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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54637 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54637)
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-Project Gutenberg's Cornish Feasts and Folk-lore, by M. A. Courtney
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Cornish Feasts and Folk-lore
-
-Author: M. A. Courtney
-
-Release Date: April 30, 2017 [EBook #54637]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CORNISH FEASTS AND FOLK-LORE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net/ for Project
-Gutenberg (This file was produced from images generously
-made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CORNISH
-
- FEASTS AND FOLK-LORE.
-
- BY
-
- MISS M. A. COURTNEY,
-
- AUTHOR OF "GLOSSARY OF WORDS USED IN WEST CORNWALL."
-
- REVISED AND REPRINTED FROM
- THE FOLK-LORE SOCIETY JOURNALS, 1886-87.
-
-
-
- PENZANCE:
- BEARE AND SON, 21, MARKET PLACE.
- 1890.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-Few Cornish people are probably aware how wide-spread still with us is
-the belief in charms and charmers, ghosts, and all other superstitions;
-nor that there are witches in our county, shunned and dreaded by some
-who fear their supposed power to ill-wish those who offend them, and
-sought out by others who want by their aid to avert the evil eye,
-or by their incantations to remove the spells already cast on them
-and their cattle by an ill-wisher who has "overlooked" them.
-
-Folk-lore is an almost inexhaustible subject. There must be many
-charms in use here that have not come under my notice; a few are too
-coarse to record, as are some of the tales.
-
-A book on folk-lore cannot in this century contain original matter;
-it must be compiled from various sources. I have when quoting from
-other writers given my authority, and to communications from friends
-generally appended their names. To "One and All" I beg leave to tender
-my sincere thanks.
-
-
- M. A. Courtney.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CORNISH FEASTS AND "FEASTEN" CUSTOMS.
-
-
-Cornwall has always been a county largely given to hospitality, and,
-as "all Cornish gentlemen are cousins," they have from time immemorial
-made it a practice to meet at each other's houses to celebrate their
-feasts and saints' days.
-
-Since "there are more saints in Cornwall than there are in heaven,"
-these friendly gatherings must necessarily be very numerous. Each
-parish has its own particular saint to which its church is
-dedicated. The feasts held in their honour, probably dating from the
-foundation of the churches, are kept on the nearest Sunday and Monday
-to dedication day, called by the people "feasten" Sunday and Monday.
-
-Every family, however poor, tries to have a better dinner than usual
-on feasten Sunday; generally a joint of meat with a "figgy-pudden"
-(a baked or boiled suet-pudding with raisins in it).
-
-On the preceding Saturdays large quantities of "plum cake" are baked;
-light currant cakes raised with barm (yeast), and coloured bright
-yellow with saffron (as dear as "saffern" is a very common simile
-in Cornwall). This "saffern cake" at tea is often supplemented with
-"heavy cake" (a delicacy peculiar to the county), a rich currant paste,
-about an inch thick, made with clotted cream, and eaten hot.
-
-The Western hounds meet in all the villages situated at a convenient
-distance from their kennel, at ten o'clock on feasten Mondays, and,
-after a breakfast given by the squire of the parish to the huntsmen,
-start for their run from somewhere near the parish church (the "church
-town"). Three or four houses clustered together, and even sometimes
-a single house, is called in Cornwall "a town," a farmyard is "a town
-place," and London is often spoken of as "Lunnon church town."
-
-The first of the West Penwith feasts is that of Paul, a parish close to
-Penzance, which has not the Apostle Paul but St. Pol-de-Lion for its
-patron saint. It falls on the nearest Sunday to 10th of October. An
-old proverb says, "Rain for Paul, rain for all," therefore, should
-the day be wet, it is of course looked upon by the young people as
-a bad sign for their future merry-makings. An annual bowling-match
-was formerly held on feasten Monday, between Paul and Mousehole men
-(Mousehole is a fishing village in the same parish); the last of
-them took place sixty years ago. Up to that time the bowling-green,
-an artificially raised piece of ground, was kept in order by the
-parishioners. No one in the neighbourhood now knows the game; the
-church schools are built on a part of the site, and the remainder
-is the village playground. If there were ever any other peculiar
-customs celebrated at Paul feast they are quite forgotten, and the
-Monday night's carousal at the public-houses has here, as elsewhere,
-given place to church and chapel teas, followed by concerts in the
-school-rooms, although there are still a few "standings" (stalls)
-in the streets, for the sale of gingerbread nuts and sweetmeats, and
-one or two swings and merry-go-rounds, largely patronised by children.
-
-October 12th. A fair, called Roast Goose Fair, is held at Redruth.
-
-On the nearest Saturday to Hallowe'en, October 31st, the fruiterers
-of Penzance display in their windows very large apples, known locally
-as "Allan" apples. These were formerly bought by the inhabitants and
-all the country people from the neighbourhood (for whom Penzance is
-the market-town), and one was given to each member of the family to
-be eaten for luck. The elder girls put theirs, before they ate them,
-under their pillows, to dream of their sweethearts. A few of the apples
-are still sold; but the custom, which, I have lately been told, was
-also observed at St. Ives, is practically dying out. On "Allantide,"
-at Newlyn West, two strips of wood are joined crosswise by a nail in
-the centre; at each of the four ends a lighted candle is stuck, with
-apples hung between them. This is fastened to a beam, or the ceiling of
-the kitchen, and made to revolve rapidly. The players, who try to catch
-the apples in their mouths, often get instead a taste of the candle.
-
-In Cornwall, as in other parts of England, many charms were tried on
-Hallowe'en to discover with whom you were to spend your future life,
-or if you were to remain unmarried, such as pouring melted lead
-through the handle of the front door key. The fantastic shapes it
-assumed foretold your husband's profession or trade.
-
-Rolling three names, each written on a separate piece of paper,
-tightly in the centre of three balls of earth. These were afterwards
-put into a deep basin of water, and anxiously watched until one of
-them opened, as the name on the first slip which came to the surface
-would be that of the person you were to marry.
-
-Tying the front door key tightly with your left leg garter between the
-leaves of a Bible at one particular chapter in the Song of Solomon. It
-was then held on the forefinger, and when the sweetheart's name was
-mentioned it turned round.
-
-Slipping a wedding-ring on to a piece of cotton, held between the
-forefinger and thumb, saying, "If my husband's name is to be ----
-let this ring swing!" Of course, when the name of the person preferred
-was spoken, the holder unconsciously made the ring oscillate. I have,
-when a school-girl, assisted at these rites, and I expect the young
-people still practise them.
-
-In St. Cubert's parish, East Cornwall, is a celebrated Holy well, so
-named, the inhabitants say, from its virtues having been discovered
-on All Hallows-day. It is covered at high spring tides.
-
-St. Just feast (which, when the mines in that district were prosperous,
-was kept up with more revelry than almost any other) is always held
-on the nearest Sunday to All Saints'-day. Formerly, on the Monday,
-many games were played, viz.--"Kook, a trial of casting quoits farthest
-and nearest to the goal, now all but forgotten" (Bottrell), wrestling,
-and kailles, or keels (ninepins), &c. Much beer and "moonshine" (spirit
-that had not paid the duty) were drunk, and, as the St. Just men are
-proverbially pugnacious, the sports often ended with a free fight. A
-paragraph in a local paper for November, 1882, described a St. Just
-feast in those days as "A hobble, a squabble, and a 'hubbadullion'
-altogether." Rich and poor still at this season keep open house, and
-all the young people from St. Just who are in service for many miles
-around, if they can possibly be spared, go home on the Saturday and
-stay until the Tuesday morning. A small fair is held in the streets
-on Monday evening, when the young men are expected to treat their
-sweethearts liberally, and a great deal of "foolish money" that can
-be ill afforded is often spent.
-
-In many Cornish parishes the bells are rung on November 4th,
-"Ringing night."
-
-The celebration of Gunpowder Plot has quite died out in West Cornwall,
-but in Launceston, and in other towns in the eastern part of the
-county, it is still observed. As regularly as the 5th of November
-comes around, fireworks are let off, and bonfires lit, to lively
-music played by the local bands.
-
-"This year, 1884, 'Young Stratton' celebrated the Fifth with much
-more than his customary enthusiasm. A good sum was raised by public
-subscription by the energy of Mr. C. A. Saunders. The Bude fife and
-drum band headed a grotesque procession, formed at Howl's Bridge,
-and second in order came a number of equestrian torch-bearers in all
-kinds of costumes, furnished by wardrobes of Her Majesty's navy, the
-Royal Marines, the Yeomanry, and numerous other sources. 'Guido Faux'
-followed in his car, honoured by a postilion and a band of Christy
-Minstrels; then came foot torch-bearers, and a crowd of enthusiastic
-citizens, who 'hurraed' to their hearts' content. Noticeable were
-the banners, 'Success to Young Stratton,' the Cornish arms, and
-'God save the Queen.' The display of fireworks took place from a
-field overlooking the town, and the inhabitants grouped together
-at points of vantage to witness the display. The bonfire was lit on
-Stamford Hill, where the carnival ended. Good order and good humour
-prevailed."--(Western Morning News.)
-
-When I was a girl, I was taught the following doggerel rhymes, which
-were on this day then commonly chanted:--
-
-
- "Please to remember the fifth of November!
- A stick or a stake, for King George's sake.
- A faggot or rope, to hang the Pope.
- For Gunpowder Plot, shall never be forgot,
- Whilst Castle Ryan stands upon a rock."
-
-
-This was in Victoria's reign; where Castle Ryan stands I have never
-been able to learn.
-
-The old custom formerly practised in Camborne, of taking a marrow-bone
-from the butchers on the Saturday before the feast, which is held on
-the nearest Sunday to Martinmas, was, in 1884, revived in its original
-form. "A number of gentlemen, known as the 'Homage Committee,'
-went round the market with hampers, which were soon filled with
-marrow-bones, and they afterwards visited the public-houses as
-'tasters.'"--(Cornishman.)
-
-One night in November is known in Padstow as "Skip-skop night," when
-the boys of the place go about with a stone in a sling; with this
-they strike the doors, and afterwards slily throw in winkle-shells,
-dirt, &c. Mr. T. Q. Couch says: "They strike violently against the
-doors of the houses and ask for money to make a feast."
-
-At St. Ives, on the Saturday before Advent Sunday, "Fair-mo" (pig
-fair) is held. This town is much celebrated locally for macaroons;
-a great many are then bought as "fairings." The St. Ives fishing
-(pilchard) season generally ends in November, consequently at this
-time there is often no lack of money.
-
-The feast of St. Maddern, or Madron feast, which is also that of
-Penzance (Penzance being until recently in that parish), is on
-Advent Sunday.
-
-The last bull-baiting held here was on the "feasten" Monday of 1813,
-and took place in the field on which the Union is now built. The
-bull was supplied by a squire from Kimyel, in the neighbouring parish
-of Paul. A ship's anchor, which must have been carried up hill from
-Penzance quay, a distance of nearly three miles, was firmly fixed in
-the centre of the field, and to it the bull was tied. Bull-baiting was
-soon after discontinued in Cornwall. The following account of the last
-I had from a gentleman who was well known in the county. He said, "This
-I think took place in a field adjoining Ponsandane bridge, in Gulval
-parish, at the east of Penzance, in the summer of 1814. I remember the
-black bull being led by four men. The crowd was dispersed early in the
-evening by a severe thunderstorm, which much alarmed the people, who
-thought it (I was led to believe) a judgment from heaven."--(T.S.B.)
-
-The second Thursday before Christmas is in East Cornwall kept by
-the "tinners" (miners) as a holiday in honour of one of the reputed
-discoverers of tin. It is known as Picrous-day. Chewidden Thursday
-(White Thursday), another "tinners'" holiday, falls always on the
-last clear Thursday before Christmas-day. Tradition says it is the
-anniversary of the day on which "white tin" (smelted tin) was first
-made or sold in Cornwall.
-
-On Christmas-eve, in East as well as West Cornwall, poor women,
-sometimes as many as twenty in a party, call on their richer neighbours
-asking alms. This is "going a gooding."
-
-At Falmouth the lower classes formerly expected from all the
-shopkeepers, of whom they bought any of their Christmas groceries, a
-slice of cake and a small glass of gin. Some of the oldest established
-tradespeople still observe this custom; but it will soon be a thing
-of the past.
-
-In some parts of the county it is customary for each household to make
-a batch of currant cakes on Christmas-eve. These cakes are made in
-the ordinary manner, coloured with saffron, as is the custom in these
-parts. On this occasion the peculiarity of the cakes is, that a small
-portion of the dough in the centre of each top is pulled up and made
-into a form which resembles a very small cake on the top of a large
-one, and this centre-piece is usually called "the Christmas." Each
-person in a house has his or her especial cake, and every person
-ought to taste a small piece of every other person's cake. Similar
-cakes are also bestowed on the hangers-on of the establishment, such
-as laundresses, sempstresses, charwomen, &c.; and even some people who
-are in the receipt of weekly charity call, as a matter of course, for
-their Christmas cakes. The cakes must not be cut until Christmas-day,
-it being probably "unlucky to eat them sooner."--(Geo. C. Boase,
-Notes and Queries, 5th series, Dec. 21st, 1878.)
-
-The materials to make these and nearly all the cakes at this season
-were at one time given by the grocers to their principal customers.
-
-In Cornwall, as in other English counties, houses are at Christmas
-"dressed up" with evergreens, sold in small bunches, called "Penn'orths
-of Chris'mas"; and two hoops fastened one in the other by nails at
-the centres are gaily decorated with evergreens, apples, oranges,
-&c., and suspended from the middle beam in the ceiling of the best
-kitchen. This is the "bush," or "kissing bush." At night a lighted
-candle is put in it, stuck on the bottom nail; but once or twice
-lately I have seen a Chinese lantern hanging from the top one.
-
-In a few remote districts on Christmas-eve children may be, after
-nightfall, occasionally (but rarely) found dancing around painted
-lighted candles placed in a box of sand. This custom was very
-general fifty years ago. The church towers, too, are sometimes
-illuminated. This of course, on the coast can only be done in very
-calm weather. The tower of Zennor church (Zennor is a village on the
-north coast of Cornwall, between St. Ives and St. Just) was lit up
-in 1883, for the first time since 1866.
-
-When open chimneys were universal in farmhouses the Christmas stock,
-mock, or block (the log), on which a rude figure of a man had been
-chalked, was kindled with great ceremony; in some parts with a piece
-of charred wood that had been saved from the last year's "block." A
-log in Cornwall is almost always called a "block." "Throw a block on
-the fire."
-
-Candles painted by some member of the family were often lighted at
-the same time.
-
-The choir from the parish church and dissenting chapels go from house
-to house singing "curls" (carols), for which they are given money or
-feasted; but the quaint old carols, "The first good joy that Mary
-had," "I saw three ships come sailing in," common forty years ago,
-are now never heard. The natives of Cornwall have been always famous
-for their carols; some of their tunes are very old. Even the Knockers,
-Sprig-gans, and all the underground spirits that may be always heard
-working where there is tin (and who are said to be the ghosts of the
-Jews who crucified Jesus), in olden times held mass and sang carols
-on Christmas-eve.
-
-In the beginning of this century at the ruined baptistery of St. Levan,
-in West Cornwall (Par-chapel Well), all the carol-singers in that
-district, after visiting the neighbouring villages, met and sang
-together many carols. Mr. Bottrell says, "One was never forgotten,
-in which according to our West Country version, Holy Mary says to
-her dear Child:--
-
-
- 'Go the wayst out, Child Jesus,
- Go the wayst out to play;
- Down by God's Holy Well
- I see three pretty children,
- As ever tongue can tell.'
-
-
-"This for its sweet simplicity is still a favourite in the west."
-
-An old carol or ballad,
-
-
- "Come and I will sing you," etc.,
-
-
-known to many old people in all parts of the county, has been thought
-by some to be peculiar to Cornwall; but this is an error, as it has
-been heard elsewhere.
-
-At the plentiful supper always provided on this night, [1] egg-hot,
-or eggy-hot, was the principal drink. It was made with eggs, hot beer,
-sugar, and rum, and was poured from one jug into another until it
-became quite white and covered with froth. A sweet giblet pie was one
-of the standing dishes at a Christmas dinner--a kind of mince-pie,
-into which the giblets of a goose, boiled and finely chopped, were
-put instead of beef. Cornwall is noted for its pies, that are eaten on
-all occasions; some of them are curious mixtures, such as squab-pie,
-which is made with layers of well-seasoned fat mutton and apples,
-with onions and raisins. Mackerel pie: the ingredients of this are
-mackerel and parsley stewed in milk, then covered with a paste and
-baked. When brought to table a hole is cut in the paste, and a basin of
-clotted cream thrown in it. Muggetty pie, made from sheep's entrails
-(muggets), parsley, and cream. "The devil is afraid to come into
-Cornwall for fear of being baked in a pie."
-
-There is a curious Christmas superstition connected with the Fogo,
-Vug, or Vow (local names for a cove) at Pendeen, in North St. Just.
-
-"At dawn on Christmas-day the spirit of the 'Vow' has frequently
-been seen just within the entrance near the cove, in the form of a
-beautiful lady dressed in white, with a red rose in her mouth. There
-were persons living a few years since who had seen the fair but
-not less fearful vision; for disaster was sure to visit those who
-intruded on the spirit's morning airing."--(Bottrell, Traditions,
-&c., West Cornwall, 2nd series.)
-
-The following is an account by an anonymous writer of a Christmas
-custom in East Cornwall:--
-
-"In some places the parishioners walk in procession, visiting the
-principal orchards in the parish. In each orchard one tree is selected,
-as the representative of the rest; this is saluted with a certain form
-of words, which have in them the form of an incantation. They then
-sprinkle the tree with cider, or dash a bowl of cider against it, to
-ensure its bearing plentifully the ensuing year. In other places the
-farmers and their servants only assemble on the occasion, and after
-immersing apples in cider hang them on the apple-trees. They then
-sprinkle the trees with cider; and after uttering a formal incantation,
-they dance round it (or rather round them), and return to the farmhouse
-to conclude these solemn rites with copious draughts of cider.
-
-"In Warleggan, on Christmas-eve, it was customary for some of the
-household to put in the fire (bank it up), and the rest to take a jar
-of cider, a bottle, and a gun to the orchard, and put a small bough
-into the bottle. Then they said:--
-
-
- "Here's to thee, old apple-tree!
- Hats full, packs full, great bushel-bags full!
- Hurrah! and fire off the gun."
-
- --(Old Farmer, Mid Cornwall, through T. Q. Couch,
- Sept. 1883, W. Antiquary.)
-
-
-The words chanted in East Cornwall were:--
-
-
- "Health to thee, good apple-tree,
- Pocket-fulls, hat-fulls, peck-fulls, bushel-bag fulls."
-
-
-An old proverb about these trees runs as follows:--
-
-
- "Blossom in March, for fruit you may search,
- Blossom in April, eat you will,
- Blossom in May, eat night and day."
-
-
-"At one time small sugared cakes were laid on the branches. This
-curious custom has been supposed to be a propitiation of some
-spirit."--(Mrs. Damant, Cowes, through Folk-Lore Society.)
-
-From Christmas to Twelfth-tide parties of mummers known as 'Goose or
-Geese-dancers' paraded the streets in all sorts of disguises, with
-masks on. They often behaved in such an unruly manner that women and
-children were afraid to venture out. If the doors of the houses were
-not locked they would enter uninvited and stay, playing all kinds of
-antics, until money was given them to go away. "A well-known character
-amongst them, about fifty years ago (1862), was the hobby-horse,
-represented by a man carrying a piece of wood in the form of a horse's
-head and neck, with some contrivance for opening and shutting the
-mouth with a loud snapping noise, the performer being so covered
-with a horse-cloth or hide of a horse as to resemble the animal,
-whose curvetings, biting and other motions he imitated. Some of these
-'guise-dancers' occasionally masked themselves with the skins of the
-head of bullocks having the horns on."--(The Land's End District,
-by R. Edmonds.)
-
-Sometimes they were more ambitious and acted a version of the old
-play, "St. George and the Dragon," which differed but little from
-that current in other countries.
-
-Bottrell, in his Traditions in W. Cornwall (2nd series), gives large
-extracts from another Christmas-play, "Duffy and the Devil." It turns
-upon the legend, common in all countries, of a woman who had sold
-herself to a devil, who was to do her knitting or spinning for her. He
-was to claim his bargain at the end of three years if she could not
-find out his name before the time expired. Of course, she gets it by
-stratagem; her husband, who knows nothing of the compact, first meets
-the devil, whilst out hunting, the day before the time is up, and makes
-him half-drunk. An old woman in Duffy's pay (Witch Bet) completes
-the work, and in that state the devil sings the following words,
-ending with his name, which Bet remembers and tells her mistress:--
-
-
- "I've knit and spun for her
- Three years to the day;
- To-morrow she shall ride with me
- Over land and over sea.
- Far away! far away!
- For she can never know
- That my name is 'Tarraway.'"
-
-
-Bet and some other witches then sing in chorus:--
-
-
- "By night and by day
- We will dance and play
- With our noble captain,
- Tarraway! Tarraway!"
-
-
-Mr. Robert Hunt in his Romances and Drolls of Old Cornwall has a
-variation of this play, in which the devil sings--
-
-
- "Duffy my lady, you'll never know--what?
- That my name is Ferry-top, Ferry-top--top."
-
-
-These "goose-dancers" became such a terror to the respectable
-inhabitants of Penzance that the Corporation put them down about ten
-years since, and every Christmas-eve a notice is posted in conspicuous
-places forbidding their appearance in the streets, but they still
-perambulate the streets of St. Ives. Guise-dancing wit must have
-very much deteriorated since the beginning of the present century,
-as writers before that time speak of the mirth it afforded; and the
-saying, "as good as a Christmas-play," is commonly used to describe
-a very witty or funny thing.
-
-It was the custom in Scilly eighty years ago for girls to go to
-church on Christmas morning dressed all in white, verifying the old
-proverb--"pride is never a-cold."
-
-"On Porthminster Beach on Christmas-day, as seen from the Malakoff,
-St. Ives, at nine o'clock in the morning the boys began to assemble
-on the beach with their bats and balls. As soon as twelve youths
-arrived a game commenced, called 'Rounders.' The first thing to be
-done was to right up the 'bickens.' This accomplished, the sides
-were chosen in the following manner:--Two of the best players,
-whom we will call Matthew and Phillip, went aside and selected two
-objects--the new and old pier. The old pier was Matthew and the new
-pier was Phillip. After this was arranged the 'mopper' selected the
-old pier, which meant he would rather have Matthew his side than
-Phillip. Then Phillip selected some one for his side; and so it went
-on until the whole twelve were elected one side or the other. Then
-they tossed up for the first innings. Phillip's side won the toss,
-and it was their luck to go in first. While they are taking off their
-jackets and getting ready to go in I will briefly describe the game.
-
-"The bickens, four in number, were piles of sand thrown up; each one
-being about ten yards from one another, and arranged so as to form
-a square. In the centre of the square the bowler was placed with
-ball in hand. Behind the batsman stands the 'tip,' while the other
-four were off a long way waiting for the long hits. The coats off, in
-went the first batsman. The ball was thrown towards him and he tipped
-it. The tip instantly took the ball and threw it at the batsman, and
-hit him before he arrived at the first bicken, and he was consequently
-out. The second batsman had better luck; for on the ball being thrown
-to him he sent it out to sea, and by that means he ran a rounder,
-or in other words he ran around the four bickens without being hit by
-the ball. The next batsman went in. The ball was thrown to him, when,
-lo! it went whizzing into the bowler's hands and was caught. This
-unlucky hit and lucky catch got the whole side out, before three of
-them had a chance to show their skill. The other side then went in,
-laughing at the discomfiture of their opponents. The tables, however,
-were very soon turned; for the very first hit was caught, and this
-produced a row, and the game was broken up!
-
-"I then went to the next lot: They were playing 'catchers.' There is
-only one bicken required in this game, and at this stood a lad called
-Watty, with bat and ball in hand. At last he hit the ball, and up it
-went flying in the air, descended, and passed through the hands of a
-boy named Peters. Peters took the ball from the sand and asked Watty,
-'How many?' Watty replied--
-
-
- 'Two a good scat, [2]
- Try for the bat.'
-
-
-"Peters threw the ball to the bicken, but it stopped about
-three lengths short. Watty took the ball up and again sent it a
-great way. The question was again asked, and Watty gave the same
-answer. Again the ball was thrown to the bicken, but this time with
-better success; for it stopped at the distance of the length of the
-bat and so was within the distance named. Williams then went in. He
-was a strong lusty fellow, and the ball was sent spinning along the
-sand. It was picked up by Curnow, who asked, 'How many?'
-
-
- 'Three a good scat,
- Try for the bat.'
-
-
-"The ball was thrown home and rolled about three bats from the
-bicken. This point, however, was the breaking-up of the game,
-for Williams said it was more than three bats off, whilst Curnow
-maintained that it was not three bats off, and there being no chance
-of a compromise being arrived at the game was broken up.
-
-"The next party was one of young men. They were playing rounders
-with a wooden ball, instead of an india-rubber one, as is generally
-used. They were twelve each side, and the bickens were about 20 yards
-distant. By this time the tide was out a great way, so that there was
-no fear of the ball being knocked to sea, as was the case with the
-other boys. When I got there they had been playing for about an hour,
-and the side that was in had been in about half of that time. The
-first hit I saw was 'a beauty!' The ball was sent about 75 yards,
-and the result was a rounder. Two or three other persons went in and
-did the same thing, and so the game went on for about an hour longer,
-when one of the fellows knocked up a catcher and was caught. This
-side had stayed in for about one hour and a half. The other side went
-in at about a quarter to three, and after playing about another hour
-they went home to tea.
-
-"I went to tea also, but was soon up in the Malakoff again. It was so
-dark that the play was stopped for the time. At about seven o'clock the
-older part of the town began to congregate, and about a quarter-past
-seven they began to play 'Thursa.' This game is too well known to
-need description, and I need only say that it was played about one
-hour, when they began to form a ring with the intention, I supposed,
-of playing that best of all games, 'Kiss-in-the-Ring'."--(Cornishman,
-1881.)
-
-On St. Stephen's-day, 26th December, before the days of gun-licences,
-every man or boy who could by any means get a gun went out shooting,
-and it was dangerous to walk the lanes. The custom is said to have had
-its origin in the legend of one of St. Stephen's guards being awakened
-by a bird just as his prisoner was going to escape. A similar practice
-prevailed in the neighbourhood of Penzance on "feasten Monday," the
-day after Advent Sunday; but on that day I have never heard of any
-religious idea connected with it.
-
-In the week after Christmas-day a fair is held at Launceston (and
-also at Okehampton in Devonshire), called "giglet fair" (a "giglet or
-giglot" is a giddy young woman). It is principally attended by young
-people. "At this 'giglet market,' or wife-market, the rustic swain was
-privileged with self-introduction to any of the nymphs around him,
-so that he had a good opportunity of choosing a suitable partner if
-tired of a single life."--(Britton and Brayley's Devon and Cornwall.)
-
-It is unlucky to begin a voyage on Childermas (Innocents'-day),
-also to wash clothes, or to do any but necessary household work.
-
-On New Year's-eve in the villages of East Cornwall, soon after dusk,
-parties of men, from four to six in a party, carrying a small bowl
-in their hands, went from house to house begging money to make a
-feast. They opened the doors without knocking, called out Warsail,
-and sang,--
-
-
- "These poor jolly Warsail boys
- Come travelling through the mire."
-
-
-This custom was common fifty years since, and may still be observed
-in remote rural districts. There is one saint whose name is familiar
-to all in Cornwall, but whose sex is unknown. This saint has much to
-answer for; promises made, but never intended to be kept, are all
-to be fulfilled on next St. Tibbs's-eve, a day that some folks say
-"falls between the old and new year;" others describe it as one that
-comes "neither before nor after Christmas."
-
-Parties are general in Cornwall on New Year's-eve to watch in the New
-Year and wish friends health and happiness; but I know of no peculiar
-customs, except that before retiring to rest the old women opened their
-Bibles at hap-hazard to find out their luck for the coming year. The
-text on which the fore-finger of the right hand rested was supposed to
-foretell the future. And money, generally a piece of silver, was placed
-on the threshold, to be brought in the first thing on the following
-day, that there might be no lack of it for the year. Nothing was ever
-lent on New Year's-day, as little as possible taken out, but all that
-could be brought into the house. "I have even known the dust of the
-floor swept inwards."--(T. Q. Couch, W. Antiquary, September, 1883.)
-
-Door-steps on New Year's-day were formerly sanded for good luck,
-because I suppose people coming into the house were sure to bring
-some of it in with them sticking to their feet.
-
-Many elderly people at the beginning of the present century still kept
-to the "old style," and held their Christmas-day on Epiphany. On the
-eve of that day they said "the cattle in the fields and stalls never
-lay down, but at midnight turned their faces to the east and fell on
-their knees."
-
-Twelfth-day (old Christmas-day) was a time of general feasting
-and merriment. Into the Twelfth-day cake were put a wedding-ring,
-a sixpence, and a thimble. It was cut into as many portions as there
-were guests; the person who found the wedding-ring in his (or her)
-portion would be married before the year was out; the holder of the
-thimble would never be married, and the one who got the sixpence would
-die rich. After candlelight many games were played around the open
-fires. I will describe one:--"Robin's alight." A piece of stick was
-set on fire, and whirled rapidly in the hands of the first player,
-who repeated the words--
-
-
- "Robin's alight, and if he go out I'll saddle your back."
-
-
-It was then passed on, and the person who let the spark die had to
-pay a forfeit.--(West Cornwall.)
-
-This game in East Cornwall was known as "Jack's alive."
-
-
- "Jack's alive and likely to live,
- If he die in my hand a pawn I'll give."
-
-
-In this county forfeits are always called "pawns"; they are cried by
-the holder of them, saying,--
-
-
- "Here's a pawn and a very pretty pawn!
- And what shall the owner of this pawn do?"
-
-
-After the midnight supper, at which in one village in the extreme West
-a pie of four-and-twenty blackbirds always appeared, many spells to
-forecast the future were practised. The following account of them was
-given to me by a friend. He says--"I engaged in them once at Sennen
-(the village at the Land's End) with a lot of girls, but as my object
-was only to spoil sport and make the girls laugh or speak, it was
-not quite satisfactory. I suppose the time to which I refer is over
-forty years ago. After making up a large turf fire, for hot 'umers'
-(embers) and pure water are absolutely necessary in these divinations,
-the young people silently left the house in single file, to pull the
-rushes and gather the ivy-leaves by means of which they were to learn
-whether they were to be married, and to whom; and if any, or how many,
-of their friends were to die before the end of the year. On leaving
-and on returning each of these Twelfth-night diviners touched the
-'cravel' with the forehead and 'wished.' The cravel is the tree that
-preceded lintels in chimney corners, and its name from this custom may
-have been derived from the verb 'to crave.' Had either of the party
-inadvertently broken the silence before the rushes and ivy-leaves
-had been procured they would all have been obliged to retrace their
-steps to the house and again touch the cravel; but this time all went
-well. When we came back those who wished to know their fate named the
-rushes in pairs, and placed them in the hot embers: one or two of
-the engaged couples being too shy to do this for themselves, their
-friends, amidst much laughing, did it for them. The manner in which
-the rushes burned showed if the young people were to be married to
-the person chosen or not: some, of course, burnt well, others parted,
-and one or two went out altogether. The couples that burnt smoothly
-were to be wedded, and the one named after the rush that lasted longest
-outlived the other. This settled, one ivy-leaf was thrown on the fire;
-the number of cracks it made was the number of years before the wedding
-would take place. Then two were placed on the hot ashes; the cracks
-they gave this time showed how many children the two would have. We
-then drew ivy-leaves named after present or absent friends through
-a wedding ring, and put them into a basin of water which we left
-until the next morning. Those persons whose leaves had shrivelled or
-turned black in the night were to die before the next Twelfth-tide,
-and those who were so unfortunate as to find their leaves spotted
-with red, by some violent death, unless a 'pellar' (wise man) could
-by his skill and incantations grant protection. These prophecies
-through superstition sometimes unluckily fulfilled themselves."
-
-During the twelve days of Christmas card-playing was a very favourite
-amusement with all classes. Whilst the old people enjoyed their game
-of whist with 'swabbers,' the young ones had their round games. I will
-append the rules of two or three for those who would like to try them.
-
-Whist (or whisk, as I have heard an old lady call it and maintain
-that that was its proper name) with "swabbers."
-
-This game, which was played as recently as 1880, nightly, by
-four maiden ladies at Falmouth, is like ordinary whist; but each
-player before beginning to play puts into the pool a fixed sum for
-"swabs." The "swab-cards" are--ace and deuce of trumps, ace of hearts
-and knave of clubs. The four cards are of equal value; but should
-hearts be trumps the ace would count double.
-
-"Board-'em," a round game that can be played by any number of players,
-from two to eight; it is played for fish, and there must never be
-less than six fish in the pool. Six cards are dealt to each person;
-and the thirteenth, if two are playing, the nineteenth if three, and
-so on, is turned up for trumps. The fore-hand plays; the next player,
-if he has one, must follow suit, if not, he may play another suit, or
-trump. The highest card of the original suit, if not trumped, takes
-the trick and one or more fish, according to the number staked. If
-you have neither card in your hand that you think will make a trick
-you may decline to play, in which case you only lose your stake;
-but should you play and fail to take a trick you pay for the whole
-company, and are said to "be boarded."
-
-"Ranter-go-round" was formerly played in four divisions marked with
-chalk upon a tea-tray; or even, in some cases, on a bellows--it is now
-played on a table, and is called "Miss Joan." Any number of players
-may join in it. The first player throws down any card of any suit,
-and says:--
-
-
- "Here's a ---- as you may see.
- 2nd Player--Here's another as good as he.
- 3rd Player--And here's the best of all the three.
- 4th Player--And here's Miss Joan, come tickle me."
-
-
-The holder of the fourth card wins the trick. He sometimes added the
-words wee-wee; but these are now generally omitted. If the person
-sitting next to the fore-hand has neither one of the cards demanded
-(one of the same value as the first played, in another suit), he
-pays one to the pool, as must all in turn who fail to produce the
-right cards. The player of the third may have the fourth in his hand,
-in which case all the others pay. The holder of the most tricks wins
-the game and takes the pool.
-
-I once, about thirty years since, at this season of the year, joined
-some children at Camborne who were playing a very primitive game called
-by them "pinny-ninny." A basin turned upside down was placed in the
-centre of a not very large round table. The players were supplied
-with small piles of pins--not the well-made ones sold in papers,
-but clumsy things with wire heads--"pound-pins." A large bottle full
-of them might, then, always be seen in the general shop window of
-every little country village. Each in turn dropped a pin over the
-side of the basin, and he whose pin fell and formed a cross on the
-top of the heap was entitled to add them to his own pile. This went
-on until one player had beggared all the others. Poor children before
-Christmas often begged pins to play this game, and their request was
-always granted by the gift of two.
-
-A wishing-well, near St. Austell, was sometimes called Pennameny
-Well, from the custom of dropping pins into it. Pedna-a-mean is the
-old Cornish for "heads-and-tails."--(See Divination at St. Roche and
-Madron Well.)
-
-All Christmas-cakes must be eaten by the night of Twelfth-tide,
-as it is unlucky to have any left, and all decorations must be
-taken down on the next day, because for every forgotten leaf of
-evergreen a ghost will be seen in the house in the course of the
-ensuing year. This latter superstition does not prevail, however,
-in all parts of Cornwall, as in some districts a small branch is kept
-to scare away evil spirits.
-
-January 24th, St. Paul's-eve, is a holiday with the miners, and is
-called by them 'Paul pitcher-day,' from a custom they have of setting
-up a water-pitcher, which they pelt with stones until it is broken
-in pieces. A new one is afterwards bought and carried to a beer-shop
-to be filled with beer.
-
-"There is a curious custom prevalent in some parts of Cornwall of
-throwing broken pitchers and other earthen vessels against the doors
-of dwelling-houses on the eve of the conversion of St. Paul, thence
-locally called 'Paul pitcher-night.' On that evening parties of young
-people perambulate the parishes in which the custom is retained,
-exclaiming as they throw the sherds, 'St. Paul's-eve and here's a
-heave.' According to the received notions the first heave cannot
-be objected to; but, upon its being repeated, the inhabitants of
-the house whose door is thus attacked may, if they can, seize the
-offenders and inflict summary justice upon them."--(F.M., Notes and
-Queries, March, 1874.)
-
-I have heard of this practice from a native of East Cornwall, who
-told me the pitchers were filled with broken sherds, filth, &c.
-
-The weather on St. Paul's-day still, with the old people, foretells
-the weather for the ensuing year, and the rhyme common to all England
-is repeated by them:--
-
-
- "If St. Paul's-day be fine and clear," &c.
-
-
-St. Blazey, a village in East Cornwall, is so named in honour of
-St. Blaize, who is said to have landed at Par, a small neighbouring
-seaport, when he came on a visit to England. His feast, which is
-held on 3rd February, would not be worth mentioning were it not for
-the fact that--"This saint is invoked in the county for toothache,
-while applying to the tooth the candle that burned on the altar of the
-church dedicated to him. The same candles are good for sore-throats
-and curing diseases in cattle."--(Mrs. Damant, Cowes.)
-
-On the Monday after St. Ives feast, which falls on Quinquagesima
-Sunday, an annual hurling-match is held on the sands. Most writers
-on Cornwall have described the old game. The following account is
-taken from The Land's End District, 1862, by R. Edmonds:--
-
-"A ball about the size of a cricket-ball, formed of cork, or light
-wood, and covered with silver, was hurled into the air, midway
-between the goals. Both parties immediately rushed towards it, each
-striving to seize and carry it to its own goal. In this contest,
-when any individual having possession of the ball found himself
-overpowered or outrun by his opponents, he hurled it to one of his
-own side, if near enough, or, if not, into some pool, ditch, furze,
-brake, garden, house, or other place of concealment, to prevent his
-adversaries getting hold of it before his own company could arrive."
-
-The hurlers, quaintly says Carew (Survey of Cornwall, p. 74), "Take
-their next way ouer hills, dales, hedges, ditches--yea, and thorou
-bushes, briers, mires, plashes, and rivers whatsoever--so as you
-shall sometimes see twenty or thirty lie tugging together in the
-water, scrambling and scratching for the ball. A play verily both
-rude and rough."
-
-Hurling between two or more parishes, and between one parish and
-another, has long ceased in Cornwall: but hurling by one part of a
-parish against another is still played at St. Ives, as well as other
-places in Cornwall. At St. Ives all the Toms, Wills, and Johns are on
-one side, while those having other Christian names range themselves on
-the opposite. At St. Columb (East Cornwall) the townspeople contend
-with the countrymen; at Truro, the married men with the unmarried;
-at Helston, two streets with all the other streets; on the 2nd of May,
-when their town-bounds are renewed.
-
-"Fair-play is good play," is the hurlers' motto. This is sometimes
-engraven on their balls in the old Cornish language. Private families
-possess some of these balls won by their ancestors early in the last
-century that are religiously handed down as heirlooms.
-
-A Druidic circle at St. Cleer, in East Cornwall, is known as the
-Hurlers, from a tradition that a party of men hurling on a Sunday
-were there for their wickedness turned into stone.
-
-'Peasen or Paisen Monday' is the Monday before Shrove Tuesday; it is so
-called in East Cornwall from a custom of eating pea-soup there on this
-day. This practice was once so universal in some parishes that an old
-farmer of Lower St. Columb, who had a special aversion to pea-soup,
-left his home in the morning, telling his wife that he should not
-come back to dinner, but spend the day with a friend. He returned
-two or three hours after in great disgust, as at every house in the
-village he had been asked to stay and taste their delicious pea-soup.
-
-"This day also in East Cornwall bears the name of 'Hall Monday,'
-why, I know not. And at dusk on the evening of the same day it is the
-custom for boys, and in some cases for those above the age of boys,
-to prowl about the streets with short clubs, and to knock loudly at
-every door, running off to escape detection on the slightest sign of a
-motion within. If, however, no attention be excited, and especially if
-any article be discovered, negligently exposed or carelessly guarded,
-then the things are carried away, and on the following morning are
-seen displayed in some conspicuous place, to disclose the disgraceful
-want of vigilance supposed to characterise the owner. The time when
-this is practised is called 'Nicky Nan' night, and the individuals
-concerned are supposed to represent some imps of darkness, that seize
-on and expose unguarded moments."--(Polperro, p. 151, by T. Q. Couch.)
-
-A custom nearly similar to this was practised in Scilly in the last
-century.
-
-The dinner on Shrove Tuesday in many Cornish houses consists of fried
-eggs and bacon, or salt pork, followed by the universal pancake,
-which is eaten by all classes. It is made the full size of the pan,
-and currants are put into the batter.
-
-In Penzance large quantities of limpets and periwinkles are gathered
-in the afternoon by poor people, to be cooked for their supper. This
-they call "going a-trigging." Any kind of shell-fish picked up at
-low water in this district is known as "trig-meat."
-
-Many other customs were formerly observed in Penzance on Shrove
-Tuesday, peculiar, I believe, to this town.
-
-Women and boys stood at the corners of the streets, with well-greased,
-sooty hands, which they rubbed over people's faces. I remember, not
-more than thirty years ago, seeing a little boy run into a house in
-a great hurry, and ask for what was he wanted. He had met a woman who
-had put her hands affectionately on each side of his face, and said,
-"Your father has been looking for you, my dear." She had left the
-marks of her dirty fingers.
-
-The butchers' market was always thoroughly cleaned in the afternoon,
-to see if the town hose were in perfect repair, and great merriment
-was often excited by the firemen turning the full force of the water
-on some unwary passer-by.
-
-People, too, were occasionally deluged by having buckets of water
-thrown over them. Every Shrove Tuesday after dusk men and boys went
-about and threw handfuls of shells, bottles of filth, etc., in at the
-doors. It was usual then for drapers to keep their shops open until
-a very late hour; and I have been told that boys were occasionally
-bribed by the assistants to throw something particularly disagreeable
-in on the floors, that the masters might be frightened, and order the
-shops to be shut. Still later in the evening signs were taken down,
-knockers wrenched off, gates unhung and carried to some distance. This
-last was done even as far down as 1881. Pulling boats up and putting
-them in a mill-pool (now built over) was a common practice at Mousehole
-in the beginning of the century.
-
-"In Landewednack, on Shrove Tuesday, children from the ages of six
-to twelve perambulate the parish begging for 'Col-perra' (probably
-an old Cornish word); but, whatever be its meaning, they expect to
-receive eatables or half-pence. As few refuse to give, they collect
-during the day a tolerable booty, in the shape of money, eggs, buns,
-apples, etc. The custom has existed from time immemorial, but none
-of the inhabitants are acquainted with its origin."--(A Week in the
-Lizard, by Rev. C. A. Johns, B.B., F.L.S.)
-
-I have been favoured by the Rev. S. Rundle, Godolphin, with the formula
-repeated by the children on this occasion (now almost forgotten):
-"Hen-cock, han-cock, give me a 'tabban' (morsel), or else 'Col-perra'
-shall come to your door."
-
-Boys at St. Ives, Scilly, and other places, went about with stones
-tied to strings, with which they struck the doors, saying:--
-
-
- "Give me a pancake, now! now! now!
- Or I'll knock in your door with a row, tow, tow!"
-
-
-This custom has only lately (if it has yet) quite died out. The rhyme
-at Polperro ran thus:--
-
-
- "Nicky, Nicky, Nan,
- Give me some pancake, and then I'll be gone,
- But if you give me none
- I'll throw a great stone,
- And down your door shall come."
-
- T. Q. Couch.
-
-
-Cock-fighting at Shrovetide was once a very favourite amusement in
-Cornwall, and in some of the most remote western villages has until
-recently been continued. "The Cock-pit" at Penzance, a small part
-of which still remains as a yard at the Union Hotel, belonged to and
-was kept up by the Corporation until (I think) the beginning of the
-present century.
-
-"Sir Rose Price, when young, was a great patron of the pit between
-the years 1780-1790. His father disapproved, and in consideration
-of his son giving up cock-fighting bought him a pack of hounds,
-the first foxhounds west of Truro."--(T.S.B.)
-
-"At St. Columb, about sixty years ago, on Shrove Tuesday, each child
-in a dame's school was expected by the mistress to bring an egg,
-and at twelve o'clock the children had an egg-battle. Two children
-stood facing each other, each held an egg, and struck the end of it
-against that of the opponent lengthwise, the result being that one
-or both were broken.
-
-"An unbroken egg was used again and again to fight the rest, and
-so the battle raged until all, or all but one, of the eggs were
-broken. The child who at the end of the fight held a sound egg was
-considered to be the conqueror, and was glorified accordingly. To
-save the contents of the eggs, which were the perquisite of the
-mistress, she held a plate beneath; and at the end of the battle
-the children were dismissed. And the old lady having picked out all
-the broken shells, proceeded to prepare her pancakes, of which she
-made her dinner."--(Fred. W. P. Jago, M.B., Plymouth, W. Antiquary,
-March, 1884.)
-
-"It must be now about thirty years ago that I was a day-scholar at
-the National School of St. Columb, and it was the custom then for each
-boy and girl to bring an egg. One of the senior boys stood at a table
-and wrote the name of the donor upon each. At about eleven o'clock the
-schoolmaster would produce a large punchbowl, and as he took up each
-egg he read the name, and broke the egg into the bowl. Eggs at that
-time were sold at three for a penny."--(W. B., Bodmin, W. Antiquary,
-March, 1884.)
-
-In the eastern part of the county at the beginning of Lent a straw
-figure dressed in cast-off clothes, and called "Jack-o'-lent," was not
-long since paraded through the streets and afterwards hung. Something
-of this kind is common on the Continent.
-
-The figure is supposed to represent Judas Iscariot. A slovenly ragged
-person is sometimes described as a "Jack-o'-lent."
-
-1st March.--In Mid-Cornwall, people arise before the sun is up, and
-sweep before the door to sweep away fleas.--(T. Q. Couch, W. Antiquary,
-September, 1883.)
-
-5th March.--St. Piran's day is a miners' holiday. St. Piran is the
-patron saint of "tinners," and is popularly supposed to have died
-drunk. "As drunk as a Piraner" is a Cornish proverb.
-
-The first Friday in March is another miners' holiday, "Friday in
-Lide." It is marked by a serio-comic custom of sending a young man
-on the highest "bound," or hillock, of the "works," and allowing him
-to sleep there as long as he can, the length of his siesta being the
-measure of the afternoon nap of the "tinners" throughout the ensuing
-twelve months.--(T. Q. Couch.) Lide is an obsolete term for the month
-of March still preserved in old proverbs, such as "Ducks won't lay
-'till they've drunk Lide water.
-
-Of a custom observed at Little Colan, in East Cornwall, on Palm Sunday,
-Carew says: "Little Colan is not worth observation, unlesse you will
-deride or pity their simplicity, who sought at our Lady Nant's well
-there to foreknowe what fortune should betide them, which was in this
-manner. Upon Palm Sunday these idle-headed seekers resorted thither
-with a Palme cross in one hand and an offring in the other. The offring
-fell to the Priest's share, the crosse they threwe into the well;
-which if it swamme the party should outliue the yeere; if it sunk a
-short ensuing death was boded; and perhaps not altogether vntimely,
-while a foolish conceite of this 'halsening' myght the sooner helpe
-it onwards."
-
-Holy Thursday.--On that Thursday, and the two following Thursdays,
-girls in the neighbourhood of Roche, in East Cornwall, repair to
-his holy or wishing well before sunrise. They throw in crooked pins
-or pebbles, and, by the bubbles that rise to the surface, seek to
-ascertain whether their sweethearts will be true or false. There was
-once a chapel near this well, which was then held in great repute for
-the cure of all kinds of diseases, and a granite figure of St. Roche
-stood on the arch of the building that still covers it.
-
-"Goody Friday" (Good Friday) was formerly kept more as a feast than a
-fast in Cornwall. Every vehicle was engaged days beforehand to take
-parties to some favourite place of resort in the neighbourhood, and
-labourers in inland parishes walked to the nearest seaport to gather
-"wrinkles" (winkles), &c.
-
-On the morning of Good Friday at St. Constantine, in West Cornwall,
-an old custom is still observed of going to Helford river to gather
-shell-fish (limpets, cockles, &c.); this river was once famous for
-oysters, and many were then bought and eaten on this day.
-
-"Near Padstow, in East Cornwall, is the tower of an old church
-dedicated to St. Constantine. In its vicinity the feast of
-St. Constantine used to be annually celebrated, and has only
-been discontinued of late years. Its celebration consisted in the
-destruction of limpet-pies, and service in the church, followed
-by a hurling match."--(Murray's Cornwall.) Another writer says:
-"The festival of St. Constantine" (March 9th) "was until very lately
-kept at St. Merran" (Constantine and Merran are now one parish) "by an
-annual hurling match, on which occasion the owner of Harlyn" (a house
-in the neighbourhood) "had from time immemorial supplied the silver
-ball. We are informed, on good authority, that a Shepherd's family,
-of the name of Edwards, held one of the cottages in Constantine for
-many generations under the owners of Harlyn, by the annual render
-of a Cornish pie, made of limpets, raisins, and sweet herbs, on the
-feast of St. Constantine."--(Lysons' Magna Britannia.)
-
-At St. Day a fair was formerly held on Good Friday, now changed to
-Easter Monday.
-
-"On Good Friday, 1878, I saw a brisk fair going on in the little
-village of Perran Porth, Cornwall, not far from the curious oratory of
-St. Piran, known as Perranzabuloe."--(W. A. B. C., Notes and Queries,
-April 23rd, 1881.)
-
-But, although many still make this day a holiday, the churches are
-now much better attended. Good Friday cross-buns of many kinds are
-sold by the Cornish confectioners; some, highly spiced, are eaten
-hot with butter and sugar; a commoner bun is simply washed over the
-top with saffron, and has a few currants stuck on it. There is one
-peculiar, I believe, to Penzance: it is made of a rich currant paste
-highly covered with saffron; it is about an eighth of an inch thick,
-and four inches in diameter, and is marked with a large cross that
-divides it into four equal portions.
-
-"In some of our farmhouses the Good Friday bun may be seen hanging
-to a string from the bacon-rack, slowly diminishing until the return
-of the season replaces it by a fresh one. It is of sovereign good in
-all manners of diseases afflicting the family or cattle. I have more
-than once seen a little of this cake grated into a warm mash for a
-sick cow."--(T. Q. Couch, Polperro.) There is a superstition that
-bread made on this day never gets mouldy.
-
-Many amateur gardeners sow their seeds on Good Friday; superstition
-says then they will all grow. "There is a widely known belief
-in West Cornwall, that young ravens are always hatched on Good
-Friday."--(T. Cornish, W. Antiquary, October, 1887.)
-
-On Easter Monday, at Penzance, it was the custom within the last twenty
-years to bring out in the lower part of the town, before the doors,
-tables, on which were placed thick gingerbread cakes with raisins in
-them, cups and saucers, etc., to be raffled for with cups and dice,
-called here "Lilly-bangers." Fifty years since a man, nicknamed
-Harry Martillo, with his wife, the "lovelee," always kept one of
-these "lilly-banger stalls" at Penzance on market day. He would call
-attention to his gaming-table by shouting--
-
-
- "I've been in Europe, Ayshee, Afrikee, and Amerikee,
- And come back and married the lovelee."
-
-
-I have heard that both used tobacco in three ways, and indulged
-freely in rum, also "tom-trot" (hardbake), strongly flavoured with
-peppermint. Of course a lively market would influence the dose, and
-as for "lovelee," it must have been in Harry's partial eyes.--(H.R.C.)
-
-"Upon little Easter Sunday, the freeholders of the towne and mannour
-of Lostwithiel, by themselves or their deputies, did there assemble,
-amongst whom one (as it fell to his lot by turne), bravely apparelled,
-gallantly mounted, with a crowne on his head, a scepter in his hand,
-a sword borne before him, and dutifully attended by all the rest
-also on horseback, ride thorow the principal streete to the Church;
-there the Curate in his best 'beseene' solemne receiud him at the
-Church-yard stile, and conducted him to heare diuine seruice; after
-which he repaired with the same pompe to a house fore-prouided for
-that purpose, made a feast to his attendants, kept the table's end
-himselfe, and was serued with kneeling, assay, and all other rites
-due to the estate of a Prince; with which dinner the ceremony ended,
-and every man returned home again."--(Carew.)
-
-The ancient custom of choosing a mock mayor was observed at
-Lostwithiel, on 10th October, 1884, by torchlight, in the presence of
-nearly a thousand people. The origin of both these customs is now quite
-forgotten. "A custom still existing at St. John's, Helston, and also at
-Buryan. The last mayor of the Quay, Penzance, was Mr. Robinson, a noted
-authority on sea fishing, etc. He died about ten years ago."--(H.R.C.)
-
-April 1st. The universal attempts at fooling on this day are carried on
-in Cornwall as elsewhere, and children are sent by their schoolfellows
-for penn'orths of pigeon's milk, memory powder, strap-oil, etc., or
-with a note telling the receiver "to send the fool farther." When one
-boy succeeds in taking in another, he shouts after him, Fool! fool! the
-"guckaw" (cuckoo).
-
-Towednack's (a village near St. Ives) "Cuckoo" or "Crowder" feast is on
-the nearest Sunday to the 28th April. Tradition accounts for the first
-name by the story of a man who there gave a feast on an inclement
-day in the end of April. To warm his guests he threw some faggots
-on the fire (or some furze-bushes), when a cuckoo flew out of them,
-calling "Cuckoo! cuckoo!" It was caught and kept, and he resolved
-every year to invite his friends to celebrate the event. This, too,
-is said to be the origin of the feast.
-
-"Crowder" in Cornwall means a fiddler, and the fiddle is called a
-"crowd." In former days the parishioners of Towednack were met at
-the church door on "feasten" day by a "crowder," who, playing on his
-"crowd," headed a procession through the village street, hence its
-second name.
-
-The only May-pole now erected in Cornwall is put up on April 30th,
-at Hugh Town, St. Mary's, Scilly. Girls dance round it on May-day with
-garlands of flowers on their heads, or large wreaths of flowers from
-shoulder to waist. Dr. Stephen Clogg, of Looe, says that "May-poles
-are still to be seen on May-day, at Pelynt, Dulver, and East and
-West Looe."--(W. Antiquary, August, 1884.) In the beginning of this
-century, boys and girls in Cornwall sat up until twelve o'clock on the
-eve of May-day, and then marched around the towns and villages with
-Musical Instruments, collecting their friends to go a-maying. May-day
-is ushered in at Penzance by the discordant blowing of large tin
-horns. At daybreak, and even earlier, parties of boys, five or six in
-number, assemble at the street corners, from whence they perambulate
-the town blowing their horns and conchshells. They enter the gardens
-of detached houses, stop and bray under the bed-room windows, and
-beg for money. With what they collect they go into the country, and
-at one of the farmhouses they breakfast on bread and clotted cream,
-junket, &c. An additional ring of tin (a penn'orth) is added to his
-horn every year that a boy uses it.
-
-Formerly, on May-morn, if the boys succeeded in fixing a "May bough"
-over a farmer's door before he was up, he was considered bound to
-give them their breakfasts; and in some parts of the county, should
-the first comer bring with him a piece of well-opened hawthorn,
-he was entitled to a basin of cream.
-
-"In West Cornwall it is the custom to hang a piece of furze to a door
-early in the morning of May-day. At breakfast-time the one who does
-this appears and demands a piece of bread and cream with a basin of
-'raw-milk' (milk that has not been scalded and the cream taken off).
-
-"In Landrake, East Cornwall, it was the custom to give the person
-who plucked a fern as much cream as would cover it. It was also a
-practice there to chastise with stinging nettles any one found in
-bed after six on May-morning."--(Rev. S. Rundle, Vicar, Godolphin.)
-
-Young shoots of sycamore, as well as white thorn, are known as May in
-Cornwall, and from green twigs of the former and from green stalks
-of wheaten corn the children of this county make a rude whistle,
-which they call a "feeper."
-
-Until very lately parties of young men and women rose betimes on
-May-day and went into the country to breakfast; going a "a junketing"
-in the evening has not yet been discontinued.
-
-At Hayle, on May-day (1883), as usual, groups of children, decorated
-with flowers and gay with fantastic paper-clothes, went singing through
-the streets. In the evening bonfires were lit in various parts of the
-town, houses were illuminated with candles, torches and fire-balls
-burnt until a late hour. The last is a new and dangerous plaything:
-a ball of tow or rags is saturated with petroleum, set fire to,
-and then kicked from one place to another; it leaves a small track
-of burning oil wherever it goes.
-
-"On May-morning, in Polperro, the children and even adults go
-out into the country and fetch home branches of the narrow-leaved
-elm, or flowering boughs of white thorn, both of which are called
-'May.' At a later hour all the boys sally forth with bucket, can,
-or other vessel, and avail themselves of a license which the season
-confers--to 'dip' or wellnigh drown, without regard to person or
-circumstance, the passenger who has not the protection of a piece of
-'May' conspicuously stuck in his dress; at the same time they sing,
-'The first of May is Dipping-day.' This manner of keeping May-day is,
-I have heard, common in Cornwall. We are now favoured with a call
-from the boy with his pretty garland, gay with bright flowers and
-gaudily-painted birds'-eggs, who expects some little gratuity for
-the sight."--(T. Q. Couch.)
-
-"At East and West Looe the boys dress their hats with flowers, furnish
-themselves with bullocks' horns, in which sticks of two feet long are
-fixed, and with these filled with water they parade the streets and
-dip all persons who have not the sprig of May in their hats."--(Bond.)
-
-"First of May you must take down all the horse-shoes (that are nailed
-over doors to keep out witches, &c.) and turn them, not letting them
-touch the ground."--(Old farmer, Mid-Cornwall, through T. Q. Couch,
-W. Antiquary, September, 1883.)
-
-May-day at Padstow is Hobby-horse day. A hobby-horse is carried through
-the streets to a pool known as Traitor's-pool, a quarter of a mile
-out of the town. Here it is supposed to drink: the head is dipped
-into the water, which is freely sprinkled over the spectators. The
-procession returns home, singing a song to commemorate the tradition
-that the French, having landed in the bay, mistook a party of mummers
-in red cloaks for soldiers, hastily fled to their boats and rowed away.
-
-"The May-pole on the first of May at Padstow has only been discontinued
-within the last six or eight years (1883). It was erected in connection
-with the 'Hobby-horse' festival by the young men of the town, who on
-the last eve of April month would go into the country, cut a quantity
-of blooming yellow furze, and gather the flowers then in season, make
-garlands of the same; borrow the largest spar they could get from
-the shipwright's yard, dress it up with the said furze and garlands,
-with a flag or two on the top, and hoist the pole in a conspicuous
-part of the town, when the 'Mayers,' male and female, would dance
-around it on that festival-day, singing--
-
-
- 'And strew all your flowers, for summer is come in to-day.
- It is but a while ago since we have strewed ours
- In the merry morning of May,' &c.
-
-
-"The May-pole was allowed to remain up from a week to a fortnight,
-when it was taken down, stripped, and the pole returned."--(Henry
-Harding, Padstow, W. Antiquary, August, 1883.)
-
-"Formerly all the respectable people at Padstow kept this anniversary,
-decorated with the choicest flowers; but some unlucky day a number of
-rough characters from a distance joined in it, and committed some sad
-assaults upon old and young, spoiling all their nice summer clothes,
-and covering their faces and persons with smut. From that time--fifty
-years since--(1865) the procession is formed of the lowest.
-
-"The May-pole was once decorated with the best flowers, now with
-only some elm-branches and furze in blossom. The horse is formed
-as follows: The dress is made of sackcloth painted black--a fierce
-mask--eyes red, horse's head, horse-hair mane and tail; distended
-by a hoop--some would call it frightful. Carried by a powerful man,
-he could inflict much mischief with the snappers, &c. No doubt it is
-a remnant of the ancient plays, and it represents the devil, or the
-power of darkness. They commence singing at sunrise.
-
-
- 'THE MORNING-SONG.
-
- 'Unite and unite, and let us all unite,
- For summer is comen to-day;
- For whither we are going we all will unite,
- In the merry morning of May.
-
- 'Arise up, Mr. ----, and joy you betide,
- For summer is comen to-day;
- And bright is your bride that lays by your side,
- In the merry morning of May.
-
- 'Arise, up Mrs. ----, and gold be your ring,
- For summer is comen to-day;
- And give us a cup of ale, the merrier we shall sing
- In the merry morning of May.
-
- 'Arise up, Miss ----, all in your smock of silk,
- For summer is comen to-day;
- And all your body under as white as any milk,
- In the merry morning of May.
-
- 'The young men of Padstow might if they would,
- For summer is comen to-day;
- They might have built a ship and gilded her with gold,
- In the merry morning of May.
-
- 'Now fare you well, and we bid you good cheer,
- For summer is comen to-day;
- He will come no more unto your house before another year,
- In the merry morning of May.'"
-
- (George Rawlings, September 1st, 1865, through
- R. Hunt, F.R.S., Droles, &c., Old Cornwall.)
-
-
-Mr. Rawlings all through his song has written "For summer has come
-unto day," but this is clearly a mistake. He also gives another which
-he calls the "May-Song," but it is not as well worth transcribing:
-it bears in some parts a slight resemblance to that sung at the
-Helston Hal-an-tow.
-
-Mr. George C. Boase, in an article on "The Padstow May-Songs," has many
-additional verses in "The Morning-Song." He also gives "The Day-Song,"
-sung in honour of St. George, of which I will quote the first verse,
-and the last paragraph of his paper.
-
-
- "Awake, St. George, our English knight O!
- For summer is a-come and winter is a-go,
- And every day God give us His grace,
- By day and by night O!
- Where is St. George, where is he O!
- He is out in his long boat, all on the salt sea O!
- And in every land O! the land that ere we go.
-
- Chorus--And for to fetch the summer home, the summer and the May O!
- For the summer is a-come and the winter is a-go,
- etc."
-
-
-The only account of "The Hobby-horse" found in the Cornish histories is
-in Hitchins and Drew's Cornwall (vol. i., p. 720; vol. ii., pp. 525,
-529), where it is stated that there is a tradition of St. George
-on horseback having visited the neighbourhood of Padstow, where
-the indentation of his horse's hoofs caused a spring of water to
-arise. The spot is still known as St. George's well, and water is
-said to be found there even in the hottest summer.--(W. Antiquary.)
-
-In East Cornwall they have a custom of bathing in the sea on the
-three first Sunday mornings in May. And in West Cornwall children
-were taken before sunrise on those days to the holy wells, notably to
-that of St. Maddern (Madron), near Penzance, to be there dipped into
-the running water, that they might be cured of the rickets and other
-childish disorders. After being stripped naked they were plunged three
-times into the water, the parents facing the sun, and passed round the
-well nine times from east to west. They were then dressed, and laid
-by the side of the well, or on an artificial mound re-made every year,
-called St. Maddern's bed, which faced it, to sleep in the sun: should
-they do so and the water bubble it was considered a good sign. Not
-a word was to be spoken the whole time for fear of breaking the spell.
-
-A small piece torn (not cut) from the child's clothes was hung
-for luck (if possible out of sight) on a thorn which grew out of
-the chapel wall. Some of these bits of rag may still sometimes be
-found fluttering on the neighbouring bushes. I knew two well-educated
-people who in 1840, having a son who could not walk at the age of two,
-carried him and dipped him in Madron well (a distance of three miles
-from their home,) on the first two Sundays in May; but on the third
-the father refused to go. Some authorities say this well should be
-visited on the first three Wednesdays in May; as was for the same
-purpose another holy well at Chapel Euny (or St. Uny) near Sancred.
-
-The Wesleyans hold an open-air service on the first three Sunday
-afternoons in May, at a ruined chapel near Madron well, in the south
-wall of which a hole may be seen, through which the water from the
-well runs into a small baptistry in the south-west corner.
-
-Parties of young girls to this day walk there in May to try for
-sweethearts. Crooked pins, or small heavy things, are dropped into the
-well in couples; if they keep together the pair will be married; the
-number of bubbles they make in falling shows the time that will elapse
-before the event. Sometimes two pieces of straw formed into a cross,
-fastened in the centre by a pin, were used in these divinations. An old
-woman who lived in a cottage at a little distance formerly frequented
-the well and instructed visitors how to work the charms; she was never
-paid in money, but small presents were placed where she could find
-them. Pilgrims from all parts of England centuries ago resorted to
-St. Maddern's well: that was famed, as was also her grave, for many
-miraculous cures. The late Rev. R. S. Hawker, Vicar of Morwenstow, in
-East Cornwall, published a poem, called "The Doom Well of St. Madron,"
-on one of the ancient legends connected with it.
-
-"A respectable tradesman's wife in Launceston tells me that the
-townspeople here say that a swelling in the neck may be cured by the
-patients going before sunrise on the first of May to the grave of
-the last young man (if the patient be a woman), to that of the last
-young woman (if a man) who had been buried in the churchyard, and
-applying the dew, gathered by passing the hand three times from the
-head to the foot of the grave, to the part affected by the ailment. I
-may as well add that the common notion of improving the complexion by
-washing the face with the early dew in the fields on the first of May
-prevails in these parts (East Cornwall), and they say that a child
-who is weak in the back may be cured by drawing him over the grass
-wet with the morning dew. The experiment must be thrice performed,
-that is, on the mornings of the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd of May."--(H. G. T.,
-Notes and Queries, 14th December, 1850.)
-
-The 8th of May is at Helston given up to pleasure, and is known as
-Flora-day, Flurry-day, Furry-day, and Faddy. To "fade" meant in old
-English to dance from country to town. A legend says this day was
-set apart to commemorate a fight between the devil and St. Michael,
-in which the first was defeated. The name Helston has been fancifully
-derived from a large block of granite which until 1783 was to be seen
-in the yard of the Angel hotel, the principal inn of the place. This
-was the stone that sealed Hell's mouth, and the devil was carrying
-it when met by St. Michael. Why he should have burdened himself with
-such a "large pebble" (as Cornish miners call all stones) is quite
-unknown. The fight and overthrow are figured on the town-seal.
-
-The week before Flora-day is in Helston devoted to the "spring-clean,"
-and every house is made "as bright as a new pin," and the gardens
-stripped of their flowers to adorn them.
-
-The revelry begins at day-break, when the men and maidservants
-with their friends go into the country to breakfast; these are the
-"Hal-an-tow." They return about eight, laden with green boughs,
-preceded by a drum and singing an old song, the first verses of which
-ran thus:--
-
-
- "Robin Hood and Little John
- They both are gone to fair, O!
- And we will to the merry greenwood
- To see what they do there, O!
- And for to chase--O!
- To chase the buck and doe.
-
- Refrain--With Hal-an-tow! Rumbelow!
- For we are up as soon as any O!
- And for to fetch the summer home,
- The summer and the May O!
- For summer is a-come O!
- And winter is a-gone O!
-
-
-The whole of this song may be found with the music in the Rev. Baring
-Gould's "Songs of the West," and the first verse set to another
-tune in Specimens of Cornish Provincial Dialect, by Uncle Jan
-Trenoodle. (Sandys.)
-
-The Hal-an-tow are privileged to levy contributions on strangers
-coming into the town.
-
-Early in the morning merry peals are rung on the church-bells,
-and at nine a prescriptive holiday is demanded by the boys at the
-grammar-school. At noon the principal inhabitants and visitors dance
-through the town. The dancers start from the market-house, and go
-through the streets; in at the front doors of the houses that have
-been left open for them, ringing every bell and knocking at every
-knocker, and out at the back, but if more convenient they dance
-around the garden, or even around a room, and return through the
-door by which they entered. Sometimes the procession files in at one
-shop-door, dances through that department and out through another,
-and in one place descends into a cellar. All the main streets are
-thus traversed, and a circuit is made of the bowling-green, which
-at one end is the extreme limit of the town. Two beadles, their
-wands wreathed with flowers, and a band with a gaily-decorated
-drum, head the procession. The dance ends with "hands across" at
-the assembly room of the Angel hotel, where there is always a ball
-in the evening. Non-dancers are admitted to this room by a small
-payment (which must be a silver coin), paid as they go up the stairs
-either to the landlord or a gentleman,--one stands on each side of
-the door. The gentlemen dancers on entering pay for their partners,
-and by established custom, should they be going to attend the evening
-ball, they are bound to give them their tickets, gloves, and the
-first dance. The tradespeople have their dance at a later hour,
-and their ball at another hotel.
-
-The figure of the Furry dance, performed to a very lively measure,
-is extremely simple. To the first half of the tune the couples dance
-along hand-in-hand; at the second the first gentleman turns the second
-lady and the second gentleman the first. This change is made all down
-the set. Repeat.
-
-I have appended the tune, to which children have adopted the following
-doggerel:--
-
-
- "John the bone (beau) was walking home,
- When he met with Sally Dover,
- He kissed her once, he kissed her twice,
- And he kissed her three times over."
-
-
-Some writers have made the mistake of imagining that the tune sung
-to the Hal-an-tow and the Furry dance are the same.
-
-Formerly, should any person in Helston be found at work on Flora-day,
-he was set astride on a pole, then carried away on men's shoulders to
-a wide part of the Cober (a stream which empties itself into Loe-pool
-close by), and sentenced to leap over it. As it was almost impossible
-to do this without jumping into the water, the punishment was remitted
-by the payment of a small fine towards the day's amusement. Others
-say the offender was first made to jump the Cober and then set astride
-on a pole to dry.
-
-In many of the villages around Helston the children, on Flora-day, deck
-themselves with large wreaths, which they wear over one shoulder and
-under the other arm; and at Porthleven I observed, in 1884, in addition
-to these wreaths, several children with large white handkerchiefs
-arranged as wimples, kept on their heads with garlands of flowers.
-
-One of the first objects on entering the village of St. Germans
-(East Cornwall) is the large walnut-tree, at the foot of what is
-called Nut-tree Hill. Many a gay May-fair has been witnessed by
-the old tree. In the morning of the 28th of the month splendid fat
-cattle from some of the largest and best farms in the county quietly
-chewed the cud around its trunk; in the afternoon the basket-swing
-dangled from its branches filled with merry, laughing boys and girls
-from every part of the parish. On the following day the mock mayor,
-who had been chosen with many formalities, remarkable only for their
-rude and rough nature, starting from some "bush-house" where he had
-been supping too freely of the fair-ale, was mounted on wain or cart,
-and drawn around it, to claim his pretended jurisdiction over the
-ancient borough, until his successor was chosen at the following
-fair. Leaving the nut-tree, which is a real ornament to the town, we
-pass by a spring of water running into a large trough, in which many
-a country lad has been drenched for daring to enter the town on the
-29th of May without the leaf or branch of oak in his hat.--(R. Hunt,
-F.R.S., Drolls, &c., Old Cornwall.)
-
-The wrestlers of Cornwall and their wrestling-matches are still famous,
-and in the May of 1868 4,000 assembled one day on Marazion Green,
-and 3,000 the next, to see one. The wrestlers of this county have a
-peculiar grip, called by them "the Cornish-hug."
-
-Any odd, foolish game is in West Cornwall called a May-game
-(pronounced May-gum), also a person who acts foolishly; and you
-frequently hear the expression--"He's a reg'lar May-gum!" There is a
-proverb that says--"Don't make mock of a May-gum, you may be struck
-comical yourself one day."
-
-Whit-Sunday.--It was formerly considered very unlucky in Cornwall to
-go out on this day without putting on some new thing. Children were
-told that should they do so "the birds would foul them as they walked
-along." A new ribbon, or even a shoe-lace, would be sufficient to
-protect them. Whit-Monday is generally kept as a holiday, and is often
-made an excuse for another country excursion, which, if taken in the
-afternoon, ends at some farm-house with a tea of Cornish "heavy-cream
-cake," followed (in the evening) by a junket with clotted-cream.
-
-Carew speaks of a feast kept in his time on Whit-Monday at the
-"Church-house" of the different parishes called a "Church-ale." It was
-a sort of large picnic, for which money had been previously collected
-by two young men--"wardens," who had been previously appointed the
-preceding year by their last "foregoers." This custom has long ceased
-to exist.
-
-The Wesleyans (Methodists) in Cornwall hold an open-air service
-on Whit-Monday at Gwennap-pit. The pit is an old earth-round,
-excavated in the hill-side of Carn Marth, about three miles from the
-small village of Gwennap, and one from Redruth. This amphitheatre,
-which is then usually filled, is capable of holding from four to
-five thousand people, and is in shape like a funnel. It is encircled
-from the bottom to the top with eighteen turf-covered banks, made by
-cutting the earth into steps. It is admirably adapted for sound, and
-the voice of the preacher, who stands on one side, about half way up,
-is distinctly heard by the whole congregation. Wesley, when on a visit
-to Cornwall, preached in Gwennap-pit to the miners of that district,
-and this was the origin of the custom. Many excursion-trains run to
-Redruth on Whit-Monday, and a continuous string of vehicles of every
-description, as well as pedestrians, may be seen wending their way
-from the station to the pit, which is almost surrounded by "downs,"
-and in a road close by rows of "standings" (stalls) are erected for
-the sale of "fairings." An annual pleasure-fair goes on at the same
-time at Redruth, and many avail themselves of the excursion-trains
-who have not the least intention of attending the religious service.
-
-"In Mid-Cornwall, in the second week of June, at St. Roche and in one
-or two adjacent parishes, a curious dance is performed at their annual
-'feasts.' It enjoys the rather undignified name of 'Snails' creep,'
-but would be more properly called 'The Serpent's Coil.'
-
-"The following is scarcely a perfect description of it:--The young
-people being all assembled in a large meadow, the village band
-strikes up a simple but lively air, and marches forward, followed by
-the whole assemblage, leading hand-in-hand (or more closely linked
-in case of engaged couples), the whole keeping time to the tune
-with a lively step. The band or head of the serpent keeps marching
-in an ever-narrowing circle, whilst its train of dancing followers
-becomes coiled around it in circle after circle. It is now that the
-most interesting part of the dance commences, for the band, taking
-a sharp turn about, begins to retrace the circle, still followed as
-before, and a number of young men with long, leafy branches in their
-hands as standards, direct this counter-movement with almost military
-precision."--(W. C. Wade, W. Antiquary, April, 1881.)
-
-A game similar to the above dance is often played by Sunday-school
-children in West Cornwall, at their out-of-door summer-treats, called
-by them "roll-tobacco." They join hands in one long line, the taller
-children at the head. The first child stands still, whilst the others
-in ever-narrowing circles dance around singing, until they are coiled
-into a tight mass. The outer coil then wheels sharply in a contrary
-direction, followed by the remainder, retracing their steps.
-
-23rd of June. In the afternoon of Midsummer-eve little girls may be
-still occasionally met in the streets of Penzance with garlands of
-flowers on their heads, or wreaths over one shoulder.
-
-This custom was, within the last fifty years, generally observed
-in West Cornwall. And in all the streets of our towns and villages
-groups of graceful girls, rich as well as poor, all dressed in white,
-their frocks decorated with rows of laurel-leaves ("often spangled
-with gold-leaf"--Bottrell), might in the afternoon have been seen
-standing at the doors, or in the evening dancing along with their
-brothers or lovers.
-
-In Penzance, and in nearly all the parishes of West Penwith,
-immediately after nightfall on the eves of St. John and St. Peter,
-the 23rd and 28th of June, lines of tar-barrels, occasionally broken
-by bonfires, were simultaneously lighted in all the streets, whilst,
-at the same time, bonfires were kindled on all the cairns and hills
-around Mount's Bay, throwing the outlines in bold relief against
-the sky. "Then the villagers, linked in circles hand-in-hand,
-danced round them to preserve themselves against witchcraft, and,
-when they burnt low, one person here and there detached himself from
-the rest and leaped through the flames to insure himself from some
-special evil. The old people counted these fires and drew a presage
-from them."--(Bottrell.)
-
-Regularly at dusk the mayor of Penzance sent the town-crier through
-the streets to give notice that no fireworks were allowed to be let
-off in the town; but this was done simply that he should not be held
-responsible if any accident happened, for he and all in Penzance knew
-quite well that the law would be set at defiance. Large numbers of men,
-women, and boys came up soon after from the quay and lower parts of
-the town swinging immense torches around their heads; these torches
-(locally known as "to'ches") were made of pieces of canvas about
-two feet square, fastened in the middle either to a long pole or a
-strong chain, dipped until completely saturated in tar. Of course
-they required to be swung with great dexterity or the holder would
-have been burnt. The heat they gave out was something dreadful,
-and the smoke suffocating. Most of the inhabitants dressed in their
-oldest clothes congregated in groups in the street, and a great part
-of the fun of the evening consisted in slyly throwing squibs amongst
-them, or in dispersing them by chasing them with hand-rockets. The
-greatest good humour always prevailed, and although the revellers
-were thickest in a small square surrounded by houses, some of them
-thatched, very few accidents have ever happened. A band stationed
-here played at intervals. No set-pieces were ever put off, but there
-were a few Roman-candles. Between ten and eleven a popular mayor might
-often have been seen standing in the middle of this square (the Green
-Market), encircled by about a dozen young men, each holding a lighted
-hand-rocket over the mayor's head. The sparks which fell around him
-on all sides made him look as if he stood in the centre of a fountain
-of fire. The proceedings finished by the boys and girls from the
-quay, whose torches had by this time expired, dancing in a long line
-hand in hand through the streets, in and out and sometimes over the
-now low burning tar-barrels, crying out, "An eye, an eye." At this
-shout the top couple held up their arms, and, beginning with the
-last, the others ran under them, thus reversing their position. A
-year or two ago, owing to the increasing traffic at Penzance,
-the practice of letting off squibs and crackers in the streets was
-formally abolished by order of the mayor and corporation. Efforts
-are still made and money collected for the purpose of reviving it,
-with some little success; but the Green Market is no longer the
-scene of the fun. A few boys still after dusk swing their torches,
-and here and there some of the old inhabitants keep up the custom of
-lighting tar-barrels or bonfires before their doors. A rite called
-the Bonfire Test was formerly celebrated on this night. Mr. R. Hunt,
-F.R.S., has described it in his Drolls, &c. Old Cornwall:--"A bonfire
-is formed of faggots of furze, ferns, and the like. Men and maidens,
-by locking hands, form a circle, and commence a dance to some wild
-native song. At length, as the dancers become excited, they pull each
-other from side to side across the fire. If they succeed in treading
-out the fire without breaking the chain, none of the party will die
-during the year. If, however, the ring is broken before the fire
-is extinguished, 'bad luck to the weak hands,' as my informant said
-(1865). All the witches in West Cornwall used to meet at midnight on
-Midsummer-eve at Trewa (pronounced Troway), in the parish of Zennor,
-and around the dying fires renewed their vows to their master, the
-Devil. Zennor boasts of some of the finest coast scenery in Cornwall,
-and many remarkable rocks were scattered about in this neighbourhood;
-several of them (as does the cromlech) still remain, but others have
-been quarried and carted away, amongst them one known as Witches'
-Rock, which if touched nine times at midnight kept away ill-luck,
-and prevented people from being 'over-looked' (ill-wished)."
-
-On Midsummer-day (June 24th) two pleasure fairs are held in Cornwall:
-one at Pelynt, in the eastern part of the county, where in the evening,
-from time immemorial, a large bonfire has been always lighted in an
-adjoining field by the boys of the neighbourhood (some writers fix on
-the summer solstice as the date of Pelynt fair, but this, I believe,
-is an error); and the second on the old quay at Penzance. It is called
-"Quay Fair," to distinguish it from Corpus Christi fair, another and
-much larger one held at the other extremity of the town, and which
-lasts from the eve of Corpus Christi until the following Saturday. Quay
-fair was formerly crowded by people from the neighbouring inland towns
-and villages; their principal amusement was to go out for a short row,
-a great number in one boat, the boatmen charging a penny a head. This
-was taking a "Pen'nord of Say." When not paid for, a short row is a
-"Troil." (Troil is Old-Cornish for a feast).
-
-Although this fair has not yet been discontinued, the number of those
-attending it grows less and less every year, and not enough money is
-taken to encourage travelling showmen to set up their booths. The
-old charter allowed the public-houses at the quay to keep open all
-night on the 24th of June, but such is no longer the case. Quay
-fair was sometimes known as Strawberry fair, and thirty years ago
-many strawberries were sold at it for twopence a quart. They were
-not brought to market in pottles, but in large baskets containing
-some gallons, and were measured out to the customers in a tin pint
-or quart measure. They were eaten from cabbage-leaves. Before the
-end of the day, unless there were a brisk sale, the fruit naturally
-got much bruised. They are still sold in the same way, but are not
-nearly as plentiful. Many of the strawberry fields, through which the
-public footpaths often went, have been turned up, and are now used
-for growing early potatoes. On St. John's-day Cornish miners place
-a green bough on the shears of the engine-houses in commemoration of
-his preaching in the wilderness.
-
-This day is with Cornish as with other maidens a favourite one for
-trying old love-charms. Some of them rise betimes, and go into the
-country to search for an even "leafed" ash, or an even "leafed"
-clover. When found, the rhymes they repeat are common to all England.
-
-An old lady, a native of Scilly, once gave me a most graphic
-description of her mother and aunt laying a table, just before midnight
-on St. John's-day, with a clean white cloth, knives and forks, and
-bread and cheese, to see if they should marry the men to whom they
-were engaged. They sat down to it, keeping strict silence--
-
-
- "For, if a word had been spoken,
- The spell would have been broken."
-
-
-As the clock struck twelve, the door (which had purposely been left
-unbarred) opened, and their two lovers walked in, having, as they
-said, met outside, both compelled by irresistible curiosity to go
-and see if there were anything the matter with their sweethearts.
-
-It never entered the old lady's head that the men probably had an
-inkling of what was going on, and to have hinted that such was the
-case would, I am quite sure, have given dire offence.
-
-The following charm is from the W. Antiquary:--Pluck a rose at
-midnight on St. John's-day, wear it to church, and your intended
-will take it out of your button-hole.--(Old Farmer, Mid-Cornwall,
-through T. Q. Couch.)
-
-"It was believed that if a young maiden gathered a rose on
-Midsummer-day, and folding it in white paper, forbore to look at
-it or mention what she had done until the following Christmas-day,
-she would then find the flower fresh and bright; and further if she
-placed it in her bosom and wore it at church, the person most worthy
-of her hand would be sure to draw near her in the porch, and beseech
-her to give him the rose."--Neota--Launcells. Charlotte Hawkey.
-
-In connection with Midsummer bonfires, I mentioned those on
-St. Peter's-eve; although they are no longer lighted at Penzance,
-the custom (never confined to West Cornwall) is in other places still
-observed. Many of the churches in the small fishing villages on the
-coast are dedicated to this saint, the patron of fishermen, and on
-his tide the towers of these churches were formerly occasionally
-illuminated.
-
-On St. Peter's-eve, at Newlyn West, in 1883, many of the men were
-away fishing on the east coast of England, and the celebration of the
-festival was put off until their return, when it took place with more
-than usual rejoicings. The afternoon was given up to aquatic sports,
-and in the evening, in addition to the usual bonfires and tar-barrels,
-squibs, hand and sky-rockets were let off. The young people finished
-the day with an open-air dance, which ended before twelve. In this
-village effigies of objectionable characters, after they have been
-carried through the streets, are sometimes burnt in the St. Peter's
-bonfire. I have often in Cornwall heard red-haired people described
-"as looking as if they were born on bonfire night." At Wendron, and
-many other small inland mining villages, the boys at St. Peter's-tide
-fire off miniature rock batteries called "plugs."
-
-I must now again quote from Mr. T. Q. Couch, and give his account of
-how this day is observed at Polperro.
-
-"The patron saint of Polperro is St. Peter, to whom the church, built
-on the seaward hill (still called chapel hill) was dedicated. His
-festival is kept on the 10th of July (old style). At Peter's-tide is
-our annual feast or fair. Though a feeble and insignificant matter,
-it is still with the young the great event of the year. On the eve of
-the fair is the prefatory ceremony of a bonfire. The young fishermen go
-from house to house and beg money to defray the expenses. At nightfall
-a large pile of faggots and tar-barrels is built on the beach, and,
-amid the cheers of a congregated crowd of men, women, and children
-(for it is a favour never denied to children to stay up and see the
-bonfire), the pile is lighted. The fire blazes up, and men and boys
-dance merrily round it, and keep up the sport till the fire burns
-low enough, when they venturously leap through the flames. It is a
-most animated scene, the whole valley lit up by the bright red glow,
-bringing into strong relief front and gable of picturesque old houses,
-each window crowded with eager and delighted faces, while around the
-fire is a crowd of ruddy lookers-on, shutting in a circle of impish
-figures leaping like salamanders through the flames.
-
-"The next day the fair begins, a trivial matter, except to the
-children, who are dressed in their Sunday clothes, and to the
-village girls in their best gowns and gaudiest ribbons. Stalls, or
-'standings,' laden with fairings, sweetmeats, and toys, line the
-lower part of Lansallos Street, near the strand. There are, besides,
-strolling Thespians; fellows who draw unwary youths into games
-of hazard, where the risk is mainly on one side; ballad-singers;
-penny-peep men, who show and describe to wondering boys the most
-horrid scenes of the latest murder; jugglers and tumblers also display
-their skill. In the neighbouring inn the fiddler plays his liveliest
-tunes at twopence a reel, which the swains gallantly pay. The first
-day of the fair is merely introductory, for the excitement is rarely
-allayed under three. The second day is much livelier than the first,
-and has for its great event the wrestling-match on the strand, or
-perhaps a boat-race. On the third day we have the mayor-choosing,
-never a valid ceremony, but a broad burlesque. The person who is
-chosen to this post of mimic dignity is generally some half-witted or
-drunken fellow, who, tricked out in tinsel finery, elects his staff
-of constables, and these, armed with staves, accompany his chariot
-(some jowster's huckster's cart, dressed with green boughs) through
-the town, stopping at each inn, where he makes a speech full of large
-promises to his listeners, of full work, better wages, and a liberal
-allowance of beer during his year of mayoralty. He then demands a
-quart of the landlord's ale, which is gauged with mock ceremony,
-and if adjudged short of measure is, after being emptied, broken on
-the wheel of the car. Having completed the perambulation of the town,
-his attendants often make some facetious end of the pageant by wheeling
-the mayor in his chariot with some impetus into the tide."--Polperro,
-1871, pp. 156-159.
-
-The ceremony of choosing a mock mayor was also observed at Penryn (near
-Falmouth), but it took place in the autumn, on a day in September or
-October, when hazel-nuts were ripe, and "nutting day" was kept by the
-children and poor people. The journeymen tailors went from Penryn and
-Falmouth to Mylor parish, on the opposite side of the river Fal. There
-they made choice of the wittiest among them to fill that office. His
-title was the "Mayor of Mylor." When chosen, he was borne in a chair
-upon the shoulders of four strong men from his "goode towne of Mylor"
-to his "anciente borough of Penryn." He was preceded by torch-bearers
-and two town-sergeants, in gowns and cocked hats, with cabbages instead
-of maces, and surrounded by a guard armed with staves. Just outside
-Penryn he was met with a band of music, which played him into the
-town. The procession halted at the town-hall, where the mayor made a
-burlesque speech, often a clever imitation of the phrases and manners
-of their then sitting parliamentary representative. This speech was
-repeated with variations before the different inns, the landlords of
-which were expected to provide the mayor and his numerous attendants
-liberally with beer. The day's proceedings finished with a dinner at
-one of the public-houses in Penryn. Bonfires, &c., were lighted, and
-fireworks let off soon after dusk. It was popularly believed that this
-choosing of a mock mayor was permitted by a clause in the town charter.
-
-A festival, supposed to have been instituted in honour of
-Thomas-à-Beckett, called "Bodmin-Riding," was (although shorn of its
-former importance) until very recently held there on the first Monday
-and Tuesday after the 7th of July.
-
-In the beginning of this century all the tradespeople of the town,
-preceded by music and carrying emblems of their trades, walked in
-procession to the Priory. They were headed by two men, one with a
-garland and the other with a pole, which they presented and received
-back again from the master of the house as the then representative
-of the Prior. Mr. T. Q. Couch had the following description of this
-ceremony from those who took part in its latest celebration:--
-
-"A puncheon of beer having been brewed in the previous October,
-and duly bottled in anticipation of the time, two or more young
-men, who were entrusted with the chief management of the affair,
-and who represented 'the Wardens' of Carew's Church-ales, went
-round the town (Bodmin) attended by a band of drummers and fifers,
-or other instruments. The crier saluted each house with--'To the
-people of this house, a prosperous morning, long life, health,
-and a merry riding.' The musicians then struck up the riding-tune,
-a quick and inspiriting measure, said by some to be as old as the
-feast itself. The householder was solicited to taste the riding-ale,
-which was carried round in baskets. A bottle was usually taken in,
-and it was acknowledged by such a sum as the means or humour of the
-townsmen permitted, to be spent on the public festivities of the
-season. Next morning a procession was formed (all who could afford to
-ride mounted on horse or ass, smacking long-lashed whips), first to
-the Priory to receive two large garlands of flowers fixed on staves,
-and then in due order to the principal streets to the town-end, where
-the games were formerly opened. The sports, which lasted two days,
-were of the ordinary sort--wrestling, foot-racing, jumping in sacks,
-&c. It is worthy of remark that a second or inferior brewing from the
-same wort was drunk at a minor merry-making at Whitsuntide."--(Popular
-Antiquities, Journal Royal Institute of Cornwall, 1864.)
-
-In former days the proceedings ended in a servants'-ball, at which
-dancing was kept up until the next morning's breakfast-hour.
-
-A very curious carnival was originally held under a Lord of Misrule,
-in July, on Halgaver Moor, near Bodmin, thus quaintly described
-by Carew:--
-
-"The youthlyer sort of Bodmin townsmen vse to sport themselves by
-playing the box with strangers whom they summon to Halgauer. The name
-signifieth the Goat's Moore, and such a place it is, lying a little
-without the towne, and very full of quauemires. When these mates meet
-with any rawe seruing-man or other young master, who may serue and
-deserue to make pastime, they cause him to be solemnely arrested,
-for his appearance before the Maior of Halgauer, where he is charged
-with wearing one spurre, or going vntrussed, or wanting a girdle,
-or some such felony. After he had been arraygned and tryed, with
-all requisite circumstances, iudgement is given in formal terms, and
-executed in some one vngracious pranke or other, more to the skorne
-than hurt of the party condemned. Hence is sprung the prouerb when we
-see one slouenly appareled to say he shall be presented at Halgauer
-Court (or take him before the Maior of Halgauer).
-
-"But now and then they extend this merriment with the largest, to
-preiudice of ouer-credulous people, persuading them to fight with
-a dragon lurking in Halgauer, or to see some strange matter there,
-which concludeth at least with a trayning them into the mire."--(Survey
-of Cornwall.)
-
-Heath says in his Description of Cornwall, "These sports and pastimes
-were so liked by King Charles II., when he touched at Bodmin on his
-way to Scilly, that he became a brother of the jovial society."
-
-"Taking-day."--"An old custom, about which history tells us nothing,
-is still duly observed at Crowan, in West Cornwall. Annually, on
-the Sunday evening previous to Praze-an-beeble fair (July 16th)
-large numbers of the young folk repair to the parish church, and at
-the conclusion of the service they hasten to Clowance Park, where
-still large crowds assemble, collected chiefly from the neighbouring
-villages of Leeds-town, Carnhell-green, Nancegollan, Blackrock, and
-Praze. Here the sterner sex select their partners for the forthcoming
-fair, and, as it not unfrequently happens that the generous proposals
-are not accepted, a tussle ensues, to the intense merriment of passing
-spectators. Many a happy wedding has resulted from the opportunity
-afforded for selection on 'Taking-day' in Clowance Park."--(Cornishman,
-July, 1882.)
-
-At St. Ives, on the 25th July, St. James's-day, they hold a quiennial
-celebration of the "Knillian-games." These have been fully described
-by the late J. S. Courtney in his Guide to Penzance, as follows:--
-
-"Near St. Ives a pyramid on the summit of a hill attracts
-attention. This pyramid was erected in the year 1782, as a place of
-sepulture for himself, by John Knill, Esq., some time collector of
-the Customs at St. Ives, and afterwards a resident in Gray's Inn,
-London, where he died in 1811. The building is commonly called
-'Knill's Mausoleum'; but Mr. Knill's body was not there deposited,
-for, having died in London, he was, according to his own directions,
-interred in St. Andrew's church, Holborn. The pyramid bears on its
-three sides respectively the following inscriptions, in relief, on the
-granite of which it is built: 'Johannes Knill, 1782.' 'I know that my
-Redeemer liveth.' 'Resurgam.' On one side there is also Mr. Knill's
-coat-of-arms, with his motto, 'Nil desperandum.'
-
-"In the year 1797, Mr. Knill, by a deed of trust, settled upon the
-mayor and capital burgesses of the borough of St. Ives, and their
-successors for ever, an annuity of ten pounds, as a rent-charge,
-to be paid out of the manor of Glivian, in the parish of Mawgan,
-in this county, to the said mayor and burgesses in the town-hall
-of the said borough, at twelve o'clock at noon, on the feast of the
-Nativity of St. John (Midsummer-day) in every year; and, in default,
-to be levied by the said mayor and burgesses by distress on the said
-manor. The ten pounds then received are to be immediately paid by the
-mayor and burgesses to the mayor, the collector of customs, and the
-clergyman of the parish for the time being, to be by them deposited
-in a chest secured by three locks, of which each is to have a key;
-and the box is left in the custody of the mayor.
-
-"Of this annuity a portion is directed to be applied to the repair and
-support of the mausoleum; another sum for the establishment of various
-ceremonies to be observed once every five years; and the remainder
-'to the effectuating and establishing of certain charitable purposes.'"
-
-The whole affair has, however, been generally treated with ridicule. In
-order, therefore, to show that Mr. Knill intended a considerable
-portion of his bequest to be applied to really useful purposes,
-we annex a copy of his regulations for the disposal of the money:
-
-"First. That, at the end of every five years, on the feast-day of
-St. James the Apostle, Twenty-five pounds shall be expended as follows,
-viz. Ten pounds in a dinner for the Mayor, Collector of Customs,
-and Clergyman, and two persons to be invited by each of them, making
-a party of nine persons, to dine at some tavern at the borough. Five
-pounds to be equally divided among ten girls, natives of the borough,
-and daughters of seamen, fishermen, or tinners, each of them not
-exceeding ten years of age, who shall between ten and twelve o'clock
-in the forenoon of that day dance, for a quarter of hour at least,
-on the ground adjoining the Mausoleum, and after the dance sing the
-100th Psalm of the Old Version, 'to the fine old tune' to which the
-same was then sung in St. Ives church.
-
-"One pound to the fiddler who shall play to the girls while dancing
-and singing at the Mausoleum, and also before them on their return
-home therefrom.
-
-"Two pounds to two widows of seamen, fishermen, or tinners of the
-borough, being 64 years old or upwards, who shall attend the dancing
-and singing of the girls, and walk before them immediately after the
-fiddler, and certify to the Mayor, Collector, and Clergyman that the
-ceremonies have been duly performed.
-
-"One pound to be laid out in white ribbons for breast-knots for
-the girls and widows, and a cockade for the fiddler, to be worn by
-them respectively on that day and the Sunday following. One pound
-to purchase account-books from time to time and pay the Clerk of the
-Customs for keeping the accounts. The remaining Five pounds to be paid
-to a man and wife, widower, or widow, 60 years of age or upwards,
-the man being an inhabitant of St. Ives, and a seaman, fisherman,
-tinner, or labourer, who shall have bred up to the age of ten years
-and upwards, the greatest number of legitimate children by his or
-her own labour, care, and industry, without parochial assistance,
-or having become entitled to any property in any other manner.
-
-"Secondly. When a certain sum of money shall have accumulated in
-the chest, over and above what may have been required for repairs
-of the Mausoleum and the above payments, it is directed that on
-one of the fore-mentioned days of the festival 'Fifty' pounds
-shall be distributed in addition to the 'Twenty-five' pounds spent
-quiennially in the following manner; that is Ten pounds to be given
-as a marriage-portion to the woman between 26 and 36 years old,
-being a native of St. Ives, who shall have been married to a seaman,
-fisherman, tinner, or labourer, residing in the borough, between the
-31st of December previously, and that day following the said feast-day,
-that shall appear to the Mayor, Collector, and Clergyman, the most
-worthy, 'regard being had to her duty and kindness to her parents,
-or to her friends who have brought her up.'
-
-"Five pounds to any woman, single or married, being an inhabitant of
-St. Ives, who in the opinion of the aforesaid gentlemen shall be the
-best knitter of fishing-nets.
-
-"Five pounds to be paid to the woman, married or single, inhabitant
-of St. Ives, or otherwise, who shall, by the same authorities, be
-deemed to be the best curer and packer of pilchards for exportation.
-
-"Five pounds to be given between such two follower-boys as shall
-by the same gentlemen be judged to have best conducted themselves
-of all the follower-boys in the several concerns, in the preceding
-fishing-season. (A follower is a boat that carries a tuck-net in
-pilchard-fishing.)
-
-"And Twenty-five pounds, the remainder of the said Fifty, to be
-divided among all the Friendly Societies in the borough, instituted
-for the support of the Members in sickness or other calamity, in
-equal shares. If there be no such Society, the same to be distributed
-among ten poor persons, five men and five women, inhabitants of
-the borough, of the age of 64 years or upwards, and who have never
-received parochial relief."
-
-The first celebration of the Knillian games, which drew a large
-concourse of people, took place in Knill's lifetime on July 25th, 1801.
-
-The chorus then sung by the 10 virgins was as follows:--
-
-
- 'Quit the bustle of the bay,
- Hasten, virgins, come away:
- Hasten to the mountain's brow,
- Leave, oh! leave, St. Ives below.
- Haste to breathe a purer air,
- Virgins fair, and pure as fair.
- Quit St. Ives and all her treasures,
- Fly her soft voluptuous pleasures,
- Fly her sons and all the wiles
- Lurking in their wanton smiles;
- Fly her splendid midnight halls,
- Fly the revels of her balls,
- Fly, oh! fly, the chosen seat
- Where vanity and fashion meet!
- Thither hasten: form the ring,
- Round the tomb in chorus sing.'
-
-
-These games have been repeated every five years up to the present time.
-
-Morvah feast, which is on the nearest Sunday to the 1st August, is said
-to have been instituted in memory of a wrestling-match, throwing of
-quoits, &c., which took place there one Sunday, "when there were giants
-in the land." On the following Monday there was formerly a large fair,
-and although Morvah is a very small village without any attractions,
-the farmers flocked to it in great numbers to drink and feast, sitting
-on the hedges of the small fields common in West Cornwall. "Three on
-one horse, like going to Morvah Fair," is an old proverb.
-
-On August 5th a large cattle-fair is held in the village of
-Goldsithney, in the parish of Perran-Uthnoe. Lysons, in 1814,
-says:--"There is a tradition that this fair was originally held in
-Sithney, near Helston, and that some persons ran off with the glove, by
-the suspension of which to a pole the charter was held, and carried it
-off to this village, where, it is said, the glove was hung out for many
-years at the time of the fair. As some confirmation of the tradition
-of its removal it should be mentioned that the lord of the manor, a
-proprietor of the fair, used to pay an acknowledgment of one shilling
-per annum to the churchwardens of Sithney." The same author makes the
-statement that Truro fair, on November 19th, belongs to the proprietors
-of Truro Manor, as high lords of the town, and that a glove is hung
-out at this fair as at Chester; he also says that these same lords
-claim a tax called smoke-money from most of the houses in the borough.
-
-In Cornwall the last sheaf of corn cut at harvest-time is "the
-neck." This in the West is always cut by the oldest reaper, who
-shouts out, "I hav'et! I hav'et! I hav'et!" The others answer, "What
-hav'ee? What hav'ee? What hav'ee?" He replies, "A neck! A neck! A
-neck!" Then altogether they give three loud hurrahs. The neck is
-afterwards made into a miniature sheaf, gaily decorated with ribbons
-and flowers; it is carried home in triumph, and hung up to a beam in
-the kitchen, where it is left until the next harvest. Mr. Robert Hunt
-says that "after the neck has been cried three times they (the reapers)
-change their cry to 'we yen! we yen!' which they sound in the same
-prolonged and slow manner as before, with singular harmony and effect
-three times." After this they all burst out into a kind of loud, joyous
-laugh, flinging up their hats and caps into the air, capering about,
-and perhaps kissing the girls. One of them gets the "neck," and runs
-as hard as he can to the farm-house, where the dairy-maid or one of
-the young female domestics stands at the door prepared with a pail of
-water. If he who holds the "neck" can manage to get into the house in
-any way unseen, or openly by any other way than the door by which the
-girl stands with the pail of water, then he may lawfully kiss her; but
-if otherwise he is regularly soused with the contents of the bucket.
-
-The object of crying the "neck" is to give notice to the surrounding
-country of the end of the harvest, and the meaning of "we yen" is we
-have ended.
-
-The last sheaf of the barley-harvest (there is now but little grown)
-was the "crow-sheaf," and when cut the same ceremony was gone through;
-but instead of "a neck," the words "a crow" were substituted.
-
-When "the neck" is cut at the house of a squire, the reapers sometimes
-assemble at the front of the mansion and cry "the neck," with the
-addition of these words, "and for our pains we do deserve a glass of
-brandy, strong beer, and a bun."--(John Hills, Penryn, W. Antiquary,
-October, 1882.)
-
-In East Cornwall "the neck," which is made into a slightly different
-shape, is carried to the mowhay (pronounced mo-ey) before it is cried
-(a mowhay is an inclosure for ricks of corn and hay). One of the
-men then retires to a distance from the others and shouts the same
-formula. It is hung up in the kitchen until Christmas-day, when it
-is given to the best ox in the stalls.
-
-The harvest-home feast in the neighbourhood of Penzance goes by the
-name of "gool-dize," or "gool-an-dize." In Scilly it is known as the
-"nickly thize." Farmers there at that season of the year formerly
-killed a sheep, and as long as any portion of it was left the feast
-went on.
-
-Ricks of corn in Cornwall are often made, and left to stand in the
-"arish-fields" (stubble-fields) where they were cut. These are all
-called "arish-mows," but from their different shapes they have also
-the names of "brummal-mows" and "pedrack-mows."
-
-Probus and Grace fair is held on the 17th of September, through a
-charter granted by Charles II. after his restoration, to a Mr. Williams
-of that neighbourhood, with whom he had lived for some time during
-the Civil Wars.
-
-Probus is in East Cornwall, and its church is famed for its beautiful
-tower. Tradition has it that this church was built by Saint Probus,
-but for want of funds he could not add the tower, and in his need
-asked St. Grace to help him.
-
-She consented, but when the church was consecrated Probus praised
-himself, but made no mention of her. Then a mysterious voice was heard,
-repeating the following distich:--
-
-
- "St. Probus and Grace,
- Not the first but the la-ast."
-
-
-This town, consequently, has two patron saints.
-
-I know of no other feasten ceremonies in this month; but here,
-as elsewhere, the children of the poor make up parties "to go a
-blackberrying." This fruit, by old people, was said not to be good
-after Michaelmas, kept by them 10th October (old style); after that
-date they told you the devil spat on them, and birds fouled them.
-
-I knew an old lady whose birthday falling on that day she religiously
-kept it by eating for the last time that year blackberry-tart with
-clotted cream.
-
-This brings me round to the month from which I started. Many of the
-feasts are of course omitted, as no local customs are now connected
-with them. There must be one for nearly every Sunday in the year,
-and a mere record of their names would be most wearisome. I cannot
-do better, therefore, than finish this portion of my work with two
-quotations. The first, from "Parochalia," by Mr. T. Q. Couch, Journal
-Royal Institute of Cornwall, 1865, runs thus:--
-
-"The patron saint of Lanivet feast is not known; it is marked
-by no particular customs, but is a time for general visiting and
-merry-making, with an occasional wrestling-match. A local verse says:--
-
-
- "On the nearest Sunday to the last Sunday in A-prel,
- Lanivet men fare well.
- On the first Sunday after the first Tuesday in May,
- Lanivrey men fare as well as they."
-
-
-In some parishes the fatted oxen intended to be eaten at these feasts
-were, the day before they were killed, led through the streets,
-garlanded with flowers and preceded by music.
-
-Quotation number two is what Carew wrote in 1569:--
-
-"The saints' feast is kept upon dedication-day by every householder
-of the parish within his own doors, each entertayning such forrayne
-acquaintance as will not fayle when their like time cometh about to
-requite him with the like kindness."
-
-These remarks, and the jingling couplets, could be equally well
-applied to all the unmentioned feasts.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-LEGENDS OF PARISHES, ETC.
-
-
-Cornish people possess in a marked degree all the characteristics of
-the Celts. They are imaginative, good speakers and story-tellers,
-describing persons and things in a style racy and idiomatical,
-often with appropriate gestures. Their proverbs are quaint and
-forcible, they are never at a lack for an excuse, and are withal
-very superstitious. Well-educated people are still to be met with
-in Cornwall who are firm believers in apparitions, pixies (fairies,
-called by the peasantry pisgies), omens, and other supernatural
-agencies. Almost every parish has a legend in connection with its
-patron saint, and haunted houses abound; but of the ghosts who
-inhabit them, unless they differ from those seen elsewhere, I shall
-say but little.
-
-This county was once the fabled home of a race of giants, who in
-their playful or angry moments were wont to hurl immense rocks at
-each other, which are shown by the guides at this day as proofs of
-their great strength. To illustrate how in the course of time truth
-and fiction get strangely mingled, I will mention the fact that
-old John of Gaunt is said to have been the last of these giants,
-and to have lived in a castle on the top of Carn Brea (a high hill
-near Redruth). He could stride from thence to another neighbouring
-town, a distance of four miles. I do not know if he is supposed to
-be the one that lies buried under this mighty carn, and whose large
-protruding hand and bony fingers time has turned to stone. Here,
-too, in the dark ages, a terrific combat took place between Lucifer
-and a heavenly host, which ended in the former's overthrow. A small
-monument has been erected on Carn Brea, to the memory of Lord de
-Dunstanville; and I once heard an old woman, after cleaning a room,
-say, "It was fine enough for Lord de Dunstanville." Every child has
-heard of Jack the Giant Killer, who, amongst his other exploits,
-killed by stratagem the one who dwelt at St. Michael's Mount:
-
-
- "I am the valiant Cornishman
- Who slew the giant Cormoran."
-
-
-He did not however confine himself to this neighbourhood, for of
-an ancient earth-work near Looe, known as the "Giant's Hedge," it
-is said:--
-
-
- "Jack the giant had nothing to do,
- So he made a hedge from Lerrin to Looe."
-
-
-But the sayings and doings of these mighty men have been told far
-better than I could tell them in Mr. Halliwell Phillipps' book, Rambles
-in West Cornwall by the Footsteps of the Giants; Mr. Robert Hunt's
-Drolls, Traditions, and Superstitions of West Cornwall; Mr. Bottrell's
-Hearthside Stories of West Cornwall; and by many other writers.
-
-Tourists visit West Cornwall to see the Land's End and its fine coast
-scenery, and express themselves disappointed that none of the country
-people in that district know anything of King Arthur. They forget that
-Uther's [3] heir was washed up to Merlin's feet by a wave at the base
-of "Tintagel Castle by the Cornish sea," which is in the eastern part
-of the county. This castle was built on one of the grandest headlands
-in Cornwall (slate formation).
-
-The ruins of King Arthur's Castle are most striking. They are situated
-partly on the mainland and partly on a peninsula, separated by a
-ravine, once said to have been spanned by a drawbridge connecting
-the two.
-
-The ascent of this promontory, owing to the slippery nature of the path
-cut in the friable slate, is far from pleasant; and, as there was a
-stiff breeze blowing when I mounted it, I thought old Norden was right
-when he said: "Those should have eyes who would scale Tintagel." You
-are, however, amply repaid for your trouble when you get to the top.
-
-In addition to telling you of the grandeur of the castle in good
-King Arthur's days, the guides show you some rock basins to which
-they have given the absurd names of "King Arthur's cups and saucers."
-
-Tradition assigns to this king another Cornish castle as a
-hunting-seat, viz.--the old earth-round of Castle-an-dinas, near
-St. Columb, from whence it is said he chased the wild deer on Tregoss
-Downs.
-
-A dreary drive through slate-quarries takes you from Tintagel to
-Camelford. Near that town is Slaughter Bridge, the scene of a great
-battle between King Arthur and his nephew Modred, whom by some writers
-he is said to have killed on the spot; others have it that Arthur died
-here of a wound from a poisoned arrow shot by Modred, and that, after
-receiving his death wound at Camelford, he was conveyed to Tintagel
-Castle, where, surrounded by his knights, he died. All the time he
-lay a-dying supernatural noises were heard in the castle, the sea and
-winds moaned, and their lamentations never ceased until our hero was
-buried at Glastonbury. Then, in the pauses of the solemn tolling of the
-funeral bells, sweet voices came from fairy-land welcoming him there,
-from whence one day he will return and again be king of Cornwall. No
-luck follows a man who kills a Cornish chough (a red legged crow),
-as, after his death, King Arthur was changed into one.
-
-"In the parish of St. Mabyn, in East Cornwall, and on the high road
-from Bodmin to Camelford, is a group of houses (one of them yet
-a smith's shop), known by the name of Longstone. The legend which
-follows gives the reason of the name:
-
-"In lack of records I may say: 'In the days of King Arthur there
-lived in Cornwall a smith. This smith was a keen fellow, who made and
-mended the ploughs and harrows, shod the horses of his neighbours,
-and was generally serviceable. He had great skill in farriery, and
-in the general management of sick cattle. He could also extract the
-stubbornest tooth, even if the jaw resisted, and some gyrations around
-the anvil were required.
-
-"'There seems ever to have been ill blood between devil and smith,
-and so it was between the fiend and the smith-farrier-dentist of
-St. Mabyn. At night there were many and fierce disputes between
-them in the smithy. The smith, as the rustics tell, always got the
-advantage of his adversary, and gave him better than he brought. This
-success, however, only fretted Old Nick, and spurred him on to further
-encounters. What the exact matter of controversy on this particular
-occasion was is not remembered, but it was agreed to settle it by some
-wager, some trial of strength and skill. A two-acred field was near;
-and the smith challenged the devil to the reaping of each his acre
-in the shortest time. The match came off, and the devil was beaten,
-for the smith had beforehand stealthily stuck here and there over
-his opponent's acre some harrow-tines or teeth.
-
-"'The two started well, but soon the strong swing of the fiend's scythe
-was brought up frequently by some obstruction, and as frequently he
-required the whetstone. The dexterous and agile smith went on smoothly
-with his acre, and was soon unmistakeably gaining. The devil, enraged
-at his certain discomfiture, hurled his whetstone at his rival, and
-flew off. The whetstone, thrown with great violence, after sundry
-whirls in the air, fell upright into the soil at a great depth, and
-there remained a witness against the Evil One for ages. The devil
-avoided the neighbourhood whilst it stood, but in an evil hour the
-farmer at Treblethick, near, threw it down. That night the enemy
-returned, and has haunted the neighbourhood ever since.
-
-"'This monolith was of granite, and consequently brought hither from
-a distance, for the local stone is a friable slate. It yielded four
-large gate-posts, gave spans to a small bridge, and left much granite
-remaining.'"--T. Q. Couch, Notes and Queries, April, 1883.
-
-Upon St. Austell Down is an upright block of granite, called "the
-giant's staff, or longstone," to which this legend is attached:--"A
-giant, travelling one night over these hills, was overtaken by a
-storm, which blew off his hat. He immediately pursued it; but, being
-impeded by a staff which he carried in his hand, he thrust this into
-the ground until his hat could be secured. After wandering, however,
-for some time in the dark, without being able to find his hat, he gave
-over the pursuit and returned for the staff; but this also he was
-unable to discover, and both were irrevocably lost. In the morning,
-when the giant was gone, his hat and staff were both found by the
-country people about a mile asunder. The hat was found on White-horse
-Down, and bore some resemblance to a mill-stone, and continued in its
-place until 1798, when, some soldiers having encamped around it, they
-fancied, it is said, as it was a wet season, this giant's hat was the
-cause of the rain, and therefore rolled it over the cliff. The staff,
-or longstone, was discovered in the position in which it remains;
-it is about twelve feet high, and tapering toward the top, and is
-said to have been so fashioned by the giant that he might grasp it
-with ease."--Murray's Guide.
-
-There is another longstone in the parish of St. Cleer, [4] about
-two miles north of Liskeard, which bears an inscription to Doniert
-(Dungerth), a traditional king of Cornwall, who was drowned in 872. In
-fact, these "menhirs," supposed to be sepulchral monuments, are to
-be found scattered all over the county.
-
-The following curious bit of folk-lore appeared in the Daily News
-of March 8th, 1883, communicated by the Rev. J. Hoskyns Abrahall,
-Coombe Vicarage, near Woodstock:--"A friend of mine, who is vicar of
-St. Cleer, in East Cornwall, has told me that at least one housemaid
-of his--I think his servants in general--very anxiously avoided
-killing a spider, because Parson Jupp, my friend's predecessor (whom
-he succeeded in 1844), was, it was believed, somewhere in the vicarage
-in some spider--no one knew in which of the vicarage spiders." Spiders
-are often not destroyed because of the tradition that one spun a web
-over Christ in the manger, and hid him from Herod.
-
-There are other superstitions current in Cornwall somewhat similar
-to the above. Maidens who die of broken hearts, after they have been
-deceived by unfaithful lovers, are said to haunt their betrayers
-as white hares. The souls of old sea-captains never sleep; they are
-turned into gulls and albatrosses. The knockers (a tribe of little
-people), who live underground in the tin-mines, are the spirits of
-the Jews who crucified our Saviour, and are for that sin compelled
-on Christmas morning to sing carols in his honour. "Jew" is a name
-also given to a black field-beetle (why, I know not). It exudes
-a reddish froth: country children hold it on their hands and say,
-"Jew! Jew! spit blood!" "A ghost at Pengelly, in the parish of Wendron,
-was compelled by a parson of that village after various changes of
-form to seek refuge in a pigeonhole, where it is confined to this
-day."--Through Rev. S. Rundle.
-
-After this digression I will return to St. Cleer, and, beginning with
-its holy well, briefly notice a few others. It is situated not far from
-the church, and was once celebrated as a "boussening," or ducking-well
-for the cure of mad people. Considerable remains of the baptistery,
-which formerly enclosed it, are still standing, and outside, close
-by, is an old stone cross. Carew says,--"There were many bowssening
-places in Cornwall for curing mad people, and amongst the rest one
-at Alter Nunne, in the hundred of Trigges, called S. Nunne's well,
-and because the manner of this bowssening is not so vnpleasing to
-heare as it was vneasie to feele, I wil (if you please) deliuer you
-the practise, as I receyued it from the beholders. The water running
-from S. Nunne's well fell into a square and close-walled plot, which
-might be filled at what depth they listed. Vpon this wall was the
-franticke person set to stand, his backe toward the poole, and from
-thence with a sudden blow in the brest, tumbled headlong into the
-pond, where a strong fellowe, provided for the nonce, tooke him and
-tossed him vp and downe, alongst and athwart the water, vntill the
-patient by foregoing his strength had somewhat forgot his fury. Then
-was hee conueyed to the church and certain Masses sung ouer him; vpon
-which handling if his wits returned S. Nunne had the thanks: but if
-there appeared small amendment, he was bowssened againe and againe,
-while there remayned in him any hope of life for recouery." The same
-writer says of Scarlet's "well neare vnto Bodmin, howbeