition, this volume would have been published prior to
-"Notes on the Folk-Lore of the Northern Counties of England and the
-Borders," by Wm. Henderson. As that work has appeared, it may be as well
-to state that, notwithstanding similarity of subject, the two books do
-not clash. Mr. Henderson's work relates chiefly to the three
-north-eastern counties,--Northumberland, Durham, and Yorkshire,--with
-large notices not only of the Scottish borders, but of Scotland
-generally, and many details as to Devonshire folk-lore. Its notices of
-Cumberland and Westmorland are fewer than of the three counties first
-named; and Lancashire is only two or three times incidentally mentioned.
-The field of this county palatine is therefore left free for the present
-volume.
-
-_January, 1867._
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- PART I.
-
-
- SUPERSTITIOUS BELIEFS AND PRACTICES.
-
- PAGE
- Introduction 1
-
- Lancashire Alchemists 23
-
- Lancashire Astrologers 33
-
- Bells 41
-
- Beal-tine or Beltane Fires; Relics of Baal Worship 45
-
- Boggarts, Ghosts, and Haunted Places 49
-
- Boggart Hole Clough 50
-
- Boggarts or Ghosts in Old Halls 51
-
- House Boggarts, or Labouring Goblins 56
-
- Hornby Park Mistress and Margaret Brackin 59
-
- Boggarts in the Nineteenth Century 61
-
-
- CHARMS AND SPELLS.
-
- Charms and Spells against Evil Beings 62
-
- A Charm, written in Cypher, against Witchcraft and Evil Spirits 63
-
- The Crow Charm and the Lady-bird Charm 70
-
- Pimpernel 71
-
- The Mountain Ash, or Wicken or Wiggen Tree 72
-
- Charms to Cure Sickness, Wounds, Cattle Distemper, etc. 74
-
- Charms for the Toothache 75
-
- Vervain, for Wounds, etc. 76
-
- Charms to Stop Bleeding 77
-
- Touching for the King's Evil 77
-
- Cures for Warts 78
-
- Cure for Hydrocephalus in Cattle 79
-
- Cattle Disorders.--The Shrew Tree in Carnforth 79
-
- Charms for Ague 80
-
- Stinging of Nettles 80
-
- Jaundice 80
-
- To Procure Sleep by Changing the Direction of the Bed 80
-
-
- THE DEVIL, DEMONS, &c.
-
- The Devil 81
-
- Raising the Devil 83
-
- The Devil and the Schoolmaster at Cockerham 83
-
- Old Nick 84
-
- Demonology 86
-
- Demon and Goblin Superstitions 88
-
- Dispossessing a Demoniac 92
-
- Demoniacal Possession in 1594 92
-
- Demoniacal Possession in 1689 98
-
-
- DIVINATION.
-
- Divination 102
-
- Divination at Marriages 103
-
- Divination by Bible and Key 103
-
- Another Lancashire form of Divination 104
-
- Divination by the Dying 104
-
- Second-sight 105
-
- Spirits of the Dying and the Dead 105
-
- Casting Lots, &c. 106
-
-
- MISCELLANEOUS FOLK-LORE.
-
- Druidical Rock Basins 106
-
- Elves and Fairies 110
-
- Folk-Lore of Eccles and the Neighbourhood 113
-
- Tree Barnacles; or, Geese hatched from Sea-shells 116
-
- Warts from Washing in Egg-water 121
-
- Fortune-telling.--Wise Men and Cunning Women, &c. 121
-
- Magic and Magicians 126
-
- Edward Kelly, the Seer 126
-
- Raising the Dead at Walton-le-Dale 128
-
- An Earl of Derby charged with keeping a Conjuror 129
-
-
- MIRACLES.
-
- Miracles, or Miraculous Stories 131
-
- Miracles by a Dead Duke of Lancaster and King 132
-
- A Miraculous Footprint in Brindle Church 134
-
- The Footprint at Smithells of George Marsh, the Martyr 135
-
- A Legend of Cartmel Church 137
-
- The Prophet Elias, a Lancashire Fanatic 138
-
-
- OMENS AND PREDICATIONS.
-
- Omens and Predications 138
-
- Cats 141
-
- Dogs 142
-
- Lambs 142
-
- Birds 142
-
- Swallows 143
-
- Magpies 143
-
- Dreams 145
-
- The Moon 149
-
- Haever or Hiver 149
-
- Deasil or Widersinnis 151
-
- Omens of Weather for New Year's-day 151
-
- Death Tick or Death Watch 152
-
-
- SUPERSTITIONS, GENERAL AND MISCELLANEOUS.
-
- Popular Superstitions 153
-
- Bones of St. Lawrence, at Chorley 157
-
- The Dead Man's Hand 158
-
- Nineteenth Century Superstition 164
-
- Pendle Forest Superstition 164
-
- East Lancashire Superstition 165
-
- Superstitious Fears and Cruelties 167
-
- Superstitious Beliefs in Manchester in the Sixteenth Century 168
-
- Wells and Springs 169
-
-
- WITCHES AND WITCHCRAFT.
-
- Witchcraft in the Fifteenth Century 174
-
- The Famous History of the Lancashire Witches 176
-
- Dr. Dee charged with Witchcraft 178
-
- The Lancashire Witches 179
-
- Superstitious Fear of Witchcraft 182
-
- A Household Bewitched 184
-
- The Lancashire Witches of 1612 185
-
- The Samlesbury Witches 194
-
- Witchcraft at Middleton 195
-
- Witchcraft in 1633-34 195
-
- The Lancashire Witches of 1633-4 200
-
- Lancashire Witch-finders 200
-
- The Forest of Pendle--The Haunt of the Lancashire Witches 202
-
- Pendle Hill and its Witches 204
-
- Witchcraft about 1654 206
-
- A Liverpool Witch in 1667 206
-
- The Witch of Singleton 207
-
- Witchcraft at Chowbent in the Eighteenth Century 207
-
- Killing a Witch 208
-
- A Recent Witch, near Burnley 209
-
- "Lating" or "Leeting" Witches 210
-
-
- PART II.
-
-
- LOCAL CUSTOMS AND USAGES AT VARIOUS SEASONS.
-
- Church and Season Festivals 212
-
- New Year's-day 214
-
- Fire on New Year's Eve 214
-
- New Year's Luck 214
-
- New Year's First Caller 215
-
- New Year's-day and Old Christmas-day 216
-
- Auld Wife Hakes 216
-
- New Year's Gifts and Wishes 216
-
- Shrovetide 217
-
- Shrove-Tuesday, or Pancake Tuesday 218
-
- Cock-throwing and Cock-fighting 218
-
- Cock-fighting about Blackburn 220
-
- Cock-penny at Clitheroe 220
-
- Cock-fighting at Burnley 220
-
- Shrovetide Customs in the Fylde 221
-
- Lent.--Ash-Wednesday 221
-
- Mid-Lent Sunday, or "Mothering Sunday" 222
-
- Simnel Cakes 223
-
- To Dianeme 223
-
- Bury 224
-
- Bragot-Sunday 225
-
- Fag-pie Sunday 226
-
- Good Friday 226
-
- Easter 227
-
- Pasche, Pace, or Easter Eggs 228
-
- Pace Egging in Blackburn 228
-
- Pace or Peace Egging in East Lancashire 231
-
- Easter Sports at the Manchester Free Grammar School 231
-
- "Lifting," or "Heaving" at Easter 233
-
- Easter Game of the Ring 234
-
- Playing "Old Ball" 234
-
- Acting with "Ball" 235
-
- Easter Customs in the Fylde 236
-
- May-day Customs 238
-
- May Songs 239
-
- May-day Eve 239
-
- May-day Custom 240
-
- Pendleton and Pendlebury May-pole and Games 240
-
- May Custom in Spotland 242
-
- May-day Customs in the Fylde 242
-
- The May-pole of Lostock 243
-
- Robin Hood and May-games at Burnley, in 1579 244
-
- May-day in Manchester 245
-
- Queen of the May, &c. 246
-
- Whitsuntide 246
-
- Whit-Tuesday.--King and Queen at Downham 248
-
- Rogations or Gang Days 248
-
- Oatmeal Charity at Ince 249
-
- Names for Moons in Autumn 250
-
- "Goose-Intentos" 250
-
- All Souls'-day 251
-
- Gunpowder Plot and Guy Fawkes 251
-
- Christmas 252
-
- Creatures Worshipping on Christmas Eve 253
-
- Christmas Mumming 253
-
- The Hobby Horse, or Old Ball 254
-
- Christmas Customs in the Fylde 254
-
- Celebration of Christmas at Wycoller Hall 256
-
- Carols, &c. 257
-
-
- EATING AND DRINKING CUSTOMS.
-
- Various 258
-
- The Havercake Lads 258
-
- Wooden Shoes and Oaten Bread or Jannocks 259
-
- Pork Pasties 260
-
-
- BIRTH AND BAPTISMAL CUSTOMS.
-
- Presents to Women in Childbed 260
-
- Tea-drinking after Childbirth 261
-
- Turning the Bed after Childbirth 261
-
- An Unbaptized Child cannot die 262
-
- Gifts to Infants 262
-
-
- BETROTHING AND BRIDAL OR WEDDING CUSTOMS.
-
- Betrothing Customs 263
-
- Curious Wedding Custom 263
-
- Courting and Wedding Customs in the Fylde 264
-
- Ancient Bridal Custom.--The Bride's Chair and the Fairy Hole 265
-
- Burnley 265
-
- Marriages at Manchester Parish Church 265
-
-
- DYING, DEATH-BED, AND FUNERAL CUSTOMS.
-
- Dying Hardly 268
-
- Burying in Woollen 269
-
- Funeral Dole and Arval Cake 270
-
- Dalton-in-Furness 271
-
- Old Funeral Customs at Warton 271
-
- Funeral Customs in the Fylde 272
-
- Mode of Burial of a Widow who had taken Religious Vows 273
-
- Funeral Customs in East Lancashire 273
-
- Bidding to Funerals 274
-
- Situation and Direction of Graves 275
-
-
- CUSTOMS OF MANORS.
-
- The Honour of Knighthood 277
-
- Maritagium 278
-
- Peculiar Services and Tenures 278
-
- Manor of Cockerham--Regulations for the Sale of Ale 281
-
- Manorial Customs in Furness 281
-
- The Lord's Yule Feast at Ashton 286
-
- Riding the Black Lad at Ashton-under-Lyne 289
-
- Boon Shearing 292
-
- The Principal or Heriot 293
-
- Denton Rent-boons 294
-
- A Saxon Constablewick 295
-
- Talliage or Tallage 296
-
- Rochdale Tithe, Easter-dues, Mortuaries, etc. 297
-
- Farm and Agricultural Celebrations in the Fylde 298
-
- Dalton-in-Furness 299
-
- Letting Sheep Farms in Bowland 300
-
- Mediaeval Latin Law Terms 300
-
- Customs [Dues] at Warrington 301
-
-
-
-
-LANCASHIRE FOLK-LORE.
-
-
-
-
-PART I.
-
-
-
-
-SUPERSTITIOUS BELIEFS AND PRACTICES.
-
-
-INTRODUCTION.
-
- "'Tis a history
- Handed from ages down; a nurse's tale
- Which children open-eyed and mouth'd devour,
- And thus, as garrulous ignorance relates,
- We learn it and believe."
-
-In this large section of the Folk-lore of Lancashire we propose to treat
-of all the notions and practices of the people which appear to recognise
-a supernatural power or powers, especially as aids to impart to man a
-knowledge of the future. An alphabetical arrangement has been adopted,
-which is to some extent also chronological. Beginning with the pretended
-sciences or arts of Alchemy and Astrology, the succeeding articles treat
-of Bells, Beltane fires, Boggarts, Charms, Demons, Divination, &c.
-
-Many of these superstitions are important in an ethnological point of
-view, and immediately place us _en rapport_ with those nations whose
-inhabitants have either colonized or conquered this portion of our
-country. In treasuring up these records of the olden times, tradition
-has, in general, been faithful to her vocation. She has occasionally
-grafted portions of one traditional custom, ceremony, or superstition,
-upon another; but in the majority of cases enough has been left to
-enable us to determine with considerable certainty the probable origin
-of each. So far as regards the greater portion of our local Folk-lore,
-we may safely assert that it is rapidly becoming obsolete, and many of
-the most curious relics must be sought in the undisturbed nooks and
-corners of the county. It is there where popular opinions are cherished
-and preserved, long after an improved education has driven them from
-more intelligent communities; and it is a remarkable fact that many of
-these, although composed of such flimsy materials, and dependent upon
-the fancies of the multitude for their very existence, have nevertheless
-survived shocks by which kingdoms have been overthrown, and have
-preserved their characteristic traits from the earliest times down to
-the present.
-
-As what are called the Indo-European, or Aryan, nations--viz., the
-Celts, Greeks, Latins, Germans (Teuton and Scandinavian), Letts, and
-Sclaves--as is now generally acknowledged, have a common ancestry in the
-race which once dwelt together in the regions of the Upper Oxus, in
-Asia; so their mythologies, however diverse in their later European
-developments, may be regarded as having a common origin. Space will not
-allow us to enlarge on this great subject, which has been ably treated
-by Jacob Grimm, Dr. Adalbert Kuhn, and many other German writers, and of
-which an excellent _resume_ is given in Kelly's _Curiosities of
-Indo-European Tradition and Folk-lore_.
-
-When we refer to the ancient Egyptians, and to the oldest history
-extant, we find some striking resemblances between their customs and our
-own. The rod of the magician was then as necessary to the practice of
-the art as it still is to the "Wizard of the North." The glory of the
-art of magic may be said to have departed, but _the use of the rod_ by
-the modern conjuror remains as a connecting link between the harmless
-deceptions of the present, and that powerful instrument of the
-priesthood in times remote. The divining rod, too, which indicates the
-existence of a hidden spring, or treasure, or even a murdered corpse, is
-another relic of the wand of the Oriental Magi. The divining cup, as
-noticed in the case of Joseph and his brethren, supplies a third
-instance of this close connexion. Both our wise men and maidens still
-whirl the tea-cup, in order that the disposition of the floating leaves
-may give them an intimation of their future destiny, or point out the
-direction in which an offending party must be sought. We have yet
-"wizards that do peep and mutter," and who profess to foretell future
-events by looking "through a glass darkly." The practice of "causing
-children to pass through the fire to Moloch," so strongly reprobated by
-the prophet of old, may be cited as an instance in which Christianity
-has not yet been able to efface all traces of one of the oldest forms of
-heathen worship. Sir W. Betham has observed, in his _Gael and Cymbri_,
-pp. 222-4, that "we see at this day fires lighted up in Ireland, on the
-eve of the summer solstice and the equinoxes, to the Ph[oe]nician god
-Baal; and they are called _Baal-tane_, or Baal's fire, though the
-_object_ of veneration be forgotten." Such fires are still lighted in
-Lancashire, on Hallowe'en, under the names of Beltains or Teanlas; and
-even such _cakes_ as the Jews are said to have made in honour of the
-Queen of Heaven, are yet to be found at this season amongst the
-inhabitants of the banks of the Ribble. These circumstances may appear
-the less strange when we reflect that this river is almost certainly the
-Belisama of the Romans; that it was especially dedicated to the Queen of
-Heaven, under the designation of Minerva Belisamae; and that her worship
-was long prevalent amongst the inhabitants of Coccium, Rigodunum, and
-other Roman stations in the north of Lancashire. Both the fires and the
-cakes, however, are now connected with superstitious notions respecting
-Purgatory, &c., but their origin and perpetuation will scarcely admit of
-doubt.
-
-A belief in astrology and in sacred numbers prevails to a considerable
-extent amongst all classes of our society. With many the stars still
-"fight in their courses," and our modern fortune-tellers are yet ready
-to "rule the planets," and predict good or ill fortune, on payment of
-the customary fee. That there is "luck in _odd_ numbers" was known for a
-fact in Lancashire long before Mr. Lover immortalized the tradition. Our
-housewives always take care that their hens shall sit upon an _odd_
-number of eggs; we always bathe _three_ times in the sea at Blackpool,
-Southport, and elsewhere; and our names are called over _three_ times
-when our services are required in courts of law. _Three_ times _three_
-is the orthodox number of cheers; and we still hold that the _seventh_
-son of a _seventh_ son is destined to form an infallible physician. We
-inherit all such popular notions as these in common with the German and
-Scandinavian nations; but more especially with those of the Saxons and
-the Danes. Triads of leaders, or ships, constantly occur in their
-annals; and punishments of _three_ and _seven_ years' duration form the
-burden of many of the Anglo-Saxon and Danish laws.
-
-A full proportion of the popular stories which are perpetuated in our
-nurseries most probably date their existence amongst us from some
-amalgamation of races; or, it may be, from the intercourse attendant
-upon trade and commerce. The Ph[oe]nicians, no doubt, would impart a
-portion of their Oriental Folk-lore to the southern Britons; the Roman
-legions would leave traces of their prolific mythology amongst the
-Brigantes and the Sistuntii; and the Saxons and the Danes would add
-their rugged northern modifications to the common stock. The "History of
-the Hunchback" is common to both England and Arabia; the "man in the
-moon" has found his way into the popular literature of almost every
-nation with which we are acquainted; "Cinderella and her slipper" is
-"The little golden shoe" of the ancient Scandinavians, and was equally
-familiar to the Greeks and Romans; "Jack and the bean-stalk" is told in
-Sweden and Norway as of "The boy who stole the giant's treasure;" whilst
-our renowned "Jack the giant-killer" figures in Norway, Lapland, Persia,
-and India, as the amusing story of "The herd boy and the giant." The
-labours of Tom Hickathrift are evidently a distorted version of those of
-Hercules; and these again agree in the main with the journey of Thor to
-Utgard, and the more classical travels of Ulysses. In Greece the clash
-of the elements during a thunderstorm was attributed to the chariot
-wheels of Jove; the Scandinavians ascribed the sounds to the ponderous
-wagon of the mighty Thor; our Lancashire nurses _Christianize_ the
-phenomenon by assuring their young companions, poetically enough, that
-thunder "is the noise which God makes when passing across the heavens."
-The notion that the gods were wont to communicate knowledge of future
-events to certain favoured individuals appears to have had a wide range
-in ancient times; and this curiosity regarding futurity has exerted a
-powerful influence over the minds of men in every stage of civilization.
-Hence arose the consulting of oracles and the practice of divination
-amongst the ancients, and to the same principles we must attribute the
-credulity which at present exists with respect to the "_wise men_" who
-are to be found in almost every town and village in Lancashire. The
-means adopted by some of the oracles when responses were required,
-strangely remind us of the modern feats of ventriloquism; others can be
-well illustrated by what we now know of mesmerism and its kindred
-agencies; whilst these and clairvoyance will account for many of those
-where the agents are said by Eustathius to have spoken out of their
-bellies, or breasts, from oak trees, or been "cast into trances in which
-they lay like men dead or asleep, deprived of all sense and motion; but
-after some time returning to themselves, gave strange relations of what
-they had seen and heard."
-
-The ancient Greeks and Romans regarded dreams as so many warnings; they
-prayed to Mercury to vouchsafe to them a night of good dreams. In this
-county we still hold the same opinions; but our country maidens, having
-Christianized the subject, now invoke St. Agnes and a multitude of other
-saints to be similarly propitious. There are many other points of
-resemblance between the Folk-lore of Lancashire and that of the
-ancients. Long or short life, health or disease, good luck or bad, are
-yet predicted by burning a lock of human hair; and the fire is
-frequently poked with much anxiety when testing the disposition of an
-absent lover. Many persons may be found who never put on the _left_ shoe
-first; and the appearance of a _single_ magpie has disconcerted many a
-stout Lancashire farmer when setting out on a journey of business or
-pleasure. In the matter of sneezing we are just as superstitious as when
-the Romans left us. They exclaimed, "May Jove protect you," when any one
-sneezed in their presence, and an anxious "God bless you" is the common
-ejaculation amongst our aged mothers. To the same sources we may
-probably attribute the apprehensions which many Lancashire people
-entertain with respect to spilling the salt; sudden silence, or fear;
-lucky and unlucky days; the presence of thirteen at dinner; raising
-ghosts; stopping blood by charms; spitting upon, or drawing blood from
-persons in order to avert danger; the evil eye; and a multitude of
-other minor superstitions. We possess much of all this in common with
-the Saxons and the Danes, but the original source of a great, if not the
-greater portion, is probably that of our earliest conquerors.
-
-Divination by means of the works of Homer and Virgil was not uncommon
-amongst the ancients; the earlier Christians made use of the Psalter or
-New Testament for such purposes. In Lancashire the Bible and a key are
-resorted to, both for deciding doubts respecting a lover, and also to
-aid in detecting a thief. Divination by water affords another striking
-parallel. The ancients decided questions in dispute by means of a
-tumbler of water, into which they lowered a ring suspended by a thread,
-and having prayed to the gods to decide the question in dispute, the
-ring of its own accord would strike the tumbler a certain number of
-times. Our "Lancashire witches" adopt the same means, and follow the
-Christianized formula, with a wedding-ring suspended by a hair, whenever
-the time before marriage, the number of a family, or even the length of
-life, becomes a matter of anxiety.
-
-Most nations, in all ages, have been accustomed to deck the graves of
-their dead with appropriate flowers, much as we do at present. The last
-words of the dying have, from the earliest times, been considered of
-prophetic import; and according to Theocritus, some one of those
-present endeavoured to receive into his mouth the last breath of a dying
-parent or friend, "as fancying the soul to pass out with it and enter
-into their own bodies." Few would expect to find this singular custom
-still existing in Lancashire; and yet such is the fact. Witchcraft can
-boast her votaries in this county even up to the present date, and she
-numbers this practice amongst her rites and ceremonies.
-
-A very large portion of the Lancashire Folk-lore is identical in many
-respects with that which prevailed amongst the sturdy warriors who
-founded the Heptarchy, or ruled Northumbria. During the Saxon and Danish
-periods their heathendom had a real existence. Its practices were
-maintained by an array of priests and altars, with a prescribed ritual
-and ceremonies; public worship was performed and oblations offered with
-all the pomp and power of a church establishment. The remnants of this
-ancient creed are now presented to us in the form of popular
-superstitions, in legends and nursery tales, which have survived all
-attempts to eradicate them from the minds of the people. Christ, his
-apostles, and the saints, have supplanted the old mythological
-conceptions; but many popular stories and impious incantations which now
-involve these sacred names were formerly told of some northern hero, or
-perhaps invoked the power of Satan himself. The great festival in honour
-of Eostre may be instanced as having been transferred to the Christian
-celebration of the resurrection of our Lord; whilst the lighting of
-fires on St. John's eve, and the bringing in of the boar's head at
-Christmas, serve to remind us that the worship of Freja is not extinct.
-When Christianity became the national religion, the rooted prejudices of
-the people were evidently respected by our early missionaries, and hence
-the curious admixture of the sacred and the profane, which everywhere
-presents itself in our local popular forms of expression for the
-pretended cure of various diseases. The powers and attributes of Woden
-and Freja are attributed to Jesus, Peter, or Mary; but in all other
-respects the spells and incantations remain the same.
-
-Our forefathers appear to have possessed a full proportion of those
-stern characteristics which have ever marked the Northumbrian
-population. Whatever opinions they had acquired, they were prepared to
-hold them firmly; nor did they give up their most heathenish practices
-without a struggle. Both the "law and the testimony" had to be called
-into requisition as occasion required; and even the terrors of these did
-not at once suffice. In one of the Anglo-Saxon _Penitentiaries_, quoted
-by Mr. Wright in his _Essays_, we find a penalty imposed upon those
-women who use "any witchcraft to their children, or who draw them
-through the earth at the meeting of roads, because that is great
-heathenishness." A Saxon _Homily_, preserved in the public library at
-Cambridge, states that divinations were used, "through the devil's
-teaching," in taking a wife, in going a journey, in brewing, when
-beginning any undertaking, when any person or animal is born, and when
-children begin to pine away or to be unhealthy. The same _Homily_ also
-speaks of divination by fowls, by sneezing, by horses, by dogs howling,
-and concludes by declaring that "he is no Christian who does these
-things." In a Latin _Penitentialia_ now in the British Museum, we find
-allusions to incantations for taking away stores of milk, honey, or
-other things belonging to another, and converting them to our own use.
-He who rides with Diana and obeys her commands, he who prepares _three_
-knives in company in order to predestine happiness to those born there,
-he who makes inquiry into the future on the first day of January, or
-begins a work on that day in order to secure prosperity during the whole
-of the year, is pointed out for reprobation; whilst hiding charms in
-grass, or on a tree, or in a path, for the preservation of cattle,
-placing children in a furnace, or on the roof of a house, and using
-characters for curing disease, or charms for collecting medicinal herbs,
-are enumerated, for the purpose of pointing out the penances to be
-undergone by those found guilty of "such heinous sins." Nearly all these
-instances may be said to belong to the transition state of our
-Folk-lore, and relate at once both to the ancient and the modern
-portions of our subject. We have seen that much the same practices were
-used by the Greeks and Romans; and it is a curious fact that many of the
-more important are still in vogue amongst the peasantry of Lancashire.
-Many persons will still shudder with apprehension if a dog howl during
-the sickness of a friend: dragging a child across the earth at "four
-lane ends" is yet practised for the cure of whooping-cough: fern seed is
-still said to be gathered on the Holy Bible, and is then believed to be
-able to render those invisible who will dare to take it. We still have
-prejudices respecting the first day of the new year; black-haired
-visitors are most welcome on the morning of that day; charms for the
-protection of families and cattle are yet to be found; and herbs for the
-use of man and beast are still collected when their "proper planets are
-ruling" in the heavens. More copies of Culpepper's _Herbal_ and Sibley's
-_Astrology_ are sold in Lancashire than all other works on the same
-subjects put together, and this principally on account of the planetary
-influence with which each disease and its antidote are connected. Old
-Moore's _Almanac_, however, is now sadly at a discount, because it lacks
-the table of the Moon's signs; the farmers are consequently at a loss to
-know which will be healthy cattle, and hence they prefer a spurious
-edition which supplies the grave omission.
-
-Several lucky stones for the protection of cattle have, within a few
-years past, been procured by the writer from the "shippons" of those
-who, in other respects, are not counted behind the age; and it would
-have been easy to collect an ample stock of horse-shoes and rusty
-sickles from the same sources. However, during the last forty years the
-inhabitants of Lancashire have made rapid progress both in numbers and
-intelligence. They have had the "schoolmaster abroad" amongst them, and
-have consequently divested themselves of many of the grosser
-superstitions which formed a portion of the popular faith of their
-immediate predecessors; but there is yet a dense substratum of popular
-opinions existing in those localities which have escaped the renovating
-influences of the spindle or the rail. As time progresses many of these
-will become further modified, or perhaps totally disappear; and hence it
-may be desirable to secure a permanent record of the customs and
-superstitions of the county.
-
-As to the most ancient forms of religious belief or cult, we may surely
-assume that the _simple_ must of necessity precede the _complex_, and
-consequently the idea of _one_ supernatural Being must be anterior in
-point of time to that of _two_ or more. Under this view, the good and
-the evil principles would form the second stage of development--a
-necessary consequence of increased observation--and, accordingly, we
-find the Great Spirit and his Adversary among the prevailing notions of
-some of the least civilized communities. A gradual progression from one
-to many gods appears to have been the natural process by which all known
-mythologies have been formed. The tendency of observation to multiply
-causes, real or ideal, and to personify ideas, may be ranked as one of
-the tendencies of unassisted human nature; and the operation of this
-natural force must have been equally efficient at all times and in all
-countries. In the early stages of social improvement, man would be very
-forcibly affected by natural phenomena. The regular succession of day
-and night--the order of the seasons--the heat of summer--the cold of
-winter--storms and tempests on sea and land--the sensations of pleasure
-and pain, hope and fear--would each impress him with ideas of effects
-for which he could assign no adequate causes; but having become
-susceptible of supernatural influences, the addition of imaginary beings
-to his mythology would keep pace with his experience, until every
-portion of the heavens, the earth, and the sea, was peopled with, and
-presided over, by its respective deity or demi-god. Thus it was that the
-rolling thunder and the "lightning's vivid flash" suggested the idea of
-a Jupiter grasping his destructive bolts, or of a Thor wielding his
-ponderous hammer. The "raging tempest" and the "boiling surge" gave
-birth to a Neptune or Njoerd, each endowed with attributes suited to the
-aspects of the locality where the observations were made, and specially
-adapted to the intellectual condition of the community which first
-deified the conception. As society progressed in civilization, so did
-the study of philosophy and religion. The poets and the priests,
-however, did not entrust their speculations to the judgment of the
-people; they were too sensible of the power which secrecy conferred upon
-their occult pursuits, and hence they allegorized their conceptions of
-supernatural agencies, and also their ideas of the ordinary operations
-of nature and art. The elements were spoken of as persons, and the
-changes which these underwent were regarded as the actions of
-individuals; and these in the lapse of ages, by losing their esoteric
-meaning, came to be considered as realities, and so passed into the
-popular belief. This is eminently the case with the northern mythology,
-respecting which we are at present more particularly concerned; for by
-far the greater portion of these highly poetical, though rugged myths,
-admit of a very plausible and rational explanation on astronomical and
-physical principles.[1] Whether this was equally the case with the Greek
-and Roman mythologies is now, perhaps, more difficult to determine.
-Enough, however, remains in the etymology of the names to prove that
-both these and the northern systems had much in common. The fundamental
-conceptions of each possess the same leading characteristics; and both
-are probably due to the conquering tribes who migrated into Europe from
-the fertile plains of Central Asia.[2]
-
-During these early ages, war was considered to be the most honourable
-occupation. Valour constituted the highest virtue; and in the absence of
-all written records, tradition, in course of time, would add
-considerably to the prowess of any daring chieftain. A mighty conqueror
-would be considered by his followers as something more than human. The
-fear of his enemies would clothe him with attributes peculiar to their
-conceptions of inferior deities; and this, together with the almost
-universal "longing after immortality" which seems to pervade society in
-all its stages, sufficiently accounts for the origin of the heroes and
-heroines--the demi-gods and goddesses of every mythology. Hence
-Hercules--the younger Odin--and a numerous train of minor worthies to
-whom divine honours were decreed in the rituals of Italy and of the
-north.
-
-On the introduction of Christianity, a powerful reactionary force was
-brought into the popular belief, and many of its grosser portions were
-speedily eliminated. The whole of the mythological creations were
-divided into two distinct classes, according to the attributes for which
-they were more particularly distinguished. Those whose tendencies
-inclined towards the benefit of mankind were translated to heavenly
-mansions, with God as supreme; whilst the wickedly disposed were
-consigned to the infernal regions, under the dominion of the Devil. The
-festivals of the gods were transformed into Christian seasons for
-rejoicing, their temples became churches, and the names of Christ, his
-apostles, the Virgin Mary, and the saints, took the places of those of
-Jupiter, Mercury, Thor, Freja, and Woden. All the inferior deities that
-presided over the woods, the mountains, the seas, and the rivers, were
-degraded into demons, and were classed amongst those fallen spirits who
-are employed by the evil one to harass and deceive mankind. Our early
-missionaries, however, had studied human nature too well to attempt too
-violent a change. They contented themselves, for the most part, with
-diverting the current of thought into different channels; they gave
-_new_ names to _old_ conceptions, and then left their more rational and
-more powerful faith to produce its known effects upon the superstitions
-of the masses. But the habits and opinions of a people who have long
-been under the influence of any mythological system, have become too
-deeply rooted to admit of easy eradication; and hence, in our own
-country, as in others, the transition from heathenism to Christianity
-was effected by almost imperceptible steps.
-
-There are, however, many points of resemblance between the early
-Scandinavian and the Roman mythologies. Both had probably a common
-origin, but each became modified by increased civilization and the
-character of the localities occupied by each succeeding wave of a
-migratory population. "Every country in Europe," says the learned editor
-of Warton's _History of Poetry_, "has invested its popular belief with
-the same common marvels: all acknowledge the agency of the lifeless
-productions of nature; the intervention of the same supernatural
-machinery; the existence of elves, fairies, dwarfs, giants, witches,
-wizards, and enchanters; the use of spells, charms, and amulets." The
-explosions and rumbling sounds occasionally heard in the interior of
-Etna and Stromboli were attributed, in ancient times, to the rage of
-Typhon, or the labours of Vulcan: at this day, the popular belief
-connects them with the suffering souls of men in the infernal regions.
-"The marks which natural causes have impressed upon the unyielding
-granite were produced, according to the common creed, by the powerful
-hero, the saint or the god, and large masses of stone, resembling
-domestic implements in form, were the toys or the tools of the demi-gods
-and giants of old. The repetition of the voice among the hills of
-Scandinavia is ascribed by the vulgar to the dwarfs mocking the human
-speaker; in England the fairies are said to perform the same exploits;
-while the more elegant fancy of Greece gave birth to Echo, a nymph who
-pined for love, and who still fondly repeats the accents that she hears.
-The magic scenery occasionally presented on the waters of the Straits of
-Messina is ascribed by popular opinion to the power of the Fata Morgana;
-the gossamer threads which float through the haze of an autumnal morning
-are [in Lancashire also] supposed to be woven by the ingenious dwarfs;
-the verdant circlets in the dewy mead are traced beneath the light steps
-of the dancing elves; and St. Cuthbert is said to forge and fashion the
-beads that bear his name, and lie scattered along the shores of
-Lindisfarne."[3] If we draw our parallels a little closer, we shall
-find, as has been well observed, that "the Nereids of antiquity are
-evidently the same with the Mermaids of the British and northern shores:
-the inhabitants of both are placed in crystal caves, or coral palaces,
-beneath the waters of the ocean; they are alike distinguished for their
-partialities to the human race, and their prophetic powers in disclosing
-the events of futurity. The Naiades differ only in name from the Nixens
-of Germany, the Nisses of Scandinavia, or the Water-elves of the British
-Isles. The Brownies are of the same kindred as the Lares of Latium [and
-these agree exactly with the Portuni mentioned by Gervase of Tilbury in
-his _Otia Imperialis_]. The English Puck [the Lancashire Boggart], the
-Scotch Bogle, the French Goblin, the Gobelinus of the Middle Ages, and
-the German Kobold, are probably only varied names for the Grecian
-Khobalus, whose sole delight consisted in perplexing the human race, and
-evoking those harmless terrors that constantly hover round the minds of
-the timid. So, also, the German Spuck, and the Danish Spogel, correspond
-with the more northern Spog; whilst the German Hudkin, and the Icelandic
-Puki, exactly answer to the character of the English Robin
-Goodfellow."[4] Our modern devil, with his horns and hoof, is derived
-from the Celtic Ourisk and the Roman Pan.
-
-Some of our elves and satyrs are arrayed in the costumes of Greece and
-Rome; and the Fairy Queen, with her attendants, have at times too many
-points of resemblance to escape being identified as Diana and her
-nymphs. The Roman Jupiter, by an easy transformation, becomes identical
-with the Scandinavian Thor--the thunderbolt and chariot of the former
-corresponding to the hammer and wagon of the latter. Odin takes the
-place of Mercury. Loki is the same as Lucifer, for, like him, he was
-expelled from heaven for disobedience and rebellion. Hother encountered
-Thor, as Diomede did Mars. "The Grendels of the north answer to the
-Titans of the south; they were the gods of nature to our
-forefathers--the spirits of the wood and wave." Jupiter's eagle, the
-war-sign of the Romans, is similar in character to Odin's raven among
-the Danes; both nations considered that if the bird appeared to flutter
-its wings on the banners, conquest was certain; but if they hung
-helplessly down, defeat would surely follow. Warcock Hill, on the
-borders of Lancashire and Yorkshire, has probably derived its name from
-the unfurling of this terrible ensign during the conflicts between the
-Saxons and the Danes for the possession of Northumbria;--the local
-nomenclature of the district attests the presence of colonists from both
-nations, and extensive traces of their fortifications still remain as
-evidence that our slopes and hill-tops formed at once the battle-fields
-and the strongholds of the country.
-
-The power of the Devil, his personal appearance and the possibility of
-bartering the soul for temporary gain, must still be numbered among the
-articles of our popular faith. Repeating the Lord's Prayer backwards is
-said to be the most effectual plan for causing him to rise from beneath;
-but when the terms of the bargain are not satisfactory, his exit can
-only be secured by making the sign of the cross and calling on the name
-of Christ.[5]
-
-When we come to examine the miscellaneous customs and superstitions of
-the county, we find many remarkable traces of a former belief. Tradition
-has again been true to her vocation; and in several instances has been
-most careful to preserve the _minutiae_ of the mode of operation and
-supposed effects of each minor spell and incantation. The principal
-difficulty now lies in the selection; for the materials are so plentiful
-that none but the most striking can be noticed. Among these we observe
-that, a ringing in the ears; shooting of the eyes; throwing down, or
-spilling the salt; putting on the left shoe first; lucky and unlucky
-days; pouring melted lead into water; stopping blood by means of charms;
-the use of waxen images; enchanted girdles; and lovers' knots, are all
-observed and explained almost exactly as amongst the Greeks and Romans.
-The details in many have been preserved to the very letter, whilst the
-supposed effects are exactly the same both in the ancient and modern
-times. Our marriageable maidens never receive knives, or any pointed
-implements, from their suitors, for the very same reason that such
-presents were rejected by their Scandinavian ancestors--they portend a
-"breaking off" in the matrimonial arrangements, and are notorious for
-"severing love."
-
- "If you love me as I love you,
- No knife shall cut our love in two."
-
-We never return thanks for a loan of pins. A "winding sheet" on the
-candle forebodes death; and dogs howling indicate a similar calamity.[6]
-Almost every one is aware that cuttings of human hair ought always to be
-burnt; that if _thirteen_ sit down to dinner one of them will die before
-the end of the year; that it is unlucky to meet a woman the first thing
-in the morning; and that a horse-shoe nailed or let into the step of
-the door will prevent the entrance of any evil-disposed person. We have
-probably derived nearly the whole of these notions from the Scandinavian
-settlers in the North of England. They considered it quite possible too
-to raise the Devil by the same means now practised by our "wise men;"
-and after their conversion to Christianity they are known to have marked
-their dough with a cross in order to ensure its rising--a practice which
-many of our country matrons still retain. Sodden bread is always
-considered to be bewitched, provided the yeast be good, and hence the
-necessity for the protection of the cross.
-
-We always get out of bed either on the right side, or with the right
-foot first; we take care not to cross two knives on the table; mothers
-never allow a child to be weighed soon after its birth; our children
-still blow their ages at marriage from the tops of the dandelion; and
-all these for similar reasons, and with similar objects, to those of the
-peasantry of Northumbria during the period of Danish rule. They supposed
-that the dead followed their usual occupations in the spirit-world, and
-hence, probably, the weapons of war and the implements of domestic life
-which we find amongst the ashes of their dead. They were also of opinion
-that buried treasure caused the ghosts of the owners to haunt the places
-of concealment; and many of our country population retain the same
-opinions without the slightest modification.
-
-The Folk-lore of dreams is an extensive subject, and would require a
-series of essays for its full elucidation. The _Royal Dream Book_, and
-_Napoleon's Book of Fate_, command an extensive sale amongst our
-operatives, and may be consulted for additional information. Our country
-maidens are well aware that _triple_ leaves plucked at hazard from the
-common ash, are worn in the breast for the purpose of causing prophetic
-dreams respecting a dilatory lover. The leaves of the yellow trefoil are
-supposed to possess similar virtues; and the Bible is not unfrequently
-put under their pillows with a crooked sixpence placed on the 16th and
-17th verses of the first chapter of Ruth, in order that they may both
-dream of, and see, their future husbands. "Opening the Bible for
-direction" is still practised after any troublesome dream, or when about
-to undertake any doubtful matter. To dream of the teeth falling out
-betokens death, or the loss of a lawsuit. Other signs of death are
-dreaming of seeing the Devil; or hearing a sound like the stroke of a
-wand on any piece of furniture. The proverb that "lawyers and asses
-always die in their shoes," is invariably quoted when any sudden
-calamity befalls one of the profession.
-
-Like the ancients, the folk of Lancashire have various superstitious
-observances and practices connected with the moon, especially with the
-new moon. Christmas thorns are said to blossom only on _Old_ Christmas
-Day; and persons will go considerable distances at midnight in order to
-witness the blossoming. Oxen, too, are supposed to acknowledge the
-importance of the Nativity of Christ, by going down on their knees at
-the same hour; and this is often quoted as a proof that our legislators
-were wrong in depriving our forefathers of their "eleven days" when the
-new style was enforced by Act of Parliament.[7]
-
-Some of our farmers are superstitious enough to hang in the chimney a
-portion of the flesh of any animal which has died of distemper, as a
-protection from similar afflictions; they also preserve with great care
-the membrane which sometimes envelopes a newly born foal, in the hope
-that it will ensure them good luck for the future. Sailors do not like
-to set sail on a Friday. Servant girls will rarely enter upon a new
-service either on a Friday, or on a Saturday: should they do so, they
-have an opinion that they will disagree with their mistresses and "not
-stay long in place." Most females entertain strong objections against
-giving evidence, or taking oaths, before the magistrates, when
-_enceinte_. At Burnley, not long ago, a witness in a case of felony was
-threatened with imprisonment before she would comply with the necessary
-forms. All children that are born in the twilight of certain days are in
-consequence supposed to be endowed with the faculty of seeing spirits;
-and some of our "wise men" take advantage of this, and persuade their
-dupes that they were so circumstanced at birth.
-
-Such instances might be multiplied to an almost indefinite extent, did
-space permit; but the preceding will suffice to prove both the probable
-origin and prevalence of many of our popular superstitions. To a greater
-or less extent their influence pervades all classes of society; and he
-who would elevate the intellectual condition of the people must not
-neglect this thick stratum of _common notions_ which underlies the
-deepest deposits of mental culture. As a recent writer in the _Quarterly
-Review_ reports of Cornwall, so we may state of Lancashire:--"Pages
-might be filled, not with mere legends wrought up for literary purposes,
-but with serious accounts of the wild delusions which seem to have lived
-on from the very birth of Pagan antiquity, and still to hold their
-influence among the earnest and Christian people of this portion of
-England.... Superstition lives on, with little abatement of vitality, in
-the human heart. In the lower classes it wears its old fashions, with
-very slow alterations--in the higher, it changes with the rapidity of
-modes in fashionable circles. We read with a smile of amusement and
-pity, the account of some provincial conjuror, who follows, with slight
-changes, the trade of the Witch of Endor; and we then compose our
-features to a grave expression of interest--for so society requires--to
-listen to some enlightened person's description of the latest novelties
-in table-turning or spirit-rapping; or to some fair patient's account of
-her last conversation with her last quack-doctor."
-
-The labours of Croker, Keightley, Thorpe, and Kemble, following in the
-wake of the Brothers Grimm, have added considerably to our knowledge of
-the Folk-lore of the North of Europe; but much yet remains to be
-collected before the subject can be examined in all its bearings.
-
-It is hoped that in the following pages the facts collected will suffice
-to prove that the superstitious beliefs, observances, and usages of
-Lancashire are by no means unworthy of the attention of the antiquary,
-the ethnologist, or the historian.
-
-
-LANCASHIRE ALCHEMISTS.
-
-Alchemy (from _al_, Arab. the, and {chemeia}, chemistry), the pretended
-art of transmuting the inferior metals into gold or silver, by means of
-what was called the Philosopher's Stone, or the powder of projection, a
-red powder possessing a peculiar smell, is supposed to have originated
-among the Arabians; Geber, an Arabian physician of the seventh century,
-being one of the earliest alchemists whose works are extant; but written
-so obscurely as to have led to the suggestion that his name was the
-origin of our modern term _gibberish_, for unintelligible jargon. A
-subsequent object of alchemy was the discovery of a universal medicine,
-the _Elixir Vitae_, which was to give perpetual life, health, and youth.
-The Egyptians are said to have practised alchemy; and Paulus Diaconus, a
-writer of the eighth century, asserts that Dioclesian burned the library
-of Alexandria, in order to prevent the Egyptians from becoming learned
-in the art of producing at will those precious metals which might be
-employed as "the sinews of war" against himself.[8] The earliest English
-writer on alchemy was probably St. Dunstan, Archbishop of Canterbury, in
-the tenth century. "He who shall have the happiness to meet with St.
-Dunstan's work, 'De Occulta Philosophia' [that on the 'Philosopher's
-stone' is in the Ashmole Museum], may therein read such stories as will
-make him amazed to think what stupendous and immense things are to be
-performed by virtue of the Philosopher's Mercury."[9] A John Garland is
-also said to have written on alchemy and mineralogy prior to the
-Conquest.[10] Alchemy was much studied in conventual establishments[11]
-and by the most learned doctors and schoolmen, and the highest Church
-dignitaries--nay, even by kings and popes. Albertus Magnus, a German,
-born in 1282, wrote seven treatises on alchemy; and Thomas Aquinas "the
-angelic doctor" (said to have been a pupil of Albert), wrote three works
-on this subject. Roger Bacon ("Friar Bacon"), born at Ilchester in 1214,
-though he wrote against the folly of believing in magic, necromancy, and
-charms, nevertheless had faith in alchemy; and his chemical and
-alchemical writings number eighteen. Of his _Myrrour of Alchemy_, Mr. J.
-J. Conybeare observes, "Of all the alchemical works into which I have
-been occasionally led to search, this appears the best calculated to
-afford the curious reader an insight into the history of the art, and of
-the arguments by which it was usually attacked and defended. It has the
-additional merit of being more intelligible and more entertaining than
-most books of the same class."[12]
-
-Raymond Lully, born at Majorca in 1235, is said to have been a scholar
-of Roger Bacon, and to have written nineteen works on alchemy. Arnoldus
-de Villa Nova, born in 1235, amongst a number of works on this subject,
-wrote _The Rosarium_, a compendium of the alchemy of his time. He died
-in 1313, on his way to visit Pope Clement V. at Avignon. Another pope,
-John XXII., professed and described the art of transmuting metals, and
-boasts in the beginning of his book that he had made two hundred ingots
-of gold, each weighing one hundred pounds. Among English alchemists of
-the fourteenth century may be mentioned Cremer, abbot of Westminster
-(the disciple and friend of Lully), John Daustein, and Richard, who both
-practised and wrote upon the "hermetic philosophy," as it was termed. In
-the fifteenth century was born George Ripley, a canon registrar of
-Bridlington, who wrote the _Medulla Alchymiae_ (translated by Dr. Salmon
-in his _Clavis_), and another work in rhyme, called "The Compound of
-Alchemie," which was dedicated to Edward IV. Dr. John Dee (born 1527),
-the warden of Manchester College, and his assistant, or "seer," Edward
-Kelly (born 1555), were both avowed alchemists. Dee wrote a _Treatise of
-the Rosie Crucian Secrets, their excellent methods of making Medicines
-and Metals_, &c. Ashmole says of him, that "some time he bestowed in
-vulgar chemistry, and was therein master of divers secrets: amongst
-others, he revealed to one Roger Cooke 'the great secret of the elixir'
-(as he called it) 'of the salt of metals, the projection whereof was
-one upon a hundred.'[13]
-
-"'Tis generally reported that Dr. Dee and Sir Edward Kelly were so
-strangely fortunate as to find a very large quantity of the elixir in
-some parts of the ruins of Glastonbury Abbey." It had remained here,
-perhaps, ever since the time of the highly gifted St. Dunstan, in the
-tenth century.[14] The great Lord Bacon relates the following story in
-his _Apothegms_:--
-
-"Sir Edward Dyer, a grave and wise gentleman, did much believe in Kelly,
-the alchemist, that he did indeed the work, and made gold; insomuch that
-he went into Germany, where Kelly then was, to inform himself fully
-thereof. After his return he dined with my Lord of Canterbury, where at
-that time was at the table Dr. Brown, the physician. They fell in talk
-of Kelly. Sir Edward Dyer, turning to the archbishop, said--'I do assure
-your Grace that that I shall tell you is truth: I am an eye-witness
-thereof; and if I had not seen it, I should not have believed it. I saw
-Master Kelly put of the base metal into the crucible; and after it was
-set a little upon the fire, and a very small quantity of the medicine
-put in, and stirred with a stick of wood, it came forth, in great
-proportion, perfect gold, to the touch, to the hammer, and to the test.'
-My Lord Archbishop said, 'You had need take heed what you say, Sir
-Edward Dyer, for here is an infidel at the board.' Sir Edward Dyer said
-again pleasantly, 'I would have looked for an infidel sooner in any
-place than at your Grace's table.' 'What say you, Dr. Brown?' said the
-archbishop. Dr. Brown answered, after his blunt and huddling manner,
-'The gentleman hath spoken enough for me.' 'Why,' saith the archbishop,
-'what hath he said?' 'Marry,' saith Dr. Brown, 'he said he would not
-have believed it except he had seen it; and no more will I.'"
-
-Professor De Morgan observes that "Alchemy was more than a popular
-credulity: Newton and Boyle were amongst the earnest inquirers into it."
-Bishop Berkeley was of opinion that M. Homberg made gold by introducing
-light into the pores of mercury. Amongst the works of the Hon. Robert
-Boyle (vol. iv. 13-19), is _An Historical Account of a Degradation of
-Gold, made by an anti-Elixir: a Strange Chemical Narrative_, in which he
-says--"To make it more credible that other metals are capable of being
-graduated or exalted into gold, by way of projection, I will relate to
-you, that by the like way, gold has been degraded or imbased.... Our
-experiment plainly shows that gold, though confessedly the most
-homogeneous and the least mutable of metals, may be in a very short time
-(perhaps not amounting to many minutes), exceedingly changed, both as to
-malleableness, colour, homogeneity, and (which is more) specific
-gravity; and all this by so very inconsiderable a portion of injected
-powder," &c.
-
-"When Locke, as one of the executors of Boyle, was about to publish some
-of his works, Newton wished him to insert the second and third part of
-Boyle's recipes (the first part of which was to obtain 'a mercury that
-would grow hot with gold'), and which Boyle had communicated to him on
-condition that they should be published after his death."[15] "Mangetus
-relates a story of a stranger calling on Boyle, and leaving with him a
-powder, which he projected into the crucible, and instantly went out.
-After the fire had gone out, Boyle found in the crucible a
-yellow-coloured metal, possessing all the properties of pure gold, and
-only a little lighter than the weight of the materials originally put in
-the crucible."[16]
-
-From these proofs of the credulity of great men, let us turn to the
-encouragements vouchsafed to alchemy and its adepts by the Kings and
-Parliaments of England. Raymond Lully visited England on the invitation
-of Edward I.; and he affirms in one of his works, that in the secret
-chamber of St. Katherine, in the Tower of London, he performed in the
-royal presence the experiment of transmuting some crystal into a mass of
-diamond, or adamant, as he calls it; on which Edward, he says, caused
-some little pillars to be made for the tabernacle of God. It was
-popularly believed, indeed, at the time, that the English king had been
-furnished by Lully with a great quantity of gold for defraying the
-expense of an expedition which he intended to make to the Holy Land.
-Edward III. was not less credulous on this subject than his grandfather,
-as appears by an order which he issued in 1329, in the following
-terms:--"Know all men that we have been assured that John of Rous, and
-Master William of Dalby, know how to make silver by the art of alchemy;
-that they have made it in former times, and still continue to make it;
-and considering that these men, by their art, and by making the precious
-metal, may be profitable to us and to our kingdom, we have commanded our
-well-beloved Thomas Cary to apprehend the aforesaid John and William
-wherever they can be found, within liberties or without, and bring them
-to us, together with all the instruments of their art, under safe and
-sure custody." The first considerable coinage of gold in England was
-begun by Edward III. in 1343: and "The alchemists did affirm, as an
-unwritten verity, that the rose nobles, which were coined soon after,
-were made by projection or multiplication alchemical, by Raymond Lully,
-in the Tower of London." But Lully died in 1315; and the story only
-shows the strength of the popular faith in alchemy. That this pretended
-science was much cultivated in the fourteenth century, and with the
-usual evil results, may be inferred from an Act passed 5 Hen. IV. cap. 4
-(1404), to make it felony "to multiply gold or silver, or to use the
-craft of multiplication," &c. It is probable, however, that this statute
-was enacted from some apprehension that the operations of the
-multipliers might possibly affect the value of the king's coin. Henry
-VI., a very pious, yet very weak and credulous prince, was as great a
-patron of the alchemists as Edward III. had been before him. These
-impostors practised with admirable success upon his weakness and
-credulity, repeatedly inducing him to advance them money wherewith to
-prosecute the operations, as well as procuring from him protections
-(which he sometimes prevailed upon the Parliament to confirm) from the
-penalties of the statute just mentioned.[17] In 1438, the king
-commissioned three philosophers to make the precious metals; but, as
-might be expected, he received no returns from them in gold or
-silver.[18] His credulity, however, seems to have been unshaken by
-disappointment, and we next find him issuing one of these protections,
-which is too long to print entire, granted to the "three famous men,"
-John Fauceby, John Kirkeby, and John Ragny, which was confirmed by
-Parliament May 31, 1456. In this document the object of the researches
-of these "philosophers" is described to be "a certain most precious
-medicine, called by some philosophers 'the mother and empress of
-medicines;' by some, 'the inestimable glory;' by others, 'the
-quintessence;' by others, 'the philosopher's stone;' by others, 'the
-elixir of life;' which cures all curable diseases with ease; prolongs
-human life in perfect vigour of faculty to its utmost natural term;
-heals all healable wounds; is a most sovereign antidote against all
-poisons; and is capable of preserving to us and our kingdom other great
-advantages, such as the transmutation of other metals into the most real
-and finest gold and silver."[19] Fauceby, here mentioned, is elsewhere
-designated the king's physician.[20] We have not traced the position of
-the other two adepts named. Fauceby, however, notwithstanding his power
-of gold-making, did not refuse to accept a grant from the king, in 1456,
-of a pension of 100_l._ a year for life.[21]
-
-We come now to the two most distinguished of Lancashire alchemists, both
-knights, and at the head of the principal families of the county. They
-seem to have been actively engaged together in the delusive pursuit of
-the transmutation of metals; and, self-deceived, to have deluded the
-weak king with promises of wealth which never could be realised. These
-Lancashire adepts were Sir Edmund de Trafford, Knight, and Sir Thomas
-Ashton [of Ashton], Knight. The former was the younger of two sons of
-Henry de Trafford, Esq., and Elizabeth his wife, daughter of Sir Ralph
-Radcliffe, Knight. The elder son, Henry, dying at the early age of
-twenty-six years, this Edmund succeeded as his heir about King Henry V.
-(1414), and he was knighted by Henry VI. at the Whitsuntide of 1426. He
-married Dame Alice Venables, eldest daughter and co-heir to Sir William
-Venables, of Bollyn, Knight. Their only son, Sir John Trafford, knighted
-about 1444, in his father's life-time, married Elizabeth, daughter of
-Sir Thomas Ashton, of Ashton-under-Lyne, Knight; whilst Sir Edmund's
-youngest daughter, Dulcia, or Douce, married Sir John Ashton, a son of
-Sir Thomas, in 1438; so that the two families were connected by this
-double alliance. Sir Thomas Ashton, the alchemist, was the eldest son of
-Sir John de Ashton (Knight of the Bath at the coronation of Henry IV. in
-1399, Knight of the Shire in 1413, and Constable of Coutances in 1417),
-and of his first wife, Jane, daughter of John Savile, of Tankersley,
-county York. Sir Thomas married Elizabeth, daughter of Sir John Byron.
-The date of his death is not known. Sir Edmund Trafford died in 1457.
-Their supposed power of transmuting the baser metals into gold had great
-attractions for a weak king, whose treasury was low, and who was
-encumbered with debt. They were not mere adventurers, but men descended
-from ancient families, opulent, and of high estimation in their native
-county. Fuller found in the Tower of London, and copied,[22] a patent
-granted to these two knights by Henry VI., in the twenty-fourth year of
-his reign (1446), of which he gives the following translation:--"The
-King to all unto whom, &c., greeting--Know ye, that whereas our beloved
-and loyal Edmund de Trafford, Knight, and Thomas Ashton, Knight, have,
-by a certain petition shown unto us, set forth that although they were
-willing by the art or science of philosophy to work upon certain metals,
-to translate [transmute] imperfect metals from their own kind, and then
-to transubstantiate them by their said art or science, as they say, into
-perfect gold or silver, unto all manner of proofs and trials, to be
-expected and endured as any gold or silver growing in any mine;
-notwithstanding certain persons ill-willing and maligning them,
-conceiving them to work by unlawful art, and so may hinder and disturb
-them in the trial of the said art and science: WE, considering the
-premises, and willing to know the conclusion of the said work or
-science, of our special grace have granted and given leave to the same
-Edmund and Thomas, and to their servants, that they may work and try the
-aforesaid art and science lawfully and freely, without any hindrance of
-ours, or of our officers, whatsoever; any statute, act, ordinance, or
-provision made, ordained, or provided to the contrary notwithstanding.
-In witness whereof, &c., the King at Westminster, the 7th day of April"
-[1446.][23] Fuller leaves this curious document, which might fitly have
-been dated the _first_ instead of the 7th April, without a word of
-comment. The two knightly alchemists, doubtlessly imposing on themselves
-no less than on their royal patron, kept the king's expectation wound up
-to the highest pitch; and in the following year he actually informed his
-people that the happy hour was approaching when by means of "the stone"
-he "should be able to pay off his debts!"[24] It is scarcely necessary
-to add that the stone failed, and the king's debts must have remained
-unpaid, if his majesty had not pawned the revenue of his Duchy of
-Lancaster, to satisfy the demands of his clamorous creditors. Henry VI.
-was deposed by Edward IV. in March, 1461, and though he was nominally
-restored to the throne in October, 1470, he lost both crown and life in
-May, 1471, being found dead (most probably murdered) in the Tower on the
-evening or the morrow of the day on which Edward IV. entered London
-after his victory at Barnet. Such are some of the most notable facts in
-the practice of alchemy as connected with Lancashire. It will naturally
-be asked if alchemy is still practised in this county? We can only say,
-that if it be it is in very rare instances, and with the greatest
-secrecy. The more chemistry is known--and the extent to which it has
-been developed within the last twenty years is truly marvellous--the
-more completely it takes the ground from under the feet of a believer in
-alchemy. It is not like astrology, which accepts the facts of the true
-science of astronomy, and only draws false conclusions from true
-premisses. Alchemy could only have sprung up at a period when all the
-operations of the chemist's laboratory were of the most rude, imperfect,
-and blundering character; when the true bases of earths and minerals and
-metals were unknown; when what was called chemistry was without
-analysis, either quantitative or qualitative; before the law of definite
-proportions had been discovered; when, in short, chemistry was a groping
-in the dark without the help of any accurate weight or measure, or
-other knowledge of the countless substances which are now so extensively
-investigated, and so accurately described in the briefest formulas. A
-man, to become an alchemist in the nineteenth century, must study only
-the hermetical writings of past ages, shutting both eyes and ears to all
-the facts of modern chemistry. It is scarcely possible at this day to
-find such a combination of exploded learning and scientific ignorance.
-Hence we conclude that alchemy is in all probability, from the very
-nature of things, an obsolete and forgotten lore.
-
-
-LANCASHIRE ASTROLOGERS.
-
-Astrology (literally the Science of the Stars), is now understood to
-signify the mode of discovering future events by means of the position
-of the heavenly bodies, which has been termed judicial astronomy. This
-quasi science found universal belief among all the nations of antiquity
-except the Greeks. Among the Romans it was eagerly cultivated from the
-time of the conquest of Egypt. In the second century the whole world was
-astrological. All the followers of Mohammed have ever been, and still
-are, believers in it. The Church of Rome has repeatedly condemned the
-art, but popes and cardinals rank amongst its votaries. Cardinal d'Ailly
-(about 1400), calculated the horoscope of Jesus Christ; and in the
-fifteenth century Pope Calixtus III. directed prayers and anathemas
-against a comet which had either assisted in or predicted the success of
-the Turks against the Christians. The establishment of the Copernican
-system was the death of astrology. The last of the astrologers was
-Morin, best known as the opponent of Gassendi. The latter in youth had
-studied and believed in the art, but afterwards renounced and written
-against it. Morin, who worked thirty years at a book on astrology, and
-who disbelieved in the motion of the earth, repeatedly predicted the
-death of Gassendi, but was always wrong, as he was in foretelling the
-death of Louis XIII. Since his death, in 1656, the pseudo-science has
-gradually sunk, and has not since, it is believed, been adopted by any
-real astronomer. Roger Bacon and other early English philosophers were
-believers in astrology, no less than in alchemy. In Lancashire the most
-remarkable practisers of the art were Dr. John Dee, warden of Manchester
-College, his friend and "seer," Sir Edward Kelly, and John Booker, of
-Manchester. Dee was the son of a wealthy vintner, and was born in London
-in 1527. At the age of fifteen he was entered at St. John's College,
-Cambridge, where he seems to have devoted himself to the study of
-mathematics, astronomy, and chemistry; displaying great assiduity and
-industry. At twenty he made a year's tour on the Continent, chiefly in
-Holland, and on his return was made one of the fellows of Trinity
-College on its foundation by Henry VIII., in 1543. In 1548 he was
-strongly suspected of being addicted to "the black art," probably from
-his astrological pursuits; and having taken his degree of A.M., he again
-went abroad to the university of Louvaine and to Rheims, and elsewhere
-in France; returning to England in 1551, when he was presented by Cecil
-to King Edward VI., who assigned him a pension of one hundred crowns,
-which he subsequently relinquished for the rectory of Upton-on-Severn.
-Shortly after the accession of Mary, he was accused of "practising
-against the queen's life by _enchantment_;" the charge being founded on
-some correspondence between him and "the servants of the Lady
-Elizabeth." He was long imprisoned and frequently examined, but as
-nothing could be established against him he was set at liberty by an
-order of the church in 1555. On the accession of Elizabeth, Dee was
-consulted by Lord Robert Dudley respecting "a propitious day" for the
-coronation. He says, "I wrote at large and delivered it for her
-Majesty's use, by the commandment of the Lord Robert (afterwards Earl of
-Leicester), what in my judgment the ancient astrologers would determine
-on the election day of such a time as was appointed for her Majesty to
-be crowned in." He was presented to the queen, who made him great
-promises (not always fulfilled); amongst others, that where her brother
-Edward "had given him a crown, she would give him a noble" [one-third
-more--viz., from 5_s._ to 6_s._ 8_d._]. Nothing can better mark the
-belief in astrology than the fact that Queen Elizabeth's nativity was
-cast, in order to ascertain whether she could marry with advantage to
-the nation. Lilly, some eighty years later, declares[25] that he
-received twenty pieces of gold, in order that he might ascertain where
-Charles I. might be most safe from his enemies, and what hour would be
-most favourable for his escape from Carisbrooke Castle.
-
-In 1564 Dee again visited the Continent, and was presented to the
-Emperor Maximilian, probably on some secret mission; for Lilly says, "he
-was the Queen's intelligencer, and had a salary for his maintenance from
-the Secretaries of State. He was a ready-witted man, quick of
-apprehension, and of great judgment in the Latin and Greek tongues. He
-was a very great investigator of the more secret hermetical learning
-(alchemy), a perfect astronomer, a curious astrologer, a serious
-geometrician; to speak truth, he was excellent in all kinds of
-learning."[26] Dee was repeatedly and urgently sent for one morning "to
-prevent the mischief which divers of her Majesty's privy council
-suspected to be intended against her Majesty, by means of a certain
-image of wax, with a great pin stuck into it, about the breast of it,
-found in Lincoln's Inn Fields." For some years Dee led a life of privacy
-and study at Mortlake in Surrey, collecting books and MSS., beryls and
-magic crystals, talismans, &c. So strong was the popular belief in his
-neighbourhood that he had dealings with the devil, that in 1576 a mob
-assembled, broke into his house, and destroyed nearly all his library
-and collections; and it was with difficulty that he and his family
-escaped the fury of the rabble. In October, 1578, by the Queen's
-command, he had a conference with Dr. Bayley, her Majesty's physician,
-"about her Majesty's grievous pains, by reason of toothache and the
-rheum," &c.; and the same year he was sent on a winter journey of about
-1500 miles by sea and land, "to consult with the learned physicians and
-philosophers [_i.e._, astrologers], for her Majesty's health-recovering
-and preserving." Passing over his more useful and valuable services to
-the State and to the world, as we are only noting here his doings as an
-astrologer, &c., we may remark that most of his proceedings and writings
-in this pseudo-science or art were accomplished after he had passed his
-fiftieth year. It was in 1581 that he took into his service, as an
-assistant in his alchemical and astrological labours, an apothecary of
-Worcester named Edward Kelly, born in 1555, and who was called "The
-Seer," because, looking into magic crystals or speculae, it was said he
-saw many things which it was not permitted to Dee himself to behold.
-Kelly also acted as Dee's amanuensis, and together they held
-"conversations with spirits." They had a black speculum, it is said "a
-polished piece of cannel coal," in which the angels Gabriel and Raphael
-appeared at their invocation. Hence Butler says--
-
- "Kelly did all his feats upon
- The devil's looking-glass--a stone."
-
-In 1583 a Polish noble, Albert Lasque, palatine of Siradia [? Sieradz]
-being in England, Dee and Kelly were introduced to him, and accompanied
-him to Poland. He persuaded them to pay a visit to Rodolph, king of
-Bohemia, who, though a weak and credulous man, is said to have become
-disgusted with their pretensions. They had no better success with the
-king of Poland, but were soon after invited by a rich Bohemian noble to
-his castle of Trebona, where they continued for some time in great
-affluence, owing, as they asserted, to their transmuting the baser
-metals into gold. Kelly is said to have been sordid and grasping,
-without honour or principle. Lilly asserts that the reason of many
-failures in the conferences with spirits was because Kelly was very
-vicious, "unto whom the angels were not obedient, or willingly did
-declare [answers to] the questions propounded." Dee and Kelly quarrelled
-and separated in Bohemia; Dee returning to England, while Kelly remained
-at Prague. He died in 1595. In 1595 the Queen appointed Dee warden of
-Manchester College, he being then sixty-eight years of age. He resided
-at Manchester nine years, quitting it in 1604 for his old abode at
-Mortlake, where he died in 1608, aged eighty-one, in great poverty, and
-leaving a numerous family and a great many printed works and forty
-unpublished writings behind him. The catalogue of Dee's library at
-Mortlake shows that it was rich in the works of preceding astrologers
-and alchemists, especially those of Roger Bacon, Raymond Lully, Albertus
-Magnus, Arnold de Villa Nova, &c.
-
-John Booker, a celebrated astrologer of the seventeenth century, was the
-son of John Bowker (commonly pronounced Booker), of Manchester, and was
-born 23rd March, 1601. He was educated at the Manchester Grammar School,
-where he acquired some acquaintance with Latin. From childhood he showed
-an inclination for astrology, and amused himself with studying almanacks
-and other books on that subject. After serving some time to a
-haberdasher in London, he practised as a writing-master at Hadley,
-Middlesex; and was subsequently clerk for some time to the aldermen at
-Guildhall. Becoming famous by his studies, he was appointed Licenser of
-Mathematical Publications, which then included all those relating to the
-"celestial sciences." Lilly tells us that he once thought him the
-greatest astrologer in the world; but he afterwards came to think
-himself a much greater man. George Wharton, who had been one of his
-astrological acquaintances, quarrelled with him, and in consequence
-published at Oxford in 1644, in answer to one of Booker's pamphlets,
-what he called "Mercurio-C[oe]lica-Mastyx; or an Anti-caveat to all such
-as have heretofore had the misfortune to be cheated and deluded by the
-great and treacherous impostor, John Booker; in an answer to his
-frivolous pamphlet, entitled 'Mercurius-C[oe]licus, or a Caveat to all
-the People of England.'" Booker died of dysentery in April, 1667, and
-was buried in St. James's Church, Duke's Place, London, where the
-following monument was erected to him by Ashmole, who was one of his
-greatest admirers:--"Ne oblivione conteretur Urna Johannis Bookeri,
-Astrologi, qui Fatis cessit 6 idus Aprilis, A.D. 1667. Hoc illi posuit
-amoris Monumentum, Elias Ashmole, Armiger." Lilly, in his _Life and
-Times_, gives the following character of Booker:--
-
-"He was a great proficient in astrology, whose excellent verses upon
-the twelve months, framed according to the configurations of each month,
-being blest with success according to his predictions, procured him much
-reputation all over England. He was a very honest man; abhorred any
-deceit in the art he studied; had a curious fancy in judging of thefts;
-and was successful in resolving love questions. He was no mean
-proficient in astronomy; understood much of physic; was a great admirer
-of the antimonial cup; not unlearned in chemistry, which he loved, but
-did not practise; and since his decease I have seen a nativity of his
-performance, exactly directed, and judged with as much learning as from
-astrology can be expected. His library of books came short of the
-world's approbation, and were sold by his widow to Elias Ashmole, Esq.,
-who most generously gave far more than they were worth."
-
-Lilly and Booker were frequently consulted during the differences
-between the king and the parliamentary army, and were once invited by
-General Fairfax, and sent in a coach-and-four to head quarters at
-Windsor, to give their opinions on [_i.e._, their predictions as to] the
-prosecution of the war. Booker became famous for a prediction on the
-solar eclipse of 1613, in which year both the king of Bohemia and
-Gustavus, king of Sweden, died. Booker's works (chiefly tracts or
-pamphlets) were about fifteen or sixteen in number. The only work now
-worth notice is his _Bloody Irish Almanack_ (London, 1646, quarto),
-which contains some memorable particulars relative to the war in
-Ireland.[27]
-
-Another Lancashire astrologer was Charles Leadbetter, who was born at
-Cronton, near Prescot, and was the author of a _Treatise on Eclipses of
-the Sun and Moon, commencing A.D. 1715, and ending A.D. 1749_; in which
-he gives the horoscope of every eclipse of importance; and, from the
-aspects of the stars, predicts the principal occurrences that may be
-expected within limited periods. He failed, however, to predict the
-Rebellion of 1715, or that of 1745; and though under the years 1720 and
-1721 he predicated "Sea Fights and Death of Fish," no hint of the "South
-Sea Bubble," the great event of those years, can be found amongst his
-prophecies. He entertained no doubt of an "eclipse of the moon, moving
-subjects to seduction [? sedition], servants to disobedience, and wives
-to a disorder against their husbands." Yet Leadbetter's Works on
-Astronomy, &c., were held in able repute, and he taught the "Arts and
-Sciences Mathematical" with much success, "at the Hand and Pen, Cock
-Lane, near Shore Ditch, London."
-
-If we close here our notices of Lancashire Astrologers, it is not
-because we suppose the class to be wholly extinct. But those to whom we
-have so far referred, were well acquainted with astronomy, and erred
-only in superadding the delusions of astrology to the truths of that
-real science. The class still remaining in Lancashire, chiefly in
-country districts, are (with very few exceptions) greatly inferior in
-knowledge, and, mixing up the arts of the so-called sorcerer or conjuror
-with the deductions of the so-called "astral science" (of which they are
-blundering smatterers, often ignorant of the very elements of
-astronomy), they do not merit the name of astrologers, but should be
-classed with the numerous "wise men," "cunning women," and other
-varieties of fortune-tellers, who have not even the negative merit of
-being self-deluded by the phenomena of a supposed science; but are in
-their way mere charlatans and cheats, knowingly cozening their credulous
-dupes of as much money as they can extort. Some notices of this class
-will be found in later pages.
-
-
-BELLS.
-
-It is not with Bells generally, but only with Church Bells, and not with
-all their uses, but only such of them as are superstitious, that we are
-called upon to deal here. The large church bells are said to have been
-invented by Paulinus, Bishop of Nola, in Campania (whence the low Latin
-name of Campana), about A.D. 400. Two hundred years afterwards they
-appear to have been in great use in churches. Pope John XIII., in A.D.
-968, consecrated a very large newly-cast bell in the Lateran Church at
-Rome, giving it the name of John. This is the first instance known of
-what has since been called "the baptising of bells," a Roman Catholic
-superstition of which vestiges remain in England in the names of great
-bells, as "Tom of Lincoln," "Great Tom of Oxford," &c. The priests
-anciently rung them themselves. Amongst their superstitious uses, were
-to drive away lightning and thunder; to chase evil spirits from persons
-and places; to expedite childbirth, when women were in labour; and the
-original use of the soul-bell or passing-bell was to drive away any
-demon that might seek to take possession of the soul of the deceased.
-Grose says that the passing-bell was anciently rung for two purposes:
-one, to bespeak the prayers of all good Christians for a soul just
-departing; the other, to drive away the evil spirits who stood at the
-bed's foot and about the house, ready to seize their prey, or at least
-to molest and terrify the soul in its passage. By the ringing of the
-bell they were kept aloof, and the soul, like a hunted hare, gained the
-start, or had what sportsmen call "law." Hence the high charge for
-tolling the great bell of the church, which, being louder, the evil
-spirits must go further off to be clear of its sound, by which the poor
-soul got so much the more start of them; besides, being heard further
-off, it would likewise procure the dying man a greater number of
-prayers. Till about 1830, it was customary at Roman Catholic funerals in
-many parts of Lancashire, to ring a merry peal on the bells, as soon as
-the interment was over. Doubtless the greater the clang of the bells,
-the further the flight of the fiends waiting to seize the soul of the
-departed. There are some monkish rhymes in Latin on the uses of church
-bells, some of which are retained in the following doggerel:--
-
- Men's deaths I tell By doleful knell;
- Lightning and thunder I break asunder;
- On Sabbath all To church I call;
- The sleepy head I raise from bed;
- The winds so fierce I do disperse;
- Men's cruel rage I do assuage.
-
-The following verses (the spelling modernized) further illustrate the
-subject:[28]--
-
- "If that the thunder chance to roar, and stormy tempest shake,
- A wonder is it for to see the wretches how they quake;
- How that no faith at all they have, nor trust in any thing,
- The clerk doth all the bells forthwith at once in steeple ring;
- With wondrous sound and deeper far than he was wont before,
- Till in the lofty heavens dark the thunders bray no more.
- For in these christen'd bells they think doth lie much pow'r and might
- As able is the tempest great and storm to vanquish quite.
-
- I saw myself at Nurnberg once, a town in Toring coast,
- A bell that with this title bold herself did proudly boast:
- By name I 'Mary' called am, with sound I put to flight
- The thunder-cracks and hurtful storms, and every wicked sprite.
- Such things when as these bells can do, no wonder certainly
- It is, if that the papists to their tolling always fly,
- When hail, or any raging storm, or tempest comes in sight,
- Or thunderbolts, or lightning fierce, that every place doth smite."
-
-Wynkin de Worde[29] tells us that bells are rung during thunder-storms,
-to the end that the fiends and wicked spirits should be abashed, and
-flee, and cease the moving of the tempest.[30] Bells appear to have had
-an inherent power against evil spirits, but this power was held to be
-greatly increased by the bells being christened. There is a custom in
-some Lancashire parishes, in ringing the passing-bell, to conclude its
-tolling with nine knells or strokes of the clapper, for a man, six for a
-woman, and three for a child; the vestiges of an ancient Roman Catholic
-injunction.[31] In an Old English Homily for Trinity Sunday,[32] it is
-stated that "the form of the Trinity was found in man; that was, Adam
-our forefather, on earth, one person, and Eve of Adam, the second
-person; and of them both was the third person. At the death of a man
-three bells should be rung, as his knell, in worship of the Trinity, and
-for a woman, who was the second person of the Trinity, two bells should
-be rung." Two couplets on the passing-bell may be inserted here:--
-
- "When the bell begins to toll,
- Lord have mercy on the soul!
-
- When thou dost hear a toll or knell
- Then think upon _thy_ passing-bell."[33]
-
-The great bell which used to be rung on Shrove-Tuesday to call the
-people together for the purpose of confessing their sins, or to be
-"shriven," was called the "Pancake Bell," and some have regarded it
-simply as a signal for the people to begin frying their pancakes. This
-custom prevails still in some parts of Lancashire, and in many country
-places throughout the North of England. Another bell, rung in some
-places as the congregation quits the church on Sunday, is popularly
-known among country people as the "pudding-bell," they supposing that
-its use is to warn those at home to get the dinner ready, as, in homely
-phrase, "pudding-time has come." A Lancashire clergyman[34] states that
-this bell is still rung in some of the old Lancashire parish churches;
-but he does not suggest any more probable reason for tolling this bell.
-The Curfew Bell [_couvre feu_, cover-fire] is commonly believed to be of
-Norman origin; a law having been made by William the Conqueror that all
-people should put out their fires and lights at the eight o'clock
-(evening) bell, and go to bed. In one place the sexton of a parish was
-required to lie in the church steeple, and at eight o'clock every night
-to ring the curfew for a quarter of an hour. The curfew-bell is still
-rung at Burnley, Colne, Blackburn, Padiham, and indeed in most of the
-older towns and many of the villages of Lancashire. It has nearly lost
-its ancient name, and is a remarkable instance of the persistence of an
-old custom or usage, long after all its significance or value has
-ceased. It is now merely called "the eight o'clock bell." A morning
-bell, rung anciently at four, now more commonly at six o'clock, is also
-to be heard in Burnley and other places, and is called "the six o'clock
-bell." Of what maybe called "the vocal ghosts of bells" many stories
-might be told. Opposite the Cross-slack, on the sands near Blackpool,
-out at sea, once stood the church and cemetery of Kilgrimol, long since
-submerged. Many tales are told of benighted wanderers near this spot
-being terrified with the sound of bells pealing dismal chimes o'er the
-murmuring sea.[35]
-
-
-BEAL-TINE OR BELTANE FIRES; RELICS OF BAAL WORSHIP.
-
-Among the dim traces of an extinct worship of Bel, or Baal, the ancient
-sun-god, perceptible still among Celtic peoples, especially in Ireland
-and Scotland, are the three festival periods when fires are kindled on
-eminences in honour of the sun. The _Bel_, or _Belus_, the chief deity
-of the Babylonians and the Assyrians, seems to have been identical with
-the _Baal_ of the Ph[oe]nicians and Carthaginians. The Chaldee _Bel_ and
-the Hebrew _Baal_ alike mean "Lord;" and under these names worship was
-paid by the old Asiatics to the sun, whose light and heat-giving
-properties were typified by fires kindled on the tops of high hills. In
-parts of Lancashire, especially in the Fylde, these traces of a heathen
-cult still linger. "From the great heaps of stones on eminences, called
-Cairns, from the Toot-hills (_i.e._, the hills dedicated to the worship
-of the Celtic god, Tot, or Teut, or Teutates, the same with the Egyptian
-Thoth), and the Belenian eminences, whereon was worshipped Bel, or
-Belus, or Belenus, the sun-god; from these three kinds of heights the
-grand sacred fires of the _Bel-Tine_ flamed thrice a year, at three of
-the great festivals of the Druids, in honour of Beal, or the Sun--viz.,
-on the eve of May-day, on Midsummer Eve, and on the eve of the 1st
-November. Two such fires were kindled by one another on May-day Eve in
-every village of the nation, as well throughout all Gaul as in Britain,
-Ireland, and the outlying lesser islands, between which fires the men
-and the beasts to be sacrificed were to pass; from whence came the
-proverb, 'Between Bel's two fires,' meaning one in a great strait, not
-knowing how to extricate himself. One of the fires was on the cairn, and
-the other on the ground. On the eve of the 1st of November all the
-people, out of a religious persuasion instilled into them by the Druids,
-extinguished their fires. Then every master of a family was religiously
-obliged to take home a portion of the consecrated fire, and to kindle
-the fire anew in his house, which for the ensuing year was to be lucky
-and prosperous. Any man who had not paid all his last year's dues to the
-Druids was neither to have a spark of this holy fire from the cairns,
-nor dared any of his neighbours let him take the benefit of theirs,
-under pain of excommunication; which, as managed by the Druids, was
-worse than death. If, therefore, he would live the winter out, he must
-pay the Druids' dues by the last day of October. The Midsummer fires and
-sacrifices were to obtain a blessing on the fruits of the earth, now
-becoming ready for gathering; as those on the 1st of May, that they
-might prosperously grow; and those on the last of October were a
-thanksgiving for finishing their harvest. But in all of them regard was
-had to the several degrees of increase and decrease in the heat of the
-sun. At the cairn fires it was customary for the lord of the place, or
-his son, or some other person of distinction, to take the entrails of
-the sacrificed animal into his hands, and walking bare-foot over the
-coals thrice, after the flames had ceased, to carry them to the Druid,
-who waited in a whole skin at the altar. If the fire-treader escaped
-harmless, it was reckoned a good omen, and welcomed with loud
-acclamations; but if he received any hurt, it was deemed unlucky both to
-the community and to himself."[36] In Ireland, May-day is called _la na
-Beal tina_, and its eve, _neen na Beal tina_--_i.e._, the day and eve of
-Beal's fire, from its having been in heathen times consecrated to the
-god Beal, or Belus. The ceremony practised on May-day Eve, of making the
-cows leap over lighted straw or faggots, has been generally traced to
-the worship of this deity.[37]
-
-The Irish have ever been worshippers of fire and of Baal, and are so to
-this day. The chief festival in honour of the sun and fire is upon the
-21st [24th] June, when the sun arrives at the summer solstice, or rather
-begins its retrograde motion. "At the house where I was entertained, in
-the summer of 1782, it was told me that we should see at midnight the
-most singular sight in Ireland, which was _the lighting of fires in
-honour of the sun_. Accordingly, exactly at midnight, the fires began to
-appear; and, going up to the leads of the house, which had a
-widely-extended view, I saw, on a radius of thirty miles all around, the
-fires burning on every eminence. I learned from undoubted authority that
-the people danced round the fires, and at the close went through these
-fires, and made their sons and daughters, together with their cattle,
-pass the fire; and the whole was conducted with religious
-solemnity."[38] Bonfires are still made on Midsummer Eve in the northern
-parts of England and in Wales. The 1st of November was considered among
-the ancient Welsh as the conclusion of summer, and was celebrated with
-bonfires, accompanied with ceremonies suitable to these events, and some
-parts of Wales still retain these customs. Dr. Jamieson, in his
-_Dictionary of the Scottish Language_, mentions a festival called
-_Beltane_ or _Beltein_, annually held in Scotland on Old May Day (May
-13th). A town in Perthshire is called _Tillee Beltein_--_i.e._, the
-eminence or high place of the fire of Baal. Near it are two Druidical
-Temples of upright stones, with a well adjacent to one of them, still
-held in great veneration for its sanctity. The doctor describes the
-drawing of bits of a cake, one part of which is made perfectly black
-with charcoal, and he who draws the black bit is considered as "devoted
-to Baal, and is obliged to leap three times through the flame." Pennant,
-in his _Tour in Scotland_, gives a like account, with other ceremonies.
-The custom existed in the Isle of Man on the eve of the 1st of May, of
-lighting _two_ fires on a hill-top, in honour of the pagan god Baal, and
-of driving cattle between those fires, as an antidote against murrain or
-any pestilent distemper for the year following. It was also customary to
-light these fires on St. John's Eve (June 23rd), and up to the present
-time a stranger is surprised to see on this day, as evening approaches,
-fires springing up in all directions around him, accompanied with the
-blowing of horns and other rejoicings.[39] Macpherson notices the
-_Beltein_ ceremonies in Ireland, and adds, "Beltein is also observed in
-Lancashire." On Horwich Moor are two heaps of stones, or cairns, which
-are called by the country people "The Wilder Lads." It is believed that
-on May Day Eve the Druids made prodigious fires on cairns, situated as
-these are, on lofty eminences, which being every one in sight of some
-other like fire, symbolized a universal celebration. These fires were in
-honour of _Beal_, or _Bealan_, latinized into _Belenus_, by which name
-the Gauls and their colonies denoted the sun; and to this time the
-first day of May is by the Irish called _La Bealtine_, or the Day of
-Belen's Fire. It bears a like name among the Highlanders of Scotland,
-and in the Isle of Man.[40]
-
-The last evening in October was called the "Teanlay Night," or "The Fast
-of All Souls." At the close of that day, till of late years, the hills
-which encircle the Fylde shone brightly with many a bonfire; the mosses
-of Marton, &c., rivalling them with their fires, kindled for the avowed
-object of succouring their friends, whose souls were supposed to be
-detained in purgatory. A field near Poulton in which the mummery of the
-"Teanlay" was once celebrated (a circle of men standing with bundles of
-straw, raised on high with forks), is named "Purgatory" by the old
-inhabitants. Formerly this custom was not confined to one village or
-town of the Fylde district, but was generally practised as a sacred
-ceremony.[41]
-
-
-BOGGARTS, GHOSTS, AND HAUNTED PLACES.
-
-What is a Boggart? A sort of ghost or sprite. But what is the meaning of
-the word Boggart? Brand says that "in the northern parts of England,
-ghost is pronounced _gheist_ and _guest_. Hence _bar-guest_, or
-_bar-gheist_. Many streets are haunted by a guest, who assumes many
-strange appearances, as a mastiff-dog, &c. It is a corruption of the
-Anglo-Saxon _gast_, spiritus, anima." Brand might have added that _bar_
-is a term for gate in the north, and that all the gates of York are
-named "bars," so that a _bar-gheist_ is literally a gate-ghost; and many
-are the tales of strange appearances suddenly seen perched on the top of
-a gate or fence, whence they sometimes leaped upon the shoulders of the
-scared passenger. Drake, in his _Eboracum_, says (Appendix, p. 7), "I
-have been so frightened with stories of the _barguest_ when I was a
-child, that I cannot help throwing away an etymology upon it. I suppose
-it comes from Anglo-Saxon _burh_, a town, and _gast_, a ghost, and so
-signifies a town sprite. N.B.--_Guest_ is in the Belgic and Teutonic
-softened into _gheist_ and _geyst_." The "Boggart Hole" therefore means
-the hollow haunted by the bar-gheist or gate-ghost.
-
-
-BOGGART HOLE CLOUGH.
-
-"Not far from the little snug, smoky village of Blakeley or Blackley,
-there lies one of the most romantic of dells, rejoicing in a state of
-singular seclusion, and in the oddest of Lancashire names, to wit, the
-'Boggart Hole.' [In the present generation, by pleonasm, the place is
-named 'Boggart Hole Clough.'] Rich in every requisite for picturesque
-beauty and poetical association, it is impossible for me (who am neither
-a painter nor a poet) to describe this dell as it should be described;
-and I will, therefore, only beg of thee, gentle reader, who,
-peradventure, mayst not have lingered in this classical neighbourhood,
-to fancy a deep, deep, dell, its steep sides fringed down with hazel,
-and beech, and fern, and thick undergrowth, and clothed at the bottom
-with the richest and greenest sward in the world. You descend, clinging
-to the trees, and scrambling as best you may, and now you stand on
-haunted ground! Tread softly, for this is the Boggart's Clough, and see,
-in yonder dark corner, and beneath the projecting mossy stone, where
-that dusky sullen cave yawns before us, like a bit of Salvator's best,
-there lurks that strange elf, the sly and mischievous Boggart. Bounce! I
-see him coming; oh no, it was only a hare bounding from her form; there
-it goes--there!"--Such is the introduction to a tale of a boggart, told
-by Crofton Croker, in Roby's _Traditions of Lancashire_; but which, if
-memory serve us faithfully, is but a localized version of a story told
-of an Irish sprite, and also of a Scotch brownie; for in all three tales
-when the farmer and his family are "flitting" in order to get away from
-the nocturnal disturbance, the sprite pops up his head from the cart,
-exclaiming, "Ay, neighbour, we're flitting!" Tradition, which has
-preserved the name of the clough selected by the Lancashire boggart for
-his domicile, has failed to record any particular pranks of this
-individual elf, and we can only notice this charming little clough, as
-conveying by its popular name the only remaining vestige of its lost
-traditions. Perhaps the best story of this clough is that graphically
-told by Bamford[42] of three friends seeking by a charm (consisting in
-gathering three grains of St. John's fern seed there), to win for one of
-them the love of a damsel who was indifferent to him.
-
-
-BOGGARTS OR GHOSTS IN OLD HALLS.
-
-There is scarcely an old house, or hall, of any antiquity in Lancashire,
-that cannot boast of that proud distinction over the houses of
-yesterday, a ghost or boggart. _Radcliffe Tower_ was haunted by a black
-dog; perhaps in commemoration of the Fair Ellen of Radcliffe, who, by
-order of her stepmother, was murdered by the master cook, and cut up
-small, and of her flesh a venison pasty made for her father's dinner!
-
-_Smithells Hall_, near Bolton, was formerly haunted by the ghost of the
-martyr George Marsh, whose stamped footstep indenting a flagstone, is
-still shown there.
-
-_Ince Hall_ stands about a mile from Wigan, on the left-hand of the high
-road to Bolton. It is a very conspicuous object, its ancient and
-well-preserved front--one of those black and white half-timbered facades
-now almost confined to the two counties palatine of Lancashire and
-Cheshire--generally attracting the notice and inquiry of travellers.
-About a mile to the south-east stands another place of the same name,
-once belonging to the Gerards of Bryn. The manor is now the property of
-Charles Walmsley, Esq., of Westwood, near Wigan. The two mansions _Ince
-Hall_ and _Ince Manor House_, are sometimes confounded together in
-topographical inquiries; and it is not now certain to which of them
-properly belongs a tradition about a forged will and a ghost, on which
-Mr. Roby has founded a very graphic story, in his _Traditions of
-Lancashire_. There are the Boggart of _Clegg Hall_, near Rochdale; the
-_Clayton Hall_ Boggart, Droylsden; the _Clock House_ Boggart, in the
-same neighbourhood; the _Thackergate_ Boggart, near Alderdale; and many
-others: indeed they are too numerous for us to attempt a full
-enumeration. Mr. Higson observes[43] that few sombre or out-of-the-way
-places, retired nooks and corners, or sequestered by-paths, escaped the
-reputation of being haunted. Many domiciles had their presiding boggart,
-and _feeorin'_ [fairies] swarmed at every turn of the dark old lanes,
-and arch-boggarts held revel at every "three-road-end." After dusk, each
-rustle of the leaves, or sigh of the night wind through the branches, to
-the timid wayfarer heralded the instant and unceremonious appearance of
-old wizards and witches, "Nut Nans," and "Clapcans," or the terrific
-exploits of headless trunks, alias "men beawt yeds," or other
-traditionary "sperrits," hobgoblins, and sprites, or the startling
-semblances of black dogs, phantoms, and other indescribable apparitions.
-Aqueous nymphs or _nixies_, yclept "Grindylow," and "Jenny Green Teeth,"
-lurked at the bottom of pits, and with their long, sinewy arms dragged
-in and drowned children who ventured too near. On autumnal evenings, the
-flickering flame (carburetted hydrogen, spontaneously ignited) of the
-"Corpse Candle," "Will-o'-th'-Wisp," or "Jack" or "Peg-a-Lantern" (for
-the sex was not clearly ascertained), performed his or her fantastic and
-impossible jumps in the plashy meadows near Edge Lane, to the terror of
-many a simple-minded rustic. Fairies, also, were believed to commit many
-depredations; such as eating the children's porridge, nocturnally riding
-out the horses, loosing the cows in the shippon, or churning the milk
-whilst "calving," by the fireside, and stealing the butter; and hence,
-behind many a door, as yet observable in Clayton, both of dwelling and
-shippon, was carefully nailed a worn horse-shoe, believed to be a potent
-counter-charm or talisman against their freaks and fancies. There were
-certain localities in the township of Droylsden notorious as the
-rendezvous or favourite promenades of boggarts and feeorin', which after
-nightfall few persons could muster pluck sufficient to linger in, or
-even pass by, for--
-
- "Grey superstition's whisper dread,
- Debarr'd the spot to vulgar tread."
-
-Manifestly pre-eminent was "th' owd Green Lone," which "Jem Hill, th'
-king o' Dreighlesdin," used to assert "swaarmt wi' fairees, witches, un'
-boggerts, un' which nob'dy could mester bur hissel'." The boggart
-located at Thackergate, near Alderdale, has well-nigh scared many a
-sober person out of his senses. Herds of four-footed boggarts used to
-issue from a pit at East End, in form resembling "great big dhogs, wi'
-great glarin' een, as big as tay-cups." The boggart at the
-croft-tenter's lodge (South) Clock-house, as fancy dictated, stalked
-through the chamber and stripped the bedclothes off the sleepers; or,
-assuming gigantic proportions and snow-white vestments, perched in the
-solemn yew-tree, a startling object by contrast. At last, being
-exorcised by an array of divines, it was _laid_ for a time, beneath its
-favourite tree. A field-path from Fairfield to Ashton Hill-lane was
-nightly traversed by a being of another world, mostly representing a
-shadowy lady, draped according to whim, either in a loose white robe, or
-in rustling black silk. For a certain distance she glided in advance of
-the pedestrian, and then, by suddenly vanishing, most likely left his
-hair standing on end. At one of the Greenside farms a murder was said to
-have been committed in the shippon; and the exact spot was supposed to
-be indicated by the impossibility of securely fastening a cow in one
-particular boose; for, however carefully its occupant was chained
-overnight, next morning she was sure to be found at large, and once was
-actually discovered on the shippon balks. Thither, it was believed, the
-cow had been carried by supernatural agency; but, be that as it may, it
-was necessary to lower her cautiously down, with the aid of ropes and
-blocks. At a cottage adjoining, a boggart varied its amusements by
-drumming on the old oaken chest, still preserved; or, growing
-emboldened, shook the hangings of the bed, or rustled amongst the
-clothes; the alarmed occupants sometimes in despair rolling up the
-coverlet, and unavailingly whirling it at their invisible tormentor. At
-a neighbouring farm-house, amongst other vagaries, the boggart would
-snatch up the infant, whilst asleep between its parents, and, without
-awakening them, would harmlessly deposit it on the hearthstone,
-downstairs. "Clayton Ho'" [Hall] was of course honoured with a boggart,
-which at dead of night diversified its pranks by snatching the clothes
-from the beds, trailing heavy iron weights on the floors, or rattling
-ponderous chains through the crazy apartments. These pranks becoming
-insufferable, the help of a clergyman from the parish church was
-obtained; and fortunately, with the aid of counter-spells and
-incantations, he succeeded in _laying_ the spirit for ever, declaring
-that,
-
- "Whilst ivy climbs and holly is green,
- Clayton Hall Boggart shall no more be seen."
-
-Even yet one room in the mansion is named "the Bloody Chamber," from
-some supposed stains of human gore on the oaken floor planks; which,
-however, in reality are only natural red tinges of the wood, denoting
-the presence of iron. Even since the formation of the new road, J.
-W----, the last of the ancient race of boggart-seers in the township,
-used to combat with feeorin' between East End and Droylsden toll-gate;
-but as he died a few years ago without bequeathing his gift, he
-(happily) carried with him his mantle to the grave. At a period just
-within memory, oft, after sunset, has the weary and tardy pedestrian
-quickened his speed on approaching some lonely place, by remembering how
-its tutelar spirit or Boggart could assume at will the shape of a
-rabbit, dog, bear, or still more fearful form. On its appearance, of
-course, the wayfarer fled in affright, and from fear and unwonted
-exertion, often reached home utterly exhausted. Next day the story would
-be widely circulated through the thinly populated district, detailing at
-length (and of course gathering minuteness and improvement in its
-transmission), how "Owd Yethurt o' Grunsho," or "Lung Tum woife," "th'
-neet afore wur welly ta'en by a great black Boggart, wi' great lung
-hurms, un' a whiskin' tail, un' yure as black as soot, un' rowlin' e'en
-as big as saucers." The decadence of all these old superstitions is to
-be attributed to a variety of causes. Straight, well-paved roads;
-increased intellectual activity in useful channels, informing the minds
-of one locality with the ideas of another, the publication of scientific
-works; and lastly, according to one aged unbeliever, the introduction of
-"Owd Ned [the steam-engine], un' lung chimblies; fact'ry folk havin'
-summat else t'mind nur wanderin' ghosts un' rollickin' sperrits." The
-same authority archly declared as a clincher, "There's no Boggarts neaw,
-un' iv ther' were, folk han grown so wacken, they'd soon catch 'em."[44]
-
-
-HOUSE BOGGARTS, OR LABOURING GOBLINS.
-
-These humbler classes of boggarts are by turns both useful and
-troublesome to the farmers of the district where they choose to reside.
-Syke Lumb Farm, near Blackburn, is reputed to be still visited by one
-of these anomalous beings, and many of his mad pranks are still talked
-of and believed in the neighbourhood. When in a good humour, this noted
-goblin will milk the cows, pull the hay, fodder the cattle, harness the
-horses, load the carts, and stack the crops. When irritated by the
-utterance of some unguarded expression or mark of disrespect, either
-from the farmer or his servants, the cream-mugs are smashed to atoms; no
-butter can be obtained by churning; the horses and other cattle are
-turned loose or driven into the woods; two cows will sometimes be found
-fastened in the same stall; no hay can be pulled from the mow; and all
-the while the wicked imp sits grinning with delight upon one of the
-cross-beams in the barn. At other times the horses are unable to draw
-the empty carts across the farm-yard; if loaded, they are upset; whilst
-the cattle tremble with fear, not at any visible cause. Nor do the
-inmates of the house experience any better or gentler usage. During the
-night the clothes are said to be violently torn from off the beds of the
-offending parties, whilst invisible hands drag these individuals down
-the stone stairs by the legs, one step at a time, after a more
-uncomfortable manner than we need describe. Hothershall Hall, near
-Ribchester, was formerly the scene of similar exploits; but the goblin
-is understood to have been "laid" under the roots of a large laurel tree
-at the end of the house, and will not be able to molest the family so
-long as the tree exists. It is a common opinion in that part of the
-country that the roots have to be moistened with milk on certain
-occasions, in order to prolong its existence, and also to preserve the
-power of the spell under which the goblin is laid. None but the Roman
-Catholic priesthood are supposed to have the power of "laying an evil
-spirit," and hence they have always the honour to be cited in our local
-legends. Sometimes, too, they have the credit of outwitting the goblins;
-and many an old farm residence has the reputation of having thus been
-freed from these imps of darkness till they can spin a rope from the
-sands of the Ribble. The mansion at Towneley does not escape the
-imputation of having its "_Boggart_," although its visits are now
-limited to once in seven years, when its thirst for vengeance has to be
-satisfied by the untimely death of one of the residents at the Hall. A
-Sir John Towneley is supposed to have injured the poor of the district,
-nearly four hundred years ago, by "laying-in" a considerable portion of
-common to his park, and, as a punishment for this offence, his soul is
-said to haunt the scenes of his oppression. The peasantry still aver
-"that the old knight's spirit, being unable to rest, wanders about the
-mansion, and may be heard over the very parts taken in, crying, in most
-piteous tones--
-
- "Be warned! Lay out! Be warned! Lay out!
- Around Hore-law and Hollin-hey clough:
- To her children give back the widow's cot,
- For you and yours there is still enough."[45]
-
-The popular story of "The Boggart Flitting" is common to both Lancashire
-and Yorkshire; and indeed to most of the nations in the North of Europe.
-
-Of boggarts the Rev. William Thornber observes,[46] that there were
-several different kinds, having their haunts in that part of the Fylde
-near Blackpool; as, for instance, the wandering ghost of the homicide or
-the suicide; that of the steward of injustice, or that of the victim of
-a cruel murder; again, the lubber-fiends, the horse-boggarts, and the
-house-boggarts, or industrious, yet mischievous imps, haunting
-dwellings. He names, "The headless Boggart of White-gate Lane," as a
-sample of the first class. So was "The Boggart of Staining Hall," near
-Blackpool, said to be the wandering ghost of a Scotchman who was
-murdered there near a tree, which has since marked the deed by perfuming
-the soil around with a sweet odour of thyme. Of another kind were those
-whose appearance was the forerunner of death in some families. The
-Walmsleys, of Poulton-le-Fylde, he adds, were haunted by a boggart of
-this description, always making its appearance with alarming noises
-before the decease of one of the family.
-
-Of the lubber-fiends, house-boggarts, or brownies, so strikingly
-described by Milton,[47] Mr. Thornber mentions the ancient one of
-Rayscar and Inskip, which at times kindly housed the grain, collected
-the horses, and got them ready for the market; but at other times played
-the most mischievous pranks. The famous "Boggart of Hackensall Hall"
-had the appearance of a huge horse, which was very industrious if
-treated with kindness. Every night it was indulged with a fire, before
-which it was frequently seen reclining; and when deprived of this
-indulgence by neglect, it expressed its anger by fearful outcries.
-
-
-HORNBY PARK MISTRESS AND MARGARET BRACKIN.
-
-The following story is told and believed by some persons in Hornby. The
-Park Mistress may be supposed to be the ghost of Lady Harrington, who
-committed murder three hundred years ago. Margaret Brackin was born in
-1745, and died in 1795. The dialect is that of the locality:--
-
- "In days that oud folks tell on still,
- Meg Brackin went up Windy Bank;
- Shou lated kinlin' on the hill,
- Till owr t' Lake Mountains t' sun it sank.
-
- Nat lang at efter t' sun was set,
- And shou hed fill'd her brat wi' sticks,
- Shou sid aside at t' Park wood yett,
- A woman stan'in mang the wicks.
-
- T' leaves on t' trees, they owm'ered t' land,
- And fadin' was the summer light,
- When Marget sid that woman stand
- Donn'd like a ghoost o' oor i' white.
-
- Marget was fear'd, but spak and ex'd,
- 'Hey Missis! let me gang wi' ye,
- I hope as that ye'll nut be vext,
- But it is gitten dark and dree.'
-
- T' Park Mistress e'en shin'd o' wi' leet;
- Shou whyatly cam te Marget's side;
- T' gerss didn't bend underneath her feet;
- Shou seem'd in t' air te float and glide.
-
- As soon's shou cam whare Marget stood,
- Shou gript a tight houd on her hand;
- Shou led her first intul t' Park wood,
- Then back and forret o' owr t' land.
-
- They kept na road, they kept na path,
- They went thro' brackins, scrogs, and briar,
- Marget shou soon was out of breath,
- But t' lady didn't seem te tire.
-
- They baath com down te Wenning's brink,
- And Marget's throat was dry wi' dread,
- But shou dursn't ex te stop and drink,
- Saa forret still that woman led.
-
- Owr shillar and rough staans they trod,
- Intu t' Wenning, then out fra t' stream;
- Surlie their walkin' wasn't snod,
- T' way they travell'd was naan saa weam.
-
- Marget lous'd t' strings of her brat,
- And trail'd it gerss and bushes through,
- Till deg'd and damp and wet it gat;
- Then suck'd it out for t' cooling dew.
-
- Fra Weaver's Ayr they went up t' wood,
- Now gaain' straight and then aslant,
- They niver stopt, they niver stood,
- But raac'd up t' brow saa rough and brant.
-
- Marget could niver gradely say
- Where nesht wi' t' ghoost shou went that neet;
- On Windy Bank, when it was day,
- They fun' her liggin, spent wi' freet.
-
- Marget hed been stout and throddy,
- But t' walk she tuk that summer neet,
- Left lile fatness on her body;
- At efter shou was thin and leet."
-
-
-BOGGARTS IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY.
-
-Having fallen into conversation with a working man on our road to Holme
-Chapel, we asked him if people in those parts were now ever annoyed by
-beings of another world. Affecting the _esprit fort_, he boldly
-answered, "Noa! the country's too full o' folk;" while his whole manner,
-and especially his countenance, as plainly said "Yes!" A boy who stood
-near was more honest. "O, yes!" he exclaimed, turning pale; "the Boggart
-has driven William Clarke out of his house; he flitted last Friday."
-"Why," I asked; "what did the Boggart do?" "O, he wouldn't let 'em
-sleep; he stripp'd off the clothes." "Was that all?" "I canna' say,"
-answered the lad, in a tone which showed he was afraid to repeat all he
-had heard; "but they're gone, and the house is empty. You can go and see
-for yoursel', if you loike. Will's a plasterer, and the house is in
-Burnley Wood, on Brown Hills."[48]
-
-Edwin Waugh, in his story of "_The Grave of Grislehurst Boggart_,"[49]
-says, the most notable boggart of the hilly district towards Blackstone
-Edge, was the Clegg Ho' Boggart, still the theme of many a winter's tale
-among the people of the hills above Clegg Hall. The proverb, "Aw 'm
-heere agen, like Clegg Ho' Boggart," is common there, and in all the
-surrounding villages.... Boggarts appear, however, to have been more
-numerous than they are now upon the country side, when working people
-wove what was called "one lamb's wool" in a day; but when it came to
-pass that they had to weave "three lambs' wools" in a day, and the
-cotton trade arose, boggarts, and fairies, and feeorin' of all kinds,
-began to flee away from the clatter of shuttles. As to the Grislehurst
-Boggart, here is part of the story as told to Waugh, or by him:--"Whau
-it isn't aboon a fortnit sin' th' farmer's wife at the end theer yerd
-seed summat i' th' dyhed time o' th' neet; an' hoo war welly thrut eawt
-o' bed, too, besides--so then" ... "Th' pranks 'at it's played abeawt
-this plaze at time an' time, 'ud flay ony wick soul to yer tell on ...
-unyawkin' th' byes, an' turnin' carts an' things o'er i' th' deep neet
-time; an' shiftin' stuff up and deawn th' heawse when folk are i' bed;
-it's rayther flaysome yo may depend."
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] See Thorpe's _Northern Mythology_, vol. i. pp. 118-231.
-
-[2] See Mallet's _Northern Antiquities_, Keightley's _Mythology of
-Greece and Rome_, and Kelly's _Indo-European Tradition and Folk-lore_.
-
-[3] Keightley's _Fairy Mythology_, pp. 2, 3.
-
-[4] Roby's _Traditions of Lancashire_, p. xiv.
-
-[5] It may be stated that this introductory essay is abridged from two
-papers read before the Historical Society of Lancashire and Cheshire, in
-1859 and 1860, which were written long before the writer saw any of the
-almost identical general deductions and conclusions in Dr. Dasent's
-introduction to his _Popular Tales from the Norse_.
-
-[6] This popular opinion appears to be very ancient and wide-spread; for
-it has been noticed by Moses as prevailing in Egypt.--Exodus xi. 5-7.
-
-[7] The use of the old style in effect, is not yet extinct in
-Lancashire. The writer knows an old man, R. H., of Habergham, about 77
-years of age, who always reckons the changes of the seasons in this
-manner. He alleges the practice of his grandfather and father in support
-of his method; and states with much confidence that--"Perliment didn't
-change t' seeasuns wen thay chang'd t' day o't' munth."
-
-[8] _Conybeare_, p. 242.
-
-[9] Charnock's _Breviary of Natural Philosophy_ in Ashmole's _Theatrum
-Chemicum_, p. 297.
-
-[10] _Companion to Almanac_ for 1837, p. 22.
-
-[11] Maier's _Symbola Ameae Mensae_.
-
-[12] Thomson's _Annals of Philosophy_, n. s., vol. vi. p. 241.
-
-[13] Ben Jonson, in his play of the _Alchemist_, has the following
-lines:--
-
- "But when you see th' effects of the Great Medium,
- Of which one part projected on a hundred
- Of Mercury, or Venus, or the Moon,
- Shall turn it to as many of the Sun;
- Nay to a thousand, so ad infinitum,
- You will believe me."
-
-[14] Godwin's _Lives of Necromancers_, Art. Dee. Dr. Dee's _Diary_
-(Camden Soc.) contains many references to his alchemical pursuits.--See
-pp. 7, 22, 25, 27, 28, 37, and 63.
-
-[15] Brewster's _Life of Sir Isaac Newton_, vol. ii. p. 376.
-
-[16] Preface to _Bibl. Chem. Curiosa_, quoted by Thomson, p. 18. For a
-list of Boyle's works connected with alchemy, see the _Philosophical
-Epitaphs_, by W. C.
-
-[17] _Pictorial History of England_, vol. ii. p. 207.
-
-[18] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[19] _F[oe]dera_, vol. ix. p. 379.
-
-[20] _Rot. Parl._, vol. v. p. 314_a_.
-
-[21] _Rot. Parl._, vol. v. p. 314_a_.
-
-[22] _Worthies_, &c., p. 122.
-
-[23] For a copy of this patent in the original Latin, see Baines's
-_Lancashire_, vol. i. p. 406.
-
-[24] Pennant's _London_.
-
-[25] _History of his Life and Times._
-
-[26] Lilly's _Life and Times_, p. 224.
-
-[27] Whatton's _Memoir_ in Baines's _Lancashire_, vol. ii. p. 367.
-
-[28] From Barnaby Googe's Translation of the _Regnum Papisticum_ (or
-Popish Kingdom) of Naogeorgus, fol. 41 _b_.
-
-[29] _Golden Legend._
-
-[30] Hone's _Every-Day Book_, p. 141.
-
-[31] See Durand's _Rationale_.
-
-[32] Strutt's _Manners and Customs_, vol. iii. p. 176.
-
-[33] Ray's _Collection of Old English Proverbs_.
-
-[34] P. P., in _Notes and Queries_, vol. ix. p. 569.
-
-[35] Thornber's _History of Blackpool_, p. 342.
-
-[36] Toland's _History of the Druids_.
-
-[37] Hone's _Every-Day Book_, vol. i. p. 594.
-
-[38] _Gentleman's Magazine_, February, 1795.
-
-[39] Mr. William Harrison's notes on Waldron's _Description of the Isle
-of Man_, p. 125.
-
-[40] Hampson's _Medii AEvi Kalendarium_, vol. i. p. 252.
-
-[41] Rev. W. Thornber's _History of Blackpool_.
-
-[42] _Passages in the Life of a Radical_, vol. i. p. 130.
-
-[43] _History of Droylsden_, p. 67.
-
-[44] Mr. John Higson's _Notices of Droylsden_.
-
-[45] See _Pictorial History of Lancashire_, p. 189, and Whitaker's
-_History of Whalley_, p. 342.
-
-[46] _History of Blackpool_, p. 332.
-
-[47] In his _L'Allegro_, where he
-
- "Tells how the drudging goblin sweat
- To earn the cream-bowl duly set,
- When, in one night, ere glimpse of morn,
- His shad'wy flail had thresh'd the corn,
- That ten day-labours could not end;
- Then lies him down the _lubber-fiend_,
- And stretch'd out all the chimney's length,
- Basks at the fire his hairy strength,
- And, cropful, out of doors he flings,
- Ere the first cock his matin rings."
-
-[48] _Pictorial History of Lancashire._
-
-[49] _Sketches of Lancashire Life_, p. 192.
-
-
-
-
-CHARMS AND SPELLS.
-
-
-These may be placed in two classes--those directed against evil beings,
-witchcraft, &c., and those which may be termed in their object curative
-of "all the ills that flesh is heir to." First as to
-
-
-CHARMS AND SPELLS AGAINST EVIL BEINGS.
-
-These are usually supplied for a consideration by the fortune-tellers,
-astrologers, or "wise men" of a neighbourhood. The following is a
-correct copy of one of these documents which was found over the door of
-a house in the neighbourhood of Burnley. Its occupier had experienced
-"ill luck," and he thus sought protection from all evil-doers:--
-
-"Sun, Moon, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, Saturn, Trine, Sextile,
-Dragon's Head, Dragon's Tail, I charge you all to gard this hause from
-all evils spirits whatever, and gard it from all Desorders, and from
-aney thing being taken wrangasly, and give this famaly good Ealth &
-Welth."
-
-Another individual, well known to the writer, was so far convinced that
-certain casualties that happened to his cattle arose from the practice
-of witchcraft, that he unconsciously resorted to Baal-worship, and
-consumed a live calf in the fire, in order to counteract the influences
-of his unknown enemies. At the same time, almost every door about his
-house had its horse-shoe nailed to it as a charm, to protect all within
-it from demons and witches.
-
-
-A CHARM, WRITTEN IN CYPHER, AGAINST WITCHCRAFT AND EVIL SPIRITS.
-
-Early in the nineteenth century, some men engaged in pulling down a
-barn, or shippon, at West Bradford, about two miles north of Clitheroe,
-were attracted by seeing a small square piece of wood fall from one of
-the beams, and from it dropped a paper, folded as a small letter, but
-measuring, when opened, 7-1/4 by 6 inches. A sort of superscription was
-in large and unknown characters, and inside the paper was nearly covered
-with a species of hieroglyphics, mixed with strange symbols; and in the
-top left corner a table or square of thirty-six small squares, filled
-with characters in red ink, the great bulk of the writing being in black
-ink. The charm belongs to Jeremiah Garnett, Esq., of Roefield,
-Clitheroe, and it was first deciphered by his brother, the late Rev.
-Richard Garnett, of the British Museum, in May, 1825. It is this
-gentleman's explanation, with a very few additions and corrections by
-the present writer, the substance of which is now appended:--The table
-in the top corner is a sort of magic square, called by astrologers "The
-Table of the Sun." It consists of six rows of six small squares each,
-and is so arranged that the sum of the figures in every row of six
-squares, whether counted vertically, horizontally, or diagonally,
-amounts to 111, and the sum total of the table to 666--a favourite
-magical number, being that of "the beast."[50] To mystify the thing as
-much as possible the numerals are expressed by letters, or rather by a
-sort of cypher, chiefly formed from the Greek alphabet. Thus 1 is
-represented by _a_; 2 = _e_; 3 = _i_; 4 = _o_; 5 = _u_; 6 = _l_; 7 =
-_m_; 8 = _n_; 9 = _r_; and 0 = _z_. In a tablet, or space at the top of
-the paper, flanking this table, are five mystical characters, or
-symbols, in red ink. The first consists of the symbols of the sun, and
-of the constellation Leo, which, in astrology, is "the sun's own house,"
-and where, of course, he is supposed to have the greatest power. A word
-in black-ink cyphers, under these symbols, is _Machen_, the cabalistic
-name of "the third [or fourth] heaven;" and the Archangel Michael being
-supposed to preside over the sphere [and to be the "Angel of the Lord's
-Day"], his seal, or cypher, is introduced below these symbols--a series
-of joined lines and swirls, like some long word written in one of the
-older English shorthands. [This figure will be found under "The Lord's
-Day," in the Heptameron of one Peter de Abano.] In cyphers below, in
-black ink, is written his name, "Michael." The next cabalistic character
-represents "the _Intelligence_ of the Sun," and over it, in cypher or
-Greek letters, is written "intelligence." Under this is another
-cabalistic symbol, denoting the "Spirit of the Sun," the word "spirit"
-being written within it. In astrology, every planet is supposed to have
-two beings, or spirits, attached to it, and called its Intelligence and
-its Spirit. The last figure (which contains in a sort of quartering the
-word _sigil_, seal) is "the seal of the Sun" himself, in astrological
-language. All these symbols show that the charm was meant to be put in
-operation on a Sunday, that being the day of the Archangel Michael, as
-well as of the sun. These symbols and table occupy the upper third of
-the paper, the remaining two-thirds being filled with the words of the
-charm itself, in fourteen lines, of a sort of cypher-writing, in which
-the five vowels are represented by a sort of arbitrary character, as are
-most of the consonants, g, l, m, n, and p, being written as Greek
-letters. The fourteen lines may be thus rendered in ordinary letters;
-and it may be supposed that whoever pronounces the incantation, makes
-the sign of the cross wherever it is indicated in the writing:--
-
-Line 1. "apanton [or awanton] + hora + camab. + naadgrass + pynavet
-ayias + araptenas.
-
-2. "+ quo + signasque + payns [or pagns ? pagus] + sut gosikl +
-tetragrammaton +
-
-3. "inverma + amo + {th} [apparently an abbreviation for _Theos_, God] +
-dominus + deus + hora + [here a hole in the paper has destroyed a word]
-+ fiat + fiat + fiat +
-
-4. "ut dicitur decimo septimo capitulo Sancti Matthaei a vigesimo carmine
-
-5. "fide demoveatis montes, fiat secundum fidem, si sit, vel fuerit
-
-6. "ut cunque fascinum vel daemon habitat vel perturbat hanc
-
-7. "personam, vel hunc locum, vel hanc bestiam, adjuro te, abire
-
-8. "Sine perturbatione, molestia, vel tumultu minime, nomine
-
-9. "Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sanctu. Amen. Pater noster qui es
-
-10. "in c[oe]lis, sanctificetur nomen tuum, veniat regnum tuum, fiat
-voluntas
-
-11. "tuo, sicut in c[oe]lo etiam in terra, panem nostrum quotidianum da
-
-12. "nobis in diem, et remitte nobis peccata nostra, etenim ipsi
-
-13. "remittimus omnibus qui nobis debent; et ne nos inducas in tentat-
-
-14. "-ionem, sed libera nos a malo. Fiat."
-
- * * * * *
-
-It will be seen that the first three lines of this charm are a sort of
-gibberish, with an admixture of Greek and Latin words, constituting in
-itself a charm, supposed to be efficacious in expelling or restraining
-evil spirits. With the fourth line, then, we begin our translation.
-
-"As it is said in the seventeenth chapter of St. Matthew, at the
-twentieth verse, 'By faith ye may remove mountains: be it according to
-[my] faith,'[51] if there is, or ever shall be, witchcraft [or
-enchantment] or evil spirit, that haunts or troubles this person, or
-this place, or this beast [or these cattle], I adjure thee to depart,
-without disturbance, molestation, or trouble in the least, in the name
-of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen." [Then
-follows the Lord's Prayer in Latin, ending with the word "Fiat" (be it
-done), instead of Amen.] These words are endorsed or written outside the
-paper in two lines:--
-
- "Agla + On [or En] Tetragrammaton."
-
-In a charm cited in the _Heptameron, or Mercurial Elements_ of Peter de
-Abano, these are called "the three secret names." The first two are
-names given to the Deity by the Jewish cabalists. The third (which is
-also the last word in the second line of the charm) is one also
-frequently in use amongst Talmudists and Jewish writers, meaning
-literally "four-lettered," as descriptive of the sacred and
-unpronounceable name ("Jehovah," written in Hebrew by four letters). The
-word is here endorsed, as if to authenticate the whole charm, and to
-show that it is the production of an artist who understood his business;
-for "tetragrammaton," and "fiat," are words of such potency, that a
-charm without them would be of no efficacy whatever. The Rev. Richard
-Garnett adds to his account of this charm (in May, 1825):--"I should
-think that the document is of no great antiquity, probably not more than
-thirty or forty years old. It was doubtless manufactured by some country
-'wise man,' a regular dealer in such articles. There are, I believe,
-several persons within twenty miles of Blackburn, who still carry on a
-trade of this sort."
-
- * * * * *
-
-[In the _Heptameron_, already quoted, is "The Conjuration of the Lord's
-Day," which runs thus:--"I conjure and confirm upon you, ye strong and
-holy angels of God ... [here follow various names of angels, including
-those 'who rule in the fourth heaven'], and by the name of his star,
-which is _Sol_, and by his sign, and by the immense name of the living
-God, and by all the names aforesaid--I conjure thee, Michael, O! great
-angel, who art chief ruler of the Lord's Day," &c.].
-
-Amongst other charms against evil may be named that of our ancestors,
-who, when eating eggs, were careful to break the shells, lest the
-witches should use them to their disadvantage. We do the same for a
-similar reason; it is accounted unlucky to leave them whole. They
-avoided cutting their nails on a Friday, because bad luck would follow;
-but we have improved upon their practice, and lay down the whole theory
-as follows:--
-
- "Cut your nails on a Monday, cut them for news;
- Cut them on Tuesday, a new pair of shoes;
- Cut them on Wednesday, cut them for health;
- Cut them on Thursday, cut them for wealth;
- Cut them on Friday, cut them for woe;
- Cut them on Saturday, a journey you'll go;
- Cut them on Sunday, you cut them for evil,
- For all the next week you'll be ruled by the Devil."
-
-Most grandmothers will exclaim, "God bless you!" when they hear a child
-sneeze, and they sum up the philosophy of the subject with the following
-lines, which used to delight the writer in days of his childhood:--
-
- "Sneeze on a Monday, you sneeze for danger;
- Sneeze on a Tuesday, you kiss a stranger;
- Sneeze on a Wednesday, you sneeze for a letter;
- Sneeze on a Thursday, for something better;
- Sneeze on a Friday, you sneeze for sorrow;
- Sneeze on a Saturday, your sweetheart to-morrow;
- Sneeze on a Sunday, your safety seek,
- The Devil will have you the whole of the week."
-
-These lines may be taken either as charms or spells to produce the
-effect predicted; or as omens or warnings of the results to follow. In
-most parts of Lancashire it is customary for children to repeat the
-following invocation every evening on retiring to bed, after saying the
-Lord's Prayer and the Apostles' Creed:--
-
- "Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,
- Bless the bed that I lie on;
- There are four corners to my bed,
- And four angels overspread,
- Two at the feet, two at the head.
-
- If any ill thing me betide,
- Beneath your wings my body hide.
- Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,
- Bless the bed that I lie on. Amen."[52]
-
-The influence of the "_evil eye_" is felt as strongly in this county as
-in any other part of the world, and various means are resorted to in
-order to prevent its effects. "Drawing blood above the mouth" of the
-person suspected is the favourite antidote in the neighbourhood of
-Burnley; and in the district of Craven, a few miles within the borders
-of Yorkshire, a person who was well disposed towards his neighbours is
-believed to have slain a pear-tree which grew opposite his house by
-directing towards it "the first morning glances" of his evil eye.[53]
-Spitting three times in the person's face; turning a live coal on the
-fire; and exclaiming, "The Lord be with us," are other means of averting
-its influence.
-
-In Lancashire our boys spit over their fingers in order to screw up
-their courage to the fighting point, or to give them luck in the battle.
-Sometimes they do this as a sort of asseveration, to attest their
-innocence of some petty crime laid to their charge. Travellers and
-recruits still spit upon a stone and then throw it away, in order to
-insure a prosperous journey. Hucksters, market-people, &c., always spit
-upon the first money they receive in the morning, in order to insure
-ready sale and "good luck" during the day. "Hansell (they say) is always
-lucky when well wet."
-
-The ancients performed certain rites and ceremonies at the changes of
-the moon; and hence that luminary has added some curious items to the
-popular creed. _Old Mother Bunch's Garland_ is an authority on these
-matters, and amongst many other things it teaches expectant females who
-desire to pry into futurity, to cross their hands on the appearance of
-the new moon, and exclaim--
-
- "All hail! new Moon; all hail to thee!
- I pray thee, good Moon, declare to me
- This night who my true love shall be."
-
-We have noticed, in the introductory chapter, various other minor charms
-and spells to avert evil, or "bad luck," and to secure "good luck" or
-fortune for a coming period, usually a year.
-
-
-THE CROW CHARM AND THE LADY-BIRD CHARM.
-
-The following charms are repeated by children throughout Lancashire and
-Yorkshire:--
-
-_Crow Charm._
-
- "Crow, crow, get out of my sight,
- Or else I'll eat thy liver and lights."
-
-_Lady-Bird Charm._
-
- "Lady-bird, lady-bird, eigh [hie] thy way home,
- Thy house is on fire, thy children all roam;
- Except little Nan, who sits in her pan,
- Weaving gold laces as fast as she can."
-
-I remember as a child sitting out of doors on an evening of a warm
-summer or autumn day, and repeating the crow charm to flights of rooks,
-as they winged home to their rookery. The charm was chanted so long as a
-crow remained in sight, their final disappearing being to my mind strong
-proof of the efficacy of the charm. The lady-bird charm is repeated to
-the insect (the _Coccinella septempunctata_ of Linnaeus), the common
-Seven-spotted Lady-bird, to be found in every field and garden during
-summer. The lady-bird is placed upon the child's open hand, and the
-charm is repeated until the insect takes to flight. The warmth and
-moisture of the hand no doubt facilitate this, although the child fully
-believes in the moving power of the charm. The lady-bird is also known
-as _lady-cow_, _cow-lady_, and is sometimes addressed as
-"_Cusha-cow-lady_."[54]
-
-One of the present editors has often joined in the lady-bird charm, in
-the East Riding of Yorkshire, where it ran--
-
- "Cusha-coo-lady, fly away home,
- Thy house is a-fire and all thy bairns gone," &c.
-
-
-PIMPERNEL.
-
-According to a MS. on Magic, preserved in Chetham's Library, Manchester,
-"the herb pimpernel is good to prevent witchcraft, as Mother Bumby doth
-affirm;" and the following lines must be used when it is gathered:--
-
- "Herb pimpernel I have thee found
- Growing upon Christ Jesus' ground;
- The same gift the Lord Jesus gave unto thee,
- When He shed his blood upon the tree.
- Arise up, pimpernel, and go with me,
- And God bless me,
- And all that shall wear thee. Amen."
-
-Say this fifteen days together, twice a day; morning early fasting, and
-in the evening full.--(_MS. Ibid._)
-
-
-THE MOUNTAIN ASH, OR WICKEN OR WIGGEN TREE.
-
-The anti-witching properties of this tree are held in very high esteem
-in the northern counties of England. No witch will come near it; and it
-is believed that its smallest twig crossing the path of a witch, will
-effectually stop her career. To prevent the churn being bewitched, so
-that the butter will not come, the churn-staff must be made of the
-wiggen-tree. So cattle must be protected from witchery by sprigs of
-wiggen over or in the shippons. All honest people wishing to have sound
-sleep must keep the witches from their beds by having a branch of wiggen
-at their bed-heads.[55]
-
-The charms against the malevolence of witches and of evil beings were
-very numerous. A horse-shoe nailed to the door protected the family
-domicile; a _hag_-stone, penetrated with a hole, and attached to the key
-of the stable, preserved the horse within from being ridden by the
-witch; and when hung up at the bed-head, was a safeguard to the master
-himself. A hot heater, put into the churn, kept witches and evil beings
-from spoiling the cream or retarding the butter. The baking of dough was
-protected by a cross, and so was the kneading-trough barred against
-fiendly visitation. Another class of charms was of those used by and
-amongst the witches themselves.
-
-In the "Confession of James Device, prisoner at Lancaster," charged
-with being a witch and practicing witchcraft, before "William Sands,
-James Anderton, and Thomas Cowell, Esqrs.," we have the following
-"charm" to get "_drink_ within one hour after saying the said prayer:"--
-
- "Upon Good Friday I will fast while I may,
- Untill I heare them knell
- Our Lord's own bell.
- Lord in his messe
- With his twelve Apostles good;--
- What hath he in his hand?
- Ligh in leath wand:
- What hath he in his other hand?
- Heaven's doore keys.
- Steck, Steck Hell door,
- Let Chrizun child
- Goe to its mother mild.
- What is yonder that casts a light so farrandly?
- Mine own dear Sonne that's naild to the tree.
- He is naild sore by the head and hand;
- And Holy harne Panne.
- Well is that man
- That Friday spell can,
- His child to learne:--
- A cross of Blue and another of Red,
- As Good Lord was to the Roode.
- Gabriel laid him down to sleep
- Upon the ground of Holy weepe:--
- Good Lord came walking by,
- Sleepest thou, wakest thou, Gabriel?
- No, Lord, I am sted with stick and stake,
- That I can neither sleepe nor wake.
- Rise up, Gabriel, and go with me,
- The stick nor the stake shall never deere thee.
- Sweet Jesus. Our Lord. Amen."
-
-But James Device's charm was not the only one brought to light in this
-memorable trial;--the witches themselves were liable to be bewitched by
-others of superior power, nor were their domestic preparations
-altogether free from the malevolent effects of an envious practitioner.
-In these cases _counter charms_ were of frequent necessity, and none of
-these seem to be of greater efficacy than the following one from the
-"Examination of Anne Whittle, _alias_ Chattox [a celebrated Lancashire
-witch], before Roger Nowell, Esq., of Read, April 2nd, 1612." "A charm
-to help _drink_ that is forespoken or bewitched."
-
- "Three biters hast thou bitten.
- The Heart, ill Eye, ill Tongue.
- Three bitter shall be thy Boote,
- Father, Sonne, and Holy Ghost:--a God's name.
- Five Paternosters, five Avies and a Creede,
- In worship of five woundes of our Lorde."
-
-The Scotch appear to have held similar notions on these subjects with
-ourselves, for in Sinclair's "_Satan's Invisible World Discovered_" we
-find the following charm, "To preserve the house and those in it from
-danger at night:"--
-
- "Who sains the house the night?
- They that sains it ilk a night,
- Saint Bryde and her brate;
- Saint Colme and his hat;
- Saint Michael and his spear;
- Keep this house from the weir--
- From running thiefe--
- And burning thiefe--
- And from and ill Rea:--
- That be the gate can gae:--
- And from an ill wight:--
- That be the gate can light.
- Nine reeds about the house;
- Keep it all the night.
- What is that what I see,
- So red, so bright, beyond the sea?
- 'Tis he was pierced through the hands,
- Through the feet, through the throat,
- Through the tongue,
- Through the liver and the lung.
- Well is them that well may
- Fast on Good Friday."
-
-
-CHARMS TO CURE SICKNESS, WOUNDS, CATTLE DISTEMPER, ETC.
-
-Many are the charms and spells which operate against disease or sickness
-in two ways--they either ward it off, if it threaten; or if too late for
-that, they dispel its virulence, and effect a marvellous cure. No
-medical man, we are told, will rub ointment on a wound with the
-forefinger of his right hand, because it is popularly accounted
-venomous. A dead man's hand is said to have the power of curing wens and
-other excrescences of the neck. Three spiders, worn about the neck, will
-prevent the ague. A string with _nine_ knots tied upon it, placed about
-the neck of a child, is reported to be an infallible remedy for the
-whooping-cough. The same effect also follows from passing the child
-_nine_ times round the neck of a she-ass, according to the popular creed
-of the county. Formerly silver rings, made from the hinges of coffins,
-were worn as charms for the cure of fits, or for the prevention of
-cramp, or even of rheumatism. The superstition continues, though the
-metal is of necessity changed, few coffins having now hinges of silver.
-The stranger in Lancashire can be nowhere, in town or country, amongst
-any considerable number of the humbler classes, without seeing on the
-fingers of women chiefly, but occasionally of men, what are called
-galvanized rings, made of two hoops, one of zinc, the other of copper,
-soldered together. Many wear a belt to charm away rheumatism; brimstone
-carried about the person is regarded as a sure remedy against cramp; so
-also is placing the shoes under the bed, the toes peeping outwards.
-These are the modern charms or cure-alls against disease. Fried mice are
-yet given to children in some parts of Lancashire, to cure non-retention
-of urine during sleep.
-
-
-CHARMS FOR THE TOOTHACHE.
-
-"The following," says the Rev. W. Thornber, of Blackpool, "is a foolish
-charm, yet much accredited amongst us [in the Fylde] for the
-toothache:"--
-
- "Peter sat weeping on a marble stone.
- Jesus came near and said, 'What aileth thee, O Peter?'
- He answer'd and said, 'My Lord and my God!'
- He that can say this, and believeth it for my sake,
- Never more shall have the toothache."
-
-Our "wise men" still sell the following charm for the cure of continued
-toothache, but it must be worn inside the vest or stays, and over the
-left breast:--
-
-"Ass Sant Petter sat at the geats of Jerusalm our Blessed Lord and
-Sevour Jesus Crist Pased by and Sead, What Eleth thee hee sead Lord my
-Teeth ecketh hee sead arise and folow mee and thy Teeth shall never Eake
-Eney moor. Fiat + Fiat + Fiat."[56]
-
-
-VERVAIN, FOR WOUNDS, ETC.
-
-A magical MS. in Chetham's Library, Manchester, of the time of Queen
-Elizabeth, supplies the following metrical prayer, to be said in
-gathering this herb:--
-
- "All-hele, thou holy herb, Vervin,
- Growing on the ground;
- In the Mount of Calvary
- There wast thou found;
- Thou helpest many a grief,
- And stanchest many a wound.
- In the name of sweet Jesus
- I take thee from the ground.
- O Lord, effect the same
- That I do now go about."
-
-The following lines, according to the same authority, were to be said
-when pulling it:--
-
- "In the name of God, on Mount Olivet
- First I thee found;
- In the name of Jesus
- I pull thee from the ground."
-
-
-CHARMS TO STOP BLEEDING.
-
-In an ancient 8vo. MS. volume, described by Dr. Whitaker, in his
-_History of Whalley_, entitled _Liber Loci Benedicti de Whalley_,
-commencing with the translation of the convent from Stanlaw (in 1296)
-and ending about the year 1346, are the following monkish charms (in
-Latin) for stopping haemorrhage:--
-
-"_For staunching bleeding from the Nostrils, or from Wounds, an approved
-remedy._--O God, be Thou merciful to this Thy servant N., nor allow to
-flow from his body more than one drop of blood. So may it please the Son
-of God. So his mother Mary. In the name of the Father, stop, O blood! In
-the name of the Son, stop, O blood! In the name of the Holy Ghost, stop,
-O blood! In the name of the Holy Trinity.
-
-"_To staunch Bleeding._--A soldier of old thrust a lance into the side
-of the Saviour: immediately there flowed thence blood and water,--the
-blood of Redemption, and the water of Baptism. In the name of the Father
-+ may the blood cease. In the name of the Son + may the blood remain. In
-the name of the Holy Ghost + may no more blood flow from the mouth, the
-vein, or the nose."
-
-To particular persons was attached the virtue of stopping bleeding by a
-word; and a woman of Marton, near Blackpool, whose maiden name was
-Bamber, was so celebrated for her success, that she was sought for to
-stop haemorrhage throughout a district of twenty miles around.
-
-
-TOUCHING FOR THE KING'S EVIL.
-
-The records of the Corporation of Preston contain two votes of money, to
-enable persons to go from Preston to be touched for the evil. Both are
-in the reign of James II. In 1682, the bailiffs were ordered to "pay
-unto James Harrison, bricklayer, 10_s._ towards the carrying of his son
-to London, in order to the procuring of his Majesty's touch." And in
-1687, when James was at Chester, the council passed a vote that "the
-bailiffs pay unto the persons undermentioned each of them 5_s._ towards
-their charge in going to Chester to get his Majesty's touch: Anne,
-daughter of Abel Mope, ---- daughter of Richard Letmore."[57]
-
-
-CURES FOR WARTS.
-
-Steal a piece of meat from a butcher's stall or his basket, and, after
-having well rubbed the parts affected with the stolen morsel, bury it
-under a gateway at four lane ends, or, in case of emergency, in any
-secluded place. All this must be done so secretly as to escape
-detection; and as the portion of meat decays, the warts will disappear.
-This practice is very prevalent in Lancashire, and two of my female
-acquaintances having tried the remedy, stoutly maintain its
-efficacy.[58]
-
-The following superstition prevails in the neighbourhood of Manchester:
-Take a piece of twine, making upon it as many knots as there are warts
-to be removed; touch each wart with the corresponding knot; then bury
-the twine in a moist place, saying at the same time, "There is none to
-redeem it besides thee." As the process of decay goes on [in the twine]
-the warts gradually disappear.[59]
-
-A snail hung upon a thorn is another favourite spell against warts; as
-the snail wastes away, so do the warts. Again, take a bag of stones,
-equal in number with the warts to be destroyed, and throw them over the
-left shoulder; the warts soon quit the thrower. But whoever chances to
-pick up one or more of these stones, takes with them as many of the
-warts, which are thus transferred from the loser to the finder of the
-stones.
-
-
-CURE FOR HYDROCEPHALUS IN CATTLE.
-
-Dr. Whitaker mentions what he designates as "one practical superstition"
-in the district about Pendle, and peculiar to that neighbourhood. "The
-hydrocephalus (he says) is a disease incident to adolescent animals, and
-is supposed by the shepherds and herdsmen to be contagious; but in order
-to arrest the progress of the disease, whenever a young beast had died
-of this complaint, it was usual, and it has, I believe, been practised
-by farmers yet alive, to cut off the head and convey it for interment
-into the nearest part of the adjoining county. Stiperden, a desert plain
-upon the border of Yorkshire, was the place of skulls." Whitaker thinks
-the practice may have originated in some confused and fanciful analogy
-to the case of Azazel (Numbers xvi. 22), an analogy between the removal
-of sin and disease--that as the transgressions of the people were laid
-upon the head of the scape-goat, the diseases of the herd should be laid
-upon the head of the deceased animal.[60]
-
-
-CATTLE DISORDERS.--THE SHREW TREE IN CARNFORTH.
-
-On an elevation in the township of Carnforth, in the parish of Warton,
-called Moothaw [? Moot Hall], the ancient Saxon courts were held. Near
-this place stood the "Shrew Tree" mentioned by Lucas, which, according
-to rustic superstition, received so much virtue from plugging up a
-number of living shrews, or field-mice, in a cavity prepared for their
-reception in the tree, that a twig cut from it, when freely applied to
-the backs of disordered cattle, would cure them of their maladies.[61]
-
-
-CHARMS FOR AGUE.
-
-"Casting out the ague" was but another name for "casting out the devil,"
-for it was his possession of the sufferer that caused the body to shiver
-and shake. One man, of somewhat better education than his neighbours,
-acquired a reputation for thus removing the ague by exorcism, and was
-much resorted to for many years for relief.
-
-
-STINGING OF NETTLES.
-
-This was at once removed by the saying aloud of some charm in doggerel
-verse.
-
-
-JAUNDICE.
-
-Persons in the Fylde district suffering from this disorder were some
-years ago cured at the rate of a shilling per head, by a person living
-at the Fold, who, by some charm or incantation, performed on the urine
-of the afflicted person, suspended in a bottle over the smoke of his
-fire, was believed to effect most wonderful cures.
-
-
-TO PROCURE SLEEP BY CHANGING THE DIRECTION OF THE BED.
-
-There are two superstitions respecting restlessness. One is that it is
-caused by the bed standing north and south, and that it will be cured if
-the bedstead be so moved as to stand east and west. The other goes
-further, and says that to effect a perfect remedy, not only must the
-bedstead range east and west, but that the head must be towards the
-east. One informant stated that this was because the earth revolved from
-west to east, or in an easterly course.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[50] Revelation xiii. 18.
-
-[51] This is not a literal quotation. The verse runs thus in the
-ordinary version: "If ye have faith as a grain of mustard-seed, ye shall
-say to this mountain, Remove hence to yonder place, and it shall
-remove; and nothing shall be impossible to you."
-
-[52] This is noticed by the Rev. W. Thornber in his _History of
-Blackpool_, p. 99; also in the _Oxford Essays_, 1858, p. 127; and the
-late Rev. James Dugan, M.A., T.C.D., informed the writer that the Irish
-midwives in Ulster use a very similar formula when visiting their
-patients. They first mark each corner of the house, on the outside, with
-a cross, and previously to entering repeat the following words:--
-
- "There are four corners to her bed,
- Four angels at her head:
- Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,
- God bless the bed that she lies on.
- New Moon, new Moon, God bless me,
- God bless this house and family."
-
-[53] See Carr's _Craven Glossary_, vol. i. p. 137.--"Look, sir," said
-Mr. Carr's informant, "at that pear-tree, it wor some years back, sir, a
-maast flourishin' tree. Ivvry mornin, as soon as he first oppans the
-door, that he may not cast his ee on onny yan passin' by, he fixes his
-een o' that pear-tree, and ye plainly see how it's deed away."
-
-[54] Mr. Robert Rawlinson in _Notes and Queries_, vol. iv. p. 55.
-
-[55] See Hone's _Table Book_, vol. i. p. 674.
-
-[56] Carr's _Glossary_, vol. ii. p. 264.
-
-[57] Wm. Dobson, in _Notes and Queries_, 2nd series, vol. iv. p. 287.
-
-[58] T. T. W., ibid., vol. ii. p. 68.
-
-[59] H., ibid.
-
-[60] _History of Whalley._
-
-[61] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-
-
-
-THE DEVIL, DEMONS, &c.
-
-
-THE DEVIL.
-
-The power of the devil, his personal appearance, and the possibility of
-bartering the soul for temporary gain, must still be numbered among the
-articles of our popular faith. Repeating the Lord's Prayer backwards is
-said to be the most effectual plan for "raising the devil;" but when
-the terms of the bargain are not satisfactory, his exit can only be
-secured by making the sign of the cross and calling on the name of
-Christ. In the neighbourhood of Blackburn a story prevails that two
-threshers once succeeded in raising him through the barn floor; but on
-their becoming alarmed at their success, he was summarily dismissed by
-means of a vigorous thrashing on the head with the flails. His
-partiality for playing at cards has long been proverbial, both in
-Lancashire and elsewhere. A near relative of the writer firmly believed
-that the devil had once visited their company when they had prolonged
-their play into Sunday. How he joined them they never rightly knew, but
-(as in the Danish legend respecting a similar visit) his presence was
-first suspected in consequence of his extraordinary "run of good luck;"
-and a casual detection of his _cloven foot_ completed the dispersion of
-the players. It is not always, however, that he obtains the advantage;
-for he has more than once been outwitted by a crafty woman or a cunning
-priest. In the Lancashire tradition we find the poor tailor of Chatburn
-stipulating for _three_ wishes, and, on the advice of his wife,
-consulting the "holy father of Salley" in his extremity. When the fatal
-day arrived, he freed himself from the bond by expressing as his last
-wish, that his tormentor "were riding back to his quarters on a dun
-horse, never to plague him more." The devil, it is said, gave a yell
-which was heard to Colne, on finding that he had lost his man. Mr. Roby
-in his _Traditions_, and the author of the _Pictorial History of
-Lancashire_, give humorous engravings of this noted ride; and the sign
-of "The Dule upo' Dun," over the door of the wayside inn, attests the
-popular belief in the local tradition. From these and many other
-instances it is evident that we have derived many of these superstitions
-from the Saxon and Danish settlers in Northumbria. The essential parts
-of each are identical, and as regards these particular bargains, it may
-be added as a curious circumstance, that in no case is the bond held to
-be binding unless it be signed with the blood of the person
-contracting.[62]
-
-Offering fowls to evil spirits appears to have been an ancient and
-wide-spread practice. It was common to sacrifice a cock to the devil.
-Burns, in his "Address to the Deil," says--"Some cock or cat your rage
-must stop." Music and dancing are also associated in our popular
-superstitions with witches, evil spirits, and the devil. The devils, it
-is said, love music, but dread bells, and have a very delicate sense of
-smells. In the _True and Faithful Relation of what passed between Dr.
-Dee and some Spirits_, we learn that the devil appeared to the doctor
-"as an angel in a white robe, holding a bloody cross in his right hand,
-the same hand being also bloody," and in this guise he prayed, and
-"anabaptistically bewailed the wickedness of the world."[63]
-
-
-RAISING THE DEVIL.
-
-The boys at the Burnley Grammar-school are said to have succeeded on one
-occasion in raising the devil. They repeated the Lord's Prayer
-backwards, and performed some incantations by which, as it is said,
-Satan was induced to make his appearance through a stone flag on the
-floor of the school-house. After he had got his head and shoulders well
-out, the boys became alarmed, and began to hammer him down with the
-poker and tongs. With much ado they drove him back; but the _black mark_
-he had left on the flag was shown in proof of his appearance until the
-school-house was repaired, a few years ago, when the floor was boarded
-over, and the flagstone disappeared.
-
-
-THE DEVIL & THE SCHOOLMASTER AT COCKERHAM.
-
-It is said that the arch Spirit of Evil once took up his abode in
-Cockerham, and so scared and disturbed the inhabitants of that quiet
-place, that at length in public meeting, to consider how to free
-themselves from this fiendish persecution, they appointed the
-schoolmaster, as the wisest and cleverest man in the place, to do his
-best to drive the devil away. Using the prescribed incantation at
-midnight, the pedagogue succeeded in raising Satan; but when he saw his
-large horns and tail, saucer eyes, and long claws, he became almost
-speechless. According to the recognised procedure in such cases, the
-devil granted him the privilege of setting three tasks, which if he
-(Satan) accomplished, the schoolmaster became his prey; if he failed, it
-would compel the flight of the demon from Cockerham. The first task, to
-count the number of dewdrops on certain hedges, was soon accomplished;
-and so was the second, to count the number of stalks in a field of
-grain. The third task was then proposed in the following words,
-according to a doggerel version of the tradition:--
-
- "Now make me, dear sir, a rope of yon sand,
- Which will bear washing in Cocker, and not lose a strand."
-
-Speedily the rope was twisted of fine sand, but it would not stand
-washing; so the devil was foiled, and at one stride he stepped over the
-bridge over Broadfleet, at Pilling Moss. The metrical version of the
-legend is scarcely worth printing.
-
-
-OLD NICK.
-
-According to Scandinavian mythology, the supreme god Odin assumes the
-name of Nick, Neck, Nikkar, Nikur, or Hnikar, when he acts as the evil
-or destructive principle. In the character of Nikur, or Hnikudur, a
-Protean water-sprite, he inhabits the lakes and rivers of Scandinavia,
-where he raises sudden storms and tempests, and leads mankind into
-destruction. Nick, or Nickar, being an object of dread to the
-Scandinavians, propitiatory worship was offered to him; and hence it has
-been imagined that the Scandinavian spirit of the waters became, in the
-middle ages, St. Nicholas, the patron of sailors, who invoke his aid in
-storms and tempests. This supposition (which has a degree of probability
-almost amounting to certainty) receives countenance from the great
-devotion still felt by the Gothic nations towards St. Nicholas, to whom
-many churches on the sea-shore are dedicated. The church of St.
-Nicholas, in this situation at Liverpool, was consecrated in 1361; and,
-says Mr. Baines,[64] "in the vicinity there formerly stood a statue of
-St. Nicholas; and when the faith in the intercession of saints was more
-operative than at present, the mariners were wont to present a
-peace-offering for a prosperous voyage on their going out to sea, and a
-wave-offering on their return; but the saint, having lost his votaries,
-has long since disappeared." The Danish Vikings called the Scandinavian
-sea-god _Hold Nickar_, which in time degenerated into the ludicrous
-expression, "Old Nick."[65]
-
-Another writer on this subject says:--We derive the familiar epithet of
-"_Old Nick_" from the Norwegian Noek, the Norse Nikr, or the Swedish
-Neck; and no further proof of their identity is required than a
-comparison between the attributes possessed in common by all these
-supernatural beings. The _Noek_ is said to require a human sacrifice once
-a year, and some one is therefore annually missing in the vicinity of
-the pond or river where this sprite has taken up its abode. The males
-are said to be very partial to young maidens, whom they seize and drag
-under the water; whilst those of the opposite sex are quite as
-attractive and dangerous to the young fishermen who frequent the rivers.
-The German _Nixes_ possess the same attributes. Both sexes have large
-green teeth; and the male wears a green hat, which is frequently
-mistaken by his victims for a tuft of beautiful vegetation. He is said
-to kill without mercy whenever he drags a person down; and a fountain of
-blood, which shoots up from the surface of the water, announces the
-completion of the deed. A perfect identification of this with our own
-popular belief is now easy. Nothing is more common at present than for
-children who reside in the country to be cautioned against venturing too
-near the water's brink, lest "_Green Teeth_" or "_Bloody Bones_" should
-pull them in. "_Old Nick_" is said to lurk under the shady willows which
-overhang the deep water; and the bubbles of gas which may be observed
-escaping from the bottoms of quiet pools are attributed to the movements
-of the water-sprites which lurk beneath.
-
-
-DEMONOLOGY.
-
-A recent writer in _Blackwood's Magazine_ asks if Demonology "was not a
-vague spirit-worship, the ancient religion of the bulk of mankind?"
-"This Demonology" (he continues) "may be said to have been imported into
-Christianity in its early days. It was the universal belief of the Pagan
-world, and not easily to be eradicated; as the early Church accepted
-things pretty much as it found them, and turned them to account;
-teaching that these objects of heathen awe and reverence were fallen
-angels, whose power for evil had been permitted to exist uncontrolled
-till the advent of our Saviour. The early Roman Church elaborately
-imitated, if it did not exceed, the Greeks and Romans in their
-demonology. Every class of men had their guardians, who practically
-represented the _Dii minores_ or _minorum gentium_; the hills and dales
-and woods had their patrons, the successors of the Orcades, Napaeae, and
-the Dryades; every kind of disease, from the toothache to the gout, had
-its special healer, and even birds and beasts their spiritual
-protectors." No one who has paid the most passing attention to the
-folk-lore of this country can have failed to note amongst us, even yet,
-the remnants of this curious superstition. In 1531, John Cousell, of
-Cambridge, and John Clarke, of Oxford, two learned clerks, applied for
-and obtained from Henry VIII. a formal license to practise sorcery, and
-to build churches, a quaint combination of evil and antidote. They
-professed power to summon "the sprytes of the ayre," and to make use of
-them generally, and particularly in the discovery of treasure and stolen
-property. Their seventh petition is to build churches, bridges, and
-chapels, and to have cognizance of all sciences. One of their petitions
-refers to a certain "noyntment" to see the sprytes, and to speak with
-them dayly. Strange that Henry VIII. should have granted this license,
-seeing that a statute was passed in his reign, making "witchcraft and
-sorcery felony, without benefit of clergy."[66] Bishop Jewell, preaching
-before Queen Anne, on the marvellous increase of witches and sorcerers,
-after describing how the victims pined away, even unto death, loyally
-concluded his sermon thus, "I pray God they never practise further than
-upon the subject." The following charm or spell against St. Vitus's
-Dance was, and very likely is still, in use in Devonshire. It was
-written on parchment, and carried about by an old woman so afflicted:--
-
- "Shake her, good Devil,
- Shake her once well;
- Then shake her no more,
- Till you shake her in hell."
-
-Some of our laws against sorcery remained unrepealed a little more than
-forty years ago. The Irish law against sorcery was only repealed in
-1831. So late as August, 1863, an old man of eighty was flung into a
-mill-stream in the parish of Little Hedingham, being what is called
-"swimming for a wizard," and he died of his maltreatment. One curious
-book on Demonology is entitled "An Account of Demoniacs, and the power
-of casting out Demons, both in the New Testament, and the four first
-Centuries," by William Whiston, M.A. (London, 1737, 8vo). He observes
-that "The symptoms of these demoniacal distresses were very different
-from the symptoms of other diseases, and even included wild raving,
-irregular convulsions of the body, unnatural contortions of the limbs,
-or dismal malady of the mind, and came upon the unhappy patients by
-terrible fits of paroxysms, to the amazement of the spectators, and the
-horrible affection of the possessed, and included the sorest illness and
-madness in the world." The same symptoms revived in the extraordinary
-epidemic called the _hystero-demonopathy_, which visited Morzine, in
-Savoy, in 1857. The persons afflicted were violently and unnaturally
-convulsed; now rushed phrenetically into the woods, or to the river, now
-were subject to fits of coma; were insensible to pain; believed
-themselves to be haunted by evil spirits; were violent, but in their
-violence injured no one; and exhibited generally symptoms not observed
-in any known disorder.[67] The people of Morzine believed themselves
-possessed by spirits of dead persons, a peculiarity which appears to
-have occurred in many cases during the prevalence of the epidemic.
-
-
-DEMON AND GOBLIN SUPERSTITIONS.
-
-Among the more prominent of the demon superstitions prevalent in
-Lancashire, we may instance that of the _Spectre Huntsman_, which
-occupies so conspicuous a place in the folk-lore of Germany and the
-North. This superstition is still extant in the Gorge of Cliviger, where
-he is believed to hunt a milk-white doe round the Eagle's Crag in the
-Vale of Todmorden, on All-Hallows' Eve. His hounds are said to fly
-yelping through the air on many other occasions, and under the local
-name of "_Gabriel Ratchets_," are supposed to predict death or
-misfortune to all who hear the sounds.[68] The "_Lubber Fiend_," or
-stupid demon, still stretches his hairy length across the hearth-stones
-of the farm-houses in the same district, and the feats of the "_Goblin
-Builders_" form a portion of the popular literature of almost every
-locality. They are said to have removed the foundations of Rochdale
-Church from the banks of the river Roach, up to their present elevated
-position. Samlesbury Church, near Preston, possesses a similar
-tradition. The "_Demon Pig_" not only determined the site of St.
-Oswald's Church, at Warwick, but gave a name to the parish. The
-parochial church at Burnley, it is said, was originally intended to be
-built on the site occupied by the old Saxon Cross in Godly Lane; but,
-however much the masons might have built during the day, both the stones
-and the scaffolding were invariably found where the church now stands,
-on their coming to work next morning. The local legend states that on
-this occasion, also, the goblins took the form of _pigs_, and a rude
-sculpture of such an animal, on the south side of the steeple, lends its
-aid to confirm and perpetuate the story.
-
-Our peasantry retain the notion so prevalent in North Germany, that the
-_Night-mare_ is a demon, which sometimes takes the form of a cat or a
-dog, and they seek to counteract its influence by placing their shoes
-under the bed with the toes outwards, on retiring to rest.
-
-The _Water Sprites_, believed in by our ancestors in the north of
-England, still form a portion of the folk-lore of Lancashire and
-Yorkshire. There is scarcely a stream of any magnitude in either county
-which does not possess a presiding spirit in some part of its course.
-The stepping-stones at Bungerley, near Clitheroe, are said to be haunted
-by a malevolent sprite, who assumes almost as many shapes as Proteus of
-old. He is not known by any particular designation, nor are there any
-traditions to account for his first appearance; but at least _one_ life
-in every _seven_ years is required to appease the anger of the spirit
-of the Ribble at this place. It was at these stepping-stones that King
-Henry VI. was treacherously betrayed by a Talbot of Bashall and others;
-whence may have arisen a tradition of a malevolent spirit at that place.
-
-Our local literature possesses Roby's traditions of "The _Mermaid_ of
-Martin Mere," which has given permanence to the popular notions
-respecting mermen and mermaids. The _Schrat_, or _Schritel_, of the
-German nations, is identical with the more ancient _Skrat_ of the
-Scandinavians. He is noted for making game of persons who are out late
-at night. Occasionally he places himself on a cart, or other vehicle,
-which then becomes so heavy that the horses are unable to move the load.
-They begin to tremble and perspire, as if sensible of the presence of
-something diabolical; but after a short time "_Old Scrat_" slips off
-behind, and disappears with a malicious laugh. In Lancashire we are no
-strangers to Old Scrat and his doings. With many the name is merely a
-synonyme for that of the devil; but our city carters are able to mark
-the distinction, and have besides a goodly store of anecdotes respecting
-the heavy loads which their horses have sometimes been compelled to
-draw, when nothing could be seen except the empty cart. One of them
-assured me that on such occasions his horses reared, and became almost
-frantic; their manes stood erect; and he himself could see the wicked
-imp actually dancing with delight between their ears. Another very
-respectable person affirms that, not many years ago, as a funeral was
-proceeding to church, the coffin became so heavy that it could not be
-carried. On this being made known to a clergyman, who was present, he
-offered up a short prayer, and commanded Old Scrat to take his own. This
-was no sooner done than the excessive weight was felt no more, and the
-corpse was carried forward to the place of interment. Similar
-superstitions prevail in the more northern cities with but slight
-variations; and hence sufficiently indicate their common origin. The
-_Barguest_, or _Barn-ghaist_ of the Teutons, is also reported to be a
-frequent visitor in Lancashire. The appearance of this sprite is
-considered as a certain death-sign, and has obtained the local names of
-"_Trash_" and "_Skriker_." He generally appears to one of the family
-from whom Death is about to select his victim, and is more or less
-visible, according to the distance of the event. I have met with persons
-to whom the barguest [bar-ghaist, _i.e._, gate-ghost] has assumed the
-form of a white cow, or a horse; but on most occasions "Trash" is
-described as having the appearance of a very large dog, with very broad
-feet, shaggy hair, drooping ears, and eyes "as large as saucers." When
-walking, his feet make a loud splashing noise, like old shoes in a miry
-road, and hence the name of "Trash." The appellation "_Skriker_" has
-reference to the screams uttered by the sprite, which are frequently
-heard when the animal is invisible. When followed by any individual he
-begins to walk backwards with his eyes fixed full on his pursuer, and
-vanishes on the slightest momentary inattention. Occasionally he plunges
-into a pool of water, and at times he sinks at the feet of the persons
-to whom he appears with a loud splashing noise, as if a heavy stone were
-thrown into the miry road. Some are reported to have attempted to strike
-him with any weapon they had at hand, but there was no substance to
-receive the blows, although the Skriker kept his ground. He is said to
-frequent the neighbourhood of Burnley at present, and is mostly seen in
-Godly Lane, and about the parish church. But he by no means confines his
-visits to the churchyard, as similar sprites are said to do in other
-parts of England and Wales.[69]
-
-
-DISPOSSESSING A DEMONIAC.
-
-Richard Rothwell, a native of Bolton-le-Moors, born about 1563, a
-minister of the Gospel, ordained by Dr. Whitgift, Archbishop of
-Canterbury, who was called by his biographer, the Rev. Stanley Gower,
-minister of Dorchester--"_Orbis terrarum Anglicarum oculus_" (the eye of
-our English world), is said to have dispossessed one John Fox, near
-Nottingham, of a devil; with whom he had a discourse, by way of question
-and answer, a good while. Such dialogues are said to be frequent amongst
-the Popish exorcists, but being rare amongst Protestants, is the more to
-be observed, and not disbelieved, because vouched by so good a man. Mr.
-Rothwell died at Mansfield, Notts, in 1627, aged sixty-four.[70]
-
-[There is a long account of this contest with the devil in Rothwell's
-_Life_, by Gower, pp. 178-183. After the devil had been driven out of
-him, John Fox was dumb for three years, but afterwards had speech
-restored to him, and wrote a book about the temptations the devil
-haunted him with.]
-
-
-DEMONIACAL POSSESSION IN 1594.
-
-Towards the close of the sixteenth century, seven persons in Lancashire
-were alleged to be "possessed by evil spirits." According to the
-narrative of the Rev. John Darrell, himself a principal actor in the
-scene, there lived in 1594 at Cleworth (now called Clayworth), in the
-parish of Leigh, one Nicholas Starkie, who had only two children, John
-and Ann; the former ten and the latter nine years of age. These
-children, according to Mr. Darrell, became possessed with an evil
-spirit; and John Hartlay, a reputed conjuror, was applied to, at the end
-of from two to three months, to give them relief, which he effected by
-various charms, and the use of a magical circle with four crosses, drawn
-near Mr. Starkie's seat, at Huntroyd, in the parish of Whalley. Hartlay
-was conjuror enough to discover the difference between Mr. Starkie's
-table and his own, and he contrived to fix himself as a constant inmate
-in his benefactor's family for two or three years. Being considered so
-essential to their peace, he advanced in his demands, till Mr. Starkie
-demurred, and a separation took place; but not till five other persons,
-three of them the female wards of Mr. Starkie, and two other females,
-had become "possessed," through the agency of Hartlay, "and it was
-judged in the house that whomsoever he kissed, on them he breathed the
-devil." According to the narrative, all the seven demoniacs sent forth a
-strange and supernatural voice of loud shouting. In this extremity Dr.
-Dee, the Warden of Manchester College, was applied to, to exorcise the
-evil spirits; but he refused to interfere, advising that they should
-call in some godly preachers, with whom he would, if they thought
-proper, consult concerning a public or private fast; at the same time he
-sharply reproved Hartlay for his fraudulent practices. Some remission of
-violence followed, but the evil spirits soon returned, and Mr.
-Starkie's house became a perfect bedlam. John Starkie, the son, was "as
-fierce as a madman, or a mad dog;" his sister Anne was little better;
-Margaret Hardman, a gay, sprightly girl, was also troubled, and aspired
-after all the splendid attire of fashionable life, calling for one gay
-thing after another, and repeatedly telling her "lad," as she called her
-unseen familiar, that she would be finer than him. Ellinor, her younger
-sister, and Ellen Holland, another of Mr. Starkie's wards, were also
-"troubled;" and Margaret Byrom, of Salford, a woman of thirty-three, who
-was on a visit at Cleworth, became giddy, and partook of the general
-malady. The young ladies fell down, as if dead, while they were dancing
-and singing, and "playing the minstrel," and talked at such a rate that
-nobody could be heard but themselves. The preachers being called in,
-according to the advice of Dr. Dee, they inquired how the demoniacs were
-handled. The "possessed" replied that an angel, like a dove, came from
-God, and said that they must follow him to heaven, which way soever he
-would lead them. Margaret Hardman then ran under a bed, and began to
-make a hole, as she said, that her "lad" (or familiar) might get through
-the wall to her; and, amongst other of her feats, she would have leaped
-out of the window. The others were equally extravagant in their
-proceedings, but when they had the use of their feet, the use of their
-tongues was taken away. The girls were so sagacious that they foretold
-when their fits would come on. When they were about any game or sport,
-they seemed quite happy; but any godly exercise was a trouble to them.
-Margaret Byrom was grievously troubled. She thought in her fits that
-something rolled in her inside like a calf, and lay ever on her left
-side; and when it rose up towards her heart, she thought the head and
-nose thereof had been full of nails, wherewith being pricked, she was
-compelled to shriek aloud, with very pain and fear; sometimes she barked
-and howled, and at others she so much quaked that her teeth chattered in
-her head. At the sight of Hartlay she fell down speechless, and saw a
-great black dog, with a monstrous tail and a long chain, running at her
-open-mouthed. Six times within six weeks the spirit would not suffer her
-to eat or drink, and afterwards her senses were taken away, and she was
-as stiff as iron. Two nights before the day of her examination against
-Hartlay, who was committed to Lancaster Castle, the devil appeared to
-her in his likeness, and told her to speak the truth! On the 16th of
-March, Maister George More, pastor of Cawlke, in Derbyshire, and Maister
-John Darrell, afterwards preacher at St. Mary's, in Nottingham, came to
-Cleworth, when they saw the girls grievously tormented. Jane Ashton, the
-servant of Mr. Starkie, howled in a supernatural manner--Hartlay had
-given her kisses, and promised her marriage. The ministers having got
-all the seven into one chamber, gave them spiritual advice; but, on the
-Bible being brought up to them, three or four of them began to scoff,
-and called it--"Bib-le, Bab-le; Bible, Bable." The next morning they
-were got into a large parlour, and laid on couches, when Maister More
-and Maister Dickens, a preacher (and their pastor), along with Maister
-Darrell and thirty other persons, spent the day with them in prayer and
-fasting, and hearing the word of God. All the parties afflicted remained
-in their fits the whole of the day. Towards evening every one of them,
-with voice and hands lifted up, cried to God for mercy, and He was
-pleased to hear them, so that six of them were shortly dispossessed, and
-Jane Ashton in the course of the next day experienced the same
-deliverance. At the moment of dispossession, some of them were miserably
-rent, and the blood gushed out both at the nose and mouth. Margaret
-Byrom said that she felt the spirit come up her throat, when it gave her
-"a sore lug" at the time of quitting her, and went out of the window
-with a flash of fire, she only seeing it. John Starkie said his spirit
-left him, in appearance like a man with a hunch on his back, very
-ill-favoured; Ellinor Hardman's was like an urchin; Margaret Byrom's
-like an ugly black man, with shoulders higher than his head. Two or
-three days afterwards the unclean spirits returned, and would have
-re-entered had they not been resisted. When they could not succeed
-either by bribes or entreaties, they threw some of them [the
-dispossessed] violently down, and deprived others of the use of their
-legs and other members; but the victory was finally obtained by the
-preachers, and all the devils banished from Mr. Starkie's household.
-Meanwhile Hartlay the conjuror, who seems to have been a designing
-knave, after undergoing an examination before two magistrates, was
-committed to Lancaster Castle, where, on the evidence of Mr. Starkie and
-his family, he was convicted of witchcraft, and sentenced to death,
-principally, as it is stated, for drawing the magic circle, which seems
-to have been the least part of his offence, though the most obnoxious to
-the law. In this trial _spectral evidence_ was adduced against the
-prisoner, and the experiment was tried of saying the Lord's Prayer. When
-it no longer served his purpose he endeavoured to divest himself of the
-character of a conjuror, and declared that he was not guilty of the
-crime for which he was doomed to suffer; the law, however, was
-inexorable, and he was brought to execution. On the scaffold he
-persisted in declaring his innocence, but to no purpose; the executioner
-did his duty, and the criminal was suspended. While hanging, the rope
-broke, when Hartlay confessed his guilt; being again tied up, he died,
-the victim of his own craft, and of the infatuation of the age in which
-he lived. On the appearance of Mr. Darrell's book, the _Narrative_ of
-these remarkable events, a long controversy arose on the doctrine of
-Demonology, and it was charged upon him by the Rev. Samuel Harsnet,
-afterwards Bishop of Chichester and Norwich, and Archbishop of York,
-that he made a trade of casting out devils, and that he instructed the
-"possessed" how to conduct themselves, in order to aid him in carrying
-on the imposition. Mr. Darrell was afterwards examined by the Queen's
-Commissioners; and by the full agreement of the whole court, he was
-condemned as a counterfeit, deposed from the ministry, and committed to
-close confinement, there to remain for further punishment. The clergy,
-in order to prevent the scandal brought upon the Church by false
-pretensions to the power of dispossessing demons, soon afterwards
-introduced a new canon into the ecclesiastical law, in these
-terms:--"That no minister or ministers, without license and direction of
-the bishop, under his hand and seal obtained, attempt, upon any pretence
-whatever, either of possession or obsession, by fasting and prayer, to
-cast out any devil or devils, under pain of the imputation of imposture,
-or cozenage, and deposition from the ministry." Some light is cast upon
-the case of Mr. Starkie's household by "A Discourse Concerning the
-Possession and Dispossession of Seven Persons in one Family in
-Lancashire," written by George More, a puritanical minister, who had
-engaged in exorcising devils. This discourse agrees substantially with
-Darrell's narrative, but adds some noteworthy facts: amongst others,
-that he (Mr. More) was a prisoner in the Clinke for nearly two years,
-for justifying and bearing witness to the facts stated by Darrell. He
-also states that Mr. Nicholas Starkie having married a gentlewoman that
-was an inheritrix [Ann, widow of Thurstan Barton, Esq., of Smithells,
-and daughter and sole heiress of John Parr, Esq., of Kempnough, and
-Cleworth, Lancashire], and of whose kindred some were Papists;
-these--partly for religion, and partly because the estate descended but
-to heirs male--prayed for the perishing of her issue, and that four sons
-pined away in a strange manner; but that Mrs. Starkie, learning this
-circumstance, estated her lands on her husband, and _his_ heirs, failing
-issue of her own body; after which a son and daughter were born, who
-prospered _well till_ they became "possessed."[71]
-
-
-DEMONIACAL POSSESSION IN 1689.
-
-Richard Dugdale, called "The Surey Demoniac," was a youth just rising
-into manhood, a gardener, living with his parents at Surey, in the
-parish of Whalley, addicted to posture, and distinguished even at school
-as a posture-master and ventriloquist. During his "possession" he was
-attended by six Dissenting ministers--the Revs. Thomas Jolly, Charles
-Sagar, Nicholas Kershaw, Robert Waddington, Thomas Whalley, and John
-Carrington, who were occasionally assisted at the meetings held to
-exorcise the demon by the Rev. Messrs. Frankland, Pendlebury, and Oliver
-Heywood. According to the narrative, under their sanction, entitled _An
-Account of Satan's entering in and about the Body of Richard Dugdale,
-and of Satan's removal thence through the Lord's blessing of the
-within-mentioned Ministers and People_, when Dugdale was about nineteen
-years of age he was seized with an affliction early in 1689; and from
-the strange fits which violently seized him, he was supposed to be
-possessed by the devil. When the fit was upon him "he shewed great
-despite [says the narrative], against the ordinary of God, and raged as
-if he had been nothing but a devil in Richard's bodily shape; though
-when he was not in his fits he manifested great inclination to the word
-of God and prayer; for the exercise of which in his behalf he desired
-that a day of fasting might be set apart, as the only means from which
-he could expect help, seeing that he had tried all other means, lawful
-and unlawful." Meetings were accordingly appointed of the ministers, to
-which the people crowded in vast numbers. These meetings began on the
-8th May, 1689, and were continued about twice a month till the February
-following. At the first meeting the parents of the demoniac were
-examined by the ministers, and they represented that "at Whalley
-rush-bearing, on the James's tide, in July, 1688, there was a great
-dancing and drinking, when Richard offered himself to the devil, on
-condition that he would make him the best dancer in Lancashire." After
-becoming extremely drunk he went home, where several apparitions
-appeared to him, and presented to him all kinds of dainties and fine
-clothing, with gold and precious things, inviting him at the same time
-to "take his fill of pleasure." In the course of the day some compact,
-or bond, was entered into between him and the devil, after which his
-fits grew frequent and violent. While in these fits his body was often
-hurled about very desperately, and he abused the minister and blasphemed
-his Maker. Sometimes he would fall into dreadful fits; at others he
-would talk Greek and Latin, though untaught; sometimes his voice was
-small and shrill, at others hollow and hideous. Now he was as light as a
-bag of feathers, then as heavy as lead. At one time he upbraided the
-ministers for their neglect, at others he said they had saved him from
-hell. He was weather-wise and money-wise by turns; he could tell when
-there would be rain, and when he should receive presents. Sometimes he
-would vomit stones an inch and a half square, and in others of his
-trances there was a noise in his throat, as if he was singing psalms
-inwardly. But the strongest mark of demoniacal possession consisted in a
-lump, which rose from the thick of his leg, about the size of a mole,
-and did work up like such a creature towards the chest of his body, till
-it reached his breast, when it was as big as a man's fist, and uttered
-strange voices. He opened his mouth at the beginning of his fits so
-often, that it was thought spirits went in and out of him. In agility he
-was unequalled, "especially in dancing, wherein he excelled all that the
-spectators had seen, and all that mere mortals could perform. The
-demoniac would for six or seven times together leap up, so as that part
-of his legs might be seen shaking and quivering above the heads of the
-people, from which heights he oft fell down on his knees, which he long
-shivered and traversed on the ground, at least as nimbly as other men
-can twinkle or sparkle their fingers; thence springing up into his high
-leaps again, and then falling on his feet, which seemed to reach the
-earth but with the gentlest and scarce perceivable touches when he made
-his highest leaps." And yet the divines by whom he was attended most
-unjustly rallied the devil for the want of skill in his pupil. The Rev.
-Mr. Carrington, addressing himself to the devil, says, "Cease dancing,
-Satan, and begone from him. Canst thou dance no better, Satan? Ransack
-the old record of all past times and places in thy memory: canst thou
-not there find out some other way of finer trampling? Pump thine
-invention dry! Cannot that universal seed-plot of subtle wiles and
-stratagems spring up one new method of cutting capers? Is this the top
-of skill and pride, to shuffle feet and brandish knees thus, and to trip
-like a doe, and skip like a squirrel? And wherein differs thy leapings
-from the hoppings of a frog, or bounces of a goat, or friskings of a
-dog, or gesticulations of a monkey? And cannot a palsy shake such a
-loose leg as that? Dost thou not twirl like a calf that has the turn,
-and twitch up thy houghs just like a spring-hault [? spring-galled]
-tit?" In some of his last fits he announced that he must be either
-killed or cured before the 25th March. This, says the deposition of his
-father and mother, and two of his sisters, proved true; for on the 24th
-of that month he had his last fit, the devil being no longer able to
-withstand the means used with so much vigour and perseverance to expel
-him; one of the most effectual of which was a medicine, prescribed, in
-the way of his profession, by Dr. Chew, a medical practitioner in the
-neighbourhood. Mr. Zachary Taylor asserts that the preachers,
-disappointed and mortified at their ill success in Dugdale's case, gave
-it out that some of his connexions were witches, and in contract with
-the devil, and that, they supposed, was the cause why they had not been
-able to relieve him. Under this impression they procured some of the
-family to be searched, that they might see if they had not teats, or the
-devil's mark; and they tried them by the test of saying the Lord's
-Prayer. Some remains of the evil spirit, however, seem still to have
-possessed Richard; for, though after this he had no fits, yet once, when
-he had got too much drink, he was after another manner than drunken
-persons usually are. In confirmation of which feats, not only the eight
-ministers, but twenty respectable inhabitants, affixed their
-attestations to a document prepared for the purpose; and three of the
-magistrates of the district--Hugh, Lord Willoughby [of Parham], Ralph
-Egerton, Esq., and Thos. Braddyll, Esq.--received depositions from the
-attesting parties. This monstrous mass of absurdity, superstition, and
-fraud--for it was beyond doubt a compound of them all--was exposed with
-success by the Rev. Zachary Taylor, the Bishop of Chester's curate at
-Wigan, one of the King's preachers in Lancashire; but the reverend
-divine mixed with his censures too much party asperity, insisting that
-the whole was an artifice of the Nonconformist ministers, in imitation
-of the pretended miracles of the Roman Catholic priests, and likening it
-to the fictions of John Darrell, B.A., which had been practised a
-century before upon the family of Mr. Starkie, in the same county. Of
-the resemblance in many of its parts there can be no doubt; but the
-names of the venerable Oliver Heywood and Thomas Jolly form a sufficient
-guarantee against imposition on their part; and the probability is that
-the ministers were the dupes of a popular superstition in the hands of a
-dissolute and artful family.[72]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[62] See _Transactions of Historical Society of Lancashire and
-Cheshire_.
-
-[63] Casaubon, extracted from Dee's MSS., P. I., p. 22, fol. 1659.
-
-[64] _History of Lancashire_, vol. iv. p. 63.
-
-[65] Hampson's _Medii AEvi Kal._, vol. i. p. 74.
-
-[66] 33 Henry VIII., cap. 8.
-
-[67] "The Devils of Morzine," in the _Cornhill Magazine_, April, 1865.
-
-[68] See Roby's _Traditions of Lancashire_; Homerton's _Isles of Loch
-Awe_ and _Choice Notes: Folk-Lore_, pp. 247-8.
-
-[69] See _Transactions of Lancashire and Cheshire Historical Society_.
-
-[70] _Magna Britannica_, by Rev. M. S. Cox, p. 1303.
-
-[71] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[72] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-
-
-
-DIVINATION.
-
-
-This word, derived from _divinare_, to foretell, denotes a mode of
-foretelling future events, and which, among the ancients, was divided
-into two kinds, natural and artificial. Natural divination was prophecy
-or prediction, the result of supposed inspiration or the divine
-afflatus; artificial divination was effected by certain rites,
-experiments, or observations, as by sacrifices, cakes, flour, wine,
-observation of entrails, flight of birds, lots, verses, omens, position
-of the stars, &c. In modern divination, two modes are in popular
-favour--thrusting a pin or a key between the leaves of a closed Bible,
-and taking the verse the pin or key touches as a direction or omen; and
-the divining-rod, a long forked branch or twig of hazel, which being
-held between the finger and thumb in a particular way, is said to turn
-of itself when held near the earth over any hidden treasure, precious
-metals, or over a spring of water. It has also been used to discover a
-buried body of one murdered.
-
-
-DIVINATION AT MARRIAGES.
-
-The following practices are very prevalent at marriages in the districts
-around Burnley, and they are not noticed in the last edition of Brand's
-_Popular Antiquities_:--1. Put a wedding-ring into the _posset_, and
-after serving it out, the unmarried person whose cup contains the ring
-will be the first of the company to be married. 2. Make a common flat
-cake of flour, water, currants, &c., and put therein a wedding-ring and
-a sixpence. When the company are about to retire on the wedding-day the
-cake must be broken, and distributed amongst the unmarried females. She
-who gets the ring in her portion of the cake will shortly be married,
-and the one who gets the sixpence will die an old maid.[73]
-
-
-DIVINATION BY BIBLE AND KEY.
-
-When some choice specimen of the "Lancashire Witches" thinks it
-necessary to decide upon selecting a suitor from among the number of her
-admirers, she not unfrequently calls in the aid of the Bible and a key
-to assist in deciding her choice. Having opened the Bible at the passage
-in Ruth: "Whither thou goest will I go," &c., and having carefully
-placed the wards of the key upon the verses, she ties the book firmly
-with a piece of cord, and having mentioned the name of an admirer, she
-very solemnly repeats the passage in question, at the same time holding
-the Bible suspended _by joining the ends of her little fingers_ inserted
-under the handle of the key. If the key retain its position during the
-repetition the person whose name has been mentioned is considered to be
-rejected; and so another name is tried, till the book turns round and
-falls through the fingers, which is held to be a sure token the name
-just mentioned is that of an individual who will certainly marry her. I
-have a Bible in my possession which bears evidence of having seen much
-service of this description.[74]
-
-
-ANOTHER LANCASHIRE FORM OF DIVINATION.
-
-When a Lancashire damsel desires to know what sort of a husband she will
-have, on New Year's Eve she pours some melted lead into a glass of
-water, and observes what forms the drops assume. When they resemble
-scissors, she concludes that she must rest satisfied with a tailor; if
-they appear in the form of a hammer, he will be a smith or a carpenter,
-and so on of others. The writer has met with many instances of this
-class, in which the examples given did not admit of easy contradiction.
-
-
-DIVINATION BY THE DYING.
-
-Dying persons, especially if they have been distinguished for piety when
-in health, are considered to possess, for a short time, the spirit of
-prophecy. Hence many persons are then anxious to see them, in order that
-they may divine the _future_ by means of their oracular words. They also
-_know_ persons who have died before them. This is a curious remnant of
-the old Greek and Roman belief. Homer makes Hector foretell the death of
-Achilles, _Iliad_, v. 355. Virgil causes Orodes to foretell the death
-of Mezentius, _AEneid_, x. 739. Cicero also furnishes another instance,
-_De Divin._ lib. ii.
-
-
-SECOND-SIGHT.
-
-Though this faculty of seeing into the future has usually been regarded
-as limited to Scotland, and there chiefly possessed by natives of the
-Highlands, there have been individuals in Lancashire who have laid claim
-to the possession of this species of foresight. Amongst those in the
-Fylde district was a man named Cardwell, of Marton, near Blackpool, who
-foretold deaths and evil events from his vision of things to come. Men
-of superior ability were credulous enough to visit him, and to give
-implicit faith to his marvellous stories. The real form of second-sight
-is the seeing of the wraith, spirit, or ghost of one about to die; and
-in one notable instance Cardwell's second-sight failed him utterly. On
-seeing something in a vision, he concluded that his own child was about
-to die, and so strong was his own faith in this delusion that he carried
-sand to the churchyard to be ready for its grave. The death, however,
-did not happen: the child grew to maturity, and retaining robust health,
-lived for many years afterwards.
-
-
-SPIRITS OF THE DYING AND THE DEAD.
-
-1. Persons born during twilight are supposed to be able to _see_
-spirits, and to know who of their acquaintance will die next.
-
-2. Some say that this property also belongs to those who happen to be
-born _exactly_ at twelve o'clock at night.
-
-3. The spirits of persons about to die, especially if the persons be in
-distant lands, are supposed to return to their friends, and thus predict
-the calamity. While the spirit is thus _away_, the person is supposed to
-be in a _swoon_, and unaware of what is passing. His _desire_ to see his
-friends is also necessary; he must have been _thinking_ of them. I am
-not aware that these spirits ever _speak_.
-
-4. If no one in a family can _see_ a spirit, most can hear them, and
-hence strange noises are supposed to indicate death or misfortune to
-distant friends.
-
-
-CASTING LOTS, ETC.
-
-This is a species of divination or consulting of fate by omen. Great
-faith is placed by most in casting lots. Putting numbers in a box or bag
-is the common practice, and then drawing them out at random. Scripture
-was once quoted to the writer in proof that this mode of deciding
-doubtful matters was of God's appointment, and therefore could not
-fail. "The lot is cast into the bag, but the _disposal_ thereof is the
-Lord's." (Prov. xvi. 33; 1. Sam. xiv. 41.) When boys do not wish to
-divide anything they decide "who must take all" by drawing "short-cuts."
-A number of straws, pieces of twine, &c., of different lengths, are held
-by one not interested; each boy draws one, and he who gets the _longest_
-is entitled to the whole.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[73] T. T. W., in _Notes and Queries_, vol. ii. p. 117.
-
-[74] T. T. W., in _Notes and Queries_, vol. ii. p. 5.
-
-
-
-
-MISCELLANEOUS FOLK-LORE.
-
-
-DRUIDICAL ROCK BASINS.
-
-Dr. Borlase, in his _Antiquities of Cornwall_, notices the existence of
-Druidical Rock Basins, which appear to have been scooped out of the
-granite rocks and boulders which lie on the tops of the hills in the
-county. Several such cavities in stones are found on Brimham Rocks,
-near Knaresborough, and they have also been found at Plumpton and
-Rigton, in Yorkshire,[75] and on Stanton Moor, in Derbyshire. The writer
-first drew attention to the fact of similar Druidical remains existing
-in Lancashire in a paper read before the Historical Society of
-Lancashire and Cheshire, in December, 1864. They are found in
-considerable numbers around Boulsworth, Gorple, Todmorden, and on the
-hills which separate Lancashire from Yorkshire between these places.
-Commencing the enumeration of the groups of boulders, &c., containing
-rock basins, with the slopes of Boulsworth, about seven miles from
-Burnley, we have first the Standing Stones, mostly single blocks of
-millstone grit, at short distances from each other on the north-western
-side of the hill. One is locally termed the Buttock Stone, and near it
-is a block which has a circular cavity scooped out on its flat upper
-surface. Not far from these are the Joiner Stones, the Abbot Stone, the
-Weather Stones, and the Law Lad Stones [? from _llad_, British,
-sacrifices]. Next come the Great and Little Saucer Stones, so named from
-the cavities scooped out upon them. The Little Chair Stones, the Fox
-Stones, and the Broad Head Stones lie at no great distance, each group
-containing numerous like cavities. Several of these groups are locally
-named from resemblance to animals or other objects, as the Grey Stones
-and the Steeple Stones on Barn Hill, and one spur of Boulsworth is
-called Wycoller Ark, as resembling a farmer's chest or ark. On Warcock
-Hill several groups of natural rocks and boulders are locally named
-Dave or Dew Stones. On the surface of one immense Dave Stone boulder is
-a perfect hemispherical cavity, ten inches in diameter. The surface of
-another contains an oblong basin of larger dimensions, with a long
-grooved channel leading from its curved contour towards the edge of the
-stone. On a third there are four circular cavities of varying
-dimensions, the largest in the centre, and three others surrounding it,
-but none of these is more than a few inches in diameter. At the Bride
-Stones, near Todmorden, thirteen cavities were counted on one block, and
-eleven on another. All the basins here and elsewhere are formed on the
-_flat_ surfaces of the blocks; their upper surfaces being always
-parallel to the lamination of the stone. Along Widdop Moor we find the
-Grey Stones, the Fold Hole Stones, the Clattering Stones, and the
-Rigging Stones; the last named from occupying the rig or ridge of the
-hills in this locality. Amongst the Bride Stones is an immense mass of
-rock which might almost be classed among the rocking stones. It is about
-twenty-five feet in height, at least twelve feet across its broadest
-part, and rests on a base only about two feet in diameter. The Todmorden
-group contains the Hawk Stones, on Stansfield Moor, not far from
-Stiperden Cross, on the line of the Long Causeway (a Roman road); the
-Bride Stones, near Windy Harbour; the Chisley Stones, near Keelham; and
-Hoar Law, not far from Ashenhurst Royd and Todmorden. The rock basins on
-these boulders are very numerous, and of all sizes, from a few inches in
-diameter and depth to upwards of two feet. The elliptical axes of some
-of these basins did not appear to the writer to have been caused by the
-action of wind or water, or to follow any regular law. Lastly, taking
-for a centre, Gorple,[76] about five miles south-east of Burnley is
-another extensive group of naked rocks and boulders. Close to the
-solitary farm-house there are the Gorple Stones; and at a short distance
-the Hanging Stones form conspicuous objects in the sombre landscape. On
-Thistleden Dean are the Upper, Middle, and Lower Whinberry Stones, so
-named from the "whinberry" shrubs, with which this moor abounds. The
-Higher and Lower Boggart Stones come next, and these are followed by the
-Wicken Clough, and other minor groups of stones. Above Gorple Bottom is
-another set of grey stones; and these are followed by the Upper, Middle,
-and Lower Hanging Stones, on Shuttleworth Moor.[77] The rock basins here
-are very numerous, and mostly well defined. There are forty-three
-cavities in these Gorple, Gorple Gate, and Hanging Stones, ranging from
-four to forty inches in length, from four to twenty-five in breadth, and
-from two to thirteen inches in depth.
-
-Dr. Borlase confidently asserts that the ancient Druids used these rock
-basins for baptismal and sacrificial purposes--a conjecture which the
-authors of the _Beauties of Derbyshire_ admit to be probable; and so
-does Higgins in his elaborate work on the _Celtic Druids_. The
-supposition is supported by the fact of their occurring in such numbers
-mostly _on the tops of hills_, in so many counties, and in such
-different materials as the granite and the millstone-grit
-formations.[78] Whether they have been formed by natural or artificial
-means is still a matter of dispute. On the whole the writer's opinion
-is, that the rock basins of Scilly, Cornwall, Derbyshire, Yorkshire, and
-East Lancashire are partly natural, and partly artificial; the former
-being comparatively few, and easily distinguished by their varying
-depths and forms.[79] Whether wholly or partially natural or artificial,
-he thinks it safe to conclude that they have been appropriated by the
-Druids to their religious worship, as furnishing the means by which they
-could offer their sacrifices and perform their ablutions. They would
-also suffice for baptism, and preserve the rain or the dew from being
-polluted by touching the earth. The Tolmen on the neighbouring hills[80]
-may be taken as an additional reason for associating Druidical worship
-with such remains. These contain small basins on the summits, which
-differ in no respect from those here enumerated. They have, therefore,
-most probably been used for similar purposes. Those above described form
-a curious chapter in the oldest folk-lore of Lancashire.
-
-
-ELVES AND FAIRIES.
-
- "Like elves and fairies in a ring."--_Macbeth._
-
-England has ever been full of the favourite haunts of those pleasantest
-of all the supernatural sprites of childhood and superstition--elves and
-fairies. Volumes might be filled with the stories of their feats and
-pranks in all parts of England; and our greatest poet has for ever
-embalmed this superstition in the richest hues of poetic imagery and
-fancy--especially in his _Midsummer Night's Dream_. The _Fairies_, or
-"Hill Folk," yet live amongst the rural people of Lancashire. Antique
-tobacco-pipes, "formerly belonging to the fairies," are still
-occasionally found in the corners of newly-ploughed fields. They
-themselves still gambol on the grassy meads at dewy eve, and their
-revels are yet believed to be witnessed at times by some privileged
-inhabitants of our "calm sequestered vales." It is generally stated
-that, in order to see one of these diminutive beings, the use of
-ointments, four-leaved clover, or other specific preparations, is
-necessary; but a near relative of the writer, not more imbued with
-superstition than the majority, firmly believed that he once saw a real
-dwarf or fairy, without the use of any incantation. He had been amusing
-himself one summer evening on the top of Mellor Moor, near Blackburn,
-close to the remains of the Roman encampment, when his attention was
-arrested by the appearance of a dwarf-like man, attired in full hunting
-costume, with top-boots and spurs, a green jacket, red hairy cap, and a
-thick hunting whip in his hand. He ran briskly along the moor for a
-considerable distance, when, leaping over a low stone wall, he darted
-down a steep declivity, and was lost to sight. The popular opinion of
-the neighbourhood is, that an underground city exists at this place;
-that an earthquake swallowed up the encampment, and that on certain days
-in the year the hill folk may be heard ringing their bells, and
-indulging in various festivities. Considerable quantities of stone,
-which still remain around the ditches of this rectangular place, may
-have suggested the ideas of a city and an earthquake. On other occasions
-the fairies are supposed to exhibit themselves in military array on the
-mountain sides; their evolutions conforming in every respect to the
-movements of modern troops. Such appearances are believed to portend the
-approach of civil commotions, and are said to have been more than
-usually common about the time of the rebellion in 1745-6. This would
-suggest an explanation of a more rational character. [Doubtless the
-mirage, Fata Morgana, or Spectral appearances of the Hartz mountains.]
-
-One Lancashire Fairy tale runs thus:--
-
-Two men went poaching, and having placed nets, or rather sacks, over
-what they supposed to be rabbit holes, but which were in reality
-fairies' houses, the fairies rushed into the sacks, and the poachers
-(believing them to be rabbits), content with their prey, marched
-homewards again. One fairy missing another in the sack, called out (the
-story was told in the broad Lancashire dialect)--"Dick" (dignified name
-for a fairy), "where art thou?" To which fairy Dick replied,--
-
- "In a sack,
- On a back,
- Riding up Barley Brow."
-
-The story has a good moral ending; for the men were so frightened that
-they never poached again.[81]
-
-The Rev. William Thornber[82] characterizes the elves and fairies as
-kind, good-natured creatures, at times seeking the assistance of
-mortals, and in return, liberally rewarding them. They have a favourite
-spot between Hardhorn and Staining, at a cold spring of water called
-"Fairies' Well" to this day. Most amusing stories of fairies are told
-around that district. A poor woman, when filling her pitcher at the well
-just named, in order to bathe the weak eyes of her infant child, was
-mildly accosted by a handsome man, who presented her with a box of
-ointment, and told her it would be a specific remedy. She was grateful
-for the gift, but love for her child made her somewhat mistrustful; so
-she first applied the ointment to one of her own eyes. Shortly
-afterwards, she saw her benefactor at Preston, stealing corn from the
-mouths of the sacks open for sale, and, much to his amazement, accosted
-him. On his inquiry how she could recognise him, since he was invisible
-to all else around, she told him how she had used his ointment, and
-pointed to the powerful eye; when he immediately struck it out. A
-milkmaid, observing a jug and a sixpence placed at her side by some
-invisible being, filled the jug with milk, and took the money; this was
-repeated for weeks, till, overjoyed with her good fortune, she could not
-refrain from imparting it to her lover; but the jug and sixpence never
-appeared again. A ploughman when engaged in his daily labour, heard a
-plaintive cry, "I have broken my _speet_."[83] Hastily turning round,
-the ploughman beheld a lady, holding in her hand a broken _spittle_, a
-hammer, and nails, and beckoning him to repair it. He did so, and
-instantly received a handsome reward; and then the lady vanished,
-apparently sinking into the earth.
-
-
-FOLK-LORE.
-
-Under this general head we bring together a few scattered notices not
-naturally falling under any precise classification, but all showing the
-nature and character of common and popular notions, beliefs, and
-superstitions. Where, however, the subject will admit of it, many
-examples of this Folk-lore will be found in later pages, under the
-general head of "Superstitions."
-
-
-FOLK-LORE OF ECCLES AND THE NEIGHBOURHOOD.
-
-A very curious book exhibits some of the usages of our ancestors in this
-part of the county, early in the reign of James I., entitled _The Way to
-the True Church ... directed to all that seek for Resolution; and
-especially to all his loving Countrymen of Lancashire, by John White,
-Minister of God's Word at Eccles_. [White was vicar of Eccles only a few
-months--from May, 1609.] The fifth edition or "impression" is a folio,
-printed at London, 1624, but the Preface is dated Oct. 29th, 1608. White
-complains of "the prodigious ignorance" which he found among his
-parishioners when he entered upon his ministrations, and he proceeds
-thus to tell his own tale:--"I will only mention what I saw and learned,
-dwelling among them, concerning the saying of their prayers; for what
-man is he whose heart trembles not to simple people so far seduced [or
-so ill-taught] that they know not how to pronounce or say their daily
-prayers; or so to pray that all that hear them shall be filled with
-laughter? And while, superstitiously, they refuse to pray in their own
-language with understanding, they speak that which their leaders [Roman
-Catholic priests] may blush to hear. These examples I have observed from
-the common people:
-
-"'_The Creed._
-
-"'Creezum zuum patrum onitentem Creatorum ejus anicum, Dominum nostrum
-qui sum sops, virgini Mariae, crixus fixus, Ponchi Pilati audubitiers,
-morti by Sonday, father a fernes, scelerest unjudicarum, finis a
-mortibus. Creezum spirituum sanctum, eccli Catholi, remissurum
-peccaturum, communiorum obliviorum, bitam et turnam again.'
-
-"'_The Little Creed._
-
- "'Little creed, can I need
- Kneele before our Ladies' knee;
- Candlelight, candles burne,
- Our Ladie pray'd to her dear Sonne
- That we all to heaven might come.
- Little creed. Amen.'
-
-"This that followeth they call--
-
-"'_The White Paternoster._
-
- "'White Paternoster, Saint Peter's brother,
- What hast i' th' t' one hand? White book leaves.
- What hast i' th' t' other hand? Heaven yate keys.
- Open heaven yates, and steyk [shut] hell yates:
- And let every crysome child creep to it own mother.
- White Paternoster, Amen.'
-
-"'_Another Prayer._
-
- "'I bless me with God and the rood,
- With his sweet flesh and precious blood;
- With his cross and his creed,
- With his length and his breed,
- From my toe to my crown,
- And all my body up and down,
- From my back to my breast,
- My five wits be my rest;
- God let never ill come at ill,
- But through Jesus' own will,
- Sweet Jesus, Lord, Amen.'
-
-"Many also use to wear vervain against blasts; and, when they gather it
-for this purpose, first they cross the herb with their hand, and then
-they bless it thus:--
-
- "'Hallowed be thou, Vervain,
- As thou growest on the ground,
- For in the Mount of Calvary,
- There thou wast first found.
- Thou healedst our Saviour Jesus Christ,
- And staunchedst his bleeding wound;
- In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost,
- I take thee from the ground.'
-
-"And so they pluck it up and wear it. Their prayers and traditions of
-this sort are infinite, and the ceremonies they use in their actions are
-nothing inferior to the Gentiles in number and strangeness. Which any
-man may easily observe that converseth with them."[84]
-
-
-TREE BARNACLES; OR, GEESE HATCHED FROM SEA-SHELLS.
-
-The learned and venerable John Gerarde, author or translator of _A
-History of Plants, or Herball_; first published in folio in 1597, has
-the following marvellous story respecting barnacle-shells growing on
-trees, and giving birth to young geese; not as a thing which some
-wonder-monger had related to him, but as what he had seen with his own
-eyes, and the truth of which he could, therefore, and does, most
-solemnly avouch.
-
-"There are found in the north parts of Scotland, and the isles adjacent
-called Orcades, certain trees, whereon do grow certain shell-fishes, of
-a white colour, tending to russet; wherein are contained little living
-creatures; which shells in time of maturity do open, and out of them
-grow those little living things; which, falling into the water, do
-become fowls, whom we call barnacles, in the North of England brant
-geese, and in Lancashire tree geese; but the others that do fall upon
-the land perish and do come to nothing. Thus much by the writings of
-others, and also from the mouths of people of those parts, which may
-very well accord with truth. But _what our eyes have seen and hands have
-touched, we shall declare_. There is a small island in Lancashire called
-The Pile of Foulders [or Peel of Fouldrey] wherein are found the broken
-pieces of old and bruised ships, some whereof have been cast thither by
-shipwreck, and also the trunks or bodies, with the branches, of old
-rotten trees, cast up there likewise; whereon is found a certain spume
-or froth, that in time breedeth unto certain shells, in shape like those
-of the mussel, but sharper pointed, and of a whitish colour; wherein is
-contained a thing in form like a lace of silk, finely woven as it were
-together, as of a whitish colour, one end whereof is fastened unto the
-inside of the shell, even as the fish of oysters and mussels are. The
-other end is made fast unto the belly of a rude masse or lump, which in
-time cometh to the shape and form of a bird; when it is perfectly formed
-the shell gapeth open, and the first thing that appeareth is the
-foresaid lace or string; next come the legs of the bird hanging out; and
-as it groweth greater it openeth the shell by degrees, till at length it
-is all come forth and hangeth only by the bill. In short space after it
-cometh to full maturity and falleth into the sea, where it gathereth
-feathers and groweth to a fowl, bigger than a mallard and lesser than a
-goose; and black legs and bill, or beak, and feathers black and white,
-spotted in such a manner as is our magpie (called in some places a
-pie-annet), which [not the magpie, but the barnacle-hatched fowl] the
-people of Lancashire call by no other name than a tree goose; which
-place aforesaid, and all those parts adjoining, do so much abound
-therewith, that one of the best is bought for 3_d._; For the truth
-hereof, if any doubt, may it please them to repair to me, and I shall
-satisfy them by the testimony of good witnesses(!).... They spawn as it
-were in March and April; the geese are formed in May and June, and come
-to fulness of feathers in the month after." "There is another sort
-hereof, the history of which is _true, and of mine own knowledge_; for
-travelling upon the shores of our English coast between Dover and
-Romney, I found the trunk of an old rotten tree, which (with some help
-that I procured by fishermen's wives, that were there attending their
-husbands' return from the sea) we drew out of the water upon dry land.
-On this rotten tree I found growing many thousands of long crimson
-bladders, in shape like unto puddings newly filled, before they be
-sodden, which were very clear and shining; at the nether end whereof did
-grow a shell-fish, fashioned somewhat like a small mussel, but much
-whiter, resembling a shell-fish that groweth upon the rocks about
-Guernsey and Jersey, called a limpet. Many of these shells I brought
-with me to London, which, after I had opened, I found in them living
-things, without form or shape; in others, which were nearer come to
-ripeness, I found living things that were very naked, in shape like a
-bird; in others, the birds covered with soft down, the shell half open,
-and the bird ready to fall out, which no doubt were the fowls called
-barnacles.... That which I have seen with my eyes and handled with my
-hands, I dare confidently avouch and boldly put down for verity.... We
-conclude and end our present volume with this wonder of God. For which
-God's name be ever honoured and praised." This author figures the
-_Britannica Conchae Anatifera_, or the breed of barnacles; the woodcut
-representing a tree growing by the sea, with leaves like mussel shells,
-opening, and living creatures emerging; while others, swimming about in
-the sea beneath, are perfect goslings! Well may the old herbalist call
-this "one of the marvels of this land; we may say of the world." Dr.
-Charles Leigh, in his _Natural History of Lancashire_, gravely labours
-to refute the notion that barnacles grow into geese, as had been
-asserted by Speed and others.
-
-Sir J. Emerson Tennent, writing in _Notes and Queries_ (vol. viii. p.
-223), referring to Porta's _Natural Magic_ for the vulgar error that not
-only in Scotland, but in the river Thames, "there is a kind of
-shell-fish which get out of their shells and grow to be ducks, or
-such-like birds," observes that this tradition is very ancient, Porta,
-the author, having died in 1515. In _Hudibras_ is an allusion to those--
-
- "Who from the most refin'd of saints,
- As naturally grow miscreants,
- As _barnacles_ turn Soland geese,
- In th' islands of the Orcades."
-
-The story (says Sir James) has its origin in the peculiar formation of
-the little mollusc which inhabits the multivalve shell, the _Pentalasmi
-Anatifera_, which by a fleshy peduncle attaches itself by one end to the
-bottoms of ships or floating timber, whilst from the other there
-protrudes a bunch of curling and fringe-like cirrhi, by the agitation of
-which it attracts and collects its food. These cirrhi so much resemble
-feathers, as to have suggested the leading idea of a bird's tail; and
-hence the construction of the remainder of the fable, which is given
-with grave minuteness in _The Herball, or General Historie of Plants_,
-gathered by John Gerarde, Master in Chirurgie (London, 1597). After
-quoting the account, Sir James adds, that Gerarde, who is doubtless
-Butler's authority, says elsewhere, "that in the north parts of
-Scotland, and the islands called Orcades, there are certain trees
-whereon these tree geese and barnacles abound." The conversion of the
-fish into a bird, however fabulous, would be scarcely more astounding
-than the metamorphosis which it actually undergoes, the young of the
-little animal having no feature to identify it with its final
-development. In its early stage (see Carpenter's _Physiology_, i. 52) it
-has a form not unlike that of the crab, "possessing eyes and powers of
-free motion: but afterwards becoming fixed to one spot for the remainder
-of its life, it loses its eyes, and forms a shell, which, though
-composed of various pieces, has nothing in common with the jointed shell
-of the crab." Mr. T. J. Buckton (_Notes and Queries_, vol. viii. p.
-224) says that Drayton (1613), in his _Polyolbion_, p. iii., in
-connexion with the river Dee, speaks of--
-
- "Th' anatomised fish, and fowls from planchers sprung,"
-
-to which a note is appended in Southey's edition (p. 609), that such
-fowls were "_barnacles_, a bird breeding upon old ships." In the
-_Entertaining Library_, "Habits of Birds," (pp. 363-379), the whole
-story of this extraordinary ignorance of natural history is amply
-developed. The barnacle-shells which I once saw in a sea-port attached
-to a vessel just arrived from the Mediterranean had the brilliant
-appearance at a distance of flowers in bloom. (See _Penny Cyclopaedia_,
-article "Cirripeda," vii. 206, reversing the woodcut). The foot of the
-_Lepas Anatifera_ (Linn.), appeared to me like the stalk of a plant
-growing from the ship's side. The shell had the semblance of a calyx,
-and the flower consisted of the fingers (_tentacula_) of the shell-fish,
-"of which twelve project in an elegant curve, and are used by it for
-making prey of small fish." The very ancient error was to mistake the
-foot of the shell-fish for the neck of a goose, the shell for its head,
-and the _tentacula_ for a tuft of feathers. As to the body, _non est
-inventus_. The Barnacle Goose is a well-known bird; and these shell-fish
-bearing, as seen out of the water, resemblance to the goose's neck,
-were ignorantly, and without investigation, confounded with geese
-themselves. In France, the barnacle goose may be eaten on fast-days, by
-virtue of this old belief in its fishy origin. From a passage in the
-_Memoirs of Lady Fanshaw_, it appears that Sir Kenelm Digby, at the
-table of the Governor of Calais, declared that barnacles, a bird in
-Jersey, was first a shell-fish to appearance, and from that, sticking
-upon old wood, became in time a goose! An advertisement of June, 1807,
-sets forth that the "Wonderful curiosity called the Goose Tree, Barnacle
-Tree, or Tree bearing geese, taken up at sea on the 12th January, 1807,
-by Captain Bytheway, and was more than twenty men could raise out of the
-water--may be seen at the Exhibition Rooms, Spring Gardens, from ten
-o'clock in the morning till ten at night, every day. The Barnacles which
-form the present exhibition possess a neck upwards of two feet in
-length, resembling the windpipe of a chicken; each shell contains five
-pieces, and notwithstanding the many thousands which hang to eight
-inches of the tree, part of the fowl may be seen from each shell. Sir
-Robert Moxay, in the _Wonders of Nature and Art_, speaking of this
-singularly curious production, says, that in every shell he opened he
-found a perfect sea-fowl[!], with a bill like that of a goose, feet like
-those of water-fowl, and the feathers all plainly formed." (_Ibid._, p.
-300.)
-
-
-WARTS FROM WASHING IN EGG-WATER.
-
-It is commonly held that washing the hands in water in which eggs have
-been boiled will produce a plentiful crop of warts. Not long ago two
-young and intelligent ladies stated that they had inadvertently washed
-their hands and arms in egg-water, and in each case this had been
-followed by large numbers of warts. This sequence they affirmed to be a
-consequence, and the warts were shown as an ocular demonstration of the
-unpleasant results of such lavation.
-
-
-FORTUNE-TELLING.--WISE MEN AND CUNNING WOMEN, ETC.
-
-There is scarcely a town of any magnitude in Lancashire, or in one or
-two adjacent counties, which does not possess its local "fortune-teller"
-or pretender to a knowledge of astrology, and to a power of predicting
-the future events of life, under the talismanic name of "fortune," to a
-large and credulous number of applicants. The fortune-teller of the
-nineteenth century professes to be able to "cast nativities" and to
-"rule the planets." If, as is not unfrequently the case, he be a medical
-botanist, he gathers his herbs when the proper planet is "in the
-ascendant." Some of these impostors also profess to "charge the crystal"
-(_i.e._, to look into a globular or egg-shaped glass), and thereby to
-solve the gravest questions respecting the future fortunes of those who
-consult them. Nor is this by any means an unprofitable pursuit. The
-writer is aware of several instances in which "casting nativities," &c.,
-has proved a golden harvest to the professor. One individual gave up a
-well-paid occupation in order that he might devote himself wholly to the
-still more lucrative practice of astrology and fortune-telling. He not
-only predicted future events by means of the stars, but he gave heads of
-families advice as to the recovery of stolen property and the detection
-of the thief; while impatient maidens he counselled how to bring shy or
-dilatory lovers to the point. Another practitioner added to these
-practices the construction of sun-dials, in which he was very
-ingenious, and thereby amassed considerable property after a long and
-successful career. Instances are very common that credulity is not
-confined to the ignorant or uneducated classes. An intelligent and
-well-meaning lady once very seriously cautioned the writer against
-diving into the secrets of astrology, as, she said, that pursuit had
-"turned the head" of one of her acquaintance. She not only had a firm
-faith in the truth of all astrological predictions, but (from
-apprehension engendered by this faith) she would not on any account
-suffer any of these practitioners to predict her fortune, nor would she
-on any account consult them. It seems that on one occasion she did
-commit herself so far as to go to "a wise man," whom we will call Mr.
-I., in company with Miss J., whose marriage with Mr. K. was then
-somewhat doubtful; and she afterwards solemnly affirmed that the
-astrologer told her all her fortune. She described him as first
-carefully drawing the requisite diagram, showing the state of the
-heavens at the hour of Miss J.'s birth; and after "charging his glass"
-he declared that the marriage would take place within a few months;
-"but," he added, "he was also very sorry to inform her that she would
-die young." Both these events did really happen within a limited period;
-and of course the lady's belief in the truth of astrological prediction
-was very powerfully strengthened and confirmed. Some time after these
-events, this identical Mr. I. was brought before the magistrates in
-petty sessions, charged with obtaining money under false pretences; with
-practising astrology, palmistry, &c., and he only narrowly escaped
-imprisonment through some technical error in the charge or summons. It
-was said that the charge was a vindictive one--hence there was great
-rejoicing amongst his friends when it was dismissed; but the inspector
-of police who had charge of the case did not hesitate to declare that
-there were many persons then present who had paid Mr. I. money for his
-predictions.
-
-Another specimen of the fortune-teller we may notice from a rural
-district. In the hamlet of Roe Green, in the township of Worsley, in a
-humble cottage, a few years ago lived a man who held the position of
-overseer or head of one class of workmen in the employ of the
-Bridgewater Trust. In the language of the locality, "Owd Rollison
-[Rawlinson] was a _gaffer_." But to this regular avocation he added the
-profession of fortune-telling, and in the evenings many were the
-applicants for a little knowledge of future events from the villages and
-hamlets for miles around. His stock-in-trade consisted of various books
-on astrology, &c., and of two magic glasses or crystals, one a small
-globular mass of common white glass, with a short stem by which to hold
-it; the other was about the size and shape of a large hen's egg, but
-without any stem or handle. His whole apparatus was for some months in
-the possession of the writer, and a list of his books may serve to show
-the sort of literature held in esteem amongst this class of planet
-rulers. 1. _The Three Books of Occult Philosophy_ of Henry Cornelius
-Agrippa, translated by J. Freake (London, 1651, pp. 583).[85] 2. Lilly's
-_Christian Astrology_, in three books (London, 1659, pp. 832). 3. John
-Gadbury's _Thesaurus Astrologiae_ (Westminster, 1674, pp. 272). 4. _The
-Star_, by Ebn Shemaya (London, 1839, pp. 203). Zadkiel's _Grammar of
-Astrology_ (London, 1849, pp. 178): in this volume were also bound up
-"Tables for Calculating Nativities," by Zadkiel (London, 1850, pp. 64).
-6. _A Plea for Urania_ (London, 1854, pp. 387).
-
-One or two MS. books, apparently blank copy-books, which had been used
-to draw diagrams, or, as the phrase goes, to "construct horoscopes," or
-"erect schemes," or "cast nativities," showed that "Owd Rollison" had
-dabbled a little in a sort of Astrology; but the rudeness of these
-attempts betrayed him to be but a mere tyro in the "celestial science."
-He had also a reputation for selling "charms" against the various ills
-that flesh is heir to; amongst others, one to stop haemorrhage. One
-countryman told the writer that he remembered, when a boy, that his
-uncle having a very severe haemorrhage, so that he was believed to be
-bleeding to death, this boy was told to run off as hard as he could to
-Owd Rollison to get something to stop the bleeding. He soon received a
-small piece of parchment containing sundry unintelligible characters
-upon it, which was to be sewed up in a small bag and worn continually,
-so that the bag should rest on the skin just over the heart. This was
-done, the bleeding stopped, and the man recovered. Another person, who
-had been a sort of confidant of the wise man, told the writer that at
-one period Rawlinson went at regular intervals, and on stated days, to
-Manchester, where at a quiet public-house he met other "wise men," and
-they assembled in an upper chamber, with locked door, and sometimes
-remained for hours in deliberation. Of the subject of such deliberations
-the informant said he knew nothing, for he was never admitted; he had
-the honour of remaining outside the door as watchman, guard, or
-sentinel, to prevent any prying listeners from approaching. He
-conjectured that what they were about was "magic and such like;" but
-more he knew not. "Owd Rollison" kept his situation under the
-Bridgewater Trust until his death, at a ripe old age; and though he left
-several sons and a daughter, the mantle of his astrological or
-fortune-telling wisdom does not seem to have fallen on any of them.
-
-Much might be stated respecting the practice of the art of
-fortune-telling by wandering gipsies, especially in that branch of it
-termed palmistry--predicting the future from an examination of the
-"lines" of the palm of the left hand, each of which, in the jargon of
-palmists, has its own peculiar character and name, as the line of life,
-of fortune, &c.; but as these wanderers are not indigenous to
-Lancashire, but may be found in every county in England, it may suffice
-thus to name them. Of the old women who tell fortunes by cards chiefly,
-to silly women who are always wanting to know whether their future
-husband is to be denoted by the King of Hearts (a true-loving swain) or
-by the Monarch of Diamonds (as indicative of great wealth), it is enough
-to say that they may be found by scores or hundreds in every town in
-Lancashire.
-
-
-MAGIC AND MAGICIANS.
-
-Our forefathers had a strong faith in the power of magic, and even
-divided the knowledge of it into two opposite kinds--viz., "white
-magic," which was acquired from the communications of the archangels and
-angels, or at least from some of the good spirits who were allowed to
-aid human beings by their supernatural power in deeds of beneficence;
-and black magic, or "the black art," also termed "necromancy," which was
-derived from dealings with the devil, or at least from commerce with
-his imps, or the evil spirits of wicked dead men. At one period the
-terms magician and conjuror had the same meaning--one who conjured, by
-magical power, spirits and demons to appear and do his bidding. Conjuror
-has since become a name for a professor of _legerdemain_ or
-sleight-of-hand.
-
-
-EDWARD KELLY, THE SEER.
-
-Edward Kelly, whose dealings in the Black Art, it is said, would fill a
-volume, was born at Worcester, and had been an apothecary. We have
-elsewhere noticed his doings as an alchemist. He was for a considerable
-time the companion and associate of "Dr." John Dee, performing for him
-the office of "Seer," by looking into the doctor's crystal or stone, a
-faculty not possessed by Dee, who in consequence was obliged to have
-recourse to Kelly for the revelations he has published respecting the
-world of spirits. These curious transactions may be found in Casaubon's
-work, entitled, _A True and Faithful Relation of what Passed for many
-years between Dr. John Dee and some Spirits_--opening out another dark
-page in the history of imposture and credulity. Dee says that he was
-brought into unison with Kelly by the mediation of the angel Uriel.
-Afterwards he found himself deceived by him, in his opinion that these
-spirits which ministered unto him were messengers of the Deity. They had
-had several quarrels before; but when Dee found Kelly degenerating into
-the worst species of the magic art, for the purposes of avarice and
-fraud, he broke off all connexion with him, and would never afterwards
-be seen in his company. Kelly, being discountenanced by the doctor,
-betook himself to the meanest practices of magic, in all which money and
-the works of the devil appear to have been his chief aim. Many wicked
-and abominable transactions are recorded of him.
-
-In Lilly's Memoirs are the following passages relating to this
-Seer:--"Kelly outwent the Doctor, viz., about the Elixir and the
-Philosopher's Stone, which neither he nor his master attained by their
-own labour and industry. It was in this manner that Kelly obtained it,
-as I had it related from an ancient minister, who knew the certainty
-thereof from an old English merchant, resident in Germany, at what time
-both Kelly and Dee were there. Dee and Kelly, being on the confines of
-the Emperor's dominions, in a city where resided many English merchants,
-with whom they had much familiarity, there happened an old friar to come
-to Dr. Dee's lodgings, knocking at the door. Dee peeped down stairs:
-'Kelly,' says he, 'tell the old man I am not at home.' Kelly did so. The
-friar said, 'I will take another time to wait upon him.' Some few days
-after, he came again. Dee ordered Kelly, if it were the same person, to
-deny him again. He did so; at which the friar was very angry. 'Tell thy
-master I came to speak with him, and to do him good; because he is a
-great scholar, and famous: but now tell him, he put forth a book, and
-dedicated it to the Emperor. It is called _Monas Hieroglyphicas_. He
-understands it not. I wrote it myself. I came to instruct him therein,
-and in some other more profound things. Do thou, Kelly, come along with
-me. I will make thee more famous than thy master Dee.' Kelly was very
-apprehensive of what the friar delivered, and thereupon suddenly
-retired from Dr. Dee, and wholly applied unto the friar, and of him
-either had the Elixir ready made, or the perfect method of its
-preparation and making. The poor friar lived a very short time after:
-whether he died a natural death, or was otherwise poisoned or made away
-by Kelly, the merchant who related this, did not certainly know." "It
-was vulgarly reported that he [Kelly] had a compact with the devil,
-which he out-lived, and was seized at midnight by infernal spirits, who
-carried him off in sight of his family, at the instant he was meditating
-a mischievous design against the minister of the parish, with whom he
-was greatly at enmity."[86]
-
-
-RAISING THE DEAD AT WALTON-LE-DALE.
-
-In the reign of Queen Elizabeth and the year 1560, three judicial
-astrologers met in Preston, for the purpose of raising a corpse by
-incantations. They were Dr. Dee, Warden of Manchester, Edward Kelly, his
-assistant, and "seer," and Paul Wareing, of Dove Cotes, near Clayton
-Brook. Casaubon, in his "True and faithful Account of what passed for
-many years between John Dee and some Spirits," (apparently quoting from
-Weever's _Funeral Monuments_) states that "The aforesaid Master Edward
-Kelly, a person well skilled in judicial astrology, with one Paul
-Wareing (who acted with him in these incantations and all these
-conjurations) and Dr. Dee, went to the churchyard of St. Leonard's, in
-Walton-le-Dale, near Preston, and entered the burial ground exactly at
-midnight, the moon shining brightly, for the purpose of raising the body
-of a person who had been interred there, and who had during his life
-hidden a quantity of money without disclosing the fact previous to his
-death. Having had the grave pointed out to them on the preceding day,
-they opened it, removed the coffin lid, and set to work by various
-exorcisms, until the body became animated, by the spirit entering it
-again. The body then rose out of the grave and stood upright before
-them. It not only satisfied their wicked desires, it is said, but
-delivered several strange predictions concerning persons in the
-neighbourhood, which were literally and exactly fulfilled. Sibley, in
-his _Occult Sciences_, relates a similar account of this transaction,
-and also gives an engraving representing the scene, which took place at
-the midnight hour in the church of Walton. Another account states that
-Dr. Dee was engaged with Kelly in this enterprise, August 12th, 1560,
-and that Paul Wareing, of Clayton Brook, was the other who gave
-assistance in endeavouring to obtain an intercourse with familiar
-spirits."--(_Whittle's Preston._)
-
-
-AN EARL OF DERBY CHARGED WITH KEEPING A CONJUROR.
-
-The loyal and munificent Edward (third) Earl of Derby, notwithstanding
-his great services to Queen Elizabeth, and his long-proved loyalty, was
-maligned and accused of traitorous intentions. The Earl of Huntingdon
-wrote to Sir William Cecil, then the Queen's Secretary of State
-(afterwards Lord Burghley, her Treasurer), a letter, communicating
-suspicions of the Earl of Derby, which the writer asked should be burned
-as soon as read, but which has been preserved (and printed) amongst Lord
-Burghley's _State Papers_ (I. 603.) Modernising the spelling, the letter
-runs thus:--
-
- Sir,--I am bolder to write to you on weighty matters, than I dare be
- to some others; the cause I leave to your consideration, and so to
- you only I am bold to impart that I hear. The matter in short is
- this:--Among the Papists of Lancashire, Cheshire, and the Cosynes
- (?), great hope and expectation there is, that Derby will play as
- foul a part this year as the two Earls did the last year. [See the
- Rising in the North.] I hope better of him for my part, and for my
- respects, both general and particular, I wish him to do better. I
- know he hath hitherto been loyal, and even the last year, as you
- know, gave good testimony of his fidelity, and of his own
- disposition, I think, will do so still; but he may be drawn by evil
- counsel, God knoweth to what. I fear he hath even at this time many
- wicked counsellors, and some too near him. _There is one Browne, a
- conjuror, in his house, kept secretly._ There is also one Uphalle,
- who was a pirate, and had lately his pardon, that could tell
- somewhat, as I hear, if you could get him. He that carried my Lord
- Morley over, was also there within this se'ennight, kept secretly.
- He with his whole family never raged so much against religion as
- they do now, he never came to common prayer for this quarter or this
- year, as I hear, neither doth any of the family, except five or six
- persons. I dare not write what more I hear, because I cannot justify
- and prove it; but this may suffice for you in time to look to it.
- And surely, in my simple opinion, if you send some faithful and wise
- spy, that would dissemble to come from D'Alva, and dissemble popery,
- you might understand all; for if all be true that is said, there is
- a very fond company in the house at this present. I doubt not but
- you can and will use this matter better than I can advise you. Yet
- let me wish you to take heed to which of your companions (though you
- be now but five together) you utter this matter _ne forte_ it be in
- Lathom sooner than you would have it; for some of you have men about
- you and friends attending on you, &c., that deal not always well. I
- pray God save our Elizabeth and confound all her enemies; and thus I
- take my leave, committing you to God his tuition.
-
- Your assured poor friend,
- H. HUNTYNGDON.
- From Ashby, 24 Aug., 1570.
-
- P.S.--Because none there should know of my letter, I would not send
- it by my servant, but have desired Mr. Ad to deliver it to you in
- secret. When you have read it, I pray you to burn it and forget the
- name of the writer. I pray God I may not hear any more of your
- coming to ----.
-
-There seems to have been no substantial ground for suspecting the
-loyalty of the Earl of Derby, which remained unshaken through another
-ordeal, the conspiracy of the Duke of Norfolk to marry the Queen of
-Scots, and place her on the English throne. But the Bishop of Ross gave
-evidence, that in Mary's design, in 1571, to escape from Sheffield
-Castle to the Continent, she was aided by several Lancashire gentlemen;
-and adds, that she wrote a letter by a little priest of Rolleston's to
-Sir Thomas Stanley. Sir Thomas Gerrard and Rolleston devised a cypher
-for her; and they offered to convey her away, and willed the Bishop to
-ask the Duke of Norfolk's opinion therein. The prelate further stated
-that Hall told him that if the Queen [Mary] would get two men landed in
-Lancashire, Sir Thomas Stanley, and Sir Edward Stanley, along with Sir
-Thomas Gerrard, and Rolleston, would effect her escape to France or
-Flanders, &c. Upon this evidence Sir Thomas Stanley, Sir Thomas Gerrard,
-and Rolleston, were apprehended, and committed to the Tower as state
-prisoners.[87]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[75] Allen's _History of Yorkshire_, vol. iii. pp. 421-425.
-
-[76] _Gort_, narrow; _gor_, upper, Brit.; _gor_, blood, A.-S. _Gorple_
-may mean the bloody pile, or the upper pile.
-
-[77] From _Sceot-hull_, afterwards _Scout_ or _Shoot-hill_, and
-_worth_--_i.e._, the farm or hamlet of the projecting ledge or hill.
-
-[78] Dr. Borlase's argument is cumulative. He observes that rock basins
-are always on the _top_, never on the _sides_ of the stones; that the
-ancients sacrificed on rocks; that water was used by them for lustration
-and purification; that snow, rain, or dew, was preferred by them to
-running water; that it was not permitted to touch the earth; that the
-Druids practised similar rites, and held rain or snow-water to be holy;
-and they attributed a healing virtue to the gods inhabiting rocks; that
-their priests stood upon rocks to wash, sprinkle, and drink, &c. All
-these considerations, he conceives, favour his opinion that rock basins
-were _used_, if not _formed_, by the Druids.
-
-[79] See Watson's _History of Halifax_, pp. 27-36.
-
-[80] Professor Hunt is of the same opinion. See his recent work on the
-_Drolls of Cornwall_, vol. i. pp. 186-228.
-
-[81] T. G. C., in _Notes and Queries_, vol. vii. p. 177.
-
-[82] In his _History of Blackpool_, pp. 333-4.
-
-[83] Speet, spit, or spittle, are names in Lancashire for a spade.
-
-[84] L. B., in _Notes and Queries_, vol. viii. p. 613.--_Bibliographical
-Notice of the Works of the Learned and Rev. Divine, John White, D.D.,
-&c._ London, 1624; in _Chet. Soc. Books_, vol. xxxviii. p. 52.
-
-[85] There is another curious volume, which professes to contain a
-fourth book of Agrippa; but it is spurious. It includes five
-treatises--viz., 1. Henry Cornelius Agrippa's Fourth Book on Occult
-Philosophy and Geomancy; 2. The Magical Elements of Peter de Abano; 3.
-The Astronomical Geomancy of Gerard Cremonensis; 4. Isagoge, or the
-Nature of Spirits, by Geo. Victorius Villinganus, M.D.; and 5. Arbatel
-of Magick. Translated into English by Robert Turner, Philomathees.
-(London, 1665, 8vo, pp. 266.) Another version of this book appeared in
-1783, 8vo. It would lead us too far to describe the strange contents of
-this book, which contains long lists of the names of good and evil
-spirits, and symbols representing their characters; also symbols of the
-archangels and angels, their sigils, planets, signs, &c.
-
-[86] See Roby's _Traditions of Lancashire_.
-
-[87] (_Lord Burghley's Papers_, vol. ii., p. 771.) The death of Edward
-Earl of Derby, "with whom (says Camden) the glory of hospitality hath in
-a manner been laid asleep," took place on the 24th October, 1572.
-
-
-
-
-MIRACLES, OR MIRACULOUS STORIES.
-
-
-An age of credulity is naturally rich in miracles. Superstition is ever
-prone to explain the mysterious, or to account for the questionable, by
-hunting for some supernatural cause; and hence the popular love for and
-strong faith in the miraculous. No church erected before the Reformation
-but had its miraculous legend; no well or spring of a remote antiquity
-but had its tradition, either connected with its origin or with its
-marvellous and miraculous powers of healing. The miracle of a past age,
-preserved to the present in the form of a legend, is equally entitled to
-a place in our Folk-Lore.
-
-
-MIRACLES BY A DEAD DUKE OF LANCASTER AND KING.
-
-One of the Harleian Manuscripts (Cod. 423), found amongst the papers of
-Fox the Martyrologist, and entitled "De Miraculis Beatissimi Militis Xpi
-Henrici Vj." (Of the Miracles of the Most blessed Knight of Christ,
-Henry VI.), consisting of about 150 closely written pages, contains an
-account of a vast number of reputed miracles performed by this weak and
-credulous monarch (who long hoped to pay his large debts by the aid of
-two alchemists!) and of which the following specimens will doubtless
-suffice for our readers:--How Richard Whytby, priest of St. Michael's,
-was long ill of a fever, and at last miraculously cured by journeying to
-the tomb of Henry VI. John, called Robynson, who had been blind ten
-years, recovered his sight by visiting Henry's tomb. How Henry
-Lancaster, afflicted in fever, was miraculously cured in three days by
-the appearance of the blessed prince Henry VI. in the sky. How a girl
-called Joan Knyght, who was nearly killed with a bone sticking in her
-throat, and considered dead, on the bystanders invoking Henry VI.,
-vomited the bone and was restored to health. If these superstitions
-wanted a crowning absurdity, that is not wanting in the fact that Henry
-VII. actually sent an embassy to Rome, to importune the newly-elected
-Pope Julius II. to canonize Henry VI. as a saint! His holiness referred
-the matter to certain cardinals, to take the verification of the
-deceased monarch's holy acts and miracles; but these were not
-sufficiently obvious to entitle him to the dignity of the calendar, and
-the negotiation was abandoned in despair.[88]
-
-Mr. Monckton Milnes, M.P. (now Lord Houghton), in an interesting letter
-in _Notes and Queries_, I. 181, asks for information respecting this
-popular "saint," to whom the Church, however, denied canonization. He
-refers to Brady for an account of the miracle performed at the tomb of
-Thomas Earl of Lancaster, and of the picture or image of the Earl
-exhibited in St. Paul's, London, and the object of many offerings. Brady
-cites the opinion of an ecclesiastic, who doubted the propriety of this
-devotion being encouraged by the Church; the Earl, besides his political
-offences, having been a notorious evil-liver. In June 1327, a "King's
-letter" (of Edward III.) was given to Robert de Weryngton, authorizing
-him and his agents to collect alms throughout the Kingdom for the
-purpose of building a chapel on the hill where the Earl was beheaded;
-and praying all prelates and authorities to give him aid and heed. This
-sanction gave rise to imposture; and in the following December a
-proclamation appeared, ordering the arrest and punishment of
-unauthorized persons collecting money under this pretence and taking it
-for their own use. The chapel was constructed, and officiated in till
-the dissolution of the monasteries; the image in St. Paul's was always
-regarded with especial affection, and the cognomen of "_Saint_ Thomas of
-Lancaster" was generally accepted and understood. Five hundred years
-after the execution of the Earl of Lancaster [in 1822], a large stone
-coffin, massive and roughly hewn, was found in a field that belonged of
-old to the Priory of Pomfret, but at least a quarter of a mile distant
-from the hill where the chapel stood. Within was the skeleton of a
-full-grown man, partially preserved; the skull lay between the thighs.
-There is no record of the decapitation of any person at Pontefract of
-sufficient dignity to have been interred in a manner showing so much
-care for the preservation of the body, except the Earl of Lancaster. The
-coffin may have been removed here at the time the opposite party forbade
-its veneration, from motives of precaution for its safety.--R. M.
-M.--[The Editor of _Notes and Queries_ adds, that "The Office of St.
-Thomas of Lancaster," which begins "_Gaude, Thoma, ducum decus, lucerna
-Lancastriae_," is printed in the volume of "_Political Songs_" edited by
-Mr. Wright for the Camden Society, from a royal MS. in the British
-Museum, _MS. Reg. 12_. Another correspondent, we believe Mr. James
-Thompson of Leicester, states that at the dissolution of the monasteries
-in that town, several relics of St. Thomas (who was Earl of Leicester,
-as well as of Lancaster) were exhibited; amongst others his felt hat,
-which was considered a great remedy for the headache!]
-
-
-A MIRACULOUS FOOTPRINT IN BRINDLE CHURCH.
-
-Beneath the eastern gable of the chancel lies a huge stone coffin, with
-a cavity for the head, but its history is unknown. In the wall just
-above it is a small indentation, resembling the form of a foot, which,
-according to tradition, was made by the high-heeled shoe of a Popish
-disputant, who, in the ardour of debate, wished, if the doctrine he
-advanced was not true, that his foot might sink into the stone, "upon
-which the reforming stone instantly softened, and buried the papistical
-foot;" much in the same way, no doubt, as the flag in Smithells Hall
-received the print of the foot of George Marsh, the martyr.[89]
-
-
-THE FOOTPRINT AT SMITHELLS OF GEORGE MARSH, THE MARTYR.
-
-George Marsh, one of the three Lancashire martyrs in the reign of Queen
-Mary, was the son of Mr. George Marsh, a yeoman of Dean, and was born
-about 1575. He was educated at the Bolton Free Grammar School, and for a
-time followed farming, and, marrying at twenty-five, settled there till
-the death of his wife; when, placing his children with his father, he
-became a student at Cambridge University, was ordained, and was
-appointed curate of All-Hallows, Bread-street, London. He continued for
-some time preaching the reformed doctrines, and zealously supporting the
-Protestant faith, both in London and Lancashire; and while in his native
-county, in March 1555, he learned that he had been sought after by the
-servants of Mr. Barton of Smithells Hall, a magistrate; on which he went
-thither voluntarily, and was examined before Mr. Barton. In a passage
-near the door of the dining-room is a cavity in a flag, bearing some
-resemblance to the print of a man's foot, and this cavity is said by
-tradition to have been caused by the martyr stamping his foot to confirm
-his testimony, and it is shown to this day as a miraculous memorial of
-the holy man. The story goes, that "being provoked by the taunts and
-persecutions of his examiners, he stamped with his foot upon a stone,
-and, looking up to Heaven, appealed to God for the justness of his
-cause; and prayed that there might remain in that place a constant
-memorial of the wickedness and injustice of his enemies." It is said
-that about the beginning of the eighteenth century this stone was
-removed by two or three young men, of the family of Barton, then living
-at the hall, during the absence of their parents; that they cast it into
-the clough behind the hall; but all the inmates of the house were so
-much disturbed that same night by alarming noises, that they could not
-rest. Inquiry led to confession, the stone was replaced, and the noises
-ceased. It is also stated that in 1732, a guest (John Butterworth, of
-Manchester,) sleeping alone in the Green Chamber at Smithells Hall, saw
-an apparition, in the dress of a minister with bands, and a book in his
-hand. The ghost of Marsh (for so it was pronounced to be) disappeared
-through the door-way, and on the owner of Smithells hearing the story,
-he directed that divine service (long discontinued) should be resumed at
-the hall chapel every Sunday. Such are some of the stories told about
-Smithells Hall; and there is hardly an old hall in the country that has
-not one or more such traditions floating about its neighbourhood. It is
-as if ghostly visitants scorned to honour with their presence any house
-below the dignity of a hall. In this case, it may be observed that
-neither in Marsh's own account of what passed at Smithells, nor in Mr.
-Whatton's Biographical notice of him in Baines's _History of
-Lancashire_, is any mention made of the miraculous footprint. But in a
-volume of four or five tracts printed at Bolton (no year stated) the
-third tract is "The Life and Martyrdom of George Marshe," &c. "Also, the
-particulars respecting the print of a foot on the flag shewn at
-Smithills Hall, near Bolton;" which latter is signed "W. D.," and dated
-"August 22, 1787." Amongst other discrepancies, it may be observed that
-W. D. makes Marsh's interrogator "Sir Roger Barton;" while Marsh, a
-native of the immediate neighbourhood invariably writes of him as "Mr.
-Barton."
-
-
-A LEGEND OF CARTMEL CHURCH.
-
-Better than six hundred years ago (runs the story) some monks came over
-to Lancashire from another country; and, finding all this part of the
-kingdom covered with wood, they resolved to build a monastery in some
-part of Cartmel Forest. In their rambles, they found a hill which
-commanded a prospect so beautiful and extensive that they were quite
-charmed with it. They marked out a piece of ground on the summit, and
-were preparing to build the church, when a voice spoke to them out of
-the air, saying "Not there, but in a valley, between two rivers, where
-the one runs north, and the other south." Astonished at this strange
-command, they marvelled where the valley could be, for they had never
-seen a valley where two rivers ran in contrary directions. They set out
-to seek this singular valley, and travelled throughout the North of
-England, but in vain. Wearied with their fruitless search, they were
-returning to the hill where they had heard the strange voice. In passing
-through a valley covered with wood, they came to a small river, the
-stream of which ran north. They waded through it, and shortly after
-found another, the stream of which ran south. They placed the church
-midway between the two streams, upon a little island, of hard ground, in
-the midst of a morass; dedicating it to St. Mary. They also built a
-small chapel on the hill where they had heard the voice, which they
-dedicated to St. Bernard. The chapel has long since disappeared, but the
-hill is still called Mount Bernard.[90]
-
-
-THE PROPHET ELIAS, A LANCASHIRE FANATIC.
-
-In 1562, a native of Manchester who called himself Elias, but whose real
-name was Ellys, pretended to possess the spirit of prophecy. He went to
-London, where he made some proselytes, uttering his "warning voice" in
-the public places. James Pilkington, D.D., a native of Rivington, in
-Lancashire, and an eminent Protestant divine, who was raised by Queen
-Elizabeth in 1560 to the See of Durham, preached before the Queen at
-Greenwich, against the supposed mission of this Manchester fanatic. The
-Bishop of London, three days afterwards, ordered the northern prophet to
-be put in the pillory in Cheapside. He was thence committed to
-Bridewell, where he died in or about 1565.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[88] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[89] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[90] See _Lonsdale Magazine_, February, 1821.
-
-
-
-
-OMENS AND PREDICATIONS.
-
-
-An intense desire to know future events, besides being the great
-encouragement of astrologers, sorcerers, and magicians, wise men,
-cunning women, fortune-tellers, &c., has given rise to a large class of
-small circumstances which are regarded as indicative of coming good or
-bad luck, of good or evil fortune, to the observer or the person
-experiencing their influence. Hence, nothing is more common than to hear
-amongst uneducated and credulous people predications from the most
-trivial occurrences of daily life. A winding-sheet in the candle,
-spilling the salt, crossing knives, and various other trifles, are omens
-of evil to thousands of lore-folk to this day. Should one of your
-children fall sick when on a visit at a friend's house, it is held to be
-sure to entail bad luck on that family for the rest of the year, if you
-stay over New Year's-day. Persons have been known to travel sixty miles
-with a sick child rather than run the risk. A flake of soot on the bars
-of the grate is said to indicate the approach of a stranger; a bright
-spark on the wick of a candle, or a long piece of stalk in the tea-cup,
-betokens a similar event. When the fire burns briskly, some lover smirks
-or is good-humoured. A cinder thrown out of the fire by a jet of gas
-from burning coals, is looked upon as a coffin, if its hollow be long;
-as a purse of gold, if the cavity be roundish. Crickets in a house are
-said to indicate good fortune; but should they forsake the chimney
-corner, it is a sure sign of coming misfortunes.
-
-In the neighbourhood of Lancaster I know ladies who consider it "lucky"
-to find _old iron_: a horse-shoe or rusty nail is carefully conveyed
-home and hoarded up. It is also considered lucky if you see the _head_
-of the first lamb in spring; to present his _tail_ is the certain
-harbinger of misfortune. It is also said that if you have money in your
-pocket the first time you hear the cuckoo, you will never be without all
-the year.[91]
-
-In Lancashire we still dislike the moaning or hooting of owls and the
-croaking of ravens, as much as the Romans did of old. In a large class
-of our population few would yet defy evil fate, by beginning a journey
-or any important undertaking, or marrying, on a Friday; on which day
-Lancashire, like other sailors, have a strong repugnance to beginning a
-voyage. This day of the week is regarded as of evil augury, because it
-was the day (Good Friday) when our Saviour's blood was shed. The
-auguries of dreams are so numerous, that a large class of chap-books are
-still to be found circulating in country places, from _Mother Shipton_
-to _Napoleon's Book of Fate_. Few young women in the country, farmers'
-daughters and servants, were without a favourite "Dream-Book." Again,
-the farmer or cottager deems it necessary, in order to secure a crop of
-onions, to sow the seed on St. Gregory's-day [March 12] named
-"Gregory-gret-Onion," (_i.e._, Gregory the Great). Amongst the more
-pardonable longings to raise the veil of futurity are those of village
-maidens (and not a few of those in towns too, and of all ranks) to get a
-peep at the figure of the husband whom the future has in store for her.
-On All-Hallows' Eve she strews the ashes which are to take the form of
-one or more letters of her lover's name; she throws hemp-seed over her
-shoulder and timidly glances to see who follows her. On the fast of St.
-Agnes she watches a small candle called a "pig-tail," to see the passing
-image of her future husband. The up-turned tea-cup, for its leaves, or
-the coffee-cup for its "grounds;" the pack of cards, with the desired
-King of Hearts or Diamonds, the sputterings and spurtings of a
-tallow-candle, all furnished to the omen-instructed damsel some sign by
-which to read the future, and to arrive at a knowledge of her lot in
-life, as to husband, children, fortune, &c. When leaving home to begin a
-journey, or to commence any future enterprise, it is deemed an
-important observance, necessary to insure good luck, to walk
-"withershins" (_i.e._, as the weather or sun shines). In many country
-places this is always observed by a bridal party when advancing to the
-altar to have the marriage solemnized, and, of course, one particular
-aisle of the church is the only fortunate or lucky one to proceed by.
-Some, however, say that to walk "widdershins" is to take a direction
-contrary to the course of the sun, _i.e._, from right to left.[92] Some
-persons more credulous than humane, will shut up a poor cat in the oven,
-to ensure their own good luck. Days have long been parcelled out between
-lucky and unlucky, for any important undertaking, as a journey, taking a
-partner in business or for life, buying land, or even for such trivial
-matters as blood-letting, taking physic, cutting the hair, or paring
-nails. Again, the moon's age is an important element in securing future
-weal or woe. For the first year of an infant's life many mothers will
-not have its hair or nails cut, and when the year is gone these
-operations must be performed when the moon is so many days old, to
-ensure good results. A tooth, as soon as it has been drawn, should be
-sprinkled with salt, and thrown into the fire; if it be lost, no rest or
-peace will be enjoyed till it is found again. The following are a few
-omens drawn from observing peculiarities about animals:--
-
-
-CATS.
-
-1. If a cat tear at the cushions, carpets, &c., with its claws, it is
-considered to be a sign of wind. Hence we say, "the cat is raising the
-wind." 2. If a cat in washing its face draw its paw quite over its
-forehead, it is a sign of fair weather. If not so, it betokens speedy
-rain. 3. Allowing cats to sleep with you is considered very unhealthy.
-They are said to "draw your health away." 4. Those who play much with
-cats have never good health. A cat's hair is said to be indigestible,
-and you will die if one get into your stomach. 5. It is counted unlucky
-to allow cats to die in a house. Hence when they begin to be ill they
-are usually drowned. A case of this kind occurred in Burnley a short
-time ago. 6. If a kitten come to a house, it is counted a lucky omen.
-
-
-DOGS.
-
-1. Dogs are said to sit down and howl before the door when any one is
-about to be sick, or die. A death is considered _certain_ if the dog
-return as often as driven away. 2. Dogs are hence considered to be
-somehow acquainted with the spirit world, "or else," as one said, "how
-should they know when a person is going to die?" This is firmly
-believed in about Mellor and Blackburn. In Burnley and neighbourhood
-equally so at present. 3. The _life_ of a dog is sometimes said to be
-_bound up_ with that of its master or mistress. When either _dies_ the
-other cannot _live_. Is this a remnant of the old belief in the
-transmigration of souls? 4. The whining of a favourite dog is considered
-by many to betoken calamity to the family to which it belongs.
-
-
-LAMBS.
-
-It is very lucky for lambs to have their faces towards you when you
-first see them in Spring. The omen is much more favourable when they are
-looking towards the east.
-
-
-BIRDS.
-
-To kill or ill-use swallows, wrens, redbreasts, &c., is accounted
-unfortunate; for these all frequent our houses for good. There is a
-stanza common among us which declares that
-
- "A Cock Robin and a Jenny Wren
- Are God Almighty's cock and hen;
- A Spink and a Sparrow
- Are the Devil's bow and arrow."
-
-Birds are supposed by some to be somehow cognizant of what is about to
-happen. A _jackdaw_ is always an unwelcome visitor, if it alight on the
-window-sill of a sick chamber. A _white dove_ is thought to be a
-favourable omen; its presence betokens recovery to the person within, or
-it is _an angel in that form_ ready to convey the soul of a dying person
-to heaven. I once knew a Wesleyan Methodist who was of opinion that
-"forgiveness of sins" was assured to her by a small bird, which flew
-across her path when she had long been praying for a token of this kind.
-When a _Canary-bird_ sings cheerfully, all is well with the family that
-keeps it; when it becomes silent, and remains so, there is calamity in
-store for that household. If you hear the _cuckoo_ shout towards the
-east, for the first time in any year, and have gold, silver, and copper
-coin in your pockets, you will never want money during that year.
-
-
-SWALLOWS.
-
-1. If swallows, or martins, begin to build their nests about a house or
-barn, it is looked upon as predicating good luck to the occupier. "The
-_more_ birds the _better_ luck." 2. On the contrary, when they forsake a
-haunt, the occupiers become apprehensive of misfortune. Hence farmers
-will always protect such birds, and often ill-use boys who may be
-stoning them, or attempting to rob their nests.
-
-
-MAGPIES.
-
-There are, at least in Lancashire and Yorkshire, many curious
-superstitions connected with this bird. Its appearance _singly_ is still
-regarded in both these counties by many even of the educated
-representatives of the last generation, as an evil omen, and some of the
-customs supposed to break the charm are curious. One is simply to raise
-the hat as in salutation, another to sign the cross on the breast, and
-to make the same sign by crossing the thumbs. This last custom is
-confined to Yorkshire, and I know one elderly gentleman who not only
-crosses his thumbs, but spits over them when in that position, a
-practice which was, he says, common in his youth. The superstition
-applies only to a single magpie, according to the old nursery legend:--
-
- "One for sorrow,
- Two for mirth,
- Three for a wedding,
- And four for a birth."[93]
-
-I met a person the other day who solemnly assured me that he had seen a
-'pynot' as he came along the road; but he had made the figure of a cross
-on the mire in the road, in order to avert the evil omen.[94]
-
-In Lancashire they say:--
-
- "One for anger,
- Two for mirth,
- Three for a wedding,
- Four for a birth,
- Five for rich,
- Six for poor,
- Seven for a witch:
- I can tell you no more."[95]
-
-But in Tim Bobbin it is expressly said that two magpies are indicative
-of ill-fortune:--"I saigh two rott'n pynots, hong 'um, that wur a sign
-of bad fashin; for I heerd my gronny say hoo'd as leef o' seen two Owd
-Harries os two pynots."[96] "I shall catch none to-day," we heard a man
-advanced in life, exclaim in a melancholy tone, who was angling in the
-river Ribble. "Why?" we asked, "the day is not inauspicious." "No; but
-do you not see that magpie?" In fact _pynots_, that is, magpies,
-according to an old Lancashire superstition, are considered birds of
-ill-omen. In spring it is considered by old-fashioned anglers unlucky to
-see a single magpie; but two are a favourable auspice, because in cold
-weather one bird only leaves the nest in search of food, the other
-remaining to keep the eggs or the young ones warm; but when both are out
-together, the weather is warm, mild, and favourable for fishing.[97]
-
-
-DREAMS.
-
-This might well form a great division of itself, in any work on
-Folk-lore. Yet a little reflection will serve to show that it is only
-one branch, though a very large one, of the general subject of "Omens."
-Dreams are regarded by the superstitious simply for what they predicate
-as about to happen; in other words, they are important to the credulous
-only as _omens_ of coming events. Itinerant hawkers and small village
-shops drive a considerable trade in "Dream Books," or "Books of Fate,"
-which profess to interpret every dream and to explain every omen,
-whether of good or evil import. Of the great variety and extent of
-"Dream-Book literature" we cannot treat, for want of space. Hawkers and
-small shops sell a vast quantity of penny dream-books in Lancashire. One
-of the oldest specimens of these chap-books we have met with is a little
-32mo. volume, entitled "_Mother Shipton's Legacy_, or a favourite
-Fortune-book, in which is given a pleasing interpretation of dreams, and
-a collection of prophetic verses, moral and entertaining." (York, 1797,
-price 4_d._) Cap. I. treats of Lucky and Unlucky Days; II. of Moles on
-the Person; III. Miscellaneous; IV. Dreams; and V. a Magical Table. A
-few specimens of the dream portion may suffice:--To dream of joy denotes
-grief; of fine clothes, poverty; of sweetmeats, a whipping; of flying,
-falling down; of fire, anger; of serpents, private enemies; of money,
-loss; of weeping, joy; of bathing, ease from pain; of kissing, strife;
-of feasting, want; of many people, affliction; of singing, sorrow; of
-changing abode, sudden news; of fishing, good luck; of death, marriage;
-of finding money, bad luck; of gold, death; of embracing, death; of
-being bald, misfortune; of a long nose, death; of growing fat, wealth;
-of drinking water, good entertainment; of the sun rising, preferment; of
-flashes of fire, sudden death; of being among tombs, riches by the death
-of relations; of your teeth falling out, losses; of a lean ox, famine;
-of a fine garden, much pleasure.
-
- [_Moral._]
-
- Though plain and palpable each subject seems,
- Yet do not put your trust too much in dreams;
- Events may happen, which in dreams you see,
- And yet as often quite contrary be:
- This learned hint observe, for Shipton's sake--
- Dreams are but interludes which fancies make.
-
-Many persons persuade themselves into the belief that events are
-revealed to them in dreams. Those who can neither _see_ nor _hear_
-spirits generally presume to have this faculty. _One_ dream is not taken
-much notice of, but if the dream be repeated substantially _three_
-times, the events of the dreams are supposed to be sure to come to pass.
-Some _see_ all the circumstances as _realities_ in their dreams, others
-only have dim recollections; they _hear_ all but do not _see_ the
-persons. This agrees with the supposed _prophetical_ dreams of the
-ancient Greeks and Romans. (_Homer_, _Virgil_, _Ovid_, &c.) Morning
-dreams are more to be relied on than those of any other time. Those of
-the morning twilight are most valued. Horrid dreams, or those in which
-the dreamer feels very uneasy, are supposed to predict bad luck, or
-misfortune to the family. "Dreams," they say, "always go by contraries."
-There is a very general belief in dreams among the people of Lancashire.
-The following are a few not hitherto noticed by the writer:--1. Dreaming
-of _misfortune_ betokens _prosperity_.
-
- "Content and happy may they be
- Who dream of cold adversity;
- To married man and married wife
- It promises a happy life."
-
-2. To dream of sickness betokens _marriage_ to young persons. 3.
-Dreaming of being before an altar indicates sorrow and misfortune. 4. To
-see angels is a sure sign of coming happiness. 5. When you dream of
-being angry with any one, you may count that person amongst your best
-friends. 6. To dream of catching fish is very unfortunate; every fish
-you take betokens the death of some valued friend. 7. Dreaming about
-balls, dances, &c., indicates coming good fortune. To the young we may
-say:--
-
- "Who dreams of being at a ball,
- No cause have they for fear;
- For soon they will united be
- To those they hold most dear."
-
-8. When persons dream of losing their hair, it is a sign of loss of
-health, friends, or property. 9. If a person dream of losing _one_, or
-_more_, of his teeth, it is a sign that he will lose _one_, or _more_,
-lawsuits which he may happen to be engaged in. I knew a person who had a
-case in our county court. The case was to come on on the Thursday; but
-on Wednesday night he dreamt he had lost a tooth. On the case being
-decided against him, he appealed to his dream as a sure indication of
-his non-success. 10. Dreaming of bees is counted lucky, because they are
-industrious.
-
- "Happy the man who dreaming sees
- The little humble busy bees
- Fly humming round their hive."
-
-If the bees sting you, it is a sign of bad luck, crosses and
-difficulties. 11. Dreaming of marriage, brides, &c., is a sign of death,
-or long sickness. 12. To dream of a candle burning _brightly_ betokens
-health, prosperity; and _vice versa_. 13. Dreaming of cats betokens
-treachery; but if you kill the cat you will have revenge. 14. To dream
-of seeing a _coffin_ is unlucky; but to dream of seeing a _corpse_
-betokens a speedy marriage. 15. Dreaming of _death_ betokens long life
-and happiness. 16. To dream that you are _dirty_ implies sickness for a
-longer or shorter period. 17. If you dream of being _drowned_ you will
-experience some loss. 18. To dream of _falling_ indicates loss. 19. To
-dream of _flying_ implies that you will not succeed in accomplishing
-high things. 20. If you dream of the water in a river being very _clear_
-you will have good luck; if the water be _muddy_ you will have
-misfortune. 21. When a widow dreams of seeing her husband, it is a sure
-sign that she will soon have an eligible offer. 22. If you dream that
-you are daubed with ink, you may be sure that some one is _writing_ evil
-of you. 23. Dreaming of going on a journey indicates a change in your
-circumstances. 24. To dream of flying kites, or playing with bunches of
-keys, betokens prosperity and advancement in business. 25. To dream of
-cutting yourself, or of being infested with lice, indicates misfortune
-or disease. 26. It is very fortunate to dream of milk. 27. To dream of
-being naked indicates shame and misfortune. 28. To dream of the nose
-bleeding is a very sure sign of misfortune and loss. 29. Dreaming of
-seeing the ocean in a calm state betokens steadiness of circumstances;
-and _vice versa_. 30. To dream of rats indicates difficulties; of snow,
-prosperity and success; of a wedding, death; and of a widow, that your
-husband, wife, or lover, will desert you.
-
-All the preceding, and many more, are well-known to every Lancashire lad
-and lass.
-
-
-THE MOON.
-
-Our farmers predict fair weather, or the reverse, according as the new
-moon "lies on her back," or "stands upright." It is also very unlucky
-for anyone to look at the new moon, for the first time, through the
-window.
-
-
-HAEVER OR HIVER.
-
-A "quarter" of the heavens, or compass, or direction; "a lucky haever" is
-a fortunate or desirable direction. The origin of this word is somewhat
-difficult of explanation; nor is it certain whether its proper etymon
-has yet been ascertained. It is still in common use among some of the
-farmers in East Lancashire, and was much more frequently used some
-thirty or forty years ago. "What _haever_ is the wind in this morning?"
-was a common inquiry when any prediction respecting the weather for the
-day was about to be hazarded. "I don't expect much rain," would probably
-be the reply, "the wind is in a good _haever_." There is generally most
-rain in these parts of Lancashire when the wind blows from the south or
-south-west; and hence if the wind came from the eastward continued rain
-was not to be expected.
-
-Most persons have a notion that the East is the most sacred point of the
-compass. The Star of the Nativity was seen in the east; the chancel, or
-most holy portion of a church is placed at the east; and the dead are
-buried so as to rise with their faces towards the east on the morning of
-the resurrection. These considerations have been applied to the _haever_
-from which the wind may blow; and hence the proverb occasionally met
-with among those who live in the neighbourhood of Mellor and Ramsgreave,
-near Blackburn, to the effect that "the East is a lucky _haever_."
-
-A writer who signs himself "F. C. H." in _Notes and Queries_, 3rd
-series, vol. vii. p. 310, asks whether _haever_ is not "a peculiar
-pronunciation of ever, so that the above inquiry would be in plain
-English, _whatever_ is the wind in this morning?" This derivation
-appears both too fanciful and insufficient; for when we consider that
-Lancashire formed part of the Danelagh, and was long a Danish kingdom,
-and that its dialect contains a large admixture of Danish words; we are
-naturally led to examine whether such a term may not be found in the
-Danish language. On examination this proves to be the fact, for "Hive,"
-(pronounced "heeve," as "high" is pronounced "hee,") is the verb "to
-blow;" and hence "hiver" or "haever," as applied to the place whence the
-wind is blowing. This derivation appears to be both natural and
-sufficient, since it fully accounts for the use of this peculiar term;
-which, by the way, is not found in Halliwell's _Dictionary of Archaic
-Words_, or in Wright's more recent work on the same subject.
-
-
-DEASIL OR WIDERSINNIS.
-
-These are Celtic names for going round by way of ensuring good fortune.
-The former name is derived from the Gaelic _deas_ or _des_, the right
-hand, and _Syl_, the sun, and denotes a motion from east to west, or
-according to the apparent motion of the sun; and is a custom of high
-antiquity in religious ceremonies. In the western isles fire was carried
-in the right hand in this course, about the house, corn, cattle, &c.,
-about women before they were churched, and children before they were
-baptized. So the fishermen rowed the boat about first sun-wise to ensure
-a lucky voyage. On the other hand, the Highland _Wider-sinnis_ (whence
-the Lancashire _Wither-shins_) was from left to right or west to east,
-or opposed to the course of the sun, a course used in magical
-ceremonies, and said to be the mode of salutation given by witches and
-warlocks to the devil.[98]--(See page 140 _supra_.)
-
-
-OMENS OF WEATHER FOR NEW YEAR'S-DAY.
-
-In a Saxon MS. we find that "If the Kalends, or first of January, fall
-on the Lord's-day, then will the winter be good, pleasant and warm."[99]
-Another Saxon MS. in the Cotton Library contains the omens to the
-following effect:--"If the Kalends of January be on the moon's day
-(Monday) then there will be a severe and confused winter, a good spring,
-windy summer, and a rueful year, in which there will be much sickness.
-If the Kalends fall on Tuesday, then the winter will be dreary and
-severe, a windy heat and rainy summer, and many women will die; ships
-will voyage in danger, and kings and princes will die. If on Wednesday,
-there will be a hard winter and bad spring; but a good summer. The
-fruits of the earth will be much beaten down, honey will be scarce, and
-young men will die. If on Thursday, there will be a good winter, windy
-spring, good summer, and abundance of the fruits of the earth, and the
-plough will be over the earth; but sheep and children will die. If on
-Friday, there will be a variable winter, good spring and summer, with
-great abundance, and sheep's eyes will be tender in the year. If on
-Saturday, there will be a snowy winter, blowing spring, and rainy
-summer; earth fruits will labour, sheep perish, old men die, and other
-men be sick; the eyes of many will be tender, and fires will be
-prevalent in the course of the year. If the Kalends fall on Sunday,
-there will be a good winter, windy spring, and dry summer; and a very
-good year this year will be; sheep will increase, there will be much
-honey, and plenty and peace will be upon the earth."[100]
-
-
-DEATH TICK OR DEATH WATCH.
-
-The death tick is not yet forgotten in the district around Burnley. Very
-recently the insect has disturbed the imagination of a young lady, and
-its ticks have led to more than one gloomy conjecture. It is a curious
-circumstance that the _real_ death tick must only tick _three_ times on
-each occasion.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[91] T. D., in _Notes and Queries_.
-
-[92] See Halliwell's _Archaic Dictionary_, in voce.
-
-[93] E. B., (Liverpool) in _Notes and Queries_, 3rd series, vol. ix. p.
-187.
-
-[94] T. T. W.
-
-[95] Another version has the last four lines thus:--
-
- "Five for a fiddle,
- Six for a dance,
- Seven for England,
- Eight for France."
-
-[96] J. O. Halliwell's _Nursery Rhymes_.
-
-[97] _Pictorial History of Lancashire._
-
-[98] Hampson's _Medii AEvi Kalend._, vol. I. 255.
-
-[99] Hickes's _Thesaurus_, II. 194.
-
-[100] _Bibl. Cott. MSS. Tiberius, A._ III., fol. 39 b., and 40.
-
-
-
-
-SUPERSTITIONS, GENERAL AND MISCELLANEOUS.
-
-
-There are great numbers of small superstitions, beliefs, and practices
-which we must place under this general head. Before entering on these at
-length, we may briefly notice the fact in many cases, the probability in
-a still greater number, that the origin of superstitions still held to
-the popular heart, is to be found in other countries and in remote
-times. Indeed Folk-lore superstitions may be said to be the _debris_ of
-ancient mythologies; it may be of Egypt or India, Greece or Rome,
-Germany or Scandinavia. Many of the following superstitions have been
-already glanced at or briefly referred to in the introductory chapter.
-
-
-POPULAR SUPERSTITIONS.
-
-Lancashire, like all other counties, has its own peculiar superstitions,
-manners, and customs, which find no parallels in those of other
-localities. It has also, no doubt, many local observances, current
-opinions, old proverbs, and vulgar ditties, which are held and taken in
-common with the inhabitants of a greater extent of country, and differ
-merely in minor particulars,--the necessary result of imperfect oral
-transmission. The following are a few of these local superstitions:--
-
-1. If a person's hair, when thrown into the fire, burns brightly, it is
-a sure sign that the individual will live long. The brighter the flame,
-the longer life; and _vice versa_.
-
-2. A young person lightly stirs the fire with the poker to test the
-humour of a lover. If the fire blaze brightly, the lover is
-good-humoured; and _vice versa_.
-
-3. A crooked sixpence, or a copper coin with a hole through, is
-accounted a _lucky_ coin.
-
-4. Cutting or paring the nails of the hands or feet, on a Friday or
-Sunday, is very unlucky.
-
-5. If a person's _left_ ear burn, or feel hot, somebody is praising the
-party; if the _right_ ear burn, then it is a sure sign that some one is
-speaking evil of the person.
-
-6. Children are frequently cautioned by their parents not to walk
-_backwards_ when going an errand; it is a sure sign that they will be
-unfortunate in their objects.
-
-7. Belief in witchcraft is still strong in many of the rural districts.
-Many believe that others have the power to bewitch cows, sheep, horses,
-and even persons to whom the witch has an antipathy. One respectable
-farmer assured me that his horse was bewitched into a stable through a
-loophole twelve inches by three! The fact, he said, was beyond doubt,
-for he had locked the stable-door himself when the horse was in the
-field, and had kept the key in his pocket. Soon afterwards a party of
-farmers went through the process known as "burning the witch out," or
-"killing the witch" as some express it; the person suspected soon died,
-and the neighbourhood became free from his evil doings.
-
-8. A horse-shoe is still nailed behind many doors to counteract the
-effects of witchcraft. A _hagstone_ with a hole through, tied to the key
-of the stable-door, protects the horses, and, if hung up at the bed's
-head, the farmer also.
-
-9. A hot iron put into the cream during the process of churning, expels
-the witch from the churn. Dough in preparation for the baker is
-protected by being marked with the figure of a cross.
-
-10. Warts are cured by being rubbed over with a black snail; but the
-snail must afterwards be impaled upon a hawthorn. If a bag, containing
-as many pebbles as a person has warts, be tossed over the _left_
-shoulder, it will transfer the warts to whomsoever is unfortunate enough
-to pick up the bag.
-
-11. If black snails are seized by the horns and tossed over the _left_
-shoulder, the process will ensure good luck to the person who performs
-it.
-
-12. Profuse bleeding is said to be instantly stopped by certain persons,
-who pretend to possess the secret of a certain form of words or charm.
-
-13. The power of bewitching, producing evil to persons by _wishing_ it,
-&c., is supposed to be transmitted from one possessor to another when
-one of the parties is about to die.
-
-14. Cramp is effectually prevented by placing the shoes with the toes
-just peeping from beneath the coverlet; or by tying the garter round the
-_left_ leg, below the knee.
-
-15. Charmed rings are worn by many for the cure of dyspepsia; and so
-also are charmed belts for the cure of rheumatism.
-
-16. A red-haired person is supposed to bring ill-luck, if he be the
-first to enter a house on New Year's Day. Black-haired persons [are on
-the contrary deemed so lucky that they] are rewarded with liquor or
-small gratuities for "taking in the New Year" to the principal houses in
-their respective neighbourhoods.
-
-17. If any householder's fire does not burn _through_ the night of New
-Year's Eve, it betokens bad luck through the ensuing year. If any one
-allow another to take a live coal, or to light a candle, on that eve,
-the bad luck extends to the grantor.[101]
-
-Amongst other Lancashire popular superstitions are the following:--
-
-That a man must never "go a courting" on a Friday. If an unlucky fellow
-is caught with his lady-love on that day, he is followed home by a band
-of musicians, playing on pokers, tongs, pan-lids, &c., unless he can rid
-himself of his tormentors by giving them money for drink.
-
-That whooping-cough will never be taken by any child that has ridden
-upon a bear. The old bearward's profits arose in great part from the
-money given by parents whose children had had a ride. The writer knows
-of cases in which the charm is said to have been effectual.
-
-That whooping-cough may be cured by tying a hairy caterpillar in a small
-bag round the child's neck, and as the caterpillar dies the cough goes.
-
-That Good Friday is the best day of all the year to begin weaning
-children, which ought, if possible, to be put off till that day.
-
-That May cats are unlucky, and will suck the breath of infants.
-
-That crickets are lucky about a house, and will do no harm to those who
-use them well; but that they eat holes in the worsted stockings of such
-members of the family as kill them. I was assured of this on the
-experience of a respectable farmer's family.
-
-That ghosts or boggarts haunt certain neighbourhoods. There is scarcely
-a dell in my vicinity where a running stream crosses a road by a small
-bridge or stone plat, where such may not be seen. Wells, ponds, gates,
-&c., have often this bad repute. I have heard of a calf with "eyes like
-saucers," a woman without a head, a white greyhound, a column of white
-foam like a large sugar loaf in the midst of a pond, or group of little
-cats, &c., as the shape of the boggart; and sometimes it took that of a
-lady, who jumped behind hapless passengers on horseback. It is supposed
-that a Romish priest can lay them, and that it is best to cheat them to
-consent to being laid "while hollies are green." Hollies being
-evergreens, the ghosts can reappear no more.[102]
-
-Mr. J. Eastwood, of Ecclesfield, adds to T. T. W.'s seventeen
-superstitions the following six:--
-
-1. If a cock near the door crows with his face towards it, it is a sure
-prediction of the arrival of a stranger.
-
-2. If the cat frisk about the house in an unusually lively manner, windy
-or stormy weather is approaching.
-
-3. If a dog howl under the window at night, a death will shortly happen
-in the house.
-
-4. If a _female_ be the first to enter a house on Christmas or New
-Year's Day, she brings ill-luck to the house for the coming year.
-
-5. For whooping-cough, pass the child nine times over the back and under
-the belly of an ass. (This ceremony I once witnessed, but cannot vouch
-for its having had the desired effect.)
-
-6. For warts, rub them with a cinder, and this tied up in paper, and
-dropped where four roads meet [_i.e._, where two roads cross] will
-transfer the warts to whoever opens the parcel.[103]
-
-
-BONES OF ST. LAWRENCE, AT CHORLEY.
-
-In the parish church of Chorley, within the porch of the chancel, which
-belongs to the Standish family of Duxbury, _four_ bones were shown,
-apparently thigh bones, said to have belonged to Saint Lawrence, the
-patron saint, which were brought over from Normandy by Sir Rowland
-Standish, in 1442, along with the head of that saint, which skull has,
-amongst the _Harl. MSS._,[104] a certificate of a vicar of Croston, to
-which Chorley was then subject, preserved with the arms of the knight
-(azure, 3 plates) rudely tricked:--"Be it known to all men that I,
-Thomas Tarlton [or Talbot] vicar of the church of Croston, beareth
-witness and certify, that Mr. James Standish, of Duxbury, hath delivered
-a relique of St. Laurence's head unto the church of Chorley, the which
-Sir Rowland of Standish, knight, brother of the said James, and Jane his
-wife, brought out of Normandy, to the worship of God and St. Lawrence,
-for the profit and avail of the said church; to the intent that the
-foresaid Sir Rowland Standish, and Dame Jane his wife, with their
-predecessors and successors, may be in the said church perpetually
-prayed for. And in witness of the which to this my present writing I
-have set my seal. Written at Croston aforesaid, the 2nd day of March, in
-the year of our Lord God, 1442." [20 Hen. VI.][105] St. Lawrence's Day
-is August 10. As his martyrdom was said to be roasting alive upon a
-gridiron, it is not clear how his thigh bones should be preserved. But
-when we find there are _four_ of them, the miraculous character of the
-relics is at once exhibited.
-
-
-THE DEAD MAN'S HAND.
-
-At Bryn Hall, now demolished, once the seat of the Gerards, was a Roman
-Catholic Chapel and a priest, who continued long after the family had
-departed, having in his custody "The Dead Man's Hand," which is still
-kept by the same or another priest, now residing at Garswood. Preserved
-with great care, in a white silk bag, it is still resorted to by many
-diseased persons, and wonderful cures are said to have been wrought by
-this saintly relic. It is said to be the hand of Father Arrowsmith,--a
-priest who is stated to have been put to death at Lancaster for his
-religion, in the time of William III. The story goes, that when about to
-suffer, he desired his spiritual attendant to cut off his right hand,
-which should then have the power to work miraculous cures on those who
-had faith to believe in its efficacy. Not many years ago, a female sick
-of the small-pox had this dead hand lying in bed with her every night
-for six weeks, in order to effect her recovery, which took place.[106] A
-poor lad, living in Withy Grove, Manchester, afflicted with scrofulous
-sores, was rubbed with it; and though it had been said he was
-miraculously restored, on inquiry the assertion was found incorrect,
-inasmuch as he died in about a fortnight after the operation.[107] Not
-less devoid of truth is the tradition that Arrowsmith was hanged for
-"witnessing a good confession."
-
-Having been found guilty of a rape (says Mr. Roby), in all probability
-this story of his martyrdom, and of the miraculous attestation to the
-truth of the cause for which he suffered, were contrived for the purpose
-of preventing the scandal that would have come upon the church through
-the delinquency of an unworthy member. A subordinate tradition
-accompanies that already related. It is said that one of the family of
-the Kenyons attended as under-sheriff at the execution, and that he
-refused the culprit some trifling favour at the gallows; whereupon
-Arrowsmith denounced a curse upon him,--to wit, that whilst the family
-could boast of an heir, so long they should never want a cripple; which
-prediction was supposed by the credulous to have been literally
-fulfilled.[108] Mr. Roby, professing to give the _fact_ upon which he
-founded one of his tales, accuses the unfortunate priest of rape, and
-states that he was executed for that crime in the reign of William III.
-All this Mr. Roby gives as from himself, and mentions a curse pronounced
-by Father Arrowsmith upon the under-sheriff who executed him, in the
-reign of William III. Now Arrowsmith was hung, under sanction of an
-atrocious law, for no other reason but because he had taken orders as a
-Catholic priest, and had endeavoured to prevail upon others to be of his
-own faith. For this offence, and for this offence alone, in 1628,--in
-the reign not of William III., but of Charles I.,--he was tried at
-Lancashire Assizes, and hanged, drawn, and quartered, in the same year
-that Edmund Ashton, Esq., was sheriff. Mr. Roby must have seen what was
-the real state of the case in the same history of Lancashire[109] as
-that which he repeatedly quotes.[110]
-
-The hand of Arrowsmith, having been cut off after his death, was brought
-to Bryn Hall, where it was used by the superstitious to heal the sick,
-sometimes by the touch, and at others by friction: faith, however, is
-essential to success, and a lack of the necessary quality in the
-patient, rather than any decrease in the healing emission from the
-relic, is made to account for the disappointment which awaits the
-superstitious votaries of this fanatical operation. The "dead man's
-hand," or, as the Irish harvestmen are accustomed to call it, "the holy
-hand," was removed from Bryn to Garswood, and subsequently to the
-priest's house at Ashton, near Lancaster, where it remains in possession
-of the priest, if the light and knowledge of the present age have not
-consigned it to the earth.[111] A Roman Catholic publication, issued in
-1737, signed by nineteen witnesses, seventeen of whom were Protestants
-(the names being withheld, however, as it is alleged, for prudential
-reasons), attest, that in 1736, a boy of twelve years, the son of Caryl
-Hawarden, of Appleton-within-Widness, county of Lancaster, was cured of
-what appeared to be a fatal malady by the application of Father
-Arrowsmith's hand, which, according to the narrative, was effected in
-the following manner:--The boy had been ill fifteen months, and was at
-length deprived of the use of his limbs, with loss of his memory, and
-impaired sight. In this condition, which the physicians had declared
-hopeless, it was suggested to his parents, that as wonderful cures had
-been effected by the hand of "the martyred saint," it was advisable to
-try its effects upon their afflicted child. The "holy hand" was
-accordingly procured from Bryn, packed in a box, and wrapped in linen.
-Mrs. Hawarden having explained to the invalid her hopes and intentions,
-applied the back part of the dead hand to his back, stroking it down
-each side the backbone, and making the sign of the cross, which she
-accompanied with a fervent prayer that Jesus Christ would aid it with
-his blessing. Having twice repeated this operation, the patient, who had
-before been utterly helpless, rose from his seat, and walked about the
-house, to the surprise of seven persons who had witnessed the "miracle."
-From that day the boy's pains left him, his memory was restored, and his
-health became re-established! The witnesses add, that the boy, on being
-afterwards interrogated, said that he _believed_ the hand would do him
-good, and that upon its first touch he felt something give a short or
-sudden motion from his back to the end of his toes![112]
-
-Another account states that Father Edmund Arrowsmith, of the Society of
-Jesus, was a native of Haydock, in the parish of Winwick, and was born
-in 1585. In 1605 he entered the Roman Catholic College of Douay, where
-he was educated, and in 1612 he was ordained priest. His father's name
-was Robert Arrowsmith, and his mother, Margery, was a lady of the
-ancient family of the Gerards. In 1613 Father Arrowsmith was sent upon
-the English mission, and in 1628 (4th Charles I.) was apprehended and
-brought to Lancaster on the charge of being a priest, contrary to the
-laws of the realm. He was tried, sentenced to death, and executed on the
-28th of August, 1628, his last words being "Bone Jesu!" He was
-afterwards cut down, embowelled, and quartered. His head was set upon a
-pole or stake amongst the pinnacles of Lancaster Castle, and his
-quarters were hung upon four separate places of the same building. The
-hand of the martyr, having been cut off after his death, was brought to
-Bryn Hall [amongst his maternal relatives], where it was preserved as a
-precious relic, and by the application of which numerous miraculous
-cures are said to have been effected. "The holy hand" was removed from
-Bryn to Garswood [in Ashton, a seat of the Gerards], and subsequently to
-the priest's house at Ashton-in-Makerfield, where it still remains.[113]
-While the relic remained at Garswood, it was under the care of the
-Gerards' family-chaplain for the time being, and a fee was charged for
-its application to all who were able to pay, and this money was bestowed
-in charity on the needy or distressed. It is believed that no fee is now
-charged. The late Sir John Gerard had no faith in its efficacy, and many
-ludicrous anecdotes are current in the neighbourhood of pilgrims having
-been rather roughly handled by some of his servants, who were as
-incredulous as himself;--such as getting a good beating with a wooden
-hand (used for stretching gloves), and other heavy weapons; so that the
-patients rapidly retraced their steps, without having had the
-application of the "holy hand." The applicants usually provide
-themselves with a quantity of calico or flannel, which the priest of St.
-Oswald's, Ashton, causes to come in contact with the "dead hand;" the
-cloth is then applied to the part affected. Many instances are recorded
-of persons coming upon crutches or with sticks, having been suddenly so
-far restored as to be able to leave behind them these helps, as
-memorials, and return home, walking and leaping; praising the priest for
-his charity; the holy hand, for being the means of obtaining a cure; and
-God for giving such power to the dead hand. Persons have been known to
-come from Ireland, and other distant parts, to be cured. Some of these
-return home with a large piece of the cloth which has been in contact
-with the hand. This they tear into shreds, and dispose of them to the
-credulous neighbours who have not the means of undertaking so long a
-pilgrimage. About four years ago (writes our informant), I saw a poor
-maniac being dragged along by two or three of her relatives, and howling
-most piteously. I asked what they were going to do with her, when one of
-them (apparently her mother) replied: "And sure enough, master, we're
-taking her to the priest, to be rubbed with the holy hand, that the
-devil may leave her." A short time afterwards I saw them returning, but
-the rubbing had not been effectual. A policeman assisted to remove the
-struggling maniac to a neighbouring house, till a conveyance could be
-got to take her to Newton Bridge railway station.[114]
-
-
-NINETEENTH CENTURY SUPERSTITION.
-
-Will it be credited that thousands of people have, during the past week,
-crowded a certain road in the village of Melling, near Ormskirk, to
-inspect a sycamore tree, which has burst its bark, and the sap protrudes
-in a shape resembling a man's head? Rumour spread abroad that it was the
-re-appearance of Palmer, who "had come again, because he was buried
-without a coffin!" Some inns in the neighbourhood of this singular tree
-reaped a rich harvest.[115]
-
-
-PENDLE FOREST SUPERSTITION.
-
-Pendle Forest, in the neighbourhood of Burnley, has long been notorious
-for its witches. [After referring to the cases of alleged witchcraft in
-the beginning of the 17th century, the writer continues:] Two hundred
-years have since passed away, and yet the old opinions survive; for it
-is notorious that throughout the Forest the farmers still endeavour to
-
- "Chase the evil spirits away by dint
- Of sickle, horse-shoe, and hollow flint."
-
-Clay or wax images, pierced through with pins and needles, are
-occasionally met with in churchyards and gardens, where they have been
-placed for the purpose of causing the death of the persons they
-represent. Consumptive patients and paralytics are frequently said to be
-bewitched; and the common Lancashire proverb, "Draw blood of a witch,
-and she cannot harm you," has been many times practically verified upon
-quarrelsome females within my own experience. In extreme cases the
-"witch-killer" is resorted to, and implicit faith in his powers is not a
-rare item in the popular creed. Such a person usually combines the
-practice of Astrology with his other avocations. He casts nativities;
-gives advice respecting stolen property; tells fortunes; and writes out
-"charms" for the protection of those who may consult him.... Even the
-wives of clergymen have been known to consult "wise men" on doubtful
-matters respecting which they desired more satisfactory
-information.--_T. T. W._
-
-
-EAST LANCASHIRE SUPERSTITION.
-
-Strong minds often are unable to escape the thraldom of tradition and
-custom, with the help of liberal education and social intercourse. How
-then are the solitary farmers on the skirts of moorland wastes, to free
-themselves from hereditary superstition? The strength of such traditions
-is often secret and unacknowledged. It nevertheless influences the life;
-it lurks out of sight, ready to assert its power in any great crisis of
-our being. It is a homage to the unseen and the unknown, in fearful
-contradiction with the teaching of Christianity, for it creates, like
-the religion of the Jezzidies, a ritual of propitiation to malignant
-powers, instead of the prayer of faith to the All-merciful. The solitude
-of the life in the moorland farm-houses does not, however, foster the
-influence of superstitious madness, perhaps, so much as the wild, stormy
-climate, which holds its blustering reign through six months of every
-year, in this region of morass and fog, dark clough, and craggy chasm.
-Night shuts in early. The sun has gone down through a portentous gulf of
-clouds which have seemed to swallow up the day in a pit of darkness. The
-great sycamores stagger in the blast which rushes from the distant sea.
-The wind moans through the night like a troubled spirit, shakes the
-house as though it demanded admittance from the storm, and rushes down
-the huge chimney (built two centuries ago for the log fires, and large,
-hot heap of wood ashes), driving down a cloud of smoke and soot, as
-though by some wicked cantrip the witches careering in the storm would
-scatter the embers and fire the building. The lone watcher by some sick
-bed, shudders as the casements are battered by the tempest; or the bough
-of some tree, or a branch of ivy, strikes the panes like the hand of
-some unseen thing fumbling at the casement latch; or, awake from pain or
-care, restless with fever or fatigue, or troubled with superstitious
-horror, the lone shepherd waits for the day, as for a reprieve to
-conscious guilt, and even trembles while he mutters some charm to
-exorcise the evil that rides exulting on the storm. A year of ill-luck
-comes. The ewes are barren; the cows drop their untimely calves, though
-crooked sickles and lucky stones have been hung in the shippons. The
-milk is "bynged," or will not churn, though a hot poker has been used to
-spoil the witchery. The horses escape from the stable at night, though
-there is a horse-shoe over the door, and the hinds say they were
-carefully "heawsed an' fettled, and t'dooers o weel latched, bur
-t'feeorin (fairies) han 'ticed 'em eawt o' t' leawphooles, an' flown wi'
-em' o'er t'stone dykes, wi' o t'yates tynt (gates shut), an' clapp'd 'em
-reet i' t' meadow, or t' corn, just wheer tey shudna be." As the year
-advances, with such misadventures, apprehension grows. Is there some
-evil eye on the house? Will the hay be spoiled in the field? Will the
-oats ripen, or must they be cut green and given to the cattle? Or, if
-they ripen, will the stormy autumn wrap its mantle of mist and rain so
-closely about them, that they cannot be housed before they have
-sprouted, or have spoiled? The cold, bitter damp benumbs the strength of
-the feeble. Appetite and health fail; a fear creeps into the life. Fate
-seems to have dragged the sufferer into a vault of gloom, to whisper
-foreboding and inspire dread. These traditions of mischief wrought by
-malignant men inheriting the wicked craft and vindictive spite of the
-sorcerers, are uttered at the fireside, or if not so uttered, are
-brooded upon by a disturbed fancy.[116]
-
-
-SUPERSTITIOUS FEARS AND CRUELTIES.
-
-John Webster, the great exposer of shams and denouncer of superstitions
-in his day, and author of the "_Discovery of pretended Witchcraft_,"
-speaking of a clear head and sound judgment as necessary to competent
-witnesses, says:--"They ought to be of a sound judgment, and not of a
-vitiated and distempered phantasy, nor of a melancholic constitution;
-for these will take a bush to be a bugbear, and a black sheep to be a
-demon; the noise of the wild swans flying high in the night, to be
-spirits; or, as they call them here in the north, 'Gabriel Ratchets;'
-the calling of a daker hen in the meadow, to be the Whistlers; the
-howlings of the female fox in a gill or clough for the male, to be the
-cry of fairies." The Gabriel Ratchets seem to be the same with the
-German Rachtvogel or Rachtraven. The word and the superstition are still
-known in Lancashire, though in a sense somewhat different; for the
-Gabriel Ratchets are supposed to be something like litters of puppies
-yelping in the air. Ratch is certainly a name for a dog in general (see
-_Junius, in voce_). The whistlers are supposed to be the green or
-whistling plovers, which fly very high in the night, uttering their
-characteristic note. Speaking of the practices of witch-finders, Webster
-says:--"By such wicked means and unchristian practices, divers innocent
-persons have lost their lives; and these wicked rogues wanted not
-greater persons (even of the ministry too) that did authorize and
-encourage them in their diabolical courses. And the like in my time
-happened here in Lancashire, where divers, both men and women, were
-accused of supposed witchcraft, and were so unchristianly and inhumanly
-handled, as to be stripped stark naked and laid upon tables and beds to
-be searched for their supposed witch-marks; so barbarous and cruel acts
-doth diabolical instigation, working upon ignorance and superstition,
-produce."[117]
-
-
-SUPERSTITIOUS BELIEFS IN MANCHESTER IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY.
-
-At no period in the history of Manchester was there a greater
-disposition to believe in witchcraft, demoniacal possession, and the
-occult sciences, than at the close of the sixteenth century. The seer,
-Edward Kelly, was ranging through the country, practising the black art.
-Dr. Dee, the friend and associate of this impostor, had recently
-obtained the appointment of warden of the Collegiate Church of
-Manchester, by favour of his royal patroness, Queen Elizabeth, herself a
-believer in his astrological calculations; and the fame of the strange
-doings [the alleged demoniacal possession of seven persons] in the
-family of Mr. Starkie, had spread far and wide. The new warden was
-really a learned man, of the most inquisitive mind, addicted to chemical
-pursuits, not wholly unconnected with those of alchemy, and not
-altogether detached from the practice of necromancy and magic,
-notwithstanding his positive asseverations to the contrary, in his
-petition to King James. His life was full of vicissitudes; though
-enjoying the patronage of princes, he was always involved in
-embarrassments, and was at length obliged to relinquish his church
-preferment at Manchester, owing to the differences that existed between
-himself and his ecclesiastical brethren. It does not appear that during
-his residence in Lancashire he encouraged the deceptions of the
-exorcists. On the contrary he refused to become a party in the pretended
-attempt to cast out devils at Cleworth, and he strongly rebuked Hartlay,
-the conjuror, who was afterwards executed at Lancaster for his
-disgraceful practices.
-
-
-WELLS AND SPRINGS.
-
-Water, everywhere a prime necessity of life, is pre-eminently so in the
-hot and arid plains and stony deserts of Asia and Africa. We need not be
-surprised, therefore, to find that in all the ancient Eastern cults and
-mythologies, springs and wells were held in reverence, as holy and
-sacred gifts to man from the Great Spirit of the universe. The great
-Indo-European tide of migration, rolling ever westward, bore on its
-bosom these graceful superstitions, which were eagerly adopted by the
-old church of Christendom; and there is scarcely an ancient well of any
-consequence in the United Kingdom which has not been solemnly dedicated
-to some saint in the Roman Catholic calendar.
-
-WELLS NEAR LIVERPOOL.--At Wavertree, near Liverpool, is a well bearing
-the following inscription, "Qui non dat quod habet, daemon infra videt:
-1414" (Who giveth not what he hath, the devil below, seeth--or, if the
-last word be not _videt_ but _ridet_--laughs). Tradition says that at
-one period there was a cross above it, inscribed "Deus dedit, homo
-bibit" (God gave it, man drinks it); and that all travellers gave alms
-on drinking. If they omitted to do so, a devil who was chained at the
-bottom of the well, laughed. A monastic building stood near, and the
-occupants received the contributions.[118] A well at Everton, near
-Liverpool, has the reputation of being haunted, a fratricide having been
-committed there; but it is not mentioned in the local history of Syer,
-which merely says,--"The water for this well is procured by direct
-access to the liquid itself, through the medium of a few stone steps: it
-is free to the public, and seldom dry." Being formerly in a lonely
-situation, it was a haunt of pickpockets and other disorderly
-characters. It is now built over, and in a few years the short
-subterranean passage leading to the well will be forgotten.[119]
-
-PEGGY'S WELL.--Peggy's Well is near the Ribble, in a field below Waddow
-Hall, not far from Brunckerley stepping-stones, in attempting to cross
-by which several lives have been lost, when the river was swollen by a
-rapid rise, which even a day's rain will produce. These calamities, as
-well as any other fatal accidents that occur in the neighbourhood, are
-usually attributed to Peggy, the evil spirit of the well. There is a
-mutilated stone figure by the well, which has been the subject of many
-strange tales and apprehensions. It was placed there when turned out of
-the house at Waddow, to allay the terrors of the domestics, who durst
-not continue under the same roof with this mis-shapen figure. It was
-then broken, either from accident or design, and the head, some time
-ago, as is understood, was in one of the attic chambers at Waddow. Who
-Peggy of the Well was, tradition doth not inform us.
-
-The writer of the _Pictorial History of Lancashire_ states that going to
-Waddow Hall he inquired after the headless stone statue known as "Peg o'
-th' Well;" and a neat, intelligent young woman, one of the domestics,
-showed him Peggy's head on the pantry table, and the trunk by a well in
-an adjacent field. He gives the following as the substance of the
-tradition:--The old religion had been supplanted in most parts of the
-country, yet had left memorials of itself and its rites in no few
-places, nor least in those which were in the vicinity of an old Catholic
-family, or a monastic institution. Some such relic may Peggy have
-originally been. The scrupulous proprietors of Waddow Hall regarded the
-innocuous image with distrust and aversion; nor did they think
-themselves otherwise than justified in ascribing to Peggy all the evils
-and mischances that befel in the house. If a storm struck and damaged
-the house, Peggy was the author of the damage. If the wind whistled or
-moaned through the ill-fitting doors and casements, it was "Peggy at her
-work," requiring to be appeased, else some sad accident was sure to
-come. On one occasion Master Starkie--so was the host named--returned
-home very late with a broken leg. He had been hunting that day, and,
-report said, made too free with the ale afterwards. But, as usual, Peggy
-bore the blame: for some dissatisfaction she had waylaid the master of
-the house and caused his horse to fall. Even this was forgiven. A short
-time afterwards a Puritan preacher was overtaken by a fresh in the
-river, in attempting to cross over on the stepping-stones which lay just
-above the Hall, the very stones on which poor King Henry (VI.) was
-captured. Now, Mrs. Starkie had a great attachment to those preachers,
-and had indeed sent for the one in question, for him to exorcise and
-dispossess her youngest son, a boy of ten years of age, who was
-grievously afflicted with a demon, or, as was suspected, tormented by
-Peggy. "Why does he not come?" asked the lady, as she sat that night in
-her best apparel, before a blazing fire and near a well-furnished table.
-"The storm seems to get worse. Hark! heard ye no cry? Yes! there again.
-Oh, if the dear man be in the river! Run all of ye to his rescue." In a
-few minutes two trusty men-servants returned, panting under the huge
-weight of the dripping parson. He told his tale. "'Tis Peg," she
-suddenly exclaimed, "at her old tricks! This way, all!" She hurried from
-the apartment, rushed into the garden, where Peggy stood quiet enough
-near a spring, and with one blow of an axe, which she had seized in her
-passage, severed Peggy's head from her body.
-
-ST. HELEN'S WELL IN BRINDLE.--Dr. Kuerden in one of his MSS., describing
-the parish of Brindle in Leyland, states that "Over against Swansey
-House, a little towards the hill, standeth an ancient fabric, once the
-manor-house of Brindle, where hath been a chapel belonging to the same;
-and a little above it, a spring of very clear water, rushing straight
-upwards into the midst of a fair fountain, walled square about in stone
-and flagged in the bottom, very transparent to be seen, and a strong
-stream issuing out of the same. This fountain is called St. Ellen's
-Well, to which place the vulgar neighbouring people of the Red Letter
-[_i.e._, Roman Catholics] do much resort with pretended devotion on each
-year upon St. Ellins-day--[St. Helen's-day is either on May 21, August
-18, or September 3, the two first being days of a queen, and the last of
-an empress saint]--where and when, out of a foolish ceremony, they offer
-or throw into the well, pins, which there being left, may be seen a long
-time after by any visitor of the fountain."[120]
-
-ST. HELEN'S WELL, NEAR SEFTON.--Mr. Hampson[121] notices the
-superstition of casting pins or pebbles into wells, and observing the
-circles formed thereby on the surface of the agitated water, and also
-whether the water were troubled or preserved its clearness and
-transparency; from which appearances they drew omens or inferences as to
-future events. He adds: "I have frequently seen the bottom of St.
-Helen's Well, near Sefton, Lancashire, almost covered with pins, which,
-I suppose, must have been thrown in for the like purposes."
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[101] T. T. W., in _Notes and Queries_, iii. 55.
-
-[102] P. P., in _Notes and Queries_, iii. 516.
-
-[103] _Notes and Queries_, iii. p. 516.
-
-[104] Harl. MSS. Cod. 2042, fol. 239 a.
-
-[105] Harl. MSS. Cod. 2042, fol. 239.
-
-[106] Mr. Roby derived this statement from Thomas Barritt, the
-antiquary, who in one of his MSS. writes--"I was in company with a woman
-who had lain with a relation of hers sick of the small-pox. During all
-the time they had this hand lying with them every night, on purpose to
-effect a safe recovery of the afflicted person." Barritt does not say,
-however, that the recovery took place.
-
-[107] This story Mr. Roby derived from the same MSS. of Barritt, and
-also the statement of the real crime for which Arrowsmith was executed,
-and his alleged prophecy as to the Kenyons. Barritt says the dead hand
-was brought to Manchester about the time of the troubles in 1745, to
-cure a poor Papist lad, who came with Hill.
-
-[108] See Roby's _Traditions of Lancashire_.
-
-[109] Baines's _Lancashire_, vol. iii. p. 638.
-
-[110] _Pictorial History of Lancashire._
-
-[111] Mannex's _Hist. and Topog. of Lancashire_.
-
-[112] Baines's _History of Lancashire_, vol. iii. pp. 638-9.
-
-[113] Mannex's _History and Topography of Lancashire_.
-
-[114] From a Correspondent.
-
-[115] The _Tablet_, July 26, 1856.
-
-[116] Scarsdale.
-
-[117] Dr. Whitaker's _History of Whalley_.
-
-[118] Mr. Baines, in his _History of Lancashire_ (vol. iii. p. 760),
-says that in Wavertree is an ancient well with a rude, unintelligible
-inscription, of the date of 1414, which is thus _charitably_ rendered by
-the villagers:--
-
- "He that hath, and won't bestow,
- The Devil will reckon with him below."
-
-Or,
-
- "He who here does not bestow,
- The Devil laughs at him below."
-
-[119] "Agmond," in _Notes and Queries_, vol. vi. p. 305.
-
-[120] Baines's _History of Lancashire_, vol. iii. p. 497.
-
-[121] _Medii AEvi Kalendarium._
-
-
-
-
-WITCHES AND WITCHCRAFT.
-
-
-In the lore of these subjects no county in England is richer than
-Lancashire. The subject is a large one, and may even be said to include
-all the cases of demoniacal possession described in the earlier pages of
-this volume, since all these alleged possessions were the result of
-malice and (so-called) witchcraft. Indeed it is not easy to separate
-these two superstitious beliefs in their practical operation; witchcraft
-being the supposed cause, and demoniacal possession the imagined effect.
-The reader will find much, bearing on both branches of the subject,
-under both titles.
-
-
-WITCHCRAFT IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY.
-
-The first distinct charge of witchcraft in any way connected with this
-county, is that of the wife of the good Duke Humphrey, Eleanor, Duchess
-of Gloucester, the associate of Roger Bolingbroke, the priest and
-necromancer, and Margery Jourdain, the witch of Eye. The Duke of
-Gloucester, uncle and protector to the king, having become obnoxious to
-the predominant party, they got up in 1441 a strange prosecution. The
-Duchess of Gloucester, Eleanor, the daughter of Lord Cobham, a lady of
-haughty carriage and ambitious mind, being attached to the prevailing
-superstitions of the day, was accused of the crime of witchcraft "for
-that she, by sorcery and enchantment, intended to destroy the king, to
-the intent to advance and promote her husband to the crown."[122] It was
-alleged against her and her associates, Sir Roger Bolingbroke, a priest,
-and chaplain to the Duke, (who was addicted to astrology,) and Margery
-Jourdain, the witch of Eye, that they had in their possession a wax
-figure of the king, which they melted by a magical device before a slow
-fire, with the intention of wasting away his force and vigour by
-insensible degrees. The imbecile mind of Henry was sensibly affected by
-this wicked invention; and the Duchess of Gloucester, on being brought
-to trial (in St. Stephen's Chapel, before the Archbishop of Canterbury)
-and found guilty of the design to destroy the king and his ministers by
-the agency of witchcraft, was sentenced to do public penance in three
-places within the city of London, and to suffer perpetual imprisonment.
-Her confederates were condemned to death and executed, Margery Jourdain
-being burnt to death in Smithfield. The duchess, after enduring the
-ignominy of her public penance, rendered peculiarly severe by the
-exalted state from which she had fallen, was banished to the Isle of
-Man, where she was placed under the ward of Sir Thomas Stanley. On the
-way to her place of exile, she was confined for some time, first in
-Leeds Castle, and afterwards in the Castle of Liverpool;[123] the
-earliest and the noblest witch on record within the county of Lancaster.
-Another account states that amongst those arrested as accomplices of the
-duchess were a priest and canon of St. Stephen's, Westminster, named
-Southwell, and another priest named John Hum or Hume. Roger Bolingbroke,
-the learned astronomer and astrologer (who died protesting his ignorance
-of all evil intentions), was drawn and quartered at Tyburn; Southwell
-died in prison before the time of execution; and John Hum received the
-royal pardon. The worst thing proved against the duchess was that she
-had sought for love-philters to secure the constancy of her
-husband.[124] Shakspere, in the _Second Part of King Henry VI._, Act 1,
-Scene 4, represents the duchess, Margery Jourdain, Hume, Southwell, and
-Bolingbroke, as engaged in raising an evil spirit in the Duke of
-Gloucester's garden, when they are surprised and seized by the Dukes of
-York and Buckingham and their guards. The duchess, after remaining in
-the Isle of Man some years, was transferred to Calais, under the ward of
-Sir John Steward, knight, and there died.
-
-
-THE FAMOUS HISTORY OF THE LANCASHIRE WITCHES:
-
- Containing the manner of their becoming such; their enchantments,
- spells, revels, merry pranks, raising of storms and tempests, riding
- on winds, &c. The entertainments and frolics which have happened
- among them. With the loves and humours of Roger and Dorothy. Also, a
- Treatise of Witches in general, conducive to mirth and recreation.
- The like never before published.[125]
-
- CHAPTER I.--_The Lancashire Witch's Tentation, and of the Devil's
- appearing to her in sundry shapes, and giving her money._
-
- Lancashire is a famous and noted place, abounding with rivers,
- hills, woods, pastures, and pleasant towns, many of which are of
- great antiquity. It has also been famous for witches, and the
- strange pranks they played. Therefore, since the name of Lancashire
- Witches has been so frequent in the mouths of old and young, and
- many imperfect stories have been rumoured abroad, it would
- doubtless tend to the satisfaction of the reader, to give some
- account of them in their merry sports and pastimes.
-
- Some time since lived one Mother Cuthbert, in a little hovel at the
- bottom of a hill, called Wood-and-Mountain Hill, in Lancashire.
- This woman had two lusty daughters, who both carded and spun for
- their living, yet was very poor; which made them often repine at
- and lament their want. One day, as Mother Cuthbert was sauntering
- about the hill-side, picking the wool off the bushes, out started a
- thing like a rabbit, which ran about two or three times, and then
- changed into a hound, and afterwards into a man, which made the old
- beldame to tremble, yet she had no power to run away. So, putting a
- purse of money in her hand, and charging her to be there the next
- day, he immediately vanished away, and old Mother Cuthbert returned
- home, being somewhat disturbed between jealousy and fear.
-
-Such is the first chapter of this marvellous story, which, it is clear,
-is a fiction based upon real narratives. It relates the witcheries of
-Mother Cuthbert and her two daughters, Margery and Cicely, under the
-auspices of an arch-witch, "Mother Grady, the Witch of Penmure
-[Penmaen-mawr] a great mountain of Wales." Here is "_The Description of
-a Spell._--A spell is a piece of paper written with magical characters,
-fixed in a critical season of the moon, and conjunction of the planets;
-or sometimes by repeating mystical words. Of these there are many
-sorts." As showing what was the popular notion as to witches, take the
-following:--"About this time great search was made after witches and
-many were apprehended, but most of them gave the hangman and the gaoler
-the slip; though some hold that when a witch is taken she hath no power
-to avoid justice. It happened, as some of them were going in a cart to
-be tried, a coach passed by, in which appeared a person like a judge,
-who, calling to one, bid her be of good comfort, for neither she nor any
-of her companions should be harmed. In that night all the prison locks
-flew open, and they made their escape; and many, when they had been cast
-into the water for a trial, have swam like a cork. One of them boasted
-she could go over the sea in an egg-shell. It is held on all hands they
-adore the devil, and become his bond-slaves, to have for a term of years
-their pleasure and revenge. And indeed many of them are more mischievous
-than others in laming and destroying cattle, and in drowning ships at
-sea, by raising storms. But the Lancashire witches, we see, chiefly
-divert themselves in merriment, and are therefore found to be more
-sociable than the rest." The closing chapter in this chap-book, contains
-"A short description of the famous Lapland Witches."
-
-
-DR. DEE CHARGED WITH WITCHCRAFT.
-
-On the usual proclamation of a general pardon, on the accession of James
-I., the crime of witchcraft was specially excepted from the general
-amnesty; and the credulous King's belief in this superstition encouraged
-witch-finders and numerous accusations in all parts of the country.
-Amongst others, it was remembered that Dr. Dee, then warden of the
-Collegiate Church of Manchester, had in the preceding reign predicted a
-fortunate day for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth, and had also
-undertaken to render innocuous the waxen effigy of that Queen, found in
-Lincoln's Inn-fields. He was also known to have made various
-predictions, to be the possessor of a magic crystal or stone,[126] and
-to have held a close intimacy with Edward Kelly, _alias_ Talbot, a noted
-seer, conjuror and necromancer of the time. Accordingly Dr. Dee was
-formally accused of practising witchcraft, and a petition from him,
-dated 5th January, 1604, (preserved in the _Lansdowne MSS._, Cod. 161,)
-praying to be freed from this revolting imputation, even at the risk of
-a trial for his life, sufficiently indicates the horror excited by the
-charge. The doctor's petition sets forth that "It has been affirmed that
-your Majesty's supplicant was the conjuror belonging to the most
-honourable privy council of your Majesty's predecessor of famous memory,
-Queen Elizabeth, and that he is, or hath been, a caller or invocator of
-devils or damned spirits. These slanders, which have tended to his utter
-undoing, can no longer be endured; and if, on trial, he is found guilty
-of the offence imputed to him, he offers himself willingly to the
-punishment of death, yea, either to be stoned to death, or to be buried
-quick, or to be burned unmercifully." He seems to have escaped
-scatheless, save in reputation; and in 1594, when applied to for the
-purpose of exorcising seven demons who held possession of five females
-and two of the children of Mr. Nicholas Starkie, of Leigh, he refused to
-interfere; advising they should call in some godly preachers, with whom
-he would, if they thought proper, consult concerning a public or private
-fast. He also sharply reproved Hartlay, a conjuror, for his practices in
-this case.
-
-
-THE LANCASHIRE WITCHES.
-
- Come, gallant sisters, come along,
- Let's meet the devil ten thousand strong;
- Upon the whales' and dolphins' backs,
- Let's try to choak the sea with wracks,
- Spring leaks, and sink them down to rights.
- [_Line wanting._]
- And then we'll scud away to shour,
- And try what tricks we can play more.
-
- Blow houses down, ye jolly dames,
- Or burn them up in fiery flames;
- Let's rowse up mortals from their sleep,
- And send them packing to the deep,
- Let's strike them dead with thunder-stones,
- With lightning search [? scorch] to skin and bones;
- For winds and storms, by sea and land,
- You may dispose, you may command.
-
- Sometimes in dismal caves we lie,
- Or in the air aloft we flie;
- Sometimes we caper o'er the main,
- Thunders and lightnings we disdain;
- Sometimes we tumble churches down,
- And level castles with the ground;
- We fire whole cities, and destroy
- Whole armies, if they us annoy.
-
- We strangle infants in the womb,
- And raise the dead out of their tomb;
- We haunt the palaces of kings,
- And play such pranks and pretty things
- And this is all our chief delight,
- To do all mischief in despight;
- And when we've done, to shift away,
- Untoucht, unseen, by night or day.
-
- When imps do * * *
- We make them act unlucky feats;
- In puppets' wax, sharp needles' points
- We stick, to torture limbs and joints.
- With frogs' and toads' most poys'nous gore
- Our grizly limbs we 'noint all o'er,
- And straight away, away we go,
- Sparing no mortal, friend or foe.
-
- We'll sell you winds, and ev'ry charm
- Or venomous drug that may do harm;
- For beasts or fowls we have our spells
- Laid up in store in our dark cells;
- For there the devils used to meet,
- And dance with horns and cloven feet;
- And when we've done, we frisk about,
- And through the world play revel-rout.
-
- We ride on cows' and horses' backs,
- O'er lakes and rivers play nice knacks;
- We grasp the moon and scale the sun,
- And stop the planets as they run.
- We kindle comets' whizzing flames,
- And whistle for the winds by names;
- And for our pastimes and mad freaks,
- 'Mongst stars we play at barley-breaks.[127]
-
- We are ambassadors of state,
- And know the mysteries of fate;
- In Pluto's bosom there we ly,
- To learn each mortal's destiny.
- As oracles their fortunes show,
- If they be born to wealth or wo,
- The spinning Sisters' hands we guide,
- And in all this we take a pride.
-
- To Lapland, Finland, we do skice,
- Sliding on seas and rocks of ice,
- T' old beldames there, our sisters kind,
- We do impart our hellish mind;
- We take their seals and hands in blood
- For ever to renounce all good.
- And then, as they in dens do lurk,
- We set the ugly jades a-work.
-
- We know the treasures and the stores
- Lock'd up in caves with brazen doors;
- Gold and silver, sparkling stones,
- We pile on heaps, like dead men's bones.
- There the devils brood and hover,
- Keep guards, that none should them discover;
- Put upon all the coasts of hell,
- 'Tis we, 'tis we, stand sentinel.
-
-
-SUPERSTITIOUS FEAR OF WITCHCRAFT.
-
-During the sixteenth century whole districts in some parts of Lancashire
-seemed contaminated with the presence of witches; men and beasts were
-supposed to languish under their charm, and the delusion which preyed
-alike on the learned and the vulgar did not allow any family to suppose
-that they were beyond the reach of the witch's power. Was the family
-visited by sickness? It was believed to be the work of an invisible
-agency, which in secret wasted the image made in clay before the fire,
-or crumbled its various parts into dust. Did the cattle sicken and die?
-The witch and the wizard were the authors of the calamity. Did the yeast
-refuse to ferment, either in the bread or the beer? It was the
-consequence of a "bad wish." Did the butter refuse to _come_? The
-"familiar" was in the churn. Did the ship founder at sea? The gale or
-hurricane was blown by the lungless hag who had scarcely sufficient
-breath to cool her own pottage. Did the Ribble overflow its banks? The
-floods descended from the congregated sisterhood at Malkin tower. The
-blight of the season, which consigned the crops of the farmer to
-destruction, was the saliva of the enchantress, or distillations from
-the blear-eyed dame who flew by night over the field on mischief bent.
-To refuse an alms to a haggard mendicant, was to incur maledictions soon
-manifest in afflictions of body, mind, and estate, in loss of cattle and
-other property, of health, and sometimes even of life itself. To escape
-from evils like these no sacrifice was thought too great. Superstitions
-begat cruelty and injustice; the poor and the rich were equally
-interested in obtaining a deliverance; and the magistrate in his
-mansion, no less than the peasant in his cot, was deeply interested in
-abating the universal affliction. The Lancashire witches were
-principally fortune-tellers and conjurors. The alleged securities
-against witchcraft were numerous, the most popular being the horse-shoe;
-hence we see in Lancashire so many thresholds ornamented with this
-counter-charm. Under these circumstances the situation of the reputed
-witch was not more enviable than that of the individuals or families
-over whom she exerted her influence. Linked by a species of infernal
-compact to an imaginary imp, she was shunned as a common pest, or
-caressed only on the same principle which leads some Indian tribes to
-pay homage to the devil. The reputed witches themselves were frequently
-disowned by their families, feared and detested by their neighbours, and
-hunted by the dogs as pernicious monsters. When apprehended they were
-cast into ponds in the belief that witches swim; so that to sink or swim
-was almost equally perilous to them; they were punctured by bodkins to
-discover the witch imp or devil marks; they were subjected to hunger and
-kept in perpetual motion till confessions were obtained from a
-distracted mind. On their trials they were listened to with incredulity
-and horror, and consigned to the gallows with as little pity as the
-basest of malefactors. Their imaginary crimes created a thirst for their
-blood; and people of all stations, from the highest to the lowest,
-attended their trials at Lancaster with an intensity of interest that
-such mischievous persons, now divested of their sting, naturally
-excited. It has been said that witchcraft and kingcraft in England came
-in and went out with the Stuarts. This is not true. The doctrine of
-necromancy was in universal belief in the fourteenth and fifteenth
-centuries, and there was not perhaps a man in Lancashire who doubted its
-existence. The belief in witchcraft and in demoniacal possession was
-confined to no particular sect or persuasion; the Roman Catholics, the
-members of the Church of England, the Presbyterians, Independents, and
-even the Methodists (though a sect of more recent standing) have all
-fallen into this delusion; and yet each denomination has upbraided the
-other with gross superstition, and not unfrequently with wilful fraud.
-It is due, however, to the ministers of the Established Church to say
-that they were among the first of our public writers to denounce the
-belief in witchcraft with all its attendant mischiefs; and the names of
-Dr. Harsnett, afterwards Archbishop of York, of Dr. John Webster (who
-detected Robinson, the Lancashire witch-hunter), of Zach. Taylor, one of
-the king's preachers for Lancashire, and of Dr. Hutchinson, the chaplain
-in ordinary to George I., are all entitled to the public gratitude for
-their efforts to explode these pernicious superstitions. For upwards of
-a century the sanguinary and superstitious laws of James I. disgraced
-the English statute-book; but in the ninth year of George II. (1735) a
-law was enacted repealing the statute of James I., and prohibiting any
-prosecution, suit, or proceeding against any person for witchcraft,
-sorcery, enchantment, or conjuration. In this way the doctrine of
-witchcraft, with all its attendant errors, was finally exploded, except
-among the most ignorant of the vulgar.[128]
-
-
-A HOUSEHOLD BEWITCHED.
-
-(From the _Late Lancashire Witches_, a comedy, by Thomas Heywood.)
-
- My Uncle has of late become the sole
- Discourse of all the country; for a man respected
- As master of a govern'd family;
- The house (as if the ridge were fix'd below,
- And groundsills lifted up to make the roof),
- All now's turn'd topsy turvy
- In such a retrograde, preposterous way
- As seldom hath been heard of, I think never.
- The good man
- In all obedience kneels unto his Son;
- He, with an austere brow, commands his Father.
- The Wife presumes not in the Daughter's sight
- Without a prepared curtsey; the Girl, she
- Expects it as a duty, chides her mother,
- Who quakes and trembles at each word she speaks;
- And what's as strange, the Maid, she domineers
- O'er her young Mistress, who is awed by her.
- The Son, to whom the Father creeps and bends,
- Stands in as much fear of the groom, his Man!
- All in such rare disorder, that in some
- As it breeds pity, and in others wonder,
- So in the most part laughter. It is thought
- This comes by WITCHCRAFT!
-
-
-THE LANCASHIRE WITCHES OF 1612.
-
-King James VI. of Scotland, in 1594 (nine years before he ascended the
-English throne as James I.), wrote and published his disgracefully
-credulous and cruel treatise, entitled "Daemonologie," containing
-statements as to the making of witches, and their practice of
-witchcraft, which, _if true_, would only prove their revealer to be deep
-in the councils of Satan, and a regular member or attendant of
-assemblages of witches. The royal witch-hater held that, as witchcraft
-is an act of treason against the prince, the evidence of barnes
-[children] or wives [weak women], or ever so defamed persons [_i.e._, of
-character however infamous], may serve for sufficient witnesses against
-them; for [he asks], who but witches can be provers, and so witnesses of
-the doings of witches? Besides evidence, "there are two other good helps
-that may be used for their trial; the one is the finding of their
-_mark_, and then trying the insensibleness thereof; the other is
-floating on the water" [or drowning], &c. Having thus opened the door by
-admitting the loosest evidence and the most absurd tests for the most
-unjust convictions, the royal fanatic adds, that all witches [_i.e._,
-persons thus convicted] ought to be put to death, without distinction of
-age, sex, or rank. This "British Solomon" ascended the English throne in
-1603, and, as might have been expected, witch-finders soon plied their
-infamous vocation with success. The wild and desolate parts of the
-parish of Whalley furnished a fitting scene for witch assemblies, and it
-was alleged that such meetings were held at Malkin Tower, in Pendle
-Forest, within that parish. At the assizes at Lancaster in the autumn of
-1612, twenty persons, of whom sixteen were women of various ages, were
-committed for trial, and most of them tried for witchcraft. Their names
-were--1. Elizabeth Southerne, widow, _alias_ "Old Demdike" (aged eighty
-or more); 2. Elizabeth Device [probably Davies], _alias_ "Young
-Demdike," her daughter; 3. James Device, son of No. 2; 4. Alizon Device,
-daughter of No. 2; 5. Anne Whittle, widow, _alias_ "Chattox," _alias_
-Chatterbox [more probably Chadwicks], the rival witch of "Old Demdike"
-(and, like her, eighty or more years of age); 6. Anne Redferne, daughter
-of No. 5; 7. Alice Nutter; 8. Katherine Hewytt, _alias_ "Mould-heels;"
-9. Jane Bulcock, of the Moss End; 10. John Bulcock, her son; 11. Isabel
-Robey; and 12. Margaret Pearson, of Padiham. No. 12 was tried first for
-murder by witchcraft; 2nd for bewitching a neighbour; 3rd for bewitching
-a horse; and, being acquitted of the two former charges, was sentenced
-for the last to stand upon the pillory in the markets of Clitheroe,
-Padiham, Colne, and Lancaster for four successive market days, with a
-printed paper upon her head, stating her offence. The twelve persons
-already named were styled "Witches of Pendle Forest." The following
-eight were called "Witches of Samlesbury:"--13. Jennet Bierley; 14.
-Ellen Bierley; 15. Jane Southworth; 16. John Ramsden; 17. Elizabeth
-Astley; 18. Alice Gray; 19. Isabel Sidegraves; and 20. Lawrence Haye.
-The last four were all discharged without trial. The sensation produced
-by these trials was immense, not only in this, but throughout
-neighbouring counties, and Thomas Potts, Esq., the clerk of the court,
-was directed by the judges of assize, Sir Edward Bromley, Knt., and Sir
-James Altham, Knt., to collect and publish the evidence and other
-documents connected with the trial, under the revision of the judges
-themselves; and Potts's "Discovery of Witches," originally published in
-1613, has been reprinted by the Chetham Society (vol. vi.), under the
-editorship of its president, Mr. James Crossley, F.S.A. According to
-Potts, Old Mother Demdike, the principal actress in the tragedy, was a
-general agent for the devil in all these parts; no man escaping her or
-her furies that ever gave them occasion of offence, or denied them
-anything they stood in need of. The justices of the peace in this part
-of the country, Roger Nowell and Nicholas Bannister, having learned that
-Malkin Tower [Malkin is a north-country name for a hare], in the Forest
-of Pendle, the residence of Old Demdike and her daughter, was the resort
-of the witches, ventured to arrest their head and another of her
-followers, and to commit them to Lancaster Castle. Amongst the rest of
-the voluntary confessions made by the witches, that of Dame Demdike is
-preserved. She confessed that, about twenty years ago, as she was coming
-home from begging, she was met near Gould's Hey, in the forest of
-Pendle, by a spirit or devil in the shape of a boy, the one half of his
-coat black and the other brown, who told her to stop, and said that if
-she would give him her soul, she should have anything she wished for.
-She asked his name, and was told _Tib_. She consented, from the hope of
-gain, to give him her soul. For several years she had no occasion to
-make any application to her evil spirit; but one Sunday morning, having
-a little child upon her knee, and she being in a slumber, the spirit
-appeared to her in the likeness of a brown dog, and forced himself upon
-her knee, and begun to suck her blood under her left arm, on which she
-exclaimed, "Jesus! save me!" and the brown dog vanished, leaving her
-almost stark mad for eight weeks. On another occasion she was led, being
-blind, to the house of Richard Baldwyn, to obtain payment for the
-services her daughter had performed at his mill, when Baldwyn fell into
-a passion, and bid them to get off his ground, calling them w----s and
-witches, and saying he would burn the one and hang the other. On this,
-_Tib_ appeared, and they concerted matters to revenge themselves on
-Baldwyn; how, is not stated. This poor mendicant pretender to the powers
-of witchcraft, in her examination stated that the surest way of taking a
-man's life by witchcraft is to make a picture of clay, like unto the
-shape of the person meant to be killed, and when they would have the
-object of their vengeance suffer in any particular part of his body, to
-take a thorn or pin and prick it into that part of the effigy; and when
-they would have any of the body to consume away, then to burn that part
-of the figure; and when they would have the whole body to consume, then
-to burn the clay image; by which means the afflicted will die. The
-substance of the examinations of the so-called witches and others, may
-be given as follows:--Old Demdike persuaded her daughter, Elizabeth
-Device, to sell herself to the devil, which she did, and in turn
-initiated her daughter, Alizon Device, in these infernal arts. When the
-old witch had been sent to Lancaster Castle, a grand convocation of
-seventeen witches and three wizards was held at Malkin Tower on Good
-Friday, at which it was determined to kill Mr. M'Covell, the governor of
-the castle, and to blow up the building, to enable the witches to make
-their escape. The other two objects of this convocation were to christen
-the familiar of Alizon Device, one of the witches in the castle, and
-also to bewitch and murder Mr. Lister, a gentleman of Westby-in-Craven,
-Yorkshire. The business being ended, the witches, in quitting the
-meeting, walked out of the barn, named Malkin Tower, in their proper
-shapes, but on reaching the door, each mounted his or her spirit, which
-was in the form of a young horse, and quickly vanished. Before the
-assizes, Old Demdike, worn out by age and trouble, died in prison. The
-others were brought to trial. The first person arraigned before Sir
-Edward Bromley, who presided in the criminal court, was Ann Whittle,
-_alias_ "Chattox," who is described by Potts as a very old, withered,
-spent, and decrepit creature, eighty years of age, and nearly blind, a
-dangerous witch, of very long countenance, always opposed to Old
-Demdike, for whom the one favoured, the other hated deadly, and they
-accused each other in their examinations. This witch was more
-mischievous to men's goods than to themselves; her lips ever chattered
-as she walked (hence, probably, her name of Chattox or Chatterbox), but
-no one knew what she said. Her abode was in the Forest of Pendle,
-amongst the company of other witches, where the woollen trade was
-carried on, she having been in her younger days a wool-carder. She was
-indicted for having exercised various wicked and devilish arts called
-witchcrafts, enchantments, charms and sorceries, upon one Robert Nutter,
-of Greenhead, in the Forest of Pendle, and with having, by force
-thereof, feloniously killed him. To establish this charge her own
-examination was read, from which it appeared that fourteen or fifteen
-years ago, a thing like "a Christian man" had importuned her to sell her
-soul to the devil, and that she had done so, giving to her familiar the
-name of _Fancy_. On account of an insult offered to her daughter,
-Redfern, by Robert Nutter, they two conspired to place a bad wish upon
-Nutter, of which he died. It was further deposed against her that John
-Device had agreed to give Old Chattox a dole of meal yearly if she would
-not hurt him, and that when he ceased to make this annual tribute, he
-took to his bed and died. She was further charged with having bewitched
-the drink of John Moore, and also with having, without using the churn,
-produced a quantity of butter from a dish of skimmed milk! In the face
-of this evidence, and no longer anxious about her own life, she
-acknowledged her guilt, but humbly prayed the judges to be merciful to
-her daughter, Anne Redfern; but her prayer was in vain. Against
-Elizabeth Device, the testimony of her own daughter, a child nine years
-of age, was received; and the way in which her evidence was given,
-instead of filling the court with horror, seems to have excited their
-applause and admiration. Her familiar had the form of a dog and was
-called _Bull_, and by his agency she bewitched to death John and James
-Robinson and James Mitton; the first having called her a strumpet, and
-the last having refused to give Old Demdike a penny when she asked him
-for charity. To render her daughter proficient in the art, the prisoner
-taught her two prayers, by one of which she cured the bewitched, and by
-the other procured drink. The person of Elizabeth Device, as described
-by Potts, seems witch-like. "She was branded (says he) with a
-preposterous mark in nature; her left eye standing lower than her right;
-the one looking down and the other up at the same time." Her process of
-destruction was by modelling clay or marl figures, and wasting her
-victims away along with them. James Device was convicted principally on
-the evidence of his child-sister, of bewitching and killing Mrs. Ann
-Towneley, the wife of Mr. Henry Towneley, of the Carr, by means of a
-picture of clay; and both he and his sister were witnesses against their
-mother. This wizard (James Device), whose spirit was called _Dandy_, is
-described as a poor, decrepit boy, apparently of weak intellect, and so
-infirm, that it was found necessary to hold him up in court on his
-trial.
-
-Upon evidence of this kind no fewer than ten of these unfortunate people
-were found guilty at Lancaster, and sentenced to suffer death. Eight
-others were acquitted; why, it is not easy to see, for the evidence
-appears to have been equally strong, or rather equally weak and absurd,
-against all. The ten persons sentenced were--Ann Whittle _alias_
-"Chattox," Elizabeth Device, James Device, Anne Redfern, Alice Nutter,
-Catherine Hewytt, John Bulcock, Jane Bulcock, Alizon Device, and Isabel
-Robey.
-
-The judge, Sir Edward Bromley, in passing sentence on the convicted
-prisoners, said, "You, of all people, have the least cause of complaint;
-since on the trial for your lives there hath been much care and pains
-taken; and what persons of your nature and condition were ever arraigned
-and tried with so much solemnity? The court hath had great care to
-receive nothing in evidence against you but matter of fact(!)[129] As
-you stand simply (your offence and bloody practices not considered)
-your fate would rather move compassion than exasperate any man; for whom
-would not the ruin of so many poor creatures at one time touch, as in
-appearance simple, and of little understanding? But the blood of these
-innocent children, and others his Majesty's subjects whom cruelly and
-barbarously you have murdered and cut off, cries unto the Lord for
-vengeance. It is impossible that you, who are stained with so much
-innocent blood, should either prosper or continue in this world, or
-receive reward in the next." Having thus shut the door of hope, both as
-to this life and the future, the judge proceeded to urge the wretched
-victims of superstition to repentance! and concluded by sentencing them
-all to be hanged. They were executed at Lancaster on the 20th of August,
-1612, for having bewitched to death "by devilish practices and hellish
-means" no fewer than sixteen inhabitants of the Forest of Pendle. These
-were, 1. Robert Nutter, of Greenhead. 2. Richard Assheton, son of
-Richard Assheton, Esq., of Downham. 3. A child of Richard Baldwin, of
-Westhead, in the Forest of Pendle. 4. John Device, or Davies, of Pendle.
-5. Ann Nutter, daughter of Anthony Nutter, of Pendle. 6. A child of John
-Moor, of Higham. 7. Hugh Moor, of Pendle. 8. John Robinson, _alias_
-Swyer. 9. James Robinson. 10. Henry Mytton, of Rough Lee. 11. Ann
-Towneley, wife of Henry Towneley, of Carr Hall, gentleman. 12. John
-Duckworth. 13. John Hargreaves, of Goldshaw Booth. 14. Blaize
-Hargreaves, of Higham. 15. Christopher Nutter. 16. Ann Folds, near
-Colne. John Law, a pedlar, was also bewitched, so as to lose the use of
-his limbs, by Alizon Device, because he refused to give her some pins
-without money, when requested to do so by her on his way from Colne.
-Alizon Device herself _was a beggar by profession_, and the evidence
-sufficiently proved that Law's affliction was nothing more than what
-would now be termed paralysis of the lower extremities.
-
-In his _Introduction_ to _Potts's Discovery of Witches_, Mr. Crossley
-observes that "the main interest in reviewing this miserable band of
-victims will be felt to centre in Alice Nutter. Wealthy, well conducted,
-well connected, and placed probably on an equality with most of the
-neighbouring families, and the magistrate before whom she was brought
-and by whom she was committed, she deserves to be distinguished from the
-companions with whom she suffered, and to attract an attention which has
-never yet been directed to her. That James Device, on whose evidence she
-was convicted, was instructed to accuse her by her own nearest
-relatives, and that the magistrate, Roger Nowell, entered actively as a
-confederate into the conspiracy, from a grudge entertained against her
-on account of a long-disputed boundary, are allegations which tradition
-has preserved, but the truth or falsehood of which, at this distance of
-time, it is scarcely possible satisfactorily to examine. Her mansion,
-Rough Lee, is still standing, a very substantial and rather fine
-specimen of the houses of the inferior gentry, _temp._ James I., but now
-divided into cottages."
-
-
-THE SAMLESBURY WITCHES.
-
-The trials of these persons took place at the same assizes, and before
-the same judge. Against Jane and Ellen Bierley and Jane Southworth, all
-of Samlesbury, charged with having bewitched Grace Sowerbutts there, the
-only material evidence was that of Grace Sowerbutts herself, a girl of
-licentious and vagrant habits, who swore that these women (one of them
-being her grandmother), did draw her by the hair of the head and lay her
-upon the top of a hay-mow, and did take her senses and memory from her;
-that they appeared to her sometimes in their own likeness, and sometimes
-like a black dog. She declared that they by their arts had induced her
-to join their sisterhood; and that they were met from time to time by
-"four black things going upright and yet not like men in the face," who
-conveyed them across the Ribble, where they danced with them, &c. The
-prisoners were also charged with bewitching and slaying a child of
-Thomas Walshman's, by placing a nail in its navel; and after its burial,
-they took up the corpse, when they ate part of the flesh, and made an
-"_unxious_ ointment" by boiling the bones. This was more than even the
-capacious credulity of the judge and jury could digest. The Samlesbury
-witches were, therefore, acquitted, and a seminary priest named Thompson
-_alias_ Southworth, was suspected by two of the county magistrates [the
-Rev. William Leigh and Edward Chisnall, Esq.,] to whom the affair was
-afterwards referred, of having instigated Sowerbutts to make the charge;
-but this imputation was not supported by any satisfactory evidence.
-
-
-WITCHCRAFT AT MIDDLETON.
-
-About 1630, a man named Utley, a reputed wizard, was tried, found
-guilty, and hanged, at Lancaster, for having bewitched to death,
-Richard, the son of Ralph Assheton, Esq., of Downham, and Lord of
-Middleton.[130]
-
-
-WITCHCRAFT IN 1633-34.
-
-In 1633, a number of poor and ignorant people, inhabitants of Pendle
-Forest, or the neighbourhood, were apprehended, upon the information of
-a boy named Edmund Robinson, and charged with witchcraft. The following
-is a copy of Robinson's deposition:--
-
- "The examination of Edmund Robinson, son of Edmund Robinson, of
- Pendle Forest, mason, taken at Padiham, before Richard Shuttleworth
- [of Gawthorpe, Esq., then forty-seven or forty-eight] and John
- Starkie, Esq. [one of the seven demoniacs of Cleworth, in 1595] two
- of his Majesty's Justices of the Peace, within the county of
- Lancaster, 10th of February, A.D. 1633 [1634]. Who informeth upon
- oath (being examined concerning the great outrages of the witches),
- and saith, that upon All Saints' Day last past [Nov. 1, 1633], he,
- this informer, being with one Henry Parker, a next door neighbour to
- him, in Wheatley-lane, desired the said Parker to give him leave to
- get some bulloes [? bullace], which he did. In which time of getting
- bulloes, he saw two greyhounds, viz., a black and a brown one, come
- running over the next field towards him; he verily thinking the one
- of them to be Mr. Nutter's, and the other to be Mr. Robinson's, the
- said Mr. Nutter and Mr. Robinson having then such like. And the said
- greyhounds came to him and fawned on him, they having about their
- necks either of them a collar, and to either of which collars was
- tied a string, which collars, as this informant affirmeth, did shine
- like gold; and he thinking that some either of Mr. Nutter's or Mr.
- Robinson's family should have followed them, but seeing nobody to
- follow them, he took the said greyhounds, thinking to hunt with
- them, and presently a hare rise [rose] very near before him, at the
- sight of which he cried 'Loo! loo!' but the dogs would not run.
- Whereupon being very angry he took them, and with the strings that
- were at their collars, tied either of them to a little bush on the
- next hedge, and with a rod that he had in his hand he beat them. And
- instead of the black greyhound, one Dickonson wife stood up (a
- neighbour), whom this informer knoweth; and instead of the brown
- greyhound a little boy, whom this informer knoweth not. At which
- sight this informer being afraid, endeavoured to run away, but being
- stayed by the woman, viz., by Dickonson's wife, she put her hand
- into her pocket and pulled out a piece of silver much like to a fair
- shilling, and offered to give him to hold his tongue, and not to
- tell, which he refused, saying, 'Nay, thou art a witch.' Whereupon
- she put her hand into her pocket again, and pulled out a string like
- unto a bridle, that jingled, which she put upon the little boy's
- head that stood up in the brown greyhound's stead; whereupon the
- said boy stood up a white horse. Then immediately the said
- Dickonson's wife took this informer before her upon the said horse
- and carried him to a new house called Hoare-stones, being about a
- quarter of a mile off; whither when they were come there were divers
- persons about the door, and he saw divers others come riding upon
- horses of several colours towards the said house, which tied their
- horses to a hedge near to the said house, and which persons went
- into the said house, to the number of three score or thereabouts, as
- this informer thinketh, where they had a fire and meat roasting,
- and some other meat stirring in the house, whereof a young woman,
- whom he, this informer, knoweth not, gave him flesh and bread upon a
- trencher, and drink in a glass, which, after the first taste, he
- refused, and would have no more, and said it was nought. And
- presently after, seeing divers of the company going to a barn
- adjoining, he followed after, and there he saw six of them kneeling,
- and pulling at six several ropes, which were fastened or tied to the
- top of the house, at or with which pulling came then in this
- informer's sight flesh smoking, butter in lumps, and milk as it were
- syling [skimming or straining] from the said ropes, all which fell
- into basins which were placed under the said ropes. And after that
- these six had done, there came other six, which did likewise; and
- during all the time of their so pulling, they made such foul faces
- that feared this informer, so as he was glad to steal out and run
- home; whom, when they wanted, some of their company came running
- after him, near to a place in a highway called Boggard-hole, where
- this informer met two horsemen, at the sight whereof the said
- persons left following him; and the foremost of which persons that
- followed him, he knoweth to be one Loynd wife, which said wife,
- together with one Dickonson wife, and one Janet Davies, he hath seen
- at several times in a croft or close adjoining to his father's
- house, which put him in a great fear. And further this informer
- saith, upon Thursday after New Year's Day last past, he saw the said
- Loynd wife sitting upon a cross piece of wood being near the chimney
- of his father's dwelling-house: and he, calling to her, said, 'Come
- down, thou Loynd wife,' and immediately the said Loynd wife went up
- out of his sight. And further, this informer saith, that after he
- was come from the company aforesaid to his father's house, being
- towards evening, his father bade him go fetch home two kine to seal
- [cows to yoke], and in the way, in a field called the Ollers
- [_i.e._, Alders,] he chanced to hap upon a boy who began to quarrel
- with him, and they fought so together till this informer had his
- ears made very bloody by fighting; and looking down, he saw the boy
- had a cloven foot, at which sight he was afraid, and ran away from
- him to seek the kine. And in the way he saw a light like a lantern,
- towards which he made haste, supposing it to be carried by some of
- Mr. Robinson's people; but when he came to the place he only found a
- woman standing on a bridge, whom, when he saw her, he knew to be
- Loynd wife, and knowing her he turned back again, and immediately he
- met with the aforesaid boy, from whom he offered to run; which boy
- gave him a blow on the back, which caused him to cry. And he further
- saith, that when he was in the barn, he saw three women take three
- pictures from off the beam, in the which pictures many thorns, or
- such like things, sticked; and that Loynd wife took one of the said
- pictures down; but the other two women that took the other two
- pictures down he knoweth not. And being further asked what persons
- were at the meeting aforesaid, he nominated these persons hereafter
- mentioned; viz., Dickonson wife, Henry Priestly wife and her son,
- Alice Hargreaves, widow, Jennet Davies, William Davies, the wife of
- Henry Jacks and her son John, James Hargreaves of Marsden, Miles
- wife of Dicks, James wife, Saunders as he believes, Lawrence wife of
- Saunders, Loynd wife, Boys wife of Barrowford, one Holgate and his
- wife as he believes, Little Robin wife of Leonards of the West
- Close.
-
- "Edmund Robinson of Pendle, father of the said Edmund Robinson, the
- aforesaid informer, upon oath saith, that upon All Saints' Day he
- sent his son, the aforesaid informer, to fetch home two kine to
- seal, and saith that he thought his son stayed longer than he
- should have done, and went to seek him; and in seeking him heard
- him cry very pitifully, and found him so afraid and distracted,
- that he neither knew his father, nor did know where he was, and so
- continued very near a quarter of an hour before he came to himself;
- and he told this informer his father all the particular passages
- that are before declared in the said Edmund Robinson his son's
- information."
-
-Upon such evidence as the above, these poor creatures, chiefly women and
-children, were committed by the two magistrates named, to Lancaster
-Castle, for trial. On their trials at the assizes, a jury, doubtless
-full of prejudice and superstitious fear, found seventeen of them
-guilty. The judge respited the convicts and reported the case to the
-king in council. They were next remitted to the Bishop of Chester (Dr.
-Bridgeman), who certified his opinion of the case, which, however, does
-not appear. Subsequently, four of these poor women, Margaret Johnson,
-Frances Dickonson, Mary Spencer, and the wife of one of the
-Hargreaveses, were sent for to London, and examined, first by the king's
-physicians and surgeons, and afterwards by Charles I. in person. The
-strangest part of this sad story of superstition is that one of the
-four, who underwent examination before the magistrates, trial before "my
-lords the king's justices," a sifting question by the Right Rev. the
-Lord Bishop of Chester, aided, probably, by his chancellor, archdeacons,
-chaplains, proctors, &c., next before the lords of his majesty's privy
-council, and lastly, before his sacred majesty the king himself, whose
-very touch would remove the king's evil,--one of these four women,
-doubtless after much badgering, bullying, and artful questioning,
-actually made a confession of her guilt as a witch. When this was made
-it does not appear; but here is the confession as preserved in
-Dodsworth's Collection of MSS., vol. lxi. p. 47:--
-
- "THE CONFESSION OF MARGARET JOHNSON.--That betwixt seven and eight
- years since, she being in her own house in Marsden in a great
- passion of anger and discontent, and withal pressed with some want,
- there appeared unto her a spirit or devil in the proportion or
- similitude of a man, apparelled in a suit of black, tied about with
- silk points; who offered that if she would give him her soul he
- would supply all her wants, and bring to her whatsoever she did
- need; and at her appointment would in revenge either kill or hurt
- whom or what she desired, were it man or beast. And saith, that
- after a solicitation or two, she contracted and covenanted with the
- said devil for her soul. And that the said devil or spirit bade her
- call him by the name of Mamilian; and when she would have him do
- anything for her, call in 'Mamilian,' and he would be ready to do
- her will. And saith, that in all her talk and confidence she calleth
- her said devil, 'Mamil, my God.' She further saith that the said
- Mamilian, her devil (by her consent) did abuse and defile * * * And
- saith that she was not at the great meeting at Hoare-stones, at the
- Forest of Pendle, upon All Saints' Day, where * * * But saith she
- was at a second meeting the Sunday next after All Saints' Day, at
- the place aforesaid, where there was at the time between thirty and
- forty witches, who did all ride to the said meeting, and the end of
- the meeting was to consult for the killing and hurting of men and
- beasts. And that besides their private familiars or spirits, there
- was one great or grand devil or spirit, more eminent than the rest.
- And if any desire to have a great and more wonderful devil, whereby
- they may have more power to hurt, they may have one such. And saith
- that such witches as have sharp bones given them by the devil to
- prick them, have no paps or dugs whereon the devil may suck; but the
- devil receiveth blood from the place pricked with the bone; and they
- are more grand witches than any that have marks. She also saith,
- that if a witch had but one mark, she hath but one spirit; if two,
- then two spirits; if three, yet but two spirits. And saith that
- their spirits usually have keeping of their bodies. And being
- desired to name such as she knew to be witches, she named, &c. And
- if they would torment a man, they bid their spirit go and torment
- him in any particular place. And that Good Friday is one constant
- day for a yearly general meeting of witches, and that on Good Friday
- last they had a meeting near Pendle water-side. She also saith that
- men witches usually have women spirits, and women witches men
- spirits. And their devil or spirit gives them notice of their
- meeting, and tells them the place where it must be. And saith, if
- they desire to be in any place upon a sudden their devil or spirit
- will, upon a rod, dog, or anything else, presently convey them
- thither; yea, into any room of a man's house. But she saith, it is
- not the substance of their bodies, but their spirit [that] assumeth
- such form and shape as go into such rooms. She also saith that the
- devil (after he begins to suck) will make a pap or dug in a short
- time, and the matter which he sucks is blood. And saith that their
- devils can cause foul weather and storms, and so did at their
- meetings. She also saith that when her devil did come to suck her
- pap, he usually came to her in the likeness of a cat, sometimes of
- one colour and sometimes of another. And that since this trouble
- befel her, her spirit hath left her, and she never saw him since."
-
-One cannot read this farrago of revolting absurdities without
-instinctively feeling that no uneducated woman could have dictated it;
-that it must have been prepared and dressed up for her to attach her
-mark, and that all she did was to make the cross to it, in fear,
-peradventure, of impending tortures. It is at least satisfactory to know
-that all these examinations of the poor women by legal, ecclesiastic,
-and regal authorities had a beneficial result. Strong presumption was
-afforded that the chief witness, the boy Robinson, had been suborned to
-accuse the prisoners falsely; and they were accordingly discharged. The
-boy afterwards confessed that he was suborned. The story excited, at the
-time, so much interest in the public, that in the following year, 1634,
-was acted and published a play entitled "The Witches of Lancashire,"
-which Steevens cites in illustration of Shakspeare's witches. _Dr.
-Whitaker's Whalley._ [Reference is probably made here to Heywood and
-Broome's play of "The late Lancashire Witches" (London, 1634, quarto).
-There was a much later play entitled "The Lancashire Witches," by
-Shadwell (London, 1682)].
-
-
-THE LANCASHIRE WITCHES OF 1633-4.
-
-Sir Wm. Pelham writes, May 16, 1634, to Lord Conway:--"The greatest news
-from the country is of a huge pack of witches, which are lately
-discovered in Lancashire, whereof, 'tis said, 19 are condemned, and that
-there are at least 60 already discovered, and yet daily there are more
-revealed: there are divers of them of good ability, and they have done
-much harm. I hear it is suspected that they had a hand in raising the
-great storm, wherein his Majesty [Charles I.] was in so great danger at
-sea in Scotland." The original is in the State Paper Office.[131]
-
-
-LANCASHIRE WITCH-FINDERS.
-
-Dr. Webster, in his "Display of Witchcraft," depicts the consternation
-and alarm amongst the old and decrepit, from the machinations of the
-witch-finders. Of the boy Robinson, who was a witness on several trials
-of witches, he says--"This said boy was brought into the church at
-Kildwick [in Yorkshire, on the confines of Lancashire], a large parish
-church, where I, being then curate there, was preaching in the
-afternoon, and was set upon a stool to look about him, which moved some
-little disturbance in the congregation for a while. After prayers, I
-enquired what the matter was: the people told me that it was the boy
-that discovered witches; upon which I went to the house where he was to
-stay all night, and here I found him and two very unlikely persons, that
-did conduct him and manage the business. I desired to have some
-discourse with the boy in private, but that they utterly refused. Then,
-in the presence of a great many people, I took the boy near me and said:
-'Good boy, tell me truly and in earnest, didst thou see and hear such
-strange things at the meeting of witches as is reported by many thou
-didst relate?' But the two men, not giving the boy leave to answer, did
-pluck him from me, and said he had been examined by two _able_ justices
-of the peace, and _they did never ask him such a question_. To whom I
-replied, the persons accused had therefore the more wrong." Dr. Webster
-subsequently adds, that "The boy Robinson, in more mature years,
-acknowledged that he had been instructed and suborned to make these
-accusations against the accused persons, by his father and others, and
-that, of course, the whole was a fraud. By such wicked means and
-unchristian practices, divers innocent persons lost their lives; and
-these wicked rogues wanted not greater persons (even of the ministry
-too) that did authorise and encourage them in their diabolical courses;
-and the like in my time happened here in Lancashire, where divers, both
-men and women, were accused of supposed witchcraft, and were so
-unchristianly and inhumanly handled, as to be stript stark naked, and
-laid upon tables and beds to be searched for their supposed witch-marks;
-so barbarous and cruel acts doth diabolical instigation, working upon
-ignorance and superstition, produce."
-
-
-THE FOREST OF PENDLE--THE HAUNT OF THE LANCASHIRE WITCHES.
-
-The Forest of Pendle is a portion of the greater one of
-"Blackburnshire," and is so called from the celebrated mountain of that
-name, over the declivity of which it extends, and stretches in a long
-but interrupted descent of five miles to the Water of Pendle, a barren
-and dreary tract. Dr. Whitaker observes of this and the neighbouring
-forests, and the remark even yet holds good, "that they still bear the
-marks of original barrenness and recent cultivation; that they are still
-distinguished from the ancient freehold tracts around them, by want of
-old houses, old woods, high fences (for these were forbidden by the
-forest laws); by peculiarities of dialect and manners in their
-inhabitants; and lastly, by a general air of poverty which all the
-opulence of manufactures cannot remove." He considers that "at an
-uncertain period during the occupancy of the Lacies, the first principle
-of population (in these forests) commenced;" it was found that these
-wilds, bleak and barren as they were, might be occupied to some
-advantage in breeding young and depasturing lean "cattle, which were
-afterwards fattened in the lower domain. _Vaccaries_, or great upland
-pastures, were laid out for this purpose; _booths_ or mansions erected
-upon them for the residence of herdsmen; and at the same time that herds
-of deer were permitted to range at large as heretofore, _lawnds_, by
-which are meant parks within a forest, were enclosed, in order to chase
-them with greater facility, or by confinement to produce fatter venison.
-Of these lawnds Pendle had New and Old Lawnd, with the contiguous Park
-of Ightenhill." In the early part of the 17th century the inhabitants of
-this district must have been, with few exceptions, a wretchedly poor and
-uncultivated race, having little communication with the occupants of the
-more fertile regions around them, and in whose minds superstition, even
-yet unextinguished, must have had absolute and uncontrollable
-domination. Under the disenchanting influence of steam, still much of
-the old character of its population remains. The "parting genius" of
-superstition still clings to the hoary hill tops and rugged slopes and
-mossy water sides, along which the old forest stretched its length, and
-the voices of ancestral tradition are still heard to speak from the
-depth of its quiet hollows, and along the course of its gurgling
-streams. He who visits Pendle will find that charms are yet generally
-resorted to amongst the lower classes; that there are hares which, in
-their persuasion, never can be caught, and which survive only to baffle
-and confound the huntsman; that each small hamlet has its peculiar and
-gifted personage, whom it is dangerous to offend; that the wise man and
-woman (the white witches of our ancestors) still continue their
-investigations of truth, undisturbed by the rural police or the progress
-of the schoolmaster; that each locality has its haunted house; that
-apparitions still walk their ghostly rounds,--and little would his
-reputation for piety avail that clergyman in the eyes of his
-parishioners, who should refuse to lay those "extravagant and erring
-spirits," when requested, by those liturgic ceremonies which the
-orthodoxy of tradition requires. In the early part of the reign of James
-I., and at the period when his execrable statute against witchcraft
-might have been sharpening its appetite by a temporary fast for the full
-meal of blood by which it was eventually glutted--for as yet it could
-count no recorded victims--two wretched old women with their families
-resided in the Forest of Pendle. Their names were Elizabeth Southernes
-and Ann Whittle, better known, perhaps, in the chronicles of witchcraft
-by the appellations of Old Demdike and Old Chattox [perhaps, Chadwick].
-Both had attained, or reached the verge of the advanced age of eighty,
-and were evidently in a state of extreme poverty, subsisting with their
-families by occasional employment, by mendicancy, but principally,
-perhaps, by the assumption of that unlawful power which commerce with
-spirits of evil was supposed to procure, and of which their sex, life,
-appearance, and peculiarities might seem to the prejudiced neighbourhood
-in the Forest to render them not unsuitable depositaries.[132]
-
-[For the details of the witchcraft alleged to be practised by these old
-crones and their families, with their trials and fate, see an article
-(page 185 _supra_) in the present volume, entitled "The Lancashire
-Witches of 1612."]
-
-
-PENDLE HILL AND ITS WITCHES.
-
-(From Rev. Richard James's _Iter Lancastrense_.)
-
- "Penigent, Pendle Hill, and Ingleborough,
- Three such hills be not in all England thorough."[133]
-
- I long to climb up Pendle[134]: Pendle stands
- Round cop, surveying all the wild moor lands,
- And Malkin's Tower,[135] a little cottage, where
- Report makes caitiff witches meet, to swear
- Their homage to the devil, and contrive
- The deaths of men and beasts. Let who will dive
- Into this baneful search, I wonder much
- If judges' sentence with belief on such
- Doth pass: then sure, they would not for lewd gain
- Bad clients favour, or put good to pain
- Of long pursuit; for terror of the fiend
- Or love of God, they would give causes end
- With equal justice. Yet I do confess
- Needs must strange fancies poor old wives possess,
- Who in those desert, misty moors do live,
- Hungry and cold, and scarce see priest to give
- Them ghostly counsel. Churches far do stand
- In laymen's hands, and chapels have no land
- To cherish learned curates,[136] though Sir John
- Do preach for four pounds unto Haslingden.
- Such yearly rent, with right of begging corn,
- Makes John a sharer in my Lady's horn:
- He drinks and prays, and forty years this life
- Leading at home, keeps children and a wife.[137]
- These are the wonders of our careless days:
- Small store serves him who for the people prays.
-
-
-WITCHCRAFT ABOUT 1654.
-
-Dr. Webster, in his _Display of Witchcraft_, dated February 23, 1673,
-mentions two cases somewhat vaguely, in the following terms:--"I myself
-have known two supposed witches to be put to death at Lancaster, within
-these eighteen years [_i.e._, between 1654 and 1673] that did utterly
-deny any league or covenant with the devil, or even to have seen any
-visible devil at all; and may not the confessions of those (who both
-died penitent) be as well credited as the confessions of those that were
-brought to such confessions by force, fraud, or cunning persuasion and
-allurement?"
-
-
-A LIVERPOOL WITCH IN 1667.
-
-In the MS. _Rental of Sir Edward More_ (p. 62), dated in the year 1667,
-it is gravely recorded that one of his tenants residing in
-Castle-street, Liverpool, was a witch, descended from a witch, and
-inheriting the faculty of witchcraft in common with her maiden
-sister:--"Widow Bridge, a poor old woman, her own sister Margaret Ley,
-being arraigned for a witch, confessed she was one, and when she was
-asked how long she had so been, replied, since the death of her mother,
-who died thirty years agone, and at her decease she had nothing to leave
-her and this widow Bridge, that were sisters, but her two spirits, and
-named then the elder spirit to this widow, and the other spirit to her,
-the said Margaret Ley. God bless me and all mine from such legacies.
-Amen."[138]
-
-
-THE WITCH OF SINGLETON.
-
-The village of Singleton [in the Fylde] is remarkable only for having
-been the residence of "Mag Shelton," a famous witch in her day. Her
-food, we are told, was _haggis_ (at that time commonly used in the
-district) made of boiled groats, mixed with thyme or parsley. Many are
-the wild tales related of her dealings in the black art. The cows of her
-neighbours were constantly milked by her; the pitcher in which she
-conveyed the stolen milk away, walking before her in the shape of a
-goose. Under this disguise her depredations were carried on till a
-neighbour, suspecting the trick, struck the seeming goose, and lo!
-immediately it was changed into a broken pitcher, and the vaccine liquor
-flowed. Once only was this witch foiled by a powerful spell, the
-contrivance of a maiden, who, having seated her in a chair, before a
-large fire, and stuck a bodkin, crossed with two weaver's healds, about
-her person, thus fixed her irremovably to her seat.[139]
-
-
-WITCHCRAFT AT CHOWBENT IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.
-
-In the beginning of this [the eighteenth] century, one Katherine
-Walkden, an old woman of the township of Atherton, Chowbent, was
-committed to Lancaster as a witch. She was examined at Hulton Hall,
-where the magistrate then resided, by a jury of matrons, by whom a
-private teat was discovered, and upon this and other evidence (I suppose
-of equal importance) her _mittimus_ was made out, but she died in gaol
-before the ensuing assizes.[140]
-
-
-KILLING A WITCH.
-
-Some years ago I formed the acquaintance of an elderly gentleman who had
-retired from business, after amassing an ample fortune by the
-manufacture of cotton. He was possessed of a considerable amount of
-general information--had studied the world by which he was
-surrounded--and was a leading member of the Wesleyan connexion. The
-faith element, however, predominated amongst his religious principles,
-and hence both he and his family were firm believers in witchcraft. On
-one occasion, according to my informant, both he and the neighbouring
-farmers suffered much from loss of cattle, and from the unproductiveness
-of their sheep. The cream was _bynged_ [soured] in the churn, and would
-bring forth no butter. Their cows died mad in the shippons, and no
-farrier could be found who was able to fix upon the diseases which
-afflicted them. Horses were bewitched out of their stables through the
-loopholes, after the doors had been safely locked, and were frequently
-found strayed to a considerable distance when they ought to have been
-safe in their stalls. Lucky-stones had lost their virtues; horse-shoes
-nailed behind the doors were of little use; and sickles hung across the
-beams had no effect in averting the malevolence of the evil-doer. At
-length suspicion rested upon an old man, a noted astrologer and
-fortune-teller, who resided near New Church, in Rossendale, and it was
-determined to put an end both to their ill-fortune and his career, by
-performing the requisite ceremonials for "killing a witch." It was a
-cold November evening when the process commenced. A thick fog covered
-the valleys, and the wild winds whistled across the dreary moors. The
-farmers, however, were not deterred. They met at the house of one of
-their number, whose cattle were then supposed to be under the influence
-of the wizard; and having procured a live cock-chicken, they stuck him
-full of pins and burnt him alive, whilst repeating some magical
-incantation. A cake was also made of oatmeal, mixed with the urine of
-those bewitched, and, after having been marked with the name of the
-person suspected, was then burnt in a similar manner.... The wind
-suddenly rose to a tempest and threatened the destruction of the house.
-Dreadful moanings as of some one in intense agony, were heard without,
-whilst a sense of horror seized upon all within. At the moment when the
-storm was at the wildest, the wizard knocked at the door, and in piteous
-tones desired admittance. They had previously been warned by the "wise
-man" whom they had consulted, that such would be the case, and had been
-charged not to yield to their feelings of humanity by allowing him to
-enter. Had they done so, he would have regained all his influence, for
-the virtue of the spell would have been dissolved. Again and again did
-he implore them to open the door, and pleaded the bitterness of the
-wintry blast, but no one answered from within. They were deaf to all his
-entreaties, and at last the wizard wended his way across the moors as
-best he could. The spell, therefore, was enabled to have its full
-effect, and within a week the Rossendale wizard was locked in the cold
-embrace of death.[141]
-
-
-A RECENT WITCH, NEAR BURNLEY.
-
-Not many years ago there resided in the neighbourhood of Burnley an old
-woman, whose malevolent practices were supposed to render themselves
-manifest by the injuries she inflicted on her neighbours' cattle; and
-many a lucky-stone, many a stout horse-shoe and rusty sickle may now be
-found behind the doors or hung from the beams in the cow-houses and
-stables belonging to the farmers in that locality, which date their
-suspension from the time when this "witch" in reputation held the
-country-side in awe. Not one of her neighbours ever dared to offend her
-openly; and if she at any time preferred a request, it was granted at
-all hazards, regardless of inconvenience and expense. If, in some
-thoughtless moment, any one spoke slightingly, either of her or her
-powers, a corresponding penalty was threatened as soon as it reached her
-ears, and the loss of cattle, personal health, or a general "run of bad
-luck" soon led the offending party to think seriously of making peace
-with his powerful tormentor. As time wore on, she herself sickened and
-died; but before she could "shuffle off this mortal coil" she must needs
-_transfer her familiar spirit_ to some trusty successor. An intimate
-acquaintance from a neighbouring township was consequently sent for in
-all haste, and on her arrival was immediately closeted with her dying
-friend. What passed between them has never fully transpired, but it is
-confidently affirmed that at the close of the interview this associate
-_received the witch's last breath into her mouth, and with it the
-familiar spirit_. The dreaded woman thus ceased to exist, but her powers
-for good or evil were transferred to her companion; and on passing along
-the road from Burnley to Blackburn, we can point out a farm-house at no
-great distance, with whose thrifty matron no one will yet dare to
-quarrel.
-
-
-"LATING" OR "LEETING" WITCHES.
-
-All-Hallows' Eve, Hallowe'en, &c. (from the old English _halwen_,
-saints), denote the vigil and day of All Saints, October 31 and November
-1, a season abounding in superstitious observances. It was firmly
-believed in Lancashire that the witches assembled on this night at their
-general rendezvous in the Forest of Pendle,--a ruined and desolate
-farm-house, called the _Malkin Tower_ (_Malkin_ being the name of a
-familiar demon in Middleton's old play of _The Witch_; derived from
-_maca_, an equal, a companion). This superstition led to another, that
-of _lighting_, _lating_, or _leeting_ the witches (from _leoht_, A.-S.
-light). It was believed that if a lighted candle were carried about the
-fells or hills from eleven to twelve o'clock at night, and burned all
-that time steadily, it had so far triumphed over the evil power of the
-witches, who, as they passed to the Malkin Tower, would employ their
-utmost efforts to extinguish the light, and the person whom it
-represented might safely defy their malice during the season; but if, by
-any accident the candle went out, it was an omen of evil to the luckless
-wight for whom the experiment was made. It was also deemed inauspicious
-to cross the threshold of that person until after the return from
-_leeting_, and not then unless the candle had preserved its light. Mr.
-Milner describes this ceremony as having been recently performed.[142]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[122] Hall's _Chronicle_.
-
-[123] William of Worcester's _Annales Rerum Anglicarum_, pp. 460-61.
-
-[124] _Pictorial History of England_, vol. ii. p. 81; also Hall's
-_Chronicle_.
-
-[125] This is the title-page of an old 12mo chap-book, the date of
-publication of which is not shown.
-
-[126] This was sold by auction only a few years ago.
-
-[127] For Sir Philip Sidney's poetical description of this old game, see
-his _Arcadia_, or Brand's _Popular Antiquities_ (Ed. 1841, vol. ii. p.
-236).
-
-[128] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-[129] To prove the guilt of one of the prisoners, evidence was received
-that it was the opinion of a man not in court, that she had turned his
-beer sour. To prove the charge of murder, it was thought sufficient to
-attest that the sick person had declared his belief that he owed his
-approaching death to the maledictions of the prisoner. The bleeding of
-the corpse on the touch of Jennet Preston, was received as an
-incontrovertible evidence of guilt. It would be nearer the truth to say
-that nothing but fiction was received in evidence.
-
-[130] Dr. Whitaker's _Whalley_, p. 528.
-
-[131] W. N. S., in _Notes and Queries_, 2nd series, vol. iv. p. 365.
-
-[132] Mr. James Crossley's introduction to _Potts's Discovery of
-Witches_.
-
-[133] This is an old local proverb, amongst the Yorkshire proverbs in
-Grose's _Provincial Glossary_. Ray gives it thus:--
-
- "Ingleborough, Pendle, and Penigent,
- Are the highest hills between Scotland and Trent."
-
-[134] Pendle Hill, or _Pen hull_ (_i.e._, the head hill) is situated on
-the borders of Lancashire, in the northern part of Whalley, and rises
-about 1800 feet above the level of the sea. The views from the summit
-are very extensive, including the Irish sea on one side, and York
-Minster (at a distance of nearly sixty miles) on the other.
-Notwithstanding the boast of the old proverb above, there are several
-hills round it of higher elevation.
-
-[135] Malkin Tower, in the Forest of Pendle, and on the declivity of
-Pendle Hill, was the place where, according to vulgar belief, a sort of
-assembly or convention of reputed witches took place on Good Friday in
-1612, which was attended by seventeen pretended witches and three
-wizards, who were afterwards brought to trial at Lancaster Assizes, and
-ten of these unfortunate creatures being found guilty, were executed.
-
-[136] The laymen here referred to were not the patrons, but the persons
-officiating, who were called readers, and had no orders. Nearly every
-chapel in the parish of Whalley was destitute of land in 1636.
-
-[137] The Sir John was probably John Butterworth, clerk, curate of
-Haslingden about this period. "Sir John" was a designation frequently
-applied to an illiterate priest. The old allowance to the priest in
-Haslingden, according to Bishop Gastrell, was 4_l._ Formerly parish
-clerks (and perhaps the priests of poor cures also) claimed once a year
-a bowl of corn from each parishioner of substance.
-
-[138] The _Moore Rental_, p. 62.
-
-[139] Rev. W. Thornber's _History of Blackpool_, p. 308.
-
-[140] _MS. Description of Atherton and Chowbent in 1787_, by Dorning
-Rasbotham, Esq.
-
-[141] See _Transactions of Lancashire and Cheshire Historical Society_.
-
-[142] _Year Book_, part xiii. col. 1558.
-
-
-
-
-PART II.
-
-
-
-
-LOCAL CUSTOMS AND USAGES AT VARIOUS SEASONS.
-
-
-Every greater or lesser festival of the church had its popular no less
-than its ecclesiastical observances. The three great events of human
-birth, marriage, and death, with their church rites of baptism, wedding,
-and burial, naturally draw towards them many customs and usages deemed
-fitting to such occasions. There are many customs in connexion with the
-free and the inferior tenants of manors, and their services to the
-manorial lord. Another class of customs will be found in observance in
-agricultural districts amongst the owners, occupiers, and labourers of
-farms and the peasantry generally. Lastly, as has been observed of the
-English generally, every great occasion, collective or individual, must
-have its festal celebration by eating and drinking in assembly. The
-viands and the beverages proper to particular occasions, therefore,
-constitute a not unimportant part of the local customs and usages of the
-people; and hence demand a place in a volume of Folk-Lore. To these
-subjects the present Part of this book is appropriated, and it is
-believed that they will be found not less strikingly illustrative of the
-manners and habits of the people of Lancashire, than the Superstitious
-Beliefs and Practices recorded in the first Part of this little work.
-
-
-CHURCH AND SEASON FESTIVALS.
-
-The feasts of dedication of parish churches to their particular
-tutelary saints, of course are much too numerous to be more than named
-in a work of this nature. The eve of such anniversary was the yearly
-wake [or watching] of the parishioners; and originally booths were
-erected in the churchyards, and feasting, dancing, and other revelry
-continued throughout the night. The parishioners attended divine service
-on the feast day, and the rest of that day was then devoted to popular
-festivities. So great grew the excesses committed during these prolonged
-orgies, that at length it became necessary to close the churches against
-the pageants and mummeries performed in them at these anniversaries, and
-the churchyards against the noisy, disorderly, and tumultuous
-merry-makings of the people. Thenceforth the great seat of the revels
-was transferred from the church and its graveyard, to the village green
-or the town market-place, or some space of open ground, large enough for
-popular assemblages to enjoy the favourite sports and pastimes of the
-period. Such were the general character and features of the wakes and
-feasts of country parishes, changing only with the name of the patron
-saint, the date of the celebration. But the great festivals of the
-church, celebrated alike in city and town, in village and hamlet,
-wherever a church "pointed its spire to heaven," were held with more
-general display, as uniting the ceremonials and rites of the church,
-with the popular festivities outside the sacred precincts. Of these
-great festivals the chief were New Year's Day, Twelfth Night (Jan. 5),
-Shrove or Pancake Tuesday, Ash-Wednesday or the first day of Lent,
-Mid-Lent or Mothering Sunday, Palm Sunday, Good Friday, Easter,
-Whitsuntide or Pentecost, May-Day, Midsummer Day (St. John's Eve and
-Day, June 23 and 24), Michaelmas Day (Sept. 29), and Christmas Day, with
-the Eve of the New Year. Of these we propose to notice various customs
-and practices as observed in Lancashire from the beginning to the close
-of the year.
-
-
-NEW YEAR'S DAY.
-
-In the church calendar this day is the festival of the Circumcision; in
-the Roman church it is the day of no fewer than seven saints. But it is
-much more honoured as a popular festival. Many families in Lancashire
-sit up on New Year's Eve till after twelve o'clock midnight, and then
-drink "a happy New Year" to each other over a cheerful glass. The church
-bells, too, in merry peals ring out the Old Year, and ring in the New.
-In the olden time the wassail-bowl, the spiced ale called "lamb's wool,"
-and currant bread and cheese, were the viands and liquor in vogue on New
-Year's Eve and Day. A turkey is still a favourite dish at dinner on New
-Year's Day.
-
-
-FIRE ON NEW YEAR'S EVE.
-
-My maid, who comes from the neighbourhood of Pendle, informs me that an
-unlucky old woman in her native village, having allowed her fire to go
-out on New Year's Eve, had to wait till one o'clock on the following day
-before any neighbour would supply her with a light.[143]
-
-
-NEW YEAR'S LUCK.
-
-Should a female, or a light-haired male, be the first to enter a house
-on the morning of New Year's Day, it is supposed to bring bad luck for
-the whole of the year then commencing. Various precautions are taken to
-prevent this misfortune: hence many male persons with black or dark
-hair, are in the habit of going from house to house, on that day, "to
-take the New Year in;" for which they are treated with liquor, and
-presented with a small gratuity. So far is the apprehension carried,
-that some families will not open the door to any one until satisfied by
-the voice that he is likely to bring the house a year's good luck by
-entering it. Then, the most kindly and charitable woman in a
-neighbourhood will sternly refuse to give any one a light on the morning
-of New Year's Day, as most unlucky to the one who gives away light.
-
-
-NEW YEAR'S FIRST CALLER.
-
-For years past, an old lady, a friend of mine, has regularly reminded me
-to pay her an early visit on New Year's Day; in short, to be her first
-caller, and to "let the New Year in." I have done this for years, except
-on one occasion. When I, who am of fair complexion, have been her first
-visitor, she has enjoyed happy and prosperous years; but on the occasion
-I missed, some dark-complexioned, black-haired gentleman
-called;--sickness and trouble, and commercial disasters, were the
-result.[144] [This is at variance with the preceding paragraph as to
-the favourite colour of the hair, &c. Perhaps this differs in different
-localities; but of this at least we are assured, that any male, dark or
-fair, is regarded as a much more lucky "letter-in" of the New Year, than
-any girl or woman, be she blonde or brunette.]
-
-In Lancashire, even in the larger towns, it is considered at this time
-of day particularly fortunate if "a black man" (meaning one of a dark
-complexion) be the first person that enters the house on New Year's
-Day.[145]
-
-
-NEW YEAR'S DAY AND OLD CHRISTMAS DAY.
-
-Some persons still keep Old Christmas Day. They always look for a change
-of weather on that day, and never on the 25th December. The common
-people have long begun their year with the 1st of January. The Act of
-1752, so far as they were concerned, only caused the Civil and the
-Ecclesiastical Year to begin together. In Hopton's _Year Book_ for A.D.
-1612, he thus speaks of _January 1st_:--"January. New-yeares day in the
-morning being red, portends great tempest and warre."
-
-
-AULD WIFE HAKES.
-
-Christmas and New Year's tea parties and dances are called "Auld Wife
-Hakes" in the Furness district of Lancashire. The word _hake_ is never
-used in the central part of the county.[146] Can this be from _hacken_
-(? from _hacking_, chopping small), a pudding made in the maw of a sheep
-or hog. It was formerly a standard dish at Christmas, and is mentioned
-by N. Fairfax, _Bulk and Selvedge_, 1674, p. 159.[147] [To _hake_, is to
-sneak, or loiter about.]
-
-
-NEW YEAR'S GIFTS AND WISHES.
-
-It was formerly a universal custom to make presents, especially from
-superiors to dependents, and _vice versa_. Now the custom is chiefly
-confined to parents and elders giving to children or young persons. The
-practice of making presents on New Year's Day existed among the Romans,
-and also amongst the Saxons; from one or both of which peoples we have
-doubtless derived it. The salutation or greeting on New Year's Day is
-also of great antiquity. Pieces of Roman pottery have been found
-inscribed "A happy new year to you," and one inscriber wishes the like
-to himself and his son. In country districts, the homely phrase is: "A
-happy New Year t'ye, and monny on 'em." In more polished society, and in
-correspondence, "I wish you a happy New Year," or "The compliments of
-the season to you."
-
-
-SHROVETIDE.
-
-This name, given to the last few days before Lent, is from its being the
-custom for the people to go to the priest to be _shriven_, _i.e._, to
-make their confession, before entering on the great fast of Lent, which
-begins on Ash-Wednesday. _Tide_ is the old Anglo-Saxon word for time,
-and it is still retained in Whitsuntide. After the people had made the
-confession required by the ancient discipline of the church, they were
-permitted to indulge in festive amusements, though restricted from
-partaking of any repasts beyond the usual substitutes for flesh: hence
-the Latin and continental name _Carnaval_,--literally "Carne, vale,"
-"Flesh, farewell." In Lancashire and other Northern counties, three days
-in this week had their peculiar dishes, viz.: "Collop Monday," "Pancake
-Tuesday," and "Fritters Wednesday." Originally, collops were simply
-slices of bread, but these were long ago discarded for slices or rashers
-of bacon. Fritters were thick, soft cakes, made from flour batter, with
-or without sliced apples intermixed. Shrovetide was anciently a great
-time for cock-throwing and cock-fighting, and indeed of many other loose
-and cruel diversions, arising from the indulgences formerly granted by
-the church, to compensate for the long season of fasting and humiliation
-which commenced on Ash-Wednesday. As Selden observes--"What the church
-debars us on one day, she gives us leave to take on another; first we
-feast, and then we fast; there is a carnival, and then a Lent."
-
-
-SHROVE-TUESDAY, OR PANCAKE TUESDAY.
-
-The tossing of pancakes (and in some places fritters) on this day was a
-source of harmless mirth, and is still practised in the rural parts of
-Lancashire and Cheshire, with its ancient accompaniments:--
-
- "It is the day whereon the rich and poor,
- Are chiefly feasted on the self-same dish,
- When every paunch till it can hold no more,
- Is fritter-filled, as well as heart can wish;
- And every man and maid do take their turn
- And toss their pancakes up for fear they burn,
- And all the kitchen doth with laughter sound,
- To see the pancakes fall upon the ground."[148]
-
-Another writer gives this injunction:--
-
- "Maids, fritters and pancakes enow see ye make,
- Let Slut have one pancake for company's sake."[149]
-
-
-COCK-THROWING AND COCK-FIGHTING.
-
-Cock-fighting was a barbarous pastime of high antiquity, being practised
-by the Greeks and Romans. In England it may be traced back to the
-twelfth century, when it appears to have been a childish or boyish
-sport. FitzStephen, in his description of London in the time of Henry
-II., says: "Every year, on the morning of Shrove-Tuesday, the schoolboys
-of the city of London, and of other cities and great towns, bring game
-cocks to their masters, and in the fore-part of the day, till
-dinner-time, are permitted to amuse themselves with seeing them fight."
-The school was the cock-pit, and the master the comptroller or director
-of the pastime. The victor, or hero of the school, who had won the
-greatest number of fights was carried about upon a pole by two of his
-companions. He held the cock in his hands, and was followed by other
-boys bearing flags, &c. Cock-throwing was a sport equally cruel; but
-only one cock was needed. The poor bird was tied to a peg or stake, by a
-string, sometimes long, sometimes short, and the boys from a certain
-distance, in turn, threw a stick at the cock. The victor in this case
-was he whose missile killed the poor bird. Amongst the recognised
-payments by the boys at the old Free Grammar Schools, was a penny yearly
-to the master for the privilege of cock-fighting or cock-throwing on
-Shrove-Tuesday. The statutes of the Manchester Free Grammar School, made
-about 1525, show a creditable desire to abolish these barbarous sports.
-One of these statutes, as to the fees of the master, provides that "he
-shall teach freely and indifferently [not carelessly, but impartially]
-every child and scholar coming to the same school, without any money or
-other reward taking there-for, as cock-penny, victor-penny," &c. Another
-is still more explicit:--"The scholars of the same school shall use no
-cock-fights, nor other unlawful games, and riding about for victors,
-&c., which be to the great let [hindrance] of virtue, and to charge and
-cost of the scholars, and of their friends." At a much later period,
-however, the scholars seem to have been allowed, on Easter Monday, to
-have archery practice at a target, one of the prizes being a
-dunghill-cock; but this was abolished by the late Dr. Smith, when high
-master.
-
-
-COCK-FIGHTING ABOUT BLACKBURN.
-
-About thirty years ago cock-fighting formed a common pastime about
-Mellor and Blackburn. A blacksmith, named Miller, used to keep a large
-number of cocks for fighting purposes. He was said to have "sold himself
-to the devil" in order to have money enough for betting; and it was
-remarked that he rarely won! If the practice is still followed, it is
-done _in secret_; but the number of game-cocks one sees kept by
-"sporting characters" can scarcely admit of any other inference.
-
-
-COCK-PENNY AT CLITHEROE.
-
-In the Clitheroe Grammar School an annual present at Shrovetide is
-expected from the scholars, varying in amount according to the
-circumstances of the parents. With the exception of this _cock-penny_,
-the school is free. The origin of this custom it is now difficult to
-trace. Shrove-Tuesday, indeed, was a sad day for cocks. Cock-fighting
-and throwing at cocks were among its barbarous sports. Schoolboys used
-to bring game-cocks to the master, and delight themselves in
-cock-fighting all the forenoon. In Scotland, the masters presided at the
-fight, and claimed the runaway cocks called "forgers" [? 'fugees] as
-their perquisites. The "cock-penny" may have been the substitute devised
-by a less cruel age for the ordinary gratuity.[150]
-
-
-COCK-FIGHTING AT BURNLEY.
-
-The head master of Burnley Grammar School used to derive a portion of
-his income from "cock-pence" paid to him by his pupils at Shrovetide.
-This has been disused for half a century. Latterly it degenerated into a
-"clubbing together" of pence by the pupils for the purpose of providing
-themselves with materials for a carouse. This was, therefore, at last
-prohibited.
-
-
-SHROVETIDE CUSTOMS IN THE FYLDE.
-
-Shrove-Tuesday was also called "Pancake Day," pancakes being the
-principal delicacy of the day. At eleven o'clock in the forenoon, the
-"pancake bell" rang at Poulton church, and operations were immediately
-commenced. Great was the fun in "tossing" or turning the pancake by a
-sudden jerk of the pan; while the appetites of the urchins never
-flagged. Amongst the sports on Shrove-Tuesday, was pre-eminently
-cock-fighting; though bull and bear baiting were also among the rude and
-savage pastimes of the season.[151] In Poulton, on Shrove-Tuesday, the
-pancake bell still warns the apprentice to quit his work, not indeed to
-go to the confessional and be _shriven_, but to prepare for the feast of
-the day.[152]
-
-
-LENT.--ASH-WEDNESDAY.
-
-The forty days' fast at the beginning of spring, in commemoration of the
-temptation and fast of our Saviour in the wilderness, was called Lent,
-from the Saxon name for Spring, _lengten-tide_. The fast, as prescribed
-by the church, consisted in abstaining from flesh, eggs, preparations of
-milk, and wine, and in making only one meal, and that in the evening.
-Fish was not forbidden, though many restricted themselves to pulse and
-fruit. Ash-Wednesday, the first day in Lent, was one of severe
-discipline in the Roman church; and to remind the faithful, at the
-beginning of the long penitential fast, that men are but "dust and
-ashes," the priest, with ashes of the wood of the palm-tree, marked the
-sign of the cross on the forehead of each confessing worshipper; whence
-the name. Since the Reformation the observance of Lent by fasting is not
-general in Lancashire.
-
-
-MID-LENT SUNDAY, OR "MOTHERING SUNDAY."
-
-The fourth or middle Sunday between Quadragesima (the first Sunday in
-Lent) and Easter Sunday. It was of old called _Dominica Refectionis_, or
-the Sunday of Refreshment, from the gospel of the day treating of the
-miraculous feeding of the five thousand. It was originally called
-"Mothering Sunday," from the ancient usage of visiting the mother or
-cathedral churches of the dioceses, when Lent or Easter offerings were
-made. The public processions have been discontinued ever since the
-middle of the thirteenth century; but the name of Mothering Sunday is
-still retained, a custom having been substituted amongst the people of
-Lancashire, Cheshire, Yorkshire, and other counties, of those who have
-left the paternal roof visiting their natural mother, and presenting to
-her small tokens of their filial affection, in money, trinkets,
-frumenty, or cakes. In some parts of Lancashire, the particular kind of
-cakes have long been fixed by old custom, being what are called
-"simnels," or, in the dialect of the district, "simlins;" and with these
-sweet-cakes, it was, and in places is still, the custom to drink warm,
-spiced ale, called "bragot." Another viand especially eaten on Mid-Lent
-Sunday was that of fig or fag-pies.
-
-
-SIMNEL CAKES.
-
-In days of yore, there was a little alleviation of the severities of
-Lent permitted to the faithful, in the shape of a cake called "Simnel."
-Two English towns claim the honour of its origin,--Shrewsbury and
-Devizes. The first makes its simnel in the form of a warden-pie, the
-crust being of saffron and very thick; the last has no crust, is
-star-shaped, and the saffron is mixed with a mass of currants, spice,
-and candied lemon. Bury, in Lancashire, is almost world-famous for its
-simnels and its bragot (or spiced sweet ale), on Mothering Sunday, or
-Mid-Lent. As to the name, Dr. Cowell, in his _Law Directory or
-Interpreter_ (folio, 1727), derives _simnell_ (Lat. _siminellus_), from
-the Latin _simila_, the finest part of the flour: "_panis
-similageneus_," simnel bread,--"still in use, especially in Lent." The
-English _simnel_ was the purest white bread, as in the Book of Battle
-Abbey: "Panem regiae mensae apsum, qui _simenel_ vulgo vocatur." (Bread
-fit for the royal table, which is commonly called _simenel_.) Dr. Cowell
-adds that it was sometimes called _simnellus_, as in the "Annals of the
-Church of Winchester," under the year 1042, "conventus centum
-_simnellos_" (the convent 100 _simnels_). He also quotes the statute of
-51 Henry III. (1266-7), which enacts that "bread made into a _simnel_
-should weigh two shillings less than wastel bread;" and also an old
-manuscript of the customs of the House of Farendon (where it is called
-"bread of symenel"), to the same effect. Wastel was the finest sort of
-bread. Herrick, who was born in 1591, and died in 1674 (?) has the
-following in his _Hesperides_:--
-
- TO DIANEME.
- A Ceremony in Gloucester.
-
- I'll to thee a _Simnell_ bring
- 'Gainst thou go'st a _mothering_;
- So that when she blesseth thee,
- Half that blessing thou'lt give me.
-
-Bailey, in his Dictionary (folio 1764), says _simnel_ is probably
-derived from the Latin _simila_, fine flour, and means, "a sort of cake
-or bun, made of fine flour, spice, &c." It will thus appear that
-_simnel_ cakes can boast a much higher antiquity than the reign of Henry
-VII. (Lambert _Simnel_ probably taking his name from them, as a baker,
-and not giving his name to them), and that they were not originally
-confined to any particular time or place.[153]
-
-In the _Dictionarius_ of John de Garlande, compiled at Paris in the
-thirteenth century, the word _simineus_ or _simnels_, is used as the
-equivalent to the Latin _placentae_, which are described as cakes exposed
-in the windows of the hucksters, to sell to the scholars of the
-University and others.[154]
-
-
-BURY.
-
-There is an ancient celebration in Bury, on Mid-Lent Sunday, there
-called "Simblin Sunday," when large cakes called "simblins" (_i.e._,
-simnels), are sold generally in the town, and the shops are kept open
-the whole day, except during Divine Service, for the purpose of vending
-this mysterious aliment.[155] These cakes are a compound of currants,
-candied lemon, sugar, and spice, sandwich-wise, between crust of short
-or puff paste. They are in great request at the period, not only in
-Bury, but in Manchester and most of the surrounding towns. A still
-richer kind, approaching the bride-cake in character, are called "Almond
-Simnels."
-
-
-BRAGOT-SUNDAY.
-
-Formerly it was the practice in Leigh to use a beverage on Mid-Lent
-Sunday, called "bragot," consisting of a kind of spiced ale; and also
-for the boys to indulge themselves by persecuting the women on their way
-to church, by secretly hooking a piece of coloured cloth to their gowns.
-A similar custom prevails in Portugal, at Carnival time, when many
-persons that walk the streets on the three last days of the Intrudo,
-have a long paper train hooked to their dress behind, on which the
-populace set up the cry of "Raboleve," which is continued till the butt
-of the joke is divested of his "tail." As to "Bragot," or more properly
-"Braget" Sunday, it is a name given in Lancashire to the fourth Sunday
-in Lent, which is in other places called "Mothering Sunday." Both
-appellations arise out of the same custom. Voluntary oblations, called
-_Quadragesimalia_ (from the Latin name of Lent, signifying forty days),
-were formerly paid by the inhabitants of a diocese to the Mother
-Cathedral Church, and at this time prevailed the custom of processions
-to the Cathedral on Mid-Lent Sunday. On the discontinuance of
-processions, the practice of "mothering," or visiting parents, began;
-and the spiced ale used on these occasions was called _braget_, from the
-British _bragawd_, the name of a kind of metheglin. Whitaker[156]
-observes that this description of liquor was called "Welsh ale" by the
-Saxons. Since his time, the liquor drunk on this day is principally
-_mulled ale_, of which there is a large consumption in Lancashire on
-Mid-Lent Sunday.[157]
-
-
-FAG-PIE SUNDAY.
-
-Fig-pies--(made of dry figs, sugar, treacle, spice, &c., and by some
-described as "luscious," by others as "of a sickly taste")--or, as they
-are locally termed, "fag-pies," are, or were at least till recently,
-eaten in Lancashire on a Sunday in Lent [? Mid-Lent Sunday], thence
-called "Fag-pie Sunday."[158]
-
-In the neighbourhood of Burnley Fag-pie Sunday is the second Sunday
-before Easter, or that which comes between Mid-Lent and Palm Sunday.
-About Blackburn fig-pies are always prepared for Mid-Lent Sunday, and
-visits are usually made to friends' houses in order to partake of the
-luxury.
-
-
-GOOD FRIDAY.
-
-This name is believed to be an adoption of the old German _Gute_ or
-_Gottes Freytag_, Good or God's Friday, so called on the same principle
-that Easter Day in England was at no very remote period called "God's
-Day." The length of the Church Services in ancient times, on this day,
-occasioned it to be called Long Friday. In most parts of Lancashire,
-buns with crosses stamped upon them, and hence called "cross buns," are
-eaten on this day at breakfast; and it is in many places believed that a
-cross bun, preserved from one Good Friday to another, will effectually
-prevent an attack of the whooping-cough. Some writers declare that our
-cross buns at Easter are only the cakes which our pagan Saxon
-forefathers ate in honour of their goddess Eostre, and from which the
-Christian clergy, who were unable to prevent people from eating them,
-sought to expel the paganism by marking them with the cross. On the
-Monday before Good Friday the youths about Poulton-le-Fylde and its
-neighbourhood congregate in strange dresses, and visit their friends'
-houses, playing antics, on which occasion they are styled "the Jolly
-Lads."[159] It is stated that in some places in Lancashire, Good Friday
-is termed "Cracklin' Friday," as on that day it is a custom for children
-to go with a small basket to different houses, to beg small wheaten
-cakes, which are something like the Jews' Passover bread; but made
-shorter or richer, by having butter or lard mixed with the flour. "Take
-with thee loaves and cracknels." (1 Kings xiv.)
-
-
-EASTER.
-
-This name is clearly traced to that of Eostre, a goddess to whom the
-Saxons and other Northern nations sacrificed in the month of April, in
-which our Easter usually falls. Easter Sunday is held as the day of our
-Lord's resurrection. Connected with this great festival of the Church
-are various local rites and customs, pageants and festivities; such as
-_pace_ or _Pasche_ [_i.e._, Easter] egging, lifting or heaving, Ball
-play, the game of the ring, guisings or disguisings, fancy cakes, "old
-hob," "old Ball," or hobby horse, &c.
-
-Easter-Day is a moveable feast, appointed to be held on the first Sunday
-after the full moon immediately following the 21st of March; but if the
-moon happen to be at the full on a Sunday, then Easter is held on the
-following Sunday and not on the day of the full moon. Thus, Easter-Day
-cannot fall earlier than the 22nd of March, nor later than the 25th of
-April, in any year.
-
-
-PASCHE, PACE, OR EASTER EGGS.
-
-In Lancashire and Cheshire children go round the village and beg eggs
-for the Easter dinner, accompanying their solicitation by a short song,
-the burthen of which is addressed to the farmer's dame, asking for "an
-egg, bacon, cheese, or an apple, or any good thing that will make us
-merry;" and ending with
-
- And I pray you, good dame, an Easter egg.
-
-In the North of Lancashire, Cumberland, Westmorland, and other parts of
-the North of England, boys beg on Easter Eve eggs to play with, and
-beggars ask for them to eat. These eggs are hardened by boiling and
-tinged with the juice of herbs, broom-flowers, &c. The eggs being thus
-prepared, the boys go out and play with them in the fields, rolling them
-up and down like bowls, or throwing them up like balls into the
-air.[160]
-
-
-PACE EGGING IN BLACKBURN.
-
-The old custom of "pace egging" is still observed in Blackburn. It is an
-observance limited to the week before Easter-Day, and is said to be
-traceable up to the theology and philosophy of the Egyptians, Persians,
-Gauls, Greeks, and Romans; among all of whom an egg was an emblem of the
-universe, the production of the Supreme Divinity. The Christians
-adopted the egg as an emblem of the resurrection, since it contains the
-elements of a future life.
-
-The immediate occasion of the observance may have been in the resumption
-on the part of our forefathers of eggs as a food at Easter on the
-termination of Lent; hence the origin of the term _pace_ or _pasque_
-[rather from _Pasche_] that is, Easter egg. In a curious roll of the
-expenses of the household of Edward I., communicated to the Society of
-Antiquaries, is the following item in the accounts for Easter Sunday:
-"For four hundred and a half of eggs, eighteen pence." The following
-prayer, found in the ritual of Pope Paul V., composed for the use of
-England, Ireland, and Scotland, illustrates the meaning of the custom:
-"Bless, O Lord, we beseech thee, this Thy creation of eggs, that it may
-become a wholesome sustenance to Thy faithful servants, eating it in
-thankfulness to Thee, on account of the resurrection of our Lord." In
-Blackburn at the present day, pace egging commences on the Monday and
-finishes on the Thursday before the Easter-week. Young men in groups
-varying in number from three to twenty, dressed in various fantastic
-garbs, and wearing masks--some of the groups accompanied by a player or
-two on the violin--go from house to house singing, dancing, and
-capering. At most places they are liberally treated with wine, punch, or
-ale, dealt out to them by the host or hostess. The young men strive to
-disguise their walk and voice; and the persons whom they visit use their
-efforts on the other hand to discover who they are; in which mutual
-endeavour many and ludicrous mistakes are made. Here you will see
-Macbeth and a fox-hunter arm in arm; Richard the Third and a black
-footman in familiar converse; a quack doctor and a bishop smoking their
-pipes and quaffing their "half and half;" a gentleman and an
-oyster-seller; an admiral and an Irish umbrella-mender; in short, every
-variety of character, some exceedingly well-dressed, and the characters
-well sustained. A few years ago parties of this description were much
-subject to annoyance from a gang of fellows styled the "Carr-laners,"
-(so-called, because living in Carr-lane, Blackburn,) armed with
-bludgeons, who endeavoured to despoil the pace-eggers. Numerous fights,
-with the usual concomitants of broken eggs and various contusions, were
-amongst the results. This lawless gang of ruffians is now broken up, and
-the serious affrays between different gangs of pace-eggers have become
-of comparatively rare occurrence. An accident, however, which ended
-fatally, occurred last year [? 1842]. Two parties had come into
-collision, and during the affray one of the young men had his skull
-fractured, and death ensued. Besides parties of the sort we have
-attempted to describe, children, both male and female, with little
-baskets in their hands, dressed in all the tinsel-coloured paper,
-ribbons, and "doll rags" which they can command, go up and down from
-house to house; at some receiving pence, at others eggs, at others
-gingerbread, some of which is called _hot_ gingerbread, having in it a
-mixture of ginger and Cayenne, causing the most ridiculous contortions
-of feature in the unfortunate being who partakes of it. Houses are
-literally besieged by these juvenile troops from morning till night.
-"God's sake! a pace-egg," is the continual cry. There is no particular
-tune, but various versions of pace-egging and other songs are sung. The
-eggs obtained by the juveniles are very frequently boiled and dyed in
-logwood and other dyes, on the Easter Sunday, and rolled in the fields
-one egg at another till broken. Great quantities of mulled ale are drunk
-in this district on Easter Sunday. The actors do not take the eggs with
-them; they are given at the places where they call. The actors are
-mostly males; but in the course of one's peregrinations on one of these
-evenings it is not unusual to discover one or two of the fair sex in
-male habiliments, and supporting the character admirably. This old
-custom of pace-egging was again observed this year [? 1843]
-notwithstanding the fatal accidents we have mentioned, without any
-molestation from the authorities, and without any accident
-occurring.[161]
-
-
-PACE OR PEACE EGGING IN EAST LANCASHIRE.
-
-The week before Easter is a busy one for the boys and girls in East
-Lancashire. They generally deck themselves up in ribbons and fantastic
-dresses, and go about the country begging for money or eggs.
-Occasionally they go out singly, and then are very careful to provide
-themselves with a neat little basket, lined with moss. Halfpence or
-eggs, or even small cakes of gingerbread, are alike thankfully received.
-Sometimes the grown young men are very elaborately dressed in ribbons,
-and ornamented with watches and other jewellery. They then go out in
-groups of five or six, and are attended by a "fool" or "tosspot," with
-his face blackened. Some of them play on musical instruments while the
-rest dance. Occasionally young women join in the sport, and then the
-_men_ are dressed in women's clothing, and the _women_ in men's.
-
-
-EASTER SPORTS AT THE MANCHESTER FREE GRAMMAR SCHOOL.
-
-A gentleman, using the initials G. H. F., some years ago communicated to
-a local paper the following facts relative to the sports of the scholars
-at Easter in the early part of the nineteenth century:--"On Easter
-Monday the senior scholars had a treat and various festivities. On the
-morning of that day, masters and scholars assembled in the school-room,
-with a band of music, banners, &c. One essential thing was a target, in
-a square frame, to which were suspended one or more pairs of silver
-buckles, constituting the chief archery prize, the second being a good
-dunghill-cock. These were the only prizes, and they were duly contended
-for by the scholars, the whole being probably devised in the old times,
-with a view to keep the youth of Manchester in the practice of the old
-English archery, which on the invention of gunpowder and fire-arms fell
-rapidly into desuetude. The gay procession thus provided, the scholars,
-bearing their bows and arrows, set out from the Grammar School, headed
-by some reverend gentleman of the Collegiate church, by the masters of
-the school, the churchwardens, &c.--the band playing some popular airs
-of the day--and took its route by Long Millgate, to Hunt's Bank, and
-along the Walkers' [_i.e._, fullers'] Croft, to some gardens, where it
-was then the custom for artizans on Sunday mornings to buy 'a penny
-posy.' Here the targets were set up, and the 'artillery practice,' as
-it was the fashion to call archery, commenced. At its close the prizes
-were awarded, and the procession returned in the same order, along
-Hunt's Bank, the Apple Market, Fennel Street, Hanging Ditch, and Old
-Millgate, to the Bull's Head, in the Market Place,--in those days a very
-celebrated house, where the junior boys were treated with
-_frumenty_--wheat stewed, and then boiled in milk with raisins,
-currants, and spices, till it forms a thick, porridge-like mess,
-exceedingly palatable to young folk. The masters and assistants, and the
-senior scholars, partook of roast beef, plum pudding, &c. The abolition
-of this Easter Monday custom, said to have been by Dr. Smith, was by no
-means relished by the Grammar School boys."
-
-
-"LIFTING" OR "HEAVING" AT EASTER.
-
-This singular custom formerly prevailed in Manchester, and it is now
-common in the neighbourhood of Liverpool, in the parish of Whalley, at
-Warrington, Bolton, and in some other parts of Lancashire, especially in
-rural districts, though it is by no means general, and in some places is
-quite unknown. A Manchester man, in 1784, thus describes it:--"_Lifting_
-was originally designed to represent our Saviour's resurrection. The men
-lift the women on Easter Monday, and the women the men on Tuesday. One
-or more take hold of each leg, and one or more of each arm, near the
-body, and lift the person up, in a horizontal position, three times. It
-is a rude, indecent, and dangerous diversion, practised chiefly by the
-lower class of people. Our magistrates constantly prohibit it by the
-bellman, but it subsists at the end of the town; and the women have of
-late years converted it into a money job. I believe it is chiefly
-confined to these northern counties."
-
-The following [translated] extract from a document entitled _Liber
-Contrarotulatoris Hospicii_, 13 Edward I. [1225], shows the antiquity of
-the custom:--"To the Ladies of the Queen's Chamber, 15th of May; seven
-ladies and damsels of the queen, because they took [or lifted] the king
-in his bed, on the morrow of Easter, and made him pay fine for the peace
-of the king, which he made of his gift by the hand of Hugh de Cerr [or
-Kerr], Esq., to the lady of Weston, L14."[162]
-
-On Easter Monday, between Radcliffe and Bolton, we saw a number of
-females surround a male, whom they mastered, and fairly lifted aloft in
-the air. It was a merry scene. What humour in the faces of these
-Lancashire witches! What a hearty laugh! What gratification in their
-eyes! The next day would bring reprisals: the girls would then be the
-party to be subjected to this rude treatment.[163]
-
-
-EASTER GAME OF THE RING.
-
-In his _History of Lancashire_, Mr. Baines states that the Easter Game
-of the Ring, little known in other parts of Lancashire, prevails at
-Padiham, in the parish of Whalley, on the Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday in
-Easter week; when young people, having formed themselves into a ring,
-tap each other repeatedly with a stick, after the manner of the holiday
-folks at Greenwich. The stick may be a slight difference; but the game
-of Easter ring, with taps of the hand, or the dropping of a handkerchief
-at the foot, the writer has seen played at Easter and at Whitsuntide in
-many villages and hamlets round Manchester.
-
-
-PLAYING "OLD BALL."
-
-This is an Easter custom. A huge and rude representation of a horse's
-head is made; the eyes are formed of the bottoms of old broken wine or
-other "black bottles"; the lower and upper jaws have large nails put in
-them to serve as teeth; the lower jaw is made to move by a contrivance
-fixed at its back end, to be operated on by the man who plays "Old
-Ball." There is a stick, on which the head rests, which is handled and
-used by the operator, to move "Old Ball" about, and as a rest. Fixed to
-the whole is a sheet of rough sacking-cloth, under which the operator
-puts himself, and at the end of which is a tail. The operator then gets
-into his position, so as to make the whole as like a horse as possible.
-He opens the mouth by means of the contrivance before spoken of. Through
-the opening he can see the crowd, and he runs first at one and then
-another, neighing like a horse, kicking, rising on his hind legs,
-performing all descriptions of gambols, and running after the crowd; the
-consequence is, the women scream, the children are frightened, and all
-is one scene of the most ridiculous and boisterous mirth. This was
-played by sundry "Old Balls" some five years ago, at the pace-egging
-time, at Blackburn; but it has gradually fallen into disuse. This year
-[? 1843] our informant has not heard it even mentioned. [It is still
-continued in various parts of Lancashire, amongst others at Swinton,
-Worsley, &c.] The idea of this rude game may have been taken from the
-hobby-horse in the ancient Christmas mummings.--_Pictorial History of
-Lancashire._ [From the editor of the above work calling this "playing
-the old ball," and never marking the word ball by a capital B, he seems
-to have supposed it meant a spherical ball; whereas "Old Ball"
-throughout Lancashire is a favourite name for a cart-horse,--See a
-further notice of "Old Ball" under Christmas.--EDS.]
-
-
-ACTING WITH "BALL."
-
-This is a curious practice, and is often substituted for "pace-egging."
-The bones of a horse's head are fixed in their natural position by means
-of wires. The bottoms of glass bottles do duty for eyes; and the head is
-covered with the skin of a calf. A handle is then fixed in the upper
-portion of the head, and the whole skull is supported on a stout pole
-shod with an iron hoop. A sack is then made to fit the skull neatly, and
-to hang low enough down so as to hide the person who plays "Ball." The
-sack, or cover, is also provided with a tail so as to look as nearly
-like a horse's tail as possible. Some five or six then take "Ball" about
-the country and play him where they can obtain leave. Sometimes a
-doggrel song is sung, while "Ball" prances about and snaps at the
-company. As soon as the song is finished, "Ball" plays his most
-boisterous pranks, and frequently hurts some of the company by snapping
-their fingers between his teeth when they are defending themselves from
-his attacks. The writer has seen ladies so alarmed as to faint and go
-into hysterics:--on this account "Ball" is now nearly extinct in the
-neighbourhoods of Blackburn, Burnley, &c.
-
-
-EASTER CUSTOMS IN THE FYLDE.
-
-Children and young people as Easter approached, claimed their
-"pace-eggs" [from Pasche, the old term for Easter] as a privileged "dow"
-[dole]. On the afternoon of Easter Sunday the young of both sexes amused
-themselves in the meadows with these eggs, which they had dyed by the
-yellow blossoms of the "whin," or of other colours by dyeing materials.
-Others performed a kind of Morris or Moorish dance or play, called
-"_Ignagning_," which some have supposed to be in honour of St. Ignatius;
-but more probably its derivation is from "_ignis Agnae_," a virgin and
-martyr who suffered at the stake about this time of the year.
-"Ignagning," says the Rev. William Thornber,[164] "has almost fallen
-into disuse, and a band of boys, termed 'Jolly Lads,' has succeeded,
-who, instead of reciting the combat of the Turk and St. George, the
-champion of England, the death of the former, and his restoration to
-life by the far-travelled doctor, now sing of the noble deeds of Nelson
-and Collingwood; retaining, however, the freaks and jokes of 'Old
-Toss-pot,' the fool of the party, who still jingles the small bells hung
-about his dress." Easter Monday was a great day for the young people of
-the neighbourhood going to the yearly fair at Poulton. Happy was the
-maiden who could outvie her youthful acquaintance in exhibiting a
-greater number of "white cakes," the gifts of admiring youths; thereby
-proving beyond dispute the superior effects of her charms. Then the
-excitement and exertion of the dance! At that time dancing consisted in
-the feet beating time to a fiddle, playing a jig in double quick time;
-one damsel succeeding another, and striving to outdo her companions in
-her power of continuing this violent exercise, for much honour was
-attached to success in this respect, the bystanders meanwhile
-encouraging their favourites, as sportsmen do their dogs, with voice and
-clapping of hands. Such was--
-
- "The dancing pair that simply sought renown,
- By holding out, to tire each other down."
-
-On Good Friday a jorum of _browis_ and roasted wheat or _frumenty_ was
-the treat for dinner; white _jannocks_, introduced by the Flemish
-refugees, and _throdkins_[165] were also then eaten with great zest by
-the hungry labourer.[166]
-
-
-MAY-DAY CUSTOMS.
-
-The Romans commenced the festival of Flora on the 28th April, and
-continued it through several days in May, with various ceremonies and
-rejoicings, and offerings of spring flowers and the branches of trees in
-bloom, which, through the accommodation of the Romish church to the
-pagan usages, remain to us as May-day celebrations to the present time.
-It was formerly a custom in Cheshire [and Lancashire] for young men to
-place birchen boughs on May-day over the doors of their mistresses, and
-mark the residence of a scold by an alder bough. There is an old rhyme
-which mentions peculiar boughs for various tempers, as an owler (alder)
-for a scolder, a nut for a slut, &c. Ormerod thinks the practice is
-disused; but he mentions that in the main street of Weverham are two
-May-poles, which are decorated on May-day with all due attention to the
-ancient solemnity; the sides are hung with garlands, and the top
-terminated by a birch, or other tall slender tree with its leaves on;
-the bark being peeled off and the stem spliced to the pole, so as to
-give the appearance of one tree from the summit.[167] The principal
-characteristics of May-day celebrations and festivities are of rejoicing
-that the reign of winter is at an end, and that of early summer with its
-floral beauties, has come. The hawthorn furnishes its white blossoms in
-profusion; and the tall May-poles, gaily decorated with garlands of
-leaves and flowers, and festoons of ribbons of the brightest colours,
-are centres of attraction on the village green, for the youth of both
-sexes to dance the May-pole dance, hand-in-hand, in a ring.
-
-
-MAY SONGS.
-
-Amongst the old customs of rural Lancashire and Cheshire is that of a
-small party of minstrels or carollers going round from house to house
-during the last few evenings of April, and singing a number of verses,
-expressive of rejoicing that "cold winter is driven away," and that the
-season is "drawing near to the merry month of May." The singers are
-generally accompanied by one or two musical instruments, a violin and
-clarionet for instance, and the tunes are very quaint and peculiar. Of
-course for their good wishes for the master of the house, with his
-"chain of gold," for the mistress, with "gold along her breast," and the
-children "in rich attire," a trifling gift in money is made.[168]
-
-
-MAY-DAY EVE.
-
-The evening before May-day is termed "Mischief Night" by the young
-people of Burnley and the surrounding district. All kinds of mischief
-are then perpetrated. Formerly shopkeepers' sign-boards were exchanged;
-"John Smith, grocer," finding his name and vocation changed, by the sign
-over his door, to "Thomas Jones, tailor," and _vice versa_; but the
-police have put an end to these practical jokes. Young men and women,
-however, still continue to play each other tricks, by placing branches
-of trees, shrubs, or flowers under each others' windows, or before their
-doors. All these have a symbolical meaning, as significant, if not
-always as complimentary, as "the Language of Flowers." Thus, "a thorn"
-implies "scorn;" "wicken" (the mountain ash) "my dear chicken;" a
-"bramble," for one who likes to "ramble," &c. Much ill-feeling is at
-times engendered by this custom.
-
-
-MAY-DAY CUSTOM.
-
-On the 1st of May the following custom is observed in some parts of
-Lancashire, though now very nearly obsolete. Late on the preceding
-night, or early on that morning, small branches of trees are placed at
-the doors of houses in which reside any marriageable girls. They are
-emblematical of the character of the maidens, and have a well-understood
-language of their own, which is rhythmical. Some speak flatteringly;
-others quite the reverse; the latter being used when the character of
-the person for whom it is intended is not quite "above suspicion." A
-malicious rustic wag may sometimes put a branch of the latter
-description where it is not deserved; but I believe this is an
-exception. I only remember a few of the various trees which are laid
-under contribution for this purpose. _Wicken_ is the local name for
-mountain ash.
-
-_Wicken_, sweet chicken.
-
-_Oak_, for a joke.
-
-_Gorse, in bloom_, rhymes with "at noon" (I omit the epithet given here
-to an unchaste woman) and used for a notorious delinquent.[169]
-
-
-PENDLETON AND PENDLEBURY MAY-POLE AND GAMES.
-
-The people of these townships for centuries celebrated May-day (a relic
-of the ancient heathen festival of the goddess Flora) by the May-pole,
-to which the watchful care of Charles I. and his royal progenitor
-extended, when they printed in their proclamation and "Book of Sports,"
-that after the end of divine service on Sundays, their "good people be
-not disturbed, letted, nor discharged from the having of May-games, and
-the setting up of the May-poles," &c. The ancient practice was to erect
-the pole on May-day, and to surround it with a number of verdant boughs,
-brought from "Blakeley Forest," which were decked usually with garlands
-and flowers, and around which the people assembled to dance and
-celebrate their May-games. "Pendleton Pole" is of much higher antiquity
-than the Reformation; for in the will of Thomas del Bothe, who died 47
-Edw. III. (1373) the sum of 30_s._ is bequeathed towards making the
-causeway at Pendleton near "le Poll." In the time of the Commonwealth
-the Pendleton Pole was taken down, in virtue of an ordinance of
-Parliament against May-poles, and such other "heathenish vanities;" but
-it was re-erected at the Restoration, and still presents its lofty head,
-surmounted by a Royal Crown; though much of the spacious field of the
-ancient May-games is now occupied by buildings [in 1780 the township
-was little more than a fold of cottages, with its May-pole and green],
-and much of the spirit of the rural sports of our ancestors has
-subsided. In Pasquil's "_Palinodia_," (published in 1654) the decay of
-May-games two centuries ago, is recorded and lamented:--
-
- "Happy the age, and harmless were the days
- (For then true love and amity was found);
- When every village did a May-pole raise,
- And Whitsun ales and May-games did abound,
- And all the lusty younkers in a rout,
- With merry lasses, danced the rod about;
- Then friendship to their banquets bid the guests,
- And poor men fared the better for their feasts.
-
- The lords of castles, manors, towns, and towers,
- Rejoiced when they beheld the farmers flourish,
- And would come down unto the summer bowers,
- To see the country gallants dance the Morice.
- . . . . .
- But since the summer poles were overthrown,
- And all good sports and merriments decay'd,
- How times and men are changed, so well is known,
- It were but labour lost if more were said."
-
-
-MAY CUSTOM IN SPOTLAND.
-
-A custom of high antiquity and of primitive simplicity prevails in the
-district of Spotland, in the parish of Rochdale. On the first Sunday in
-May the young people of the surrounding country assemble at Knott Hill
-yearly, for the purpose of presenting to each other their mutual
-greetings and congratulations on the arrival of this cheering season,
-and of pledging each other in the pure beverage which flows from the
-mountain springs.[170]
-
-
-MAY-DAY CUSTOMS IN THE FYLDE.
-
-On the morning of the first day of May, many a May-bough[171] ornamented
-the villages and towns of the Fylde, inserted by some mischievous
-youngsters, at the risk of life or limb, in the chimney-tops of their
-neighbours' houses. Then came a most imposing piece of pageantry, that
-of "bringing-in May;" when a king and queen, with their royal attendants
-and rustic band of music, mummers, &c., attracted the attention and
-admiration of the country side. May-day with its pageants, sports,
-games, dances, garlands, and May-poles, was peculiarly a season of
-hilarity, merry-making, and good humour. The pageant of "bringing-in
-May," was a favourite pastime at Poulton about fifty years ago [_i.e._,
-about 1787]; the causeways were strewed with flowers, and at the door of
-the house of each respectable inhabitant, sweetmeats, ale, and even
-wine, were handed about as a treat and refreshment to the young, who
-were thus affording them amusement. By degrees the pageant ceased; a
-vigorous attempt, however, was made to revive it in 1818, with all its
-honours; but the age-worn custom proved to be utterly incapable of
-resuscitation. Another writer,[172] however, states that at
-Poulton-le-Fylde and in its neighbourhood, some of the customs of the
-olden time are still observed. Very recently May-day was ushered in with
-a dance round the May-pole, and the lavish exhibition of garlands and
-merriment.
-
-
-THE MAY-POLE OF LOSTOCK.
-
-The May-pole of Lostock, a village near Bolton, is probably the most
-ancient upon record. It is mentioned in a charter by which the town of
-Westhalchton [? Westhaughton] was granted to the Abbey of Cockersand,
-about the reign of King John. The pole, it appears, had superseded a
-cross, and formed one of the landmarks which defined the boundaries, and
-it must therefore have been a permanent and not an annual erection. The
-words of the charter are:--"De Lostock meypull, ubi crux situ fuit,
-recta linea in austro, usque ad crucem super le Tunge."[173] (From
-Lostock May-pole, where the cross was formerly, in a straight line to
-the south, as far as to the cross upon the Tunge.)
-
-
-ROBIN HOOD AND MAY-GAMES AT BURNLEY, IN 1579.
-
-In a letter from Edmond Assheton, Esq., then a magistrate of Lancashire,
-and aged 75, to William Farington, Esq. (who was also in the commission
-of the peace), dated Manchester, May 12, 1580, the writer thus complains
-of "lewd sports" and sabbath-breaking:--"I am sure, Right Worshipful,
-you have not forgotten the last year stirs at Burnley about Robin Hood
-and the May-games. Now, considering that it is a cause that bringeth no
-good effect, being contrary to the best, therefore a number of the
-justices of the peace herein in Salford Hundred have consulted with the
-[Ecclesiastical] Commission [of Queen Elizabeth] to suppress those lewd
-sports, tending to no other end but to stir up our frail natures to
-wantonness; and mean not to allow neither old custom. Then their excuse
-in coming to the church in time of divine service, for every man may
-well know with what minds, after their embracings, kissings, and
-unchaste beholding of each other, they can come presently prepared to
-prayer. A fit assembly to confer of worse causes, over and besides their
-marching and walking together in the night time. But chiefly because it
-is a profanation of the Sabbath-day, and done in some places in
-contempt of the gospel and the religion established, I pray God it be
-not so at Burnley. It is called in the Scriptures the Lord's Day, and
-was not lawful under the old law to carry a pitcher of water on the
-Sabbath, or to gather sticks, but it was death. Such regard was had in
-the time of the law to keeping holy the Sabbath. And do not we withdraw
-even the practice and use of good and godly works upon the same day?
-Then in reason the other should cease. Tell me, I pray you, if you can
-find in the presence of the foresaid lewd pastimes, good example or
-profit to the commonwealth, the defence of the realm, honour to the
-prince, or to the glory of God? Then, let them continue; otherwise, in
-my opinion, they are to be withdrawn. For to that end I address these
-contents unto you, because we would not deal for any reformation within
-the limits of your walk; and for the better credit of the consent of the
-Commissioners, you may peruse how they mean to proceed against them of
-Burnley who have revived their former follies, if you redress not the
-same.... Your assured always to use, EDMOND ASSHETON. It will not be
-long afore [there] will be order taken for this dancing, either by the
-Privy Council or by the Bishops by their commandment. My meaning is, I
-would have you to do it yourself, which will with one word be brought to
-pass.... If you would set your hand to this precept with us, I think it
-would end these disorders within prescribed."[174]
-
-
-MAY-DAY IN MANCHESTER.
-
-In the now olden days of coaching, this was a great day in Manchester.
-The great coaching establishments, those of the royal mails, north,
-south, east, and west, and all the highflyers, &c., turned out all their
-spare vehicles and horses for a grand procession through the principal
-streets of the town. Many of the mail and other coaches were newly
-painted for the occasion; all the teams were provided with new harness
-and gearing; the coachmen and guards had new uniforms; Jehu wore a great
-cockade of ribbons, and a huge bouquet of flowers, and he handled the
-new ribbons with a dignity and grace peculiar to this almost defunct
-race. The guard, in bright scarlet uniform, blew on his Kent bugle some
-popular tune of the time; and the horses wore cockades and nosegays
-about their heads and ears; almost every coach on this occasion was
-drawn by four horses, their coats shining with an extra polish for
-May-day; and the cavalcade was really a pretty sight on a bright May-day
-morning. Second only to it in decorative splendour, and in horseflesh,
-was the display of lorries, wagons, drays, and carts, with their fine
-draught-horses. Then came the milk-carts, with their drivers in dresses
-covered with ribbons. These equine and asinine glories have passed
-away, extinguished by the rail.
-
-
-QUEEN OF THE MAY, &c.
-
-The custom of choosing a May King and Queen is now disused. May-games,
-and the May-pole, were kept up at the quiet little village of Downham
-when all other places in the neighbourhood had ceased to celebrate
-May-day. Nothing is now made of May-day, if we except the custom of
-carters dressing their horses' heads and tails with ribbons on that day.
-
-
-WHITSUNTIDE.
-
-The Feast of Pentecost, or Whitsuntide, was formerly kept as a high
-church festival, and by the people was celebrated by out-door sports and
-festivities, and especially by the drinking assemblies called
-"Whitsun-Ales." One writer (inquiring whether the custom of "lifting at
-Easter" is a memorial of Christ being raised up from the grave) observes
-that, "there seems to be a trace of the descent of the Holy Ghost on the
-heads of the Apostles, in what passes at Whitsuntide Fair, in some parts
-of Lancashire; where one person holds a stick over the head of another,
-whilst a third, unperceived, strikes the stick, and thus gives a smart
-blow to the first. But this probably is only local."[175] "Whit-week,"
-as it is generally called, has gradually grown to be the great yearly
-holiday of the hundred of Salford, and the manufacturing district of
-which Manchester is the centre. This seems to have arisen from the
-yearly races at Manchester being held from the Wednesday to the Saturday
-inclusive, in that week. After the rise of Sunday-schools, their
-conductors, desiring to keep youth of both sexes from the demoralizing
-recreations of the racecourse, took them to fields in the neighbourhood
-and held anniversary celebrations, tea-parties, &c., in the schools. The
-extension of the railway system has led to "cheap trips" and "school
-excursion trains" during Whitsuntide; which are occasionally taken to
-Wales, the Lakes, and other great distances. Canal boats take large
-numbers of Sunday scholars to Dunham Park, Worsley, &c. Short excursions
-are made in carts, temporarily fitted with seats. It is customary for
-the cotton-mills, &c., to close for Whitsuntide week to give the hands a
-holiday; the men going to the races, &c., and the women visiting
-Manchester on Whit-Saturday, thronging the markets, the Royal Exchange,
-the Infirmary Esplanade, and other public places; and gazing in at the
-"shop windows," whence this day is usually called "Gaping Saturday." The
-collieries, too, are generally closed in Whit-week; and in some the
-underground horses are brought to the surface to have a week's daylight,
-the only time they enjoy it during the year. The mills, coalpits, &c.,
-generally have the requisite repairs of machinery, &c., made during this
-yearly holiday--those at least which would necessitate the stoppage of
-the work at another time.
-
-
-WHIT-TUESDAY.--KING AND QUEEN AT DOWNHAM.
-
-The last rural queen chosen at Downham is still living in Burnley. The
-lot always fell to the prettiest girl in the village, and certainly it
-must be admitted that in this instance they exercised good judgment. A
-committee of young men made the selection; then an iron crown was
-procured and dressed with flowers. The king and queen were ornamented
-with flowers, a procession was then formed, headed by a fiddler. This
-proceeded from the Inn to the front of "Squire Assheton's," Downham
-Hall, and was composed of javelin men, and all the attendants of
-royalty. Chairs were brought out of the Hall for the king and queen, ale
-was handed round, and then a dance was performed on the lawn, the king
-and queen leading off. The procession next passed along through the
-village to the green, where seats were provided for a considerable
-company. Here again the dancing began, the king and queen dancing the
-first set. The afternoon was spent in the usual games, dances, &c. On
-the next night all the young persons met at the inn, on invitation from
-the king and queen--each paid a shilling towards the "Queen's Posset." A
-large posset was then made and handed round to the company. After this
-the evening was spent in dancing and merry-making.
-
-
-ROGATIONS OR GANG DAYS.
-
-These days are so named from the Litanies or Processions of the Church,
-before Holy Thursday or Ascension Day. It was a general custom in
-country parishes to "gang" or go round the boundaries and limits of the
-parish, on one of the three days before Holy Thursday, or the Feast of
-our Lord's Ascension; when the minister, accompanied by his
-churchwardens and parishioners, was wont to deprecate the vengeance of
-God, beg a blessing on the fruits of the earth, and preserve the rights
-and properties of the parish. In some parishes this perambulation took
-place on Ascension Day itself. In a parochial account-book, entitled "A
-Record of the Acts and Doings of the thirty men of the parish of
-Kirkham," Lancashire, is the following entry under the year 1665: "Spent
-on going perambulations on Ascension Day, 1_s._ 6_d._"
-
-
-OATMEAL CHARITY AT INCE.
-
-Under the name of Richardson's Charity, a distribution takes place
-annually on the Feast of the Ascension or Holy Thursday (ten days before
-Whit-Sunday) of _five loads of oatmeal_, each load weighing 240 lb.
-Three loads are given to the poor of the township of Ince, one to the
-poor of Abram, and the other to the poor of Hindley; adjacent
-townships, all in the parish of Wigan. The Charity Commissioners, in
-their twenty-first report, state that the meal is provided by Mr.
-Cowley, of Widnes, the owner of an estate in Ince, formerly the property
-of Edward Richardson, who, as the commissioners were informed, directed
-by his will that this distribution should be made for fifty years from
-the time of his death. The year 1784 was given as the date of this
-benefaction, in the Returns made to Parliament in 1786. Mr. Cowley has
-himself had the disposal of this charity. The charity would, according
-to this statement, legally cease in 1836.
-
-
-NAMES FOR MOONS IN AUTUMN.
-
-In Lancashire, as well as in the South of Scotland and the South of
-Ireland, the moon of September is commonly called "the harvest moon,"
-that of October "the huntsman's moon."[176]
-
-
-"GOOSE-INTENTOS."
-
-In "An Universal Etymological English Dictionary," by N. Bailey, London,
-1745, I read:--"Goose-intentos, a goose claimed by custom by the
-husbandmen in Lancashire, upon the sixteenth Sunday after Pentecost,
-when the old Church prayers ended thus: 'ac bonis operis jugiter
-praestat esse _intentos_.'" These words occur in the old Sarum books, in
-the Collect for the sixteenth Sunday after Pentecost; in the present
-Liturgy, in that for the seventeenth Sunday after Trinity.[177]
-
-Blount, in his _Glossographia_, says that "in Lancashire the husbandmen
-claim it as a due to have a goose-intentos on the sixteenth Sunday after
-Pentecost: which custom takes its origin from the last word of the old
-Church prayer of that day:--'Tua nos Domine, quae sumus, gratia semper et
-praeveniat et sequatur; ac bonis operibus jugiter praestet esse
-_intentos_.' The vulgar people called it 'a goose with ten toes.'"
-Beckwith, in his new edition of Blount's _Fragmenta Antiquitatis_
-(London, 4to, 1815, p. 413), after quoting this passage, remarks:--"But
-besides that the sixteenth Sunday after Pentecost, or after Trinity
-rather, being movable, and seldom falling upon Michaelmas Day, which is
-an immovable feast, the service for that day could very rarely be used
-at Michaelmas, there does not appear to be the most distant allusion to
-a goose in the words of that prayer. Probably no other reason can be
-given for this custom, but that Michaelmas Day was a great festival, and
-geese at that time most plentiful. In Denmark, where the harvest is
-later, every family has a roasted goose for supper on St. Martin's Eve
-[Nov. 10]." It must be borne in mind that the term _husbandman_ was
-formerly applied to persons of a somewhat higher position in life than
-an agricultural labourer, as for instance to the occupier and holder of
-the land. In ancient grants from landlords of manors to their free
-tenants, among other reserved rents, boons, and services, the landlord
-frequently laid claim to a good stubble goose at Michaelmas. After all,
-the connexion between the goose and the collect is not apparent.[178]
-
-
-ALL SOULS' DAY.--NOV. 2.
-
- So named, because in the Church of Rome prayers are offered on this
- day for "all the faithful deceased."
-
-There is a singular custom still kept up at Great Marton, in the Fylde
-district, on this day. In some places it is called "soul-caking," but
-there it is named "psalm-caking,"--from their reciting psalms for which
-they receive cakes. The custom is changing its character also--for in
-place of collecting cakes from house to house, as in the old time, they
-now beg for money. The term "psalm" is evidently a corruption of the old
-word "sal," for soul; the mass or requiem for the dead was called
-"Sal-mas," as late as the reign of Henry VI.
-
-
-GUNPOWDER PLOT AND GUY FAWKES.
-
-The anniversary of the Gunpowder Plot of November 5, 1605, is still more
-or less kept in many parts of Lancashire, in towns by the effigy of Guy
-Fawkes being paraded about the streets, and burnt at night with great
-rejoicing; and by the discharge of small cannon, guns, pistols, &c., and
-of fireworks. In the country the more common celebration is confined to
-huge bonfires, and the firing of pistols and fireworks. In some places,
-especially about Blackburn, Burnley, and that district, as well as in
-villages about Eccles, Worsley, &c., it is customary for boys for some
-days before the 5th of November, to go round to their friends and
-neighbours to beg for coals. They generally take their stand before the
-door, and either say or sing some doggerel, to the following effect:--
-
- "Remember, remember,
- The Fifth of November,
- The gunpowder treason and plot;
- A stick and a stake,
- For King George's sake,
- We hope it will ne'er be forgot."
-
-
-CHRISTMAS.
-
-In the olden time, before the Reformation, Christmas was the highest
-festival of the Church. In some rural parts of Lancashire it is now but
-little regarded, and many of its customs are observed a week later,--on
-the eve and day of the New Year. But still there linger in many places
-some relics of the old observances and festivities, as the carols, the
-frumenty on Christmas Eve, the mummers, with "old Ball," or the
-hobby-horse, and the decoration of churches and dwellings with boughs of
-evergreen shrubs and plants; in the centre of which is still to be
-found, in many country halls and kitchens, and in some also in the
-towns, that mystic bough of the mistletoe, beneath whose white berries,
-it is the custom and licence of the season to steal a kiss from fair
-maidens, and even from matrons "forty, fat, and fair."
-
-
-CREATURES WORSHIPPING ON CHRISTMAS EVE.
-
-I have been told in Lancashire, that at midnight on Christmas Eve the
-cows fall on their knees, and the bees hum the Hundredth Psalm. I am
-unwilling to destroy the poetry of these old superstitions; but their
-origin can, I think, be accounted for. Cows, it is well known, on rising
-from the ground, get up on their knees first; and a person going into
-the shippon at midnight would, no doubt, disturb the occupants, and by
-the time he looked around, they would all be rising on their knees. The
-buzzing of the bees, too, might easily be formed into a tune, and, with
-the Hundredth Psalm running in the head of the listener, fancy would
-supply the rest.[179]
-
-
-CHRISTMAS MUMMING.
-
-Mr. J. O. Halliwell, in his _Nursery Rhymes of England_, relates the
-following as a Christmas custom in Lancashire:--The boys dress
-themselves up with ribands, and perform various pantomimes, after which
-one of them, who has a blackened face, a rough skin coat, and a broom in
-his hand, sings as follows:--
-
- Here come I,
- Little David Doubt;
- If you don't give me money,
- I'll sweep you all out.
- Money I want,
- Money I crave;
- If you don't give me money,
- I'll sweep you all to the grave.
-
-
-THE HOBBY HORSE, OR OLD BALL.
-
-In an old painted window at Betley, Staffordshire, exhibiting in twelve
-diamond-octagon panes, the mummers and morris-dancers of May-day, the
-centre pane below the May-pole represents the old hobby-horse, supposed
-to have once been the King of the May, though now a mere buffoon. The
-hobby (of this window) is a spirited horse of pasteboard, in which the
-master dances and displays tricks of legerdemain, &c. In the horse's
-mouth is stuck a ladle, ornamented with a ribbon; its use being to
-receive the spectators' pecuniary donations. In Lancashire the old
-custom seems to have so far changed, that it is the head of a dead horse
-that is carried about at Christmas, as described amongst the Easter
-customs. "Old Ball" bites everybody it can lay hold of, and holds its
-victims till they buy their release with a few pence.
-
-
-CHRISTMAS CUSTOMS IN THE FYLDE.
-
-The Rev. W. Thornber[180] describes the Christmas gambols and customs in
-the Fylde nearly a century ago, as having been kept up with great
-spirit. The midnight carols of the church-singers[181]--the penny laid
-on the hob by the fireside, the prize of him who came first to the outer
-door, to "let Christmas in,"--the regular round of visits--the treat of
-mince pies[182]--in turn engrossed their attention. Each farm-house and
-hut possessed a pack of cards, which were obtained as an alms from the
-rich, if poverty forbade the purchase. Night after night of Christmas
-was consumed in poring over these dirty and obscured cards. Nor were the
-youngsters excluded from a share in the amusements of this festal
-season. Early, long before dawn, on Christmas morning, young voices
-echoed through streets and lanes, in the words of the old song--
-
- Get up old wives,
- And bake your pies,
- 'Tis Christmas-day in the morning;
- The bells shall ring,
- The birds shall sing,
- Tis Christmas-day in the morning.
-
-Many an evening was beguiled with snap-dragon, bobbing for apples,
-jack-stone, blind-man's buff, forfeits, hot cockles, hunting the
-slipper, hide lose my supper, London Bridge, turning the trencher, and
-other games now little played. Fortune-telling by cards, &c., must not
-be omitted. In the bright frost and moonshine, out-door sports were
-eagerly pursued, guns were in great request, to shoot the shore-birds,
-and many found pleasure in "watching the fleet;" others played at
-foot-ball in the lanes or streets; or engaged in the games of
-prison-bars, tee-touch-wood, thread-my-needle, horse-shoe, leap-frog,
-black-thorn, cad, bandy, honey-pot, hop-scotch, hammer and block, bang
-about and shedding copies. Cymbling for larks[183] was a very common
-pastime; now it is scarcely known by name, and few have retained any of
-the implements or instruments requisite to practise the art. Tradesmen
-presented their customers with the Yule-loaf,[184] or two mould candles
-for the church, or some other Christmas-box. The churches and
-house-windows were decked with evergreens; a superstition derived
-probably from the Druids, who decked their temples and houses with
-evergreens in December, that the Sylvan Spirits might avoid the chilly
-frosts and storms of winter, by settling in their branches. For some
-weeks before Christmas, a band of young men called "Mutes," roused at
-early morn the slumbering to their devotions, or to activity in their
-domestic duties. The beggar at the door, craving an _awmas_ [? alms] or
-_saumas_ [soul-mass] cake, reminded the inmates that charity should be a
-characteristic of the season. The Eve of Christmas Day was named "Flesh
-Day," from the country people flocking to Poulton to buy beef, &c.,
-sufficient to supply the needs of the coming year. On the morning of
-Christmas Day the usual breakfast was of black puddings, with jannock,
-&c.
-
-
-CELEBRATION OF CHRISTMAS AT WYCOLLER HALL.
-
-At Wycoller Hall, the family usually kept open house the twelve days at
-Christmas. The entertainment was [in] a large hall of curious ashlar
-work, [on] a long table, plenty of _frumenty_, like new milk, in a
-morning, made of husked wheat boiled, roasted beef, with a fat goose and
-a pudding, with plenty of good beer for dinner. A round-about
-fire-place, surrounded with stone benches, where the young folks sat and
-cracked nuts, and diverted themselves; and in this manner the sons and
-daughters got matching, without going much from home.[185]
-
-
-CAROLS, &c.
-
-"Carol" is supposed to be derived from _cantare_ to sing, and _rola_, an
-interjection of joy. Amongst our Christmas customs that of carol-singing
-prevails over a great part of Lancashire. It is the old custom of
-celebrating with song the birth of the Saviour, even as the angels are
-said to have sung "Glory to God in the highest," &c., at this great
-event. Almost every European nation has its carols. Our earliest
-Christian forefathers had theirs; one or two Anglo-Norman carols have
-been preserved, and some of every century from the thirteenth to the
-eighteenth. Numerous books containing carols have been printed (one by
-Wynkin de Worde), and it would occupy too much space to insert even the
-most popular of these carols here. A verse of one common to Lancashire
-and Yorkshire must suffice:--
-
- God rest you all, merry gentlemen,
- Let nothing you dismay;
- Remember Christ our Saviour
- Was born on Christmas-day.
-
-The town or the village waitts go about after midnight, waking many a
-sleeper with their homely music, which sounds all the sweeter for being
-heard in the stilly night. Various items of payment to the Manchester
-waitts occur in the Church Leet Books of that manor. A dance tune called
-"The Warrington Waitts" occurs in a printed Tune-Book of 1732. Hand-bell
-ringing, a favourite Lancashire diversion, is much practised about
-Christmas.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[143] Hermentrude, in _Notes and Queries_, 3rd ser., vol. ii. p. 484.
-
-[144] Prestoniensis, in _Notes and Queries_, 2nd ser., vol. ii. p. 326.
-
-[145] Hampson's _Medii AEvi Kalendarium_, vol. i. p. 98.
-
-[146] Prestoniensis, in _Notes and Queries_, 2nd series, vol. iii. p.
-50.
-
-[147] Halliwell's _Archaic and Provincial Dictionary_.
-
-[148] Pasquil's _Palinodia_.
-
-[149] _Ploughman's Feasting Days_, stanza 3.
-
-[150] _Pictorial History of Lancashire._
-
-[151] See Rev. W. Thornber's _History of Blackpool_.
-
-[152] See also, under BELLS, the Pancake Bell.
-
-[153] _Notes and Queries_, 2nd ser., V.
-
-[154] For the Simnel cakes of Shrewsbury, &c., see _Book of Days_, I.
-336.
-
-[155] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-[156] _History of Manchester_, II. 265.
-
-[157] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-[158] H. T. Riley, in _Notes and Queries_, 2nd ser., ii. 320.
-
-[159] _Pictorial History of Lancashire._
-
-[160] Hone's _Every-Day Book_, ii. 450; Brand's _Popular Antiquities,
-&c._
-
-[161] _Pictorial History of Lancashire._
-
-[162] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-[163] _Pictorial History of Lancashire._
-
-[164] _History of Blackpool_, p. 92.
-
-[165] _Browis_ or _brewis_ is broth or pottage; _frumenty_, is hulled
-wheat boiled in milk, and flavoured with cinnamon, sugar, allspice; and
-_jannocks_, oaten bread in large, coarse loaves; _throdkins_, a cake
-made of oatmeal and bacon.
-
-[166] Rev. W. Thornber's _History of Blackpool_.
-
-[167] Hone's _Every-Day Book_, ii. 597.
-
-[168] For the words of these songs, see Harland's _Ballads and Songs of
-Lancashire_, p. 116; and for words and music, Chambers's _Book of Days_,
-i. 546.
-
-[169] A. B., Liverpool, in _Notes and Queries_, v. 581.
-
-[170] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-[171] These boughs, says Mr. Thornber, in his _History of Blackpool_,
-were emblematical of the character of the maiden thus conspicuously
-distinguished; an elder-bough for a scold, one of ash for a swearer, &c.
-
-[172] _Pictorial History of Lancashire._
-
-[173] Dugdale's _Monast. Anglic._, vol. vi. p. 906.
-
-[174] _Farington Papers_, p. 128.
-
-[175] _Gent. Mag._, vol. liii., for July, 1783, p. 578.
-
-[176] M. F., in _Notes and Queries_, 3rd series, ii. 397.
-
-[177] Aquinas, in _Notes and Queries_, 3rd series, v., April 2., 1864.
-
-[178] Ed. _Notes and Queries_.
-
-[179] Wellbank, in _Notes and Queries_, 2nd series, viii. 242.
-
-[180] See _History of Blackpool_.
-
-[181] Here is the specimen of one sung from house to house during
-Christmas:--
-
- We're nather cum to yare hase to beg nor to borrow,
- But we're cum to yare hase to drive away o sorrow;
- A suop o' drink, as yau may think, for we're varra droy,
- We'll tell yau what we're cum for--a piece o' Christmas poye.
-
-[182] The mince-pie, made of a compound of Eastern productions,
-represented the offerings of the wise men who came from far to worship
-the Saviour, bringing spices. Its old English coffin-shape was in
-imitation of the manger in which the infant Jesus was laid.
-
-[183] We have not been able to find any account of this mode of catching
-larks, at least, under the name here given.
-
-[184] The baker formerly gave his customers a baby of paste; and in my
-own recollection a cake, decorated with the head of a lamb, named "the
-Ewe loaf," was the Christmas present of bakers at Poulton. On Christmas
-Eve the houses were illuminated with candles of an enormous size.--W. T.
-
-[185] From a family MS. of the Cunliffes, quoted in Baines's
-_Lancashire_, iii. 244.
-
-
-
-
-EATING AND DRINKING CUSTOMS.
-
-
-In many instances of particular Church Festivals, and of popular
-celebrations, we have already enumerated various viands appropriated to
-special occasions, as the turkey to New Year's Day; the pancake to
-Shrove-Tuesday; the simnel, carlins, bragot, and fig-pie to Mid-Lent
-Sunday; the goose to Michaelmas; frumenty, mince-pies, &c., to
-Christmas. A few remain, however, for notice here:--Eccles cakes,
-Ormskirk gingerbread, Everton toffy, and other sweet cakes have "all
-seasons for their own." The two rival shops in Eccles, on opposite sides
-of Church-street, the one called "The genuine Eccles cake shop, from
-over the way," and the other "The real Eccles cake shop, never removed,"
-so much puzzle the stranger and visitor, that purchases are often made
-at both in order to secure the real, genuine, original article.
-
-
-THE HAVERCAKE LADS.
-
-Formerly the bread eaten by the labouring classes in the parish of
-Rochdale and others in the east of Lancashire was oat-cake, which was
-also pretty generally in use in the west of Yorkshire. A regiment of
-soldiers raised in these two adjoining districts at the beginning of the
-last war took the name of the "Havercake Lads," assuming as their badge
-an oat cake [oats are called havers], which was placed (for the purpose
-of attracting recruits) on the point of the recruiting sergeant's sword.
-Oat bread is still eaten in various manufacturing and hilly districts of
-Lancashire, but not nearly so generally as half a century ago.[186]
-
-
-WOODEN SHOES AND OATEN BREAD OR JANNOCKS.
-
-Both these are said to have been introduced by the Flemish immigrant
-weavers about the year 1567. Their sabots, however, were made entirely
-of wood, lined with a little lamb's skin, to protect the top of the
-foot; while the _clogs_ of the present day have strong leather tops
-[often brass clasps] and thick wooden soles. The kind of bread
-introduced by the Flemings into Bolton and other manufacturing districts
-of Lancashire was made of oatmeal in the form of a loaf, and called
-_jannock_; but the gradual change in manners and improvement in social
-condition have almost banished this food, and wheaten-bread and
-oat-cakes have almost altogether taken its place.
-
-In the _Shepherd's Play_, performed at Chester in 1577, in honour of the
-visit to that city of the Earl of Derby, the third Shepherd says:--
-
- And brave ale of Halton I have,
- And what meat I had to my hire;
- A pudding may no man deprave,
- And a _jannock_ of Lancaster-shire.
-
-Jannock is now used in Leigh more commonly than in most other parts of
-Lancashire. Warrington ale was no less celebrated than Halton ale, and a
-song in praise of the former is printed in Harland's _Lancashire
-Ballads_.[187]
-
-
-PORK PASTIES.
-
-In West Houghton, at the annual feast or wakes, there is a singular
-local custom of making large flat pasties of pork, which are eaten in
-great quantities on the Wakes Sunday, with a liberal accompaniment of
-ale; and people resort to the village from all places for miles round,
-on this Sunday, just as they rush into Bury on Mid-Lent or Mothering
-Sunday to eat simnels and drink bragot ale.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[186] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[187] P. 199.
-
-
-
-
-BIRTH AND BAPTISMAL CUSTOMS.
-
-
-Many of the customs attending child-bearing, churching, and christening
-are not peculiar to Lancashire, but common nearly all over England. The
-term "the lady in the straw," merely meant the lady confined to her bed,
-as all beds were anciently stuffed with straw. It was formerly the
-custom in Lancashire, as elsewhere, for the husband against the birth of
-the child to provide a large cheese and a cake. These were called "the
-groaning" cheese and cake; and throughout the north of England the first
-cut of the sick wife's cheese, or groaning cheese, is taken and laid
-under the pillows of young women to cause them to dream of their lovers.
-Amongst customs now obsolete was the giving a large entertainment at the
-churching. Now it is usually given at the christening.
-
-
-PRESENTS TO WOMEN IN CHILDBED.
-
-In a note on an entry of _Nicholls's Assheton's Journal_, Dr. Whitaker
-and its Editor, the Rev. Canon Raines, say that the custom of making
-presents to women in childbed, is yet called "pr[=e]s[)e]nting" in
-Craven. It is now quite obsolete in South Lancashire, although it
-continued to be observed to the middle of the eighteenth century. In a
-MS. journal of 1706 is an entry "John Leigh brought my wife a
-groaning-cake: gave him 6_d._" Other entries in the same journal show
-that money gifts ranged from 1_s._ 6_d._ to 5_s._ (the last being to the
-minister's wife); besides smaller gifts to maids and midwives, and
-bottles of wine, syrup of ginger, and other creature comforts to the
-person confined.
-
-
-TEA-DRINKING AFTER CHILDBIRTH.
-
-In some parts of North Lancashire it is customary to have a tea-drinking
-after the recovery from childbirth. All the neighbours and friends are
-invited--sometimes many more than can be comfortably accommodated--and
-both tea and rum are plentifully distributed. After tea, each visitor
-pays a shilling towards the expense of the birth feast; and the evening
-is spent in the usual gossip.
-
-
-TURNING THE BED AFTER CHILDBIRTH.
-
-An attendant was making a bed occupied by the mother of a child born a
-few days previously. When she attempted to turn it over, to give it a
-better shaking, the nurse energetically interfered, peremptorily
-forbidding her doing so till a month after the confinement, on the
-ground that it was decidedly unlucky; and said that she never allowed it
-to be done till then, on any account whatever.[188]
-
-
-AN UNBAPTIZED CHILD CANNOT DIE.
-
-The _Morning Herald_ of the 18th June, 1860, notices a case of attempted
-infanticide near Liverpool. The wretched mother, having gained access to
-a gentleman's grounds, laid her child on the ground and covered it with
-sods. The child was happily discovered and its life saved. The mother
-was apprehended and charged with having attempted to murder her child.
-She confessed that she was guilty, and added ["the tender mercies of the
-wicked are cruel"] that she had previously succeeded in getting the
-child baptized, as she believed it could not otherwise have died. This
-is a strange bit of folk-lore.[189]
-
-
-GIFTS TO INFANTS.
-
-It is a custom in some parts of Lancashire, as well as in Yorkshire,
-Northumberland, and other counties, that when an infant first goes out
-of the house, in the arms of the mother or the nurse, in some cases the
-first family visited, in others every neighbour receiving the call,
-presents to or for the infant an egg, some salt, some bread, and in some
-cases a small piece of money. These gifts are to ensure, as the gossips
-avow, that the child shall never want bread, meat, or salt to it, or
-money, throughout life. The old custom of sponsors giving the child
-twelve tea-spoons, called "Apostle Spoons," is now obsolete. The gift of
-a coral with bells, is supposed to have had its origin in a very ancient
-superstition. Coral, according to Pliny, was deemed an amulet against
-fascination; and it was thought to preserve and fasten the teeth. The
-coral-bells (especially if blest by the priest) would scare away evil
-spirits from the child.
-
-
-CHANGELINGS.
-
-There is even yet in some parts of Lancashire a strong dread of the
-fairies or witches coming secretly and exchanging their own ill-favoured
-imps, for the newly born infant; and various charms are used to prevent
-the child from being thus stolen away.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[188] A. B., Liverpool, in _Notes and Queries_, vi. 432.
-
-[189] W. S. Simpson, in _Notes and Queries_, 2nd series, x. p. 184.
-
-
-
-
-BETROTHING AND BRIDAL OR WEDDING CUSTOMS.
-
-
-BETROTHING CUSTOMS.
-
-The common custom of breaking a piece of silver or gold (if it be
-crooked, so much the luckier) between lovers of the humbler classes,
-especially when the man is going to a distance, is believed to have had
-its origin in a sort of betrothal or promise of marriage, much practised
-amongst the ancient Danes, called _Hand-festing_, which is mentioned by
-Ray in his Collection or Glossary of Northumbrian Words. It means
-hand-fastening or binding. In betrothal it was also the custom to change
-rings, formed of two links or hoops, called gemmel rings, from
-_gemelli_, twins.
-
-
-CURIOUS WEDDING CUSTOM.
-
-An ancient custom at weddings of the poorer classes in Lancashire, and
-in some parts of Cumberland, is thus described:--The Lord of the Manor,
-in whose jurisdiction the marriage takes place, allowed the parties a
-piece of ground for a house and garden. All their friends assembled on
-the wedding-day, and the bridegroom having provided a dinner and drink,
-they set to work and constructed a dwelling for the young couple, of
-clay and wood, what is called post and petrel, or wattle and daub. Many
-of these "clay biggins" still remain in the Fylde district and the
-northern parts of Lancashire. The relatives of the pair supplied the
-most necessary part of the furniture, and thus they were enabled to
-"start fair" in the world.[190]
-
-
-COURTING AND WEDDING CUSTOMS IN THE FYLDE.
-
-On the occasion of a marriage, a christening, or a churching, each guest
-either sent or presented some offering of money or food; thus providing
-a sufficient stock of provisions for the entertainment without much, if
-any, cost to the host. The preliminaries before marriage, the addresses
-paid by the swain to his sweetheart after the day's labour was done,
-were styled "the sitting-up," the night being the time allotted to
-courtship, by the kitchen fire, after the other members of the family
-had retired to rest. This "sitting-up" was regularly observed every
-Saturday night if the lover was faithful; if otherwise, the price of the
-"lant" (?) of the forsaken fair was transmitted by her to the rival
-preferred by her inconstant swain. On the wedding-day, when a bride and
-her "groom" left the house to have the marriage rites solemnized, some
-relative or servant threw at or after the smiling pair a "shuffle"
-(_Pantoufle_, an old shoe or slipper)--a custom in its origin said to be
-Jewish--as a preventive of future unhappiness, an omen of good-luck and
-prosperity. At the church-door an idle crowd was always ready for the
-"perry,"--that is, to contest for the dole of scattered half-pence, or
-if disappointed, to deprive the bride of her shawl or shoes, till some
-largess was bestowed. The day was spent in the company of a merry party
-of friends, who, after the ceremony of "throwing the stocking" over the
-bed of the wedded pair was performed, retired to their homes.[191]
-
-
-ANCIENT BRIDAL CUSTOM.--THE BRIDE'S CHAIR AND THE FAIRY HOLE.
-
-On the lower declivity of Warton Crag, in the parish of Warton (which
-abuts on Morecambe Bay and the Westmorland border), commanding a
-beautiful and extended prospect of the bay, a seat called "The Bride's
-Chair" was resorted to on the day of marriage by the brides of the
-village; and in this seat they were enthroned with due solemnity by
-their friends; but the origin and the object of the custom, which has
-now fallen in disuse, are unknown. Not far from Warton Crag are three
-rocking-stones placed in a line, about forty feet asunder, the largest
-stone lying in the middle. A cave is also mentioned by Lucas, named "The
-Fairy Hole," where dwarf spirits called Elves or Fairies, were wont to
-resort.[192]
-
-
-BURNLEY.
-
-An ancient custom prevails at Burnley Grammar School, by which all
-persons married at St. Peter's Church in that town are fined by the
-boys. As soon as a wedding is fixed the parish clerk informs the boys,
-and on the day appointed they depute two of their number to wait upon
-the groomsman and demand a fee. There is no fixed sum named; but enough
-is got to purchase books and maintain a tolerable library for the use of
-the pupils. Former pupils always pay a liberal fine.
-
-
-MARRIAGES AT MANCHESTER PARISH CHURCH.
-
-"Th'owd Church," as the collegiate church of Manchester was provincially
-designated before it attained the dignity of a cathedral, was known and
-celebrated far and wide over the extensive parish. Its altar has
-witnessed the joining together of thousands of happy [and unhappy]
-couples. The fees here being less than those demanded at other churches,
-which had to pay tribute to it, it was of course the most popular
-sanctuary in the whole parish for the solemnization of matrimony. At the
-expiration of Lent (during which the marriage fees are doubled) crowds
-of candidates for nuptial honours present themselves; indeed so numerous
-are they that the ceremony is performed by wholesale on Easter Monday. A
-chaplain of facetious memory [the Rev. Joshua Brookes] is said to have
-on one of these occasions accidentally united the wrong parties. When
-the occurrence was represented to him, his ready reply was, "Pair as you
-go out; you're all married; pair as you go out." This verbal certificate
-appeared to give general satisfaction, and each bridegroom soon found
-his right bride. Sir George Head, in his _Home Tour through the
-Manufacturing Districts, in the summer of 1835_, thus describes what he
-saw of these wholesale Monday marriages:--"I attended the Old Church at
-Manchester one Monday morning, in order to witness the solemnization of
-several marriages, which I had reason to suppose were then and there to
-take place. I had heard on the preceding Sunday the banns proclaimed as
-follows:--'For the first time of asking, 65; for the second time, 72;
-for the third time, 60. Total, 197.' Having been informed that it would
-be expedient to be on the spot at eight in the morning I repaired
-thither at that hour. Operations, however, did not commence before ten.
-The latter is the usual time of proceeding to business, although in
-cases of persons married by licence 8 o'clock is the hour. When all was
-ready and the church doors opened, the clergyman and clerk betook
-themselves to the vestry; and the people who were about to be married,
-and their friends, seated themselves in the body of the church opposite
-the communion table, on benches which were placed there for the purpose.
-Not less than fifty persons were assembled, among whom I took my seat
-quietly, without being noticed. A party who had arrived in a narrow _vis
-a vis_ fly, most exclusively paraded in the meantime up and down (as if
-unwilling to identify themselves with the humbler candidates of
-matrimony) in another part of the church. The people at first took their
-seats in solemn silence, each one inquisitively surveying his neighbour;
-but as the clergyman and clerk were some time in preparation, the men
-first began to whisper one to another and the women to titter, till by
-degrees they all threw off their reserve, and made audible remarks on
-the new comers. There was little _mauvaise honte_ among the women, but
-of the men, poor fellows! some were seriously abashed; while among the
-hymeneal throng there seemed to prevail a sentiment that obtains pretty
-generally among their betters, namely, inclination to put shy people out
-of conceit with themselves. Thus, at the advance of a sheepish-looking
-bridegroom, he was immediately assailed on all sides with 'Come in, man;
-what art thou afraid of? Nobody 'll hurt thee!' And then a general laugh
-went round in a repressed tone, but quite sufficient to confound and
-subdue the new comer. Presently a sudden buzz broke out, 'The
-clergyman's coming;' and all was perfectly silent. About twelve couples
-were to be married; the rest were friends and attendants. The former
-were called upon to arrange themselves all together around the altar.
-The clerk was an adept in his business, and performed the duties of his
-office in a mode admirably calculated to set the people at their ease
-and direct the proceedings. In appointing them to their proper places,
-he addressed each in an intonation of voice perfectly soft and soothing,
-and which carried with it more of encouragement as he made use of no
-appellative but the Christian name of the person spoken to. Thus he
-proceeded:--'Daniel and Ph[oe]be; this way, Daniel, take off your
-gloves, Daniel. William and Anne; no, Anne; here, Anne; t'other side,
-William. John and Mary; here, John; oh! John.' And then addressing them
-all together, 'Now, all of you give your hats to some person to hold.'
-Although the marriage service appeared to me (adds Sir George) to be
-generally addressed to the whole party, the clergyman was scrupulously
-exact in obtaining the accurate responses from each individual."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Many wedding customs, as the bridesmaids and best men, the wedding-ring,
-the nuptial kiss in the church, the bouquet borne in the hand of the
-bride, &c., the scattering of flowers in her path, the throwing of an
-old shoe after her for luck, the giving gloves, &c., are of ancient
-origin, and are the relics of Anglo-Saxon or Danish usages.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[190] Hampson's _Medii AEvi Kalend._ i. 289.
-
-[191] See Rev. W. Thornber's _History of Blackpool_.
-
-[192] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-
-
-
-DYING, DEATH-BED, AND FUNERAL CUSTOMS.
-
-
-DYING HARDLY.
-
-Persons are said to "die hardly," as the phrase is, meaning to be
-unable to expire, when there are pigeons' feathers in the bed. Some will
-not allow dying persons to lie on a feather-bed, because they hold that
-it very much increases their pain and suffering, and actually retards
-their departure. On the other hand, there is a superstitious feeling
-that it is a great misfortune, nay, even a _judgment_, not to die in a
-bed.
-
-
-BURYING IN WOOLLEN.
-
-By a statute of 30 Car. II., stat. I, cap. 3 (1678), entitled "An act
-for the lessening the importation of linen from beyond the seas, and the
-encouragement of the woollen and paper manufactures of the kingdom," it
-is enacted that the curate of every parish shall keep a register, to be
-provided at the charge of the parish, wherein to enter all burials and
-affidavits of persons being buried in woollen; the affidavit to be taken
-by any justice of the peace, mayor, or such like chief officer, in the
-parish where the body was interred; and if there be no officer, then by
-any curate within the city where the corpse was buried (except him in
-whose parish the corpse was buried), who must administer the oath and
-set his hand gratis. No affidavit to be necessary for a person dying of
-the plague. It imposes a fine of L5 for every infringement; one half to
-go to the informer, and the other half to the poor of the parish. This
-act was repealed by the 54 Geo. III. cap. 108 (1814). In the parish of
-Prestwich, the first entry in the book provided for such purposes was in
-August, 1678; and there is no entry later than 1681, which appears also
-to be the limit of the act's observance in the adjacent parish of
-Radcliffe; where the entries immediately follow the record of the burial
-itself in the registers, and not in a separate book as at Prestwich.
-Under the year 1679, is the following entry in the parish register of
-Radcliffe:--
-
-"An orphan of Ralph Mather's, of Radcliffe, was buried the 9th day of
-April, and certified to be wound up in woollen only, under the hand of
-Mr. William Hulme."
-
-In the churchwardens' accounts of Prestwich, for the year 1681, is the
-following item of receipt:--
-
-"Received a fine of James Crompton, for burying his son, and not
-bringing in an affidavit, according to the act for burying in woollen,
-L2 10_s._"[193]
-
-
-FUNERAL DOLE AND ARVAL CAKE.
-
-In Lancashire, the funeral was formerly celebrated with great profusion
-in meats and drinks, to which was added in those of the richer sort,
-what was called a penny dole, or promiscuous distribution of that sum,
-anciently delivered in silver to the poor. The effect of this custom,
-says Lucas (as quoted by Dr. Whitaker[194]) was such, that he had seen
-many "who would rather go seven or eight miles to a penny dole, than
-earn sixpence in the same time by laudable industry." This custom of
-distributing a small money alms or dole at funerals still existed in
-parts of Lancashire within the last fifty years. One sexagenarian
-informant told the writer that, when a lad, he went to the funeral of a
-Mr. D., in the hamlet of Swinton, parish of Eccles, and there was what
-he called "a _dow_, gi'en to every lad and every wench [boy or girl] as
-went, far and near,--a penny a-piece; and them as carrit a choilt
-[carried a child] had tuppence." Usually at country funerals, after the
-interment, the relations first, and next their attendants, threw into
-the grave sprigs of bay, rosemary, or other odoriferous evergreens,
-which had been previously distributed amongst them. In some cases, a
-messenger went round the neighbourhood, "bidding" parties to the
-funeral, and at each house where he gave the invitation, he left a sprig
-of rosemary, &c. After the rites at the grave, the company adjourned to
-a neighbouring public-house, where they were severally presented with a
-cake and ale, which was called an _arval_. This word seems to have
-greatly puzzled Dr. Whitaker. It is the Sueo-Gothic _arfoel_, which is a
-compound of _arf_, inheritance, and _oel_, ale,--expressive of a feast
-given by the heir, at the funeral, on succeeding to the estate. The
-feast and its name were imparted to us by the Danes, whose _arfwoel_ is
-described by Olaus Wormius as a solemn banquet, celebrated by kings and
-nobles, in honour of deceased relations, whom they are succeeding.
-
-
-DALTON-IN-FURNESS.
-
-The most singular mode of conducting funerals prevails at this place. A
-full meal of bread and cheese and ale is provided at the funeral house;
-and, after the corpse is interred the parish clerk proclaims, at the
-grave-side, that the company must repair to some appointed public-house.
-Arrived there, they sit down by fours together, and each four is served
-with two quarts of ale.[195] One half of this is paid for by the
-conductor of the funeral, and the other half by the company. While they
-are drinking the ale, the waiter goes round with cakes, serving out one
-to each guest, which he is expected to carry home.[196]
-
-
-OLD FUNERAL CUSTOMS AT WARTON.
-
-A singular practice, which was growing obsolete in the time of Lucas
-(says Dr. Whitaker) once prevailed in the parish of Warton; which was,
-that most householders were furnished with a kind of family pall, or
-finely wrought coverlet, to be laid over the bier when the corpse was
-carried to church. Amongst other funeral customs at Warton, were the
-great feasting and drinking; the funeral dole, distributed to the poor;
-the casting of odoriferous herbs into the grave; and the cake and
-_arval_-ale, already described, pp. 270, 271, _supra_.[197]
-
-
-FUNERAL CUSTOMS IN THE FYLDE.
-
-When the last offices of respect to a departed friend or neighbour were
-to be rendered, a whole district, called "their side" of the country,
-was "bidden" or invited to assist in carrying the remains to their
-narrow home. At a stated hour the crowd assembled, not to mourn with
-widowed wife or weeping children, but to consume ale and tobacco, and to
-talk over their farms or trade till all was in readiness to depart for
-the completion of the obsequies. A particular order was observed. From
-the door of his former home, and into, and out of, the church, the
-corpse was carried on the shoulders of four of his relatives--his
-nearest kinsman, the chief mourner, walking in front with the clergyman.
-At the close of the ceremony, after the sprigs of box or rosemary had
-been deposited on the coffin, each person also adding a sprinkling of
-dust, the rough voice of the parish clerk was heard grating harshly in
-that solemn moment, inviting the "bidden" to show further their respect
-to the deceased by partaking of a dinner provided at the village inn.
-How the day terminated may be supposed, and indeed was a matter of sad
-notoriety. Indeed, it was not very unusual to see those who were to
-convey the dead to the sepulchre, tottering from intoxication under
-their sad burden. The best features of these old-time funerals were that
-doles in money were distributed to the aged and the very young; the poor
-were fed, and sometimes warm cloaks or other useful articles of attire
-were given, to be worn in memory of the departed.[198] Fifty-five years
-ago, says Mr. Thornber, writing in 1837, the more respectable portion of
-the inhabitants of Poulton were buried by candle-light--a custom long
-observed by some of the oldest families in the town. It was regarded as
-a sacred duty to expose a lighted candle in the window of every house as
-the corpse passed through the streets towards the church for interment;
-and he was poor indeed who did not pay this tribute of respect to the
-dead. So late as 1813 this church was strewed with rushes.
-
-
-MODE OF BURIAL OF A WIDOW WHO HAD TAKEN RELIGIOUS VOWS.
-
-A daughter of William Balderstone, of Balderstone, in her widowhood,
-makes a will of which the following is the commencement:--"Seventh day
-of January, 1497. I, Dame Jane Pilkington, widow, make and ordain this
-my last will and testament: First, I bequeath my bodye to be buried in
-y^e Nunnes Quire of Monketon, in my habit, holding my hand upon my
-breast, with my ring upon my finger, having taken in my resolves the
-mantel and the ring," &c.[199]
-
-
-FUNERAL CUSTOMS IN EAST LANCASHIRE.
-
-In _Nicholas Assheton's Journal_, he mentions that the corpse of a Mrs.
-Starkie was carried to church by four relatives; there was a sermon, and
-afterwards dinner, forty messes being provided for. On this, Dr.
-Whitaker remarks:--"An ancient usage. The nearest relations always took
-up the corpse at the door; and once more, if the distance was
-considerable, at the church gates. By forty messes, I suppose are to be
-understood so many dishes of meat." The editor (the Rev. Canon Raines)
-adds:--"This custom, which appears to be quite patriarchal, is still
-prevalent in some of the country parishes in South Lancashire. The
-custom of preaching funeral sermons on the day of the burial is now
-exploded, although so recently as 1776 the vicar of one of the largest
-parishes in Lancashire (Rev. John White, B.A., of Blackburn), objected
-to the building of a church in his parish unless he had 'some
-compensation made for the funeral sermons to be preached in it.'[200] I
-should rather understand the forty messes to be dinners provided for
-forty persons, although funerals in Lancashire at this period were
-conducted on a scale of prodigality scarcely to be conceived." [_The
-House and Farm Accounts of the Shuttleworths_ give examples of three
-burial customs--that of a dole to the poor; at one place 40_s._ 7_d._,
-at another 57_s._ 4_d._, at a third 47_s._ 8_d._ (?) a penny to each
-person; that of payment to the clergyman for a funeral sermon, in one
-case 5_s._; and that of providing dinners for the mourners, chiefly for
-those from a distance, in one case twenty-four messes of meat cost
-58_s._ 8_d._; in another instance seventy dined at 6_d._ the mess or
-meal, seventy-six and sixty-five at 5_d._; in all 211 persons attending
-one funeral.--EDS.]
-
-
-BIDDING TO FUNERALS.
-
-Previously to the formation of cemeteries, and the employment of
-omnibus-hearses, it was customary to invite large numbers to attend
-funerals. Guests were invited by _dozens_; and as each entered the house
-where the deceased lay, he was met at the door by a female attendant
-habited in black, and wearing a white apron, who offered him spiced
-liquor from a silver tankard. In the house each person was presented
-with a bun and a slice of currant bread. When the time for closing up
-the coffin arrived, each took his last look at the corpse and presented
-a shilling, or more, to the nearest relative of the deceased; who always
-sat at the head of the coffin for this purpose. In the neighbourhoods of
-Little Hulton, Peel Yate, Walkden Moor, &c., it was till of late years
-the custom for two persons to be nominated as "bidders" of guests to a
-funeral. These went to the various houses of the persons to be invited,
-and presented to each a sprig of rosemary; which the guest wore or
-carried in the hand at the funeral. This inviting or "bidding" was
-usually called "lating" or "lathing;" from the A.-S. verb _Lathian_, to
-invite, bid, or send for.
-
-
-SITUATION AND DIRECTION OF GRAVES.
-
-As churches are built to stand about East and West, the greatest spaces
-in the churchyard are the North and South sides of the church.
-Throughout Lancashire and the North of England there is a universal
-superstition that the south side of the church is the holiest or most
-consecrated ground, and it may be observed that that side of the
-graveyard is generally crowded with grave-stones, or green hillocks of
-turf, while the north side has but few. This is an old superstition,
-which held that the north side of the church was really unhallowed
-ground, fit only to be the last resting place of still-born infants and
-suicides. Then almost all graves are ranged east and west; and in a rare
-tract of the Marprelate series, called "_Martin's Month's Mind_" (1589)
-it is stated that "he would not be laid east and west (for he ever went
-against the hair), but north and south: I think because 'Ab aquilone
-omne malum' (from the north comes all evil), and the south wind ever
-brings corruption with it." The celebrated antiquary Thomas Hearne, left
-orders for his grave to be made straight by a compass, due east and
-west. Sir Thomas Browne[201] observes that "the Persians were buried
-lying north and south; the Megarians and Ph[oe]nicians placed their
-heads to the east; the Athenians, some think, towards the west, which
-Christians still retain; and Bede will have it to be the posture of our
-Saviour." One "Article of Inquiry" in a visitation of the Bishop of Ely
-in 1662, was--"When graves are digged, are they made six feet deep (at
-the least), and east and west?"
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[193] Rev. John Booker, Prestwich, in _Notes and Queries_, v. 543.
-
-[194] _Richmondshire_, ii. 298.
-
-[195] In many instances, in social feasts, four persons were regarded as
-a "mess."
-
-[196] The Rev. Mr. Hodgson's _Description of Westmorland_.
-
-[197] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-[198] Rev. W. Thornber's _History of Blackpool_.
-
-[199] Dr. Whitaker's _Whalley_, addenda.
-
-[200] _Lancashire MSS.--Letters._
-
-[201] In his _Urn Burial_.
-
-
-
-
-CUSTOMS OF MANORS.
-
-
-This subject would require extensive notice, if the materials requisite
-for its elucidation were more numerous and accessible. All prescriptive
-customs of manors have existed beyond what is termed "legal
-memory"--_i.e._, from the reign of Richard I. (1189-1199). Many others,
-relating to the military and other free tenures of the chief tenants of
-manors, and to the socage and inferior or servile tenures, with the
-boons of the cottagers, &c., and the various services attached to these
-different tenures, would make a very curious piece of history of customs
-and usages; but these are usually recorded only in private grants,
-charters, and other deeds, or in copy-rolls and other records of manors,
-not generally accessible. The following are some examples:--
-
-
-THE HONOUR OF KNIGHTHOOD.
-
-In the early ages of our history, the honour of knighthood, with the
-military services to which it was incident under the feudal system, was
-often forced upon the subject. In the year 1278, a writ to the Sheriff
-of Lancashire commanded him to distrain upon all persons seised of land
-of the value of L20 yearly, whether held of the King _in capite_, or of
-any other lords who ought to be knights and were not; and all such were
-ordered forthwith to take out their patent of knighthood. Fourteen years
-after this, a writ was issued, wherein the qualification was raised to
-double the amount; and a writ, dated 6th February, 1292, was issued to
-the Sheriff of Lancashire (with others), proclaiming that all persons
-holding lands in fee, or of inheritance, of the value of L40 per annum,
-must take the order of knighthood before Christmas in that year. The
-crown might relax or vary these services: hence a writ to the Sheriff of
-Lancashire recites "that the commonalty of England, having performed
-good services against the Welsh, the king excuses persons not holding
-lands of the value of L100 yearly from taking the order of knighthood;"
-but all holding above that amount, and not taking the order before the
-Nativity of the Virgin (Sept. 8), were to be distrained upon.
-Subsequently, injunctions were addressed to the Sheriff, commanding him
-to make extents of the lands of those refusing to take the order of
-knighthood, and to hold them for the king until further orders. Another
-writ to the Sheriff of Lancashire, of 6th April, 1305, directs him to
-proclaim that all who should become knights, and are not, must repair to
-London before the following Whit Sunday to receive that distinction, if
-properly qualified.[202]
-
-
-MARITAGIUM.
-
-On the marriage of the Princess Alianora (sister of Edward III.) with
-the Earl of Guelders, an order was issued to the abbot of Furness, and
-to the priors of Burscough, Up-Holland, and Hornby, as well as to the
-abbot of Whalley, and to the priors of Cartmell and Coningshead,
-requesting them to levy the subsidy on their respective houses, towards
-the _Maritagium_, an impost of early times, which ceased with the feudal
-system.[203] This order the priests were slow to obey, in consequence of
-which another letter was issued by the king from Pontefract, reminding
-them of their neglect, and ordering them to communicate their intention
-to the proper authority. No further documents appear on the subject; and
-it may be presumed that this second application produced the desired
-effect.[204]
-
-
-PECULIAR SERVICES AND TENURES.
-
-The following are entries in the "Testa de Nevill," a book supposed to
-have been compiled towards the close of the reign of Edward II. or the
-beginning of that of Edward III., and consequently to exhibit the
-services and tenures existing about the beginning of the 12th
-century:--Thomas and Alicia de Gersingham, by keeping the king's
-[John's] hawks in Lonsdale, till they became strong, when they were to
-be committed to the Sheriff of Lancashire. Luke Pierpoint, by keeping an
-aery; Adam de Hemelesdale, by constabulary at Crosby. Quenilda de
-Kirkdale, by conducting royal treasure. Richard Fitz Ralph, by
-constabulary at Singleton. John de Oxeclive, by being carpenter at
-Lancaster Castle. Adam Fitz Gilmighel, by being the king's carpenter.
-Roger the carpenter, by being carpenter in Lancaster Castle. Ralph Barun
-or Babrun, by being mason in Lancaster Castle. Walter, son of Walter
-Smith, by forging iron instruments. Roger Gernet, by being chief
-forester. William Gernet, by the service of meeting the king on the
-borders of the city, with his horse and white rod, and conducting him
-into and out of the city. William and Benedict de Gersingham, by the
-sergeantry of keeping the king's aeries of hawks. Gilbert Fitz Orm, by
-paying yearly 3_d._ or some spurs to Benedict Gernet, the heir of Roger
-de Heton, in thanage. Roger de Leycester, by paying 8_s._ and two arrows
-yearly. A great number of persons in thanage: others in drengage. John
-de Thoroldesholme, by larderery; Roger de Skerton, by provostry. Roger
-Fitz John, by making irons for the king's ploughs. Others, by gardenry,
-and by masonry, or the service of finding pot-herbs and leeks for
-Lancaster castle, smith's work, and carpentry; the burgesses of
-Lancaster, by free-burgage and by royal charter. Peter de Mundevill, by
-service of one brachet [a sort of hound] of one colour. The prior of
-Wingal, by he knows not what service. Lady Hillaria Trussebut, by no
-service, and she knows not by what warrant. Henry de Waleton, by being
-head sergeant or bailiff of the Hundred of Derbyshire [_i.e._, West
-Derby]. Galfridus Balistarius [Geoffrey Balistur] by presenting two
-cross-bows to the king. William Fitz William, by presenting one brachet,
-one _velosa_ [? a piece of velvet] and two _lintheamina_ [pieces of
-linen cloth]. Roger Fitz Vivian holds the sergeantry of Heysham, by
-blowing the horn before the king at his entrance into and exit from the
-city of Lancaster. Thomas Gernet, in Heysham, by sounding the horn on
-meeting the king on his arrival in those parts. William Gresle, by
-presenting a bow without string, a quiver, 12 arrows, and a _buzon_ [?
-possibly a quiver or arrow-case]. William Fitz Waukelin, by presenting
-one soar-hawk. Hervi Gorge, by presenting one plough, one _linthola_
-[piece of linen cloth], one _velosa_ [piece of velvet], and one
-_auricular_ [? a veil for the confessional]. Roger and Hugh de
-Auberville, by keeping one hawk. Several religious houses held in pure
-and free and perpetual alms, or what the Normans styled
-"Frank-almoigne." A large number of persons held by donation, in
-consideration of yearly rents, and some of these were nominal, as "a
-pepper-corn, if demanded," "a clove," "a red rose on St. John the
-Baptist's Day" (24th June), "a pair of white gloves or a peny," a
-"Manchester knife," &c.
-
-SMITHELLS.--The mesne manor of Smithells in Sharples, near Bolton, is
-dependent upon the superior manor of Sharples, the lord of which claims
-from the owner of Smithells a pair of gilt spurs annually; and, by a
-very singular and inconvenient custom, the unlimited use of the cellars
-at Smithells Hall for a week in every year.[205]
-
-It does not appear, however, that the lord of Smithells was bound to the
-quantity or to the quality of the liquors with which his cellars were at
-that time to be stored. This feudal claim seems now nearly abandoned, as
-it has not been enforced within the present century.[206]
-
-
-MANOR OF COCKERHAM.--REGULATIONS FOR THE SALE OF ALE.
-
-The customs' dues of this manor appear to have been originally ordained
-by Brother William Geryn, cellarer of the Abbey of Cokersand, in 1326,
-and were confirmed by John the Abbot in 1st Richard III. (1483-4). The
-confirmation is in the English of the period; and among other curious
-ordinances, contains the following regulation as to the price, &c., of
-ale (the spelling is modernised):--"There shall no brewer let no tenant
-for to have ale for their silver out of their house, and such [may] have
-four gallons within their house, so that they bring a vessel with them.
-Ye shall not sell a gallon of ale above a halfpenny when ye may buy a
-quarter of good oats for 2_d._ Ye shall give ale-founders [manorial
-officers also called ale-tasters] a founding-gallon, or else a taste of
-each vessel, and your charge, on pain [penalty] of grievous
-amerciaments."[207]
-
-
-MANORIAL CUSTOMS IN FURNESS.
-
-KIRKBY IRELETH.--In this manor the widow is entitled during her
-widowhood to the moiety of the estate whereof her husband died seised;
-but forfeits her right thereto upon re-marriage or breach of chastity.
-Every tenant, upon being admitted to a tenement, pays to the lord of the
-manor 20 years' quit-rent for a fine. Every entire tenement was formerly
-obliged to keep one horse and harness, for the king's service, on the
-borders or elsewhere. These were called "summer [? sumpter] nags," of
-which 30 were kept in Kirkby. The tenant was also to furnish a boon
-plough and a boon-harrow, that is, a day's ploughing and harrowing; and
-no one is to let his land for any time exceeding 7 years, without
-licence. Tenements in this manor are forfeited to the lord by treason or
-felony. A tenant convicted of wilful perjury forfeits to the lord 20
-years' rent, and for petty larceny, 10 years' rent.
-
-PENNINGTON.--Pennington is the smallest parish in the county, and
-contains fewer streams than any other parish in North Lonsdale. Some
-feudal customs, obsolete in most places, are still observed in the manor
-of Pennington. A tenant on admission pays a fine of 16 years' quit-rent.
-On the death of the lord and on every change of the lord by descent, the
-tenant pays a further fine of 6 years' quit-rent; and a running-fine,
-town-term, or _gressom_, is payable every 7th year. The heir, where
-there is a widow, pays a heriot. Every tenant must plant two trees of
-the same kind for every one that he fells. Formerly every tenant was
-obliged to carry a horse-load once a year to Manchester and half a
-horse-load to Lancaster. In 1318 a dispute between the Pennington family
-and the Abbot of Furness, as to boon services, was thus decided:--"That
-the manor of Pennington was held by the service of 30_s._, and of
-finding yearly, for one day in autumn, a man and woman, sufficient to
-mow at the Grange of Lindale, for every house with a court-yard except
-Sir William de Pennington's capital messuage; the convent to find the
-daily refreshment of each mower while employed, according to ancient
-custom; and Sir William granting that all the tenants of the manor, who
-had or might have ploughs, should plough half an acre of the Abbot's
-Grange at Lindale."[208]
-
-MUCHLAND.--Immediately after the Conquest Aldingham was granted to
-Michael Flandrensis or le Fleming, and his land was called Michael's
-land, to distinguish it from that of the abbey of Furness; spelled often
-Mychel-land and Mychelande, till it got corrupted into Muchland. In the
-manor of Muchland, the tenant on being admitted to his tenement pays to
-the lord of the manor two years' rent over and above the usual annual
-rent. Every tenant paying 40_s._ rent was formerly obliged to find a
-horse and harness for the King's service, on the borders or elsewhere.
-Every tenant who paid 20_s._ a year rent, was to furnish a man harnessed
-for the King's service. Every old tenant paid a _gressom_ of one year's
-rent on the death of the lord, and every new tenant pays two years' rent
-to the next heir. The widow has one-third of the tenement during her
-chaste widowhood. If a tenement is not presented within a year and a day
-after the death of the tenant, or if it be sold, set, or let without
-paying the fine, or _gressom_, for a year and a day, then the lord, if
-there be not good distress upon the grounds, may seize such tenement
-into his hands as a forfeiture, &c.
-
-LOWICK.--Here the customs are much the same as in Kirkby Ireleth, except
-as to forfeitures. The running _gressom_, or town term, is a year's rent
-every seventh year, paid to the lord. There are four house-lookers
-annually appointed for reviewing and assigning timber for necessary
-repairs.
-
-NEVIL HALL.--The admittance fine is two years' rent, over and above the
-accustomed yearly rent. The heriot, on the change of lord, is half a
-year's rent. The running _gressom_, or town-term, is half a year's rent
-every seventh year. Every tenant paying 20_s._ rent was formerly to keep
-a horse harnessed in readiness for the King's service. The widow in this
-manor, if the first wife, to have half the tenement; but if she be a
-latter wife, then only one-third the tenement. A tenant may, whenever he
-pleases, give his tenement to any of his sons; and in default of sons to
-any of his daughters, as he thinks fit. A tenant may let, or mortgage,
-any tenement or part of it for a year, without a licence; and may sell
-his whole tenant-right, or any part of it, with licence from the lord.
-The rents mentioned above are old and immutable rents.[209]
-
-MUCH-URSWICK.--These customs include a fine of 20_d._ to the lord of the
-manor on every change of tenancy, or on the death of the lord; except
-one large house, which paying 4_s._ rent, paid a fine of five times the
-lord's rent, or 5_d._ on the death of the lord, or a change of tenancy.
-The tenant's widow had half the estate during chaste widowhood. The
-tenants were obliged to carry a single horse-load, anciently fish, once
-a year to Mowbreck Hall, near Kirkham; but this service was commuted for
-a small rent called carriage rent. Tenements in this manor, on treason
-or felony by the tenant are forfeited to the lord. A tenant convicted of
-wilful perjury, forfeits to the lord twenty years' rent, and for petty
-larceny, ten years' rent.[210]
-
-THE ROYAL MANOR OF WARTON.--These customs are similar in many respects
-to those of the duchy manors in Furness. In the reign of Elizabeth a
-commission of survey, and a jury of twenty-four, from the neighbouring
-manors, made a return of the customs, which were confirmed by the Court
-of Exchequer. These manorial bye-laws are applicable to customary
-tenants, and relate to the subjects of heirships, performance of suit
-and service, the powers of the steward, the enrolling of tenants, the
-payment of rents, amounts of fines, &c. A fine of two years' rent is to
-be imposed on changes of tenantry; all tenants paying above 20_s._ rent
-were required to maintain a horse and man with armour, tenants paying
-under 20_s._ being commanded to serve in person: these services to be
-strictly and fully executed in cases of need. Each tenant is directed to
-repair his own homestead. In case of the death of a married tenant,
-one-half of the tenement is assigned to the widow, to be held during her
-chaste widowhood, and the other half to the heir or heirs. The crime of
-fornication to be punished with forfeiture. Tenants not to set, let, or
-mortgage for above three years without licence; not to encroach on the
-common without permission. The manor court to have jurisdiction in cases
-of tithe and tenant right; the tenants to be at liberty to take ash
-wood. The tenants are not to be abated in their rents for any loss they
-may suffer in their several proportions of turbary, marsh and common.
-These manorial regulations are now but seldom enforced, and the Court
-Baron of Warton assembles only on rare occasions, not uncommonly after
-intervals of years.[211]
-
-FEUDAL PRIVILEGES OF THE HONOUR AND MANOR OF HORNBY.--These ancient
-privileges comprised free warren, subject to a fine of 10_l._ on
-encroachments on the King's forests; right of market and fair at
-Arkholme and at Hornby; court of view of frank-pledge; sheriff's turn;
-free court of all pleas; assize of bread; soc, sac, tol, and them;
-infangetheof and utfangetheof; hamsocn; leyrwite; murder; acquittance of
-shires and hundreds, lestage [or lastage], aids of sheriffs and their
-bailiffs, and amercements; wardships, and works and enclosures of
-castles, parks, and bridges; and of passage, frontage, stallage, toll,
-paiage, and money given for murder; and right to pontage, stallage,
-hidage, and pickage. All these feudal customs were confirmed in the 12th
-Charles I. (1636) to Henry Parker, Lord Morley and Monteagle.[212]
-
-A number of the above terms require explanation. "Money given for
-murder," implied the fines levied on a district in which a murder had
-been committed, and the criminal not discovered; "the privilege of
-murder" was the power to levy such fines; thus the town or hundred which
-suffered an Englishman, who had killed a Dane there to escape, was to be
-amerced sixty-six marks [44_l._] to the King. _Hamsocn_, is the
-privilege or liberty of a man's own house, its violation is burglary.
-_Leyr_ or _lecher wite_, is the privilege of punishing adultery and
-fornication. Passage is a toll for passing over water, as at a ford or
-ferry; pontage is bridge toll; stallage, a toll for stalls in a market;
-paiage or pavage, is a paving toll. _Sac_, the right of a lord to hold
-pleas in his court, in causes of trespass among his tenants; _soc_, the
-right to administer justice and execute laws; _toll_, the right to levy
-tolls on tenants; _them_, the right to hear, restrain, and judge bondmen
-and villeins, with their children, goods and chattels, &c.
-_Infangetheof_, the lord's privilege to judge any thief taken within his
-fee. _Outfangtheof_, the right of the lord to call men dwelling within
-his manor, and taken for felony outside his fee, to judgment in the
-lord's own court.
-
-
-THE LORD'S YULE FEAST AT ASHTON.
-
-Among the customs of the Manor of Ashton-under-Lyne, as described by the
-late Dr. Hibbert-Ware, was the making of so-called "presents" by the
-tenants-at-will to the lord of the manor, for the sake of partaking in
-the annual feast at the great hall. In the rental of Sir John de
-Assheton, made in November 1422, these presents are claimed as an
-obligatory service from the tenants-at-will, in the following
-terms:--"That they shall give their presents at Yole [Christmas]; every
-present to such a value as is written and set in the rental; and the
-lord shall feed all his said tenants, and their wifes, upon Yole-day at
-the dinner, if they like for to come; but the said tenants and their
-wifes, though it be for their ease not to come, they shall send neither
-man nor woman in their name,--but if [unless] they be their son or their
-daughter dwelling with them,--unto the dinner; for the lord is not
-bounden to feed them all, only the good man and the good wife." In some
-manor-houses of Lancashire, once dedicated to these annual scenes of
-festivity, may be observed an elevation of the floor [or _dais_] at the
-extremity of the great hall, or, in the place of it, a gallery which
-stretches along one side of the room [many halls have both _dais_ and
-gallery] to accommodate the lord and his family, so that they might not
-be annoyed by the coarse rustic freedoms which the tenants would be too
-apt to take during the hours of their conviviality. In a hall, then, of
-this kind in the manor-house at Assheton, we may imagine the large Yule
-fire to be kindled; while in a gallery or raised floor Sir John of
-Assheton, his lady, and family, together with his kinsmen, Elland of
-Brighouse, and Sir John the Byron, are feasting apart, yet attentive to
-the frolics or old songs of the company below. It was on these occasions
-that peg-tankards were used, and horns that bore the names of the Saxons
-and Danes, whom the Normans had ousted out of their possessions. Of the
-description of ale that flowed merrily on these occasions we know
-little; but there can be no doubt that it was like King Henry the
-Eighth's ale, which contained neither hops nor brimstone. We may
-suppose, then, that on annual festivals like these, the wooden bowl or
-horn would pass freely through the hands of Sir John of Assheton's
-tenants-at-will; among whom were such personages as Hobbe Adamson, Hobbe
-of the Leghes, William the arrow-smith, Roger the baxter, Roger le
-smith, Jack the spencer, Jack the hind, Elyn Wilkyn daughter, Elyn the
-rose, and the widows Mergot of Staley, Peryn's wife, and Nan of the
-Windy Bank,--all clad in their best hoods, and brown woollen jackets and
-petticoats. The ancient musical instruments used in Lancashire were a
-kind of fiddle, not of the present form, and a stringed instrument
-called the virginals. The provincial songs of that period, few of which
-were less than half-an-hour in length, rehearsed the deeds of Launcelot
-du Lake, and his conquest of the giant Tarquin, at the castle of
-Manchester; Ranulph of Chester, and his wars in the Holy Land; or the
-warlike feats and amorous prowess of the renowned Cheshire hero, Roger
-de Calverley. In order to preserve, as much as possible, the degree of
-decorum that was necessary at such meetings, there was firstly
-introduced a diminutive pair of stone stocks, of about eighteen inches
-in length, for confining within them the fingers of the unruly. This
-instrument was entrusted to the general prefect of manorial festivities
-named the King of Misrule, whose office it was to punish all who
-exceeded his royal notions of decency. Accordingly such a character
-appears among the list of Sir John of Assheton's tenants, under the name
-of Hobbe the king. From these entertainments being supported by the
-contributions of the tenants, they were derisively called _Drink-leans_.
-[_Laen_, A.-S. a loan, a gift, a reward; _Laene_, adj., lean, slender,
-fragile.][213]
-
-
-RIDING THE BLACK LAD AT ASHTON-UNDER-LYNE.
-
-In the rental of Sir John Assheton, knight, of his Manor of
-Ashton-under-Lyne, A.D. 1422, it is stated that two of his sons, Rauf of
-Assheton, and Robyn of Assheton, by grants to them, "have the sour carr
-guld rode and stane rynges for the term of their lives." This donation
-(says Dr. Hibbert-Ware) evidently alludes to the privilege of
-_Guld-riding_, a custom that in Scotland at least is of great antiquity,
-having been intended to prevent lands from being over-run with the
-weeds, which, from their yellow colour, were named _gools_ or _gulds_,
-_i.e._, the corn-marigold, or _Chrysanthemum Segetum_ of Linn. Boethius
-(lib. 10) mentions a law of king Kenneth (probably rather of Alexander
-II.) to prevent the growth of _manaleta_ or _guld_, and to impose a fine
-of oxen on proof of its infraction. The Rev. J. P. Bannerman, in a
-statistical account of the parish of Cargill, in Perthshire, states that
-with a view of extirpating this weed, "after allowing a reasonable time
-for procuring clean seed from other grounds, an act of the Baron Court
-was passed, enforcing an old Act of Parliament to the same effect,
-imposing a fine of 3_s._ 4_d._, or a wether sheep, on the tenants for
-every stock of _gool_ that should be found growing in their corn at a
-particular day; and certain persons styled _gool-riders_ were appointed
-to ride through the fields, search for _gool_, and carry the law into
-execution when they discovered it. Though the fine of a wether sheep is
-now commuted and reduced to a penny, the practice of _gool-riding_ is
-still kept up, and the fine rigidly exacted." To this origin Dr.
-Hibbert-Ware attributes the custom peculiar to Ashton-under-Lyne of
-"Riding the Black Lad." He states that in the days of Sir John of
-Assheton (A.D. 1422) a large portion of low wet land in the vicinity of
-Assheton was named the Sour Carr (carr being synonymous with the Scotch
-word _carse_, and the well-known term _sour_ implying an impoverished
-state of the carr). It had been over-run with corn-marigolds or
-carr-gulds, which were so destructive to the corn that the lord of the
-manor enforced some rigorous measures for their extirpation, similar to
-the carr-guld riding in Perthshire. Ralph of Assheton, Sir John's son by
-a second marriage, and Robin, his brother, were on a certain day in the
-spring [Easter-Monday] invested with the power of riding over the lands
-of the carr, named the _Carr Guld Rode_, of levying fines for all
-_carr-gulds_ that were found among the corn, and, until the penalties
-were paid, of punishing transgressors by putting them into the [finger]
-_stocks_ or _stone rings_, or by incarceration. Ralph Assheton, by his
-alliance with a rich heiress, became the lord of the neighbouring manor
-of Middleton, and soon afterwards received the honour of knighthood;
-being at the same time entrusted with the office of Vice-Constable of
-the kingdom; and it is added, of Lieutenant of the Tower. Invested with
-such authorities, he committed violent excesses in this part of the
-kingdom. Retaining for life the privilege granted him in Ashton of
-Guld-riding, he, on a certain day in spring, made his appearance in the
-manor, clad in black armour (whence his name of the Black Lad or Black
-Boy) mounted on a charger, and attended with a numerous train of his own
-followers, in order to levy the penalty arising from the neglect of
-clearing the land from carr-gulds. The interference of so powerful a
-knight belonging to another township could not but be regarded by the
-tenants of Assheton as the tyrannical intrusion of a stranger; and as
-Sir Ralph, sanctioned by the political power given him by Henry VI.,
-exercised his privilege with the utmost severity, the name of the Black
-Lad is still regarded with sentiments of horror. Tradition has, indeed,
-perpetuated the prayer that was fervently ejaculated for a deliverance
-from his tyranny:--
-
- Sweet Jesu! for thy mercy's sake,
- And for thy bitter passion,
- Save us from the axe of the Tower,
- And from Sir Ralph of Ashton.
-
-Upon the death of the Black Knight, Sir John's heir and successor
-abolished the usage for ever, reserving for the estate a small sum of
-money for the purpose of perpetuating, in an annual ceremony, the
-dreaded annual visits of the Black Boy. This is still kept up. An effigy
-is made of a man in armour; and since Sir Ralph was the son of a second
-marriage (which, for this reason, had been esteemed by the heir of Sir
-John as an unfortunate match) the image is deridingly emblazoned with
-some emblem of the occupation of the first couple that are linked
-together in the course of the year. [Mr. Edwin Butterworth says with the
-initials of their names.] The Black Boy is then fixed on horseback, and,
-after being led in procession round the town, is dismounted, made to
-supply the place of a shooting-butt, and, all fire-arms being in
-requisition for the occasion, he is put to an ignominious death. [The
-origin of Riding the Black Lad, here suggested, is exceedingly
-ingenious; but it seems questionable whether any real data for it are
-given in the single passage cited from the rental of 1422. "The Sour
-Carr Guld Rode and the Stane Ringes" taken as they stand, may mean the
-Guld-ruyding, or ridding, as a piece of land cleared of stumps, &c., was
-called; _ex. gr._ Hunt-royd, Orme-rod, Blake-rod, &c. The Stone Rings
-may be a piece of land so-called. There is no mention of the power to
-levy penalties, nor even of any official riding, but only the
-_rode_,--not road, as it has been interpreted, but ridded land, perhaps
-cleared from gulds and weeds, no less than from stubs, stumps, and
-stones.--EDS.][214]
-
-Mr. Roby, from the above materials, has written a tale of Sir Ralph's
-cruel seizure of a widow's only cow, as the heriot due to him as lord of
-the manor, on the death of her husband. Her half-witted son is said to
-have told Sir Ralph that on his death his master the devil would claim a
-heriot, and that Sir Ralph himself would be given up. On this Sir Ralph
-took fright, and sent back the heriot cow to the poor widow. Another
-tradition exists as to the origin of the custom of "Riding the Black
-Lad," which Mr. Roby thinks may have been fabricated merely to throw off
-the odium attached to the name of Sir Ralph. In the reign of Edward III.
-one Thomas Assheton fought under Queen Philippa in the battle of
-Neville's Cross. Riding through the ranks of the enemy, he bore away the
-royal standard from the Scotch king's tent, who himself was afterwards
-taken prisoner. King Edward, on his return from France, conferred on
-Thomas the honour of knighthood, with the title of "Sir Thomas Assheton
-of Assheton-under-Lyne." To commemorate this singular display of valour,
-Sir Thomas instituted the custom of "Riding the Black Knight or Lad" at
-Assheton, on Easter-Monday; leaving 10_s._ yearly to support it,
-together with his own suit of black velvet, and a coat of mail. Which of
-these accounts of the origin of the custom is correct, there is now no
-evidence to determine.
-
-
-BOON SHEARING.
-
-In the manor of Ashton-under-Lyne, every tenant-at-will was thus
-commanded:--"He that plough has, shall plough two days. He that half
-plough has, shall plough a day, whenever the lord be liever [more
-willing], in wheet-seeding, or in lenton-seeding; and every tenant
-harrow a day with their harrow, in seeding time, when they bin charged.
-And they should cart, every tenant ten cartful of turve from Doneam Moss
-to Assheton, and shere four days in harvest, and cart a day corn." This
-service, so profitable to the lord, was familiarly called boon-work.
-Hence an old adage still retained in the North of England, when a man is
-supposed to be working for nothing, that "he has been served like a
-boon-shearer."[215]
-
-
-THE PRINCIPAL OR HERIOT.
-
-One of the services of Sir John Assheton's tenants-at-will, in the manor
-of Ashton-under-Lyne, in the fifteenth century, as appears by his rental
-of 1422, was that "they should pay a principal at their death, to wit,
-the best beast they have." This was evidently a heriot. As of a military
-vassal, or tenant by knight-service, his horse was the heriot due to his
-lord at death; so the custom became extended to that class of dependents
-who were retained in the lord's employ to perform the busier services of
-the manor. As their property consisted of cattle, or of implements of
-husbandry, the heriot due to the lord was the best beast, cow, or horse,
-of which the tenant might die possessed. This condition being fulfilled,
-every further claim upon the goods of the deceased was remitted. At
-times this expressive relic of ancient military subjection was found
-exceedingly galling. In the manor of Assheton there are many traditional
-stories still remaining on the subject of such principals or heriots. A
-tenant's boy, on the death of his father, was driving an only cow to the
-manor-house of the adjoining demesnes of Dukinfield. He was met by the
-lord of the place, with whose person and rank he was unacquainted, who
-questioned him whither he was taking his beast. "I am driving it as far
-as Dukinfield for the heriot," replied the boy. "My father is dead--we
-are many children--and we have no cow but this. Don't you think the
-devil will take Sir Robert for a heriot, when he dies?" The lad was
-fortunately addressing a humane landlord. "Take the cow back to thy
-mother; I know Sir Robert,--I am going to Dukinfield myself, and will
-make up the matter with him."[216]
-
-
-DENTON RENT-BOONS.
-
-The lands of the Denton estates of the Hollands were held in 1780 by
-seventeen tenants, subject to a rent of 294_l._ 6_s._ 8_d._ The entire
-property was held by lease of lives, and this rental was exclusive of
-fines paid on the renewal of leases. By the terms of their respective
-leases the tenants were also pledged to the payment of certain
-rent-boons, consisting of a dog and a cock, or (at the landlord's
-option) of their equivalent in money--for the dog 10_s._, for the cock
-1_s._; the landlord thus providing for his amusement in hunting and
-cock-fighting in a manner least onerous to himself.[217]
-
-
-A SAXON CONSTABLEWICK.
-
-Until within these few years a relic of Saxon polity more ancient than
-the Domesday Survey existed in the Constablewick of Garstang, which
-continued to our own days, the _freo borh_, _friborg_, or Saxon manor,
-in a very perfect state. The free-burgh consisted of 11 townships,
-surrounding the original lordship to which all but one were subject. The
-reason for establishing this institution is stated in a Saxon law. The
-_Wita_, or counsellors, having considered the impunity with which
-trespasses against neighbours were committed, appointed over every ten
-friborgs, justiciaries whom they denominated _tien heofod_ or "head of
-ten." These (says Dr. Keuerden) handled smaller causes between townsmen
-and neighbours, and according to the degree of the trespass, awarded
-satisfaction; made agreements respecting pastures, meadows and
-corn-lands, and reconciled differences among neighbours. The
-constablewick of Garstang comprised the township of Garstang and ten
-other townships, all of which are styled hamlets in the books of the
-court, and were divided into three portions. Two constables were
-annually elected for this district, and were alternately taken from each
-third portion of the constablewick. The jury were nominated in a similar
-manner. The jury were accustomed to adjourn from the court to an
-eminence called Constable hillock, adjoining the river Wyre, where they
-made choice of the constables by inscribing their names upon slips of
-wood. These officers were empowered to collect the county-rates, and
-serve for all the hamlets. The court was held annually, by direction of
-a steward of the Duke of Hamilton, the superior lord of the wick, till
-1816, when it fell into neglect, and its powers are now exercised in
-such of the townships only as are the property of the Duke. The
-adjournment of the court to the hillock is obviously the remnant of a
-custom far more ancient than the institution of the friborg itself.[218]
-
-
-TALLIAGE OR TALLAGE.
-
-This was a kind of occasional property tax, levied by order of the
-monarch in emergencies, and throughout the kingdom. In the charter
-granted by Randle, Earl of Chester, to the burgesses of Stafford, about
-A.D. 1231, is a clause reserving to him and his heirs reasonable
-tallage, when the King makes or takes tallage of his burgesses
-throughout England. A precisely similar clause is found in Thomas
-Greslet's charter to his burgesses of Mamecestre in 1301. In the 11th
-Henry III. (1226-27) a still earlier talliage was made in Lancashire,
-which enables us to measure the relative importance of the principal
-towns in the county early in the thirteenth century. The impost was
-assessed by Master Alexander de Dorsete and Simon de Hal; and the
-payments were for the towns of Lancaster thirteen marks (L8 13_s._
-4_d._); Liverpool, eleven marks, 7_s._ 8_d._ (L7 14_s._ 4_d._); West
-Derby, seven marks, 7_s._ 8_d._ (L5 1_s._); Preston, fifteen marks,
-6_d._ (L10 0_s._ 6_d._). The tenants in thanage paid ten marks (L6
-13_s._ 4_d._) to have respite, that they might not be talliaged. Baines
-deems it remarkable that Manchester, Stafford, and Wigan were not
-included; but in these old manors it was the lord of the manor who had
-the right to levy talliage within his manor. In 1332 a tallage of
-one-fifteenth was levied by Edward III., to enable him to carry on the
-war against Scotland.[219]
-
-
-ROCHDALE TITHE, EASTER-DUES, MORTUARIES, ETC.
-
-The following is a literal copy of a small hand-bill in possession of
-the writer, which appears to have been printed for distribution among
-the farmers and the parishioners generally, with the purpose of
-supplying information as to the various payments to be made to the
-vicar, or at all events to the parish church:--
-
- An EXTRACT out of the _Parliament Survey_,
- Taken the 10th of _January_ 1620.
-
- The Parish of _Rochdale_ is divided into four Divisions, viz.
- _Hundersfield_, _Spotland_, _Castleton_, and _Butterworth_. There is
- also belonging to the Rectory of _Rochdale_, the Parish Chapel of
- _Saddleworth_, in the County of _York_; and certain Parcels of Glebe
- Lands, lying in _Saddleworth_.
-
- [*3] There is no Tythe Hay paid within the Parish, but a Penny a
- Year every one payeth that holdeth any Lands within the Parish.
-
- No Tythe paid for Eggs, Apples, Hemp, or Flax.
-
- The Manner of receiving the _Easter-Role_ and Mortuarys are
- thus--each Horse payeth a Penny; for every married Man or Widow at
- the Offering, a Penny; every Plough a Penny; every Swarm of Bees a
- Penny; every Cow one Penny; and every Colt, and every Calf, one
- Halfpenny.
-
- For Mortuarys--Every one buried in the Chancel payeth 6_s._ 8_d._
- every one that dieth worth twenty Nobles, in moveable Goods, over
- and above his Debts, payeth 3_s._ 4_d._ if worth 30_l._ payeth
- 6_s._ 8_d._ if worth 40_l._ or upwards, 10_s._--Stat. 21. Hen. 8.
- Chap. 6.
-
- N.B. That House or Smoke, and Garden, hath been substituted in the
- Room of Horse and Plough.
-
- In Closes where there are more than ten Stacks of Corn (or even
- tens) in one Close, _the odd Stacks shall not be tythed_; the
- Land-Owner setting up the Corn in Stacks, may be a good
- Consideration for the same; because of Common Right the Tytheman is
- to take the Corn Tythe in the Sheaf, but when the same is stacked,
- as is customary in many places, the Tytheman may not break any odd
- Stack, for he cannot tythe both by the Stack and Sheaf. And this
- was the Opinion of Serjeants _Poole_ and _Kenyan_, and of Lawyer
- _Wilson_.
-
- No Complaint concerning any small Tythes, &c. shall be determined
- by Justices of Peace, unless the Complaint be made within two Years
- after the same Tythes, &c. become due. Stat. 7. and 8. William 3.
- Chap. 6.
-
-
-FARM AND AGRICULTURAL CELEBRATIONS IN THE FYLDE.
-
-In the olden times almost every great agricultural operation had its
-peculiar festivities; now almost everywhere obsolete. The harvest home,
-its procession and feast, still linger the last of these rural
-celebrations, but shorn of much of its old ceremonial and jollity.
-"Shutting of marling" had also its gala-day. Then a "lord" and a "lady"
-presided at the feast; having been previously drawn out of the marl-pit
-by a strong team of horses, gaily decorated with ribbons, mounted by
-their drivers, who were trimmed out in their best. The procession
-paraded through the village lanes and streets, some of its members
-shaking tin boxes, and soliciting contributions from the bystanders. The
-money collected was expended in good cheer at the feast. Again,
-"Cob-seeding" was a time when mirth and good-nature prevailed. Like the
-"bee" of our American cousins, it was an occasion when all helped every
-one else in turn,--collecting, threshing, winnowing the crop on the
-field; "housing" the seed ready prepared for the market; and when all
-the work of the day was finished, partaking of a substantial supper, and
-closing the evening with many a merry dance on the barn's clay
-floor.[220]
-
-
-DALTON-IN-FURNESS.
-
-Among the ancient customs of Dalton, is the practice of hiring reapers
-on Sundays in time of harvest. Endeavours have been made to abolish it;
-but by the statute of 27 Henry VI. cap. 5, for suppressing
-Sabbath-breaking, four Sundays in harvest time are excepted from the
-prohibition against holding markets and fairs on holydays, and the
-people of Dalton have construed it to the hiring of such servants. Till
-of late years there was at Dalton an annual festival called "The Dalton
-Hunt," in which the gentlemen of the district partook of the sports of
-the field by day, and joined the ladies in the ball-room at night. A
-suite of rooms was erected in the town, and handsomely fitted-up for
-this annual jubilee, which existed as early as the year 1703, as appears
-from the columns of the _London Gazette_, in which it is styled "the
-Dalton Route," and the pen of an elegant contributor to the _Tatler_ has
-imparted to it additional celebrity. To the regret of the beaux and
-belles of the neighbourhood the "route" was discontinued in 1789, and
-has never since been revived.[221]
-
-
-LETTING SHEEP FARMS IN BOWLAND.
-
-One custom, in letting the great sheep-farms in the higher parts of
-Bowland, deserves to be mentioned, as I do not know that it prevails
-anywhere else. It is this: That the flock, often consisting of 2000
-sheep, or more, is the property of the lord, and delivered to the tenant
-by a schedule, subject to the condition of delivering up an equal number
-of the same quality at the expiration of the term. Thus the tenant is
-merely usufructuary of his own stock. The practice was familiar to the
-Roman law, and seems to have arisen from the difficulty of procuring
-tenants who were able to stock farms of such extent.[222]
-
-
-MEDIAEVAL LATIN LAW TERMS.
-
-The old charters and deeds of Manchester, Warrington, and other
-Lancashire towns, contain various words now obsolete, and amongst others
-the words _namare_ and _namium_, which it is not easy to render
-accurately. The first may be translated to seize in pledge, to arrest,
-to distrain; the second is a pledge, or a distress, what is seized by
-distraint. In connexion with the substantive _namium_, the following
-anecdote of the great Sir Thomas More may be told, as illustrative of
-the obscurity of some of these ancient law terms. It is said that Sir
-Thomas, when travelling, arrived at Padua just as a boasting Professor
-had placarded the walls of that University with a challenge to all the
-world to dispute with him on any subject or in any art, and that Sir
-Thomas accepted the challenge, and proposed for his subject this
-question:--
-
- "AN AVERIA CARUCAE CAPTA IN VETITO NAMIO SINT IRREPLEGIBILIA?"
-
-which, it is almost needless to add, proved such a stumbling-block to
-the challenger, who did not know even the very terms of the question,
-that he surrendered at discretion, and acknowledged himself
-vanquished.[223]
-
-Perhaps the best way to English the puzzling question, would be to
-render it thus:--"Whether plough-cattle, taken in illegal distress, are
-irrepleviable?" But several of the words are susceptible of two
-meanings. Thus _averia_ means goods, as well as cattle; _caruca_, a
-cart, as well as a plough; _namium_, a pledge, as well as a distress. It
-is not to be wondered at that the continental Professor found himself
-unable even to comprehend the terms of this perplexing question.
-
-
-CUSTOMS [DUES] AT WARRINGTON.
-
-Amongst the Tower records are three royal charters bearing date
-respectively 3 Edward II., 15 Edward II., and 12 Edward III. (1309-10,
-1321-2, 1338), and granting, for the purpose of effecting repairs in the
-bridges and pavements, certain temporary customs on articles brought
-into Warrington for sale. In the two first of these charters, a custom
-of one farthing is imposed on every 100 faggots and every 1000 turves;
-and of one halfpenny on every cart-load of wood or wind-blown timber.
-The last of the charters imposes a custom of one penny on every 1000
-faggots, one farthing on every 10,000 turves, one penny on every
-ship-load of turves, and one halfpenny weekly on every cart-load of wood
-and coals [_carbonum_, ? charcoal]. Amongst other articles, a custom was
-imposed on salt, on bacon, on cheese (probably from Cheshire), on
-butter, on lampreys, on salmon, on pelts of sheep, goats, stags, hinds,
-deer, does, hares, rabbits, foxes, cats, and squirrels; on cloths in the
-entire piece; on grice work (_i.e._, fur of the skins of blue weasels);
-on Cordovan leather, on oil in flasks (_lagenas olei_); on hemp, on
-linen webs; on Aylesbury webs and linen; on canvas, Irish cloths,
-Galways and worsteds; on silks, diapered with gold (_de Samite_) and
-tissue; on silks within gold; on sendal [or _cendal_, a kind of silk];
-on cloth of baudekin [silk cloth, interwoven with threads of gold]; on
-gads of maple, and on Aberdeen gads; on every tun of wine (_et
-cinerum_--the ashes of burnt wine lees); on honey; on wool in sacks; on
-tin, brass, copper, iron, and lead; on alum, copperas, argil, and
-verdigris; on onions and garlic; and on stock-fish, salt mullet,
-herrings, and sea-fish, amongst a number of other articles.[224]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[202] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[203] Claus., 7 Edward III., 1333, p. 1, m. 23.
-
-[204] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[205] Dr. Whitaker's _Whalley_.
-
-[206] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-[207] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-[208] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[209] West's _History of Furness_.
-
-[210] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-[211] Baines's _History of Lancashire_.
-
-[212] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[213] _Illustration of the Customs of a Manor in the North of England._
-
-[214] Dr. Hibbert-Ware's _Illustration of the Customs of a Manor in the
-North of England_.
-
-[215] Dr. Hibbert-Ware's _Illustration of the Customs of a Manor in the
-North of England_.
-
-[216] _Illustration of the Customs of a Manor in the North of England_,
-by Dr. Hibbert-Ware.
-
-[217] Rev. J. Booker's _Chapel of Denton_.
-
-[218] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[219] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[220] Rev. W. Thornber's _History of Blackpool_.
-
-[221] Baines's _Lancashire_.
-
-[222] Dr. Whitaker's _Whalley_.
-
-[223] Mr. Beamont's _Warrington in the Thirteenth Century_.
-
-[224] Mr. W. Beamont, in _Warrington in 1465_.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
- Agricultural and Farm Celebrations in the Fylde, 298
-
- Alchemists, 23;
- two Lancashire, 30
-
- Alchemy, 23
-
- Ale, price of, 281;
- of Halton, 259;
- Warrington, 259;
- Cockerham, 281
-
- Ale Founders, 281
-
- All-Souls Night, 49
-
- " Day, 251
-
- Apostle Spoons, 262
-
- Arrowsmith, Father, his execution and the dead hand, 158-163
-
- Arval, cake and ale, 270-272
-
- Ascension Day, or Holy Thursday, 249
-
- Ash-Wednesday, 221
-
- Ashton, (Sir Thomas), of Ashton, 30
-
- Ashton-under-Lyne, manorial customs of, 286, 289, 292, 293;
- the Lord's Yule Feast at, 286;
- Riding the Black Lad at, 289
-
- Assheton (Sir John de), 287
-
- " (Sir Ralph de), 290-292
-
- Astrologers, Lancashire, 33
-
- Astrology, 33
-
- Auld Wife Hakes, 216
-
- Averia (cattle, goods), 300, 301
-
- Aylesbury webs and linen, 302
-
-
- Baal Worship, 3-45
-
- Bacon, Customs' dues on, 301
-
- Ball, or "Old Ball," 234, 235
-
- Baptismal Customs, 260
-
- Barguest, bar- or barn-ghaist, 91
-
- Barnacle Geese, 116-121
-
- Bel, Belus, or Baal, 45
-
- Belisama, the River Ribble, 4
-
- Bells, church, 41, 42;
- passing and funeral, 41, 42;
- pancake, 44;
- curfew, 44;
- submarine, 44;
- verses, 42
-
- Beltane or Beltein fires, 3, 45, 47, 48
-
- Betrothing and bridal customs, 263
-
- Bible, for direction, divination, and dreams, 20
-
- Bible and key, 103
-
- Bidding to funerals, 274
-
- Birth and baptismal customs, 260
-
- Black Lad, at Ashton, 289
-
- Bleeding, charms to stop, 77
-
- Boggart, or bogle, 16;
- the name, 49;
- the flitting, 58
-
- Boggart Hole Clough, 50
-
- Boggarts, ghosts, and haunted places, 49;
- various, 58;
- in old halls, 51;
- in the nineteenth century, 61
-
- Bones of St. Lawrence at Chorley, 157
-
- Booker (John), of Manchester, astrologer, 34-38
-
- _Books of Fate_, 145
-
- Boon rents at Denton, 294
-
- Boon shearing at Ashton, 292, 293
-
- Bothe (Thomas del) his will, 241
-
- Bowland, letting sheep, &c., 300
-
- Bragot-Sunday, 225, 258
-
- Bridal bouquet, 268;
- flowers, _ib._
-
- Bride's chair at Warton, 265
-
- Brindle Church, footprint at, 134
-
- Bromley (Sir Edward), judge, 189
-
- Brownies or _lares_, 16
-
- Bryn Hall, the Gerards, and the dead man's hand, 158-163
-
- Bungerley stepping-stones, 90
-
- Burial by candle light, 273;
- of a widow in vows, _ib._
-
- Burnley, the church, 89;
- a witch near, 209;
- wedding customs at, 265
-
- Burying in woollen, 269
-
-
- Cards, 140
-
- Carlins, 258
-
- Carnaval, 217
-
- Carols, Christmas, 257
-
- Carr Gulds, 290
-
- Cartmel Church, Legend of, 137
-
- Cattle Diseases, Charms for, 79
-
- Celebrations, Farm and Agricultural, in the Fylde, 298
-
- Changelings, 263
-
- Charles I., King, 200, 240
-
- Charm, a, in cypher, 63
-
- Charms and spells, 62;
- against evil beings, _ib._;
- against sickness, wounds, &c., 74;
- crow, lady-bird, 70-71;
- to get drink, 72-74;
- against danger by night, 74;
- wounds, 74;
- toothache, 75;
- rheumatism and cramp, 75;
- ague, 80;
- nettle stings, _ib._;
- jaundice, _ib._;
- to get sleep, _ib._
-
- "Chattox, Old," a witch, 186-189
-
- Child, unbaptized, cannot die, 262
-
- Childbed presents, 260
-
- Childbirth, tea-drinking, 261
-
- " turning the bed after, 261
-
- Children, gifts to, 262
-
- Christianizing of pagan gods and festivals, 14
-
- Christmas, 252;
- mumming at, 253;
- carols, 254;
- games, 255;
- mutes, 256
-
- Christmas at Wycoller Hall, 256
-
- " Carols, 254;
- rhymes, 253
-
- Christmas customs in the Fylde, 254;
- games there, 255
-
- Christmas-day, old and new, 20;
- breakfast in the Fylde, 256
-
- Christmas Eve, creatures worshipping, 253;
- called "Flesh-day," 256
-
- " Evergreens, &c., 256
-
- Christmas Frumenty, 252, 256
-
- Christmas hobby-horse, 254
-
- Christmas or Yule Feast, at Ashton-under-Lyne, 286
-
- Church Festivals, 212, _et seq._
-
- Churches and Churchyards, north and south sides of, 275
-
- Cinderella and her slipper, 5
-
- Clayton Hall Boggart, 52
-
- Clegg Hall Boggart, 52
-
- Cleworth, Demoniacs in 1594, 92
-
- Clock-house Boggart, 52
-
- Cob-seeding, 298
-
- Cock-penny, at Clitheroe, 220
-
- Cock-throwing and Cock-fighting, 218;
- about Blackburn, 220;
- at Burnley, _ib._
-
- Cockerham Manor, 281;
- ale in, _ib._
-
- Cokersand Abbey, 281;
- abbot of, _ib._
-
- Collop Monday, 217
-
- Constablewick, a Saxon, 295
-
- Corals with bells, 262
-
- Corpse, carrying the, 272, 274
-
- Courting and Wedding Customs in the Fylde, 264
-
- Cousell and Clarke, conjurors, 86
-
- Cramp Rings, 75
-
- Creed and Little Creed, at Eccles, 114
-
- Cross-buns on Good Friday, 226
-
- Crow Charm, 70
-
- Curfew Bell, 44
-
- Customs of Manors, 276;
- in Furness, 281;
- Ashton, 286, 289
-
- Customs' dues at Warrington, 301
-
- "Cuthbert, Old mother," and her daughters, 177
-
-
- Dalton-in-Furness, funerals at, 271;
- manor, 299;
- hunt and rout, _ib._
-
- Dalton-in-Furness, hiring reapers on Sunday, 299
-
- Danish Traditions, &c., 4, 5
-
- Darrell's (Rev. John) _Narrative_, &c. 93, 96;
- his punishment, 97
-
- Dead and Dying, the, 7
-
- " man's hand, 158, 163
-
- " raising the, 128
-
- Deasil, or Widersinnis, 151
-
- Death tick or Death watch, 152
-
- Dee (Dr. John), 25
-
- " charged with Witchcraft, 178
-
- Deities and demi-gods, 12
-
- "Demdike, Old," a witch, 186;
- "Young Demdike," _ib._
-
- Demon and Goblin Superstitions, 88
-
- Demon Pig, 89
-
- Demoniacal possession in 1594, 92;
- in 1686, 98
-
- Demoniacs, 87;
- dispossessing a, 92;
- at Morzine, 88
-
- Demonology, 86
-
- Denton Rent-boons, 294
-
- Derby (Edward 3rd) Earl of, charged with keeping a Conjuror, 129
-
- Device, Elizabeth and Alizon, witches, 186, 189
-
- Devil, the 16;
- his names, 84-86;
- a card-player, 81;
- raised, 17, 81;
- exorcised, 17, 81
-
- Devil, at Burnley, 83
-
- " and the Tailor of Chatburn, 82;
- and the Dun horse, _ib._;
- and the schoolmaster at Cockerham, 83
-
- Devil, sacrifices to, 82;
- appearances of, _ib._
-
- "Devils of Morzine," (demoniacs) 88
-
- Dispossession of Devils, 93-98
-
- Divination, ancient, 7;
- Lancashire, _ib._
-
- " 102;
- at marriages, 103;
- by Bible and key, _ib._;
- Lancashire form of, 104;
- by the dying, _ib._;
- second-sight, 105;
- spirits of the dying and dead, _ib._;
- by lots, 106
-
- Doles at Weddings, 264;
- at funerals, 270;
- at Swinton, _ib._
-
- Downham, King and Queen at, 248
-
- Dreams, 6, 19, 140, 145-149
-
- Drink-leans, 288
-
- Druidical Rock basins, 106-110
-
- Dugdale, the Surey demoniac, 98
-
- Dukinfield (Sir Robert), and the heriot, 294
-
- Dying, Death-bed, and Funeral Customs, 268
-
- Dying hardly, 268
-
-
- Easter, _Eostre_, 8, 226, 227
-
- " Customs, 227-237;
- Fylde, 236
-
- " Day, 227
-
- " Eggs, 227, 228
-
- " Monday, 233, 237
-
- " "Lifting or heaving," 233;
- game of the ring, 234;
- Sports, 231
-
- Easter sports at the Manchester Free Grammar School, 231
-
- Eating and Drinking Customs, 258
-
- Eccles, ignorance in, 113-115
-
- Eccles cakes, 258
-
- Edward I., King, 27;
- his gift for "lifting," 233
-
- Edward III., King, 28;
- his letter for alms, 133
-
- Edward IV., King, 32
-
- Edward VI., King, 34
-
- Eggs, Pace, Pasche, or Easter, 217, 228;
- in Blackburn, 228, 229;
- in East Lancashire, 231;
- bought for Easter, 229;
- papal prayer, blessing eggs, 229
-
- "Elias, the Prophet," a fanatic, 138
-
- Elizabeth, Queen, 35
-
- Ellen's (St.) Well, in Brindle, 172
-
- Elves and Fairies, 110-113
-
- Everton toffy, 258
-
- Evil Eye, the, 69
-
- Ewe Loaf, the, 256
-
- Exorcism of demons by godly ministers, 95, 98-101
-
-
- Fag-pie (or Fig-pie) Sunday, 226, 258
-
- Fairies, 53;
- and Elves, 106-110
-
- Fairy, a, on Mellor Moor, 111
-
- " Hole, at Warton, 265
-
- " Queen, 16
-
- " Tales, Lancashire, 112, 113
-
- Familiar Spirit, Transfer of a, 210
-
- _Famous History of Witches_, 176
-
- Feeorin (fairies), 53
-
- Fern Seed, 10
-
- Festivals, Church and Season, 212
-
- Finger Stocks of Stone, 288
-
- Flemings' Wooden Shoes and Oaten Bread, 259
-
- "Flesh-Day" (Christmas Eve), 256
-
- Folk-Lore, Eastern, 2-6;
- Greek and Roman, 5, 6;
- Scandinavian, 4, 5;
- various, 113;
- of Eccles and neighbourhood, 113
-
- Footprints at Brindle Church, 134;
- at Smithells Hall, 135
-
- Fortune-Telling, 121-126;
- Story of, 122;
- "Owd Rollison," 123
-
- Frumenty, 262, 256, 258
-
- Funeral Biddings, 274;
- gifts, 275;
- bay, rosemary, &c., 270, 272, 275
-
- Funeral Customs, 268;
- in East Lancashire, 273;
- at Dalton-in-Furness, 271;
- at Warton, 271;
- Fylde, 272
-
- Funeral Doles, 270;
- at Swinton, _ib._;
- various, 274
-
- Funeral Sermons, 274;
- dinners and drinkings, 272
-
- Furness, Manorial Customs, 281, 285
-
- Fylde, The (in Lancashire), _passim_.
-
- " Easter Customs in, 236, 242, 243
-
- " Farm and Agricultural Celebrations in, 298
-
- " Harvest Home, 298;
- "shutting of marling," _ib._;
- cob-seeding, _ib._
-
-
- Gabriel Ratchets, 89, 167
-
- "Gang-Days," or Rogation Days, 248
-
- Garstang, a Saxon Constablewick, 295
-
- Geese, hatched from sea-shells, 116
-
- Gemmel Rings, 263
-
- Gerard (Sir Thomas), 131
-
- " (Sir John), 162
-
- Gerards of Bryn, 158-162
-
- Gifts to Infants, 262
-
- Gloucester (Eleanor), Duchess of, and Witchcraft, 174
-
- Gloves, Wedding, 268
-
- Goblin, Gobelinus, Kobold, Khobalus, &c., 16
-
- Goblin Builders, 89
-
- " Superstitions, 88
-
- Good Friday, 226;
- viands, 226, 237
-
- "Goose-Intentos," 250
-
- Graves, Situation and Direction of, 275
-
- Greek Traditions and Superstitions, 5, 6, 13;
- Mythology, 13
-
- Grendels, The, 17
-
- Grislehurst Boggart, 61
-
- Groaning Cheese and Cake, 260
-
- Guld-Riding, 289
-
- Gunpowder Plot, 251
-
- Guy Fawkes, 251
-
-
- Hackensall Hall Boggart, 59
-
- Haever or Hiver, 149
-
- Hakes, Auld Wife, 216
-
- Hallowe'en, 3
-
- Halton Ale, 259
-
- Hand-bell Ringing, 258
-
- Hand-festing, 263
-
- Hartlay (John), a Conjuror, 93-96
-
- Harvest Home, 298
-
- Havercake Lads, 258
-
- Helen's (St.) Well in Brindle, 172;
- near Sefton, 173
-
- Henry IV., King, 20
-
- Henry VI., King, 28, 29, 31;
- miracles at his tomb, 132
-
- Henry VII., King, his embassy to Pope Julius II., 132
-
- Henry VIII., King, 87;
- his ale, 287
-
- Heriot or Principal, at Ashton-under-Lyne, 292, 293;
- story of, 294
-
- "Hobbe, the King," at Ashton, 288
-
- Hobby-horse at Christmas, 254
-
- Hornby, Honour and Manor of, 285
-
- " Park Mistress and Margaret Brackin, 59
-
- Horwich Moor, 48
-
- Hothershall Hall, 5
-
- House Boggarts, 56
-
- Household bewitched, 184
-
- Hunchback, story of the, 5
-
- Huntingdon's, Earl of, letter, 130
-
- Hydrocephalus in Cattle, to cure, 79
-
-
- Ignagning, 236
-
- Imps, or Changelings, 263
-
- Ince Hall, 52
-
- Ince Manor House, 52
-
- " Oatmeal Charity at, 249
-
- Indo-European origin of superstitions, 2
-
- Infants, gifts to, 262
-
- Invocation at bedtime, 68, 69
-
-
- Jack and the Bean-Stalk, 5
-
- Jack the Giant-Killer, 5
-
- James I., King, his _Daemonologie_, 185
-
- Jannocks, 259
-
- Johnson's (Margaret), confession, 198
-
- Jolly Lads, 236
-
- Jourdain (Margery), witch of Eye, 174
-
-
- Kelly (Edward), the Seer, 25, 126
-
- Killing a witch, 208
-
- King and Queen at Downham, 248
-
- King of the May, 254
-
- " of Misrule, 288
-
- King's Evil, touching for, 77
-
- Kirkby Ireleth, Manor of, 281
-
- Knighthood, honour of, 277;
- compulsory in 1278, 1292, and 1305, _ib._
-
- Knives, &c., 18;
- Manchester, 280
-
-
- Labouring Goblins, 56
-
- Lady in the straw, 260
-
- Lady-bird charm, 70, 71
-
- Lancashire musical instruments, 288
-
- " Witches, verses on, 179
-
- Lancaster (Thomas), Earl of, a saint, 133, 134
-
- Lating or Leeting Witches, 210
-
- Law Terms, mediaeval Latin, 300
-
- Lawrence, St., his bones at Chorley, 157
-
- Leadbetter (Charles), a Lancashire astrologer, 40
-
- Legend of Cartmel Church, 137
-
- Lent, 221
-
- Local customs and usages at various seasons, 212, _et seq._
-
- Lord's Day conjuration, 67
-
- Lostock May-pole, 243
-
- Lots, casting or drawing, 106
-
- Lowick, Manor of, 283
-
- Lubber Fiend, 59, 89
-
-
- Magic and Magicians, 126
-
- Magpies, 143-145
-
- Malkin Tower, in Pendle Forest, 186, 189, 204, 211
-
- Manchester knife, a, 289
-
- " Church, weddings at, 265
-
- Manorial franchises, &c., 285
-
- Manors, customs of, 276;
- in Furness, 281;
- Ashton-under-Lyne, 286, 289;
- Smithells, 280;
- Cockerham, 281;
- Kirkby Ireleth, _ib._;
- Pennington, 282;
- Muchland, _ib._;
- Lowick, 283;
- Nevill Hall, _ib._;
- Much Urswick, 284;
- Warton, _ib._;
- Hornby, 285;
- Ashton-under-Lyne, 286, 289
-
- Maritagium, custom of, 278
-
- Marsh (Geo.), the martyr, 135-137
-
- Martins, "shifting of," 143
-
- Mary Queen of Scots, 131
-
- May-day Eve, 46, 47, 239
-
- " Customs, 238-246;
- in Spotland, 242;
- in Manchester, 245
-
- May-day Games, decay of, 241;
- at Burnley (1579), 244
-
- May-Poles, 240-243;
- Parliamentary ordinance against, 241
-
- May King and Queen, 246
-
- " Songs, 239
-
- Mermaid of Marton Mere, 90
-
- "Messes" at dinners, &c., 271, 274
-
- Michaelmas Day, 250;
- goose, _ib._, 258
-
- Mid-Lent Sunday, or Mothering Sunday, 222, 225
-
- Mince Pies, 255, 258
-
- Miracles, or Miraculous Stories, 131
-
- " of a dead Duke of Lancaster (King Henry VI.), 132-134
-
- Miraculous cures by a dead man's hand, 158-163
-
- Miraculous footprints in Brindle Church, 134;
- in Smithells Hall, 135
-
- "Mischief Night," 239
-
- Mistletoe, 252
-
- Money gift at funerals, 275
-
- Moon, the, 70;
- omens from, 149;
- names for autumn moons, 250
-
- More (Sir Thomas), Story of, 300
-
- "Mothering Sunday," 222, 225
-
- Mountain Ash, 72
-
- Muchland, Manor of, 282
-
- Much-Urswick, Manor of, 284
-
- Mutes at Christmas, 256
-
- Mythology of Greece and Rome, 13;
- Oriental, _ib._;
- Northern, _ib._
-
-
- Naiades, Nixies, Nisses, 16
-
- Nails, cutting, 68
-
- Nevill Hall, Manor of, 283
-
- New Year's-Day, weather omens, 151;
- Festival, 214;
- and Old Christmas-Day, 212
-
- New-Year's turkey, 258
-
- " Eve, fire on, 214
-
- New-Year's Luck, 214;
- first caller, 215;
- gifts and wishes, 216
-
- Nicholas, St., 85
-
- "Nick, Old" (the devil), 84-86
-
- Night-mare, 89
-
- Northumbrian Superstitions, 9
-
- November 1, All Souls' Day, 251
-
- November 5, Gunpowder Plot, 251
-
- Numbers, odd, 4;
- "3" and "7," _ib._
-
- Nutter (Alice), a wealthy witch, 193
-
-
- Oat Cake, 258;
- Jannocks, 259
-
- Oatmeal charity at Ince, 249
-
- "Old Nick" (the devil), 84-86
-
- "Old Scrat," or Skrat, 90
-
- Omens and Predications, 138, 139
-
- Omens, Dreams, Withershins, Cards, Teacups, &c., 140
-
- Omens--Cats, 141;
- Dogs, Lambs, Birds, 142;
- Swallows, Magpies, _ib._
- Deasil, or Widersinnis, 151;
- weather for New Year's-Day, 151;
- Death tick, or watch, 152
-
- Ormskirk gingerbread, 258
-
-
- Pace or Pasche-egging, 128;
- in Blackburn, _ib._;
- East Lanc., 231
-
- Pagan gods, festivals and temples, changed into Christian saints,
- feasts and churches, 14
-
- Pancake Bell, 44;
- Tuesday, 218
-
- Passing Bell, 44
-
- Paternoster, White, &c., at Eccles, 115
-
- Peel of Fouldrey and Tree-Geese, 116
-
- Peggy's Well, Legend of, 171
-
- Pendle, Forest and Hill of, 202, 204
-
- Pendleton and Pendlebury, May-pole and games, 240, 241
-
- Pentecost, 16th Sunday after, 250
-
- Pentecost (See Whitsuntide).
-
- Persons bewitched, sixteen, 192
-
- Philosopher's Mercury, 23
-
- " Stone, 23
-
- Pigeons' Feathers in beds, 268
-
- Pilkington (Dame Jane), 273
-
- Pimpernel, 71
-
- Pork Pasties, 260
-
- Prayer and Blessing on Eggs, 229
-
- Prayer in Verse against Sir Ralph Ashton, 291
-
- Predications (see Omens).
-
- Presents to Women in Childbed, 260
-
- " to Infants, 262
-
- Prestwich, Burying in Woollen at, 269
-
- Principal or heriot at Ashton, 293
-
- Prophet Elias, a fanatic, 138
-
-
- Queen of the May, 246
-
-
- Radcliffe, Burying in Woollen, 269
-
- Radcliffe Tower, 51
-
- Raising the Dead, 128;
- the Devil, 17, 81
-
- Rent-boons at Denton, 294
-
- Rents, Nominal, 280
-
- Rheumatism, charms to cure, 75
-
- Riding the Black Lad at Ashton, 289
-
- Rings, betrothal or gemmel, 263;
- Wedding, 268
-
- Robins and Wrens, 142
-
- Robinson, Edmund, 195, 201
-
- Rochdale Church, 89
-
- " Tithe, Easter Dues, &c., 297
-
- Rogation Days or Gang Days, 248
-
- Rolleston, Mr., 131
-
- "Rollison, Owd," 123-125
-
- Roman Traditions and Superstitions, 5, 6, 18;
- Mythology, 13
-
-
- Saint Cuthbert's Beads, 15
-
- " John's Eve, 8, 46, 47
-
- " Vitus's Dance, 87
-
- Samlesbury Witches, 194
-
- "Scrat, Old" (or Skrat), 90
-
- Second-sight in Lancashire, 105
-
- Services and Tenures, peculiar, 278
-
- Sheep and Farms in Bowland, 300
-
- Shoes, Old, for luck, 264, 268
-
- Shrew Tree in Carnforth, 79
-
- Shrovetide, 217;
- Tuesday, 218;
- Pancakes, _ib._, 258;
- Sports, 219;
- customs in the Fylde, 221
-
- Sickness, charms to cure, 74
-
- Simnel Cakes, 223;
- at Bury, 224, 258
-
- Sitting-up Courtship, 264
-
- Skriker, 91
-
- Smithells Hall, 51;
- Marsh the Martyr, 135
-
- Smithells, Manor of, custom, 280
-
- Sneezing, 6, 68
-
- Songs, Lancashire, about 1422, 288
-
- Sparrows, 142
-
- Spell, description of a, 177
-
- Spirits of the dying and dead, 105
-
- Spitting on money, &c., 69, 70
-
- Stocks for the fingers, 283
-
- Superstitions in Manchester in the 16th century, 168
-
- Superstitions of Pendle Forest, 164;
- of East Lancashire, 165
-
- Superstitions, popular, 153-157;
- Nineteenth Century, 164
-
- Superstitious beliefs, and practices, 1;
- fears and cruelties, 167
-
- Superstitious fear of Witchcraft, 182
-
-
- Talliage or Tallage, 296;
- of Lancashire towns, &c., _ib._
-
- Teacups, Omens from, 140
-
- Teanlay, or All Souls' Night, 49
-
- Tenants of Ashton-under-Lyne, 288
-
- Tenures and Services, peculiar, 278
-
- Thackergate Boggart, 52
-
- Throwing the Stocking, 264
-
- Toothache, charms to cure, 75
-
- Touching for King's Evil, 77
-
- Towneley, ghost and tradition, 57
-
- Trash or Skriker, 91
-
- Tree Barnacles, or Tree Geese, 116
-
- Turning Bed after Childbirth, 261
-
-
- Unbaptized Child, cannot die, 262
-
- Urswick Much, Manor of, 284
-
- Utley, hanged for witchcraft, 195
-
-
- Vervain, to cure wounds, a rhyming charm, 76, 115;
- against blasts, 115
-
- Victor Penny, 219
-
- Vitus's (St.), Dance, 87
-
-
- Waddow Hall, 171
-
- Waitts, the, 257;
- of Manchester, 257;
- of Warrington, 258
-
- Walton-le-Dale, raising the dead, 128
-
- Warcock Hill, 17
-
- Warrington Ale, 259
-
- Warton, Royal Manor of, 284;
- wedding customs at, 265
-
- Warts, cures for, 78;
- caused by washing in egg-water, 121
-
- Water Sprites, 89
-
- Weather Omens, 141-145, 149-152
-
- Wedding Customs, 263;
- in the Fylde, 264;
- at Warton, 265;
- at Burnley, 265;
- various, 268
-
- Weddings at Manchester Church, 265
-
- Well at Wavertree, 169
-
- Well, Peggy's, 170;
- Legend of, 171
-
- Well, St. Helen's, in Brindle, 172;
- near Sefton, 173
-
- Wells and Springs, dedicated to saints, 169
-
- West Houghton Wakes, 260
-
- Whitsuntide, 246;
- Fair, 246;
- 16th Sunday after, 250
-
- Whitsuntide Ales, 246
-
- " Tuesday, 248
-
- " week, 247
-
- Whooping Cough, 10
-
- Wicken or Wiggen Tree (the mountain ash), 72
-
- Widersinnis, or Deasil, 151;
- Withershins, 140, 151
-
- Widow, Burial of a, 273
-
- Widows, manorial customs, 281-285
-
- Wilder Lads, 48
-
- Will-o'-th'-Wisp, 53
-
- Winwick Church, 89
-
- Wise Men and Cunning Women, 121
-
- Wizards, 87;
- Swimming a, _ib._
-
- Wooden Shoes and Oaten Bread, 259
-
- Woollen, burying in, 269
-
- Wounds, to cure, 74;
- Vervain, 76
-
- Wycoller Hall, Christmas at, 256
-
-
- Yule Loaf, 256
-
-
-
-
-
-
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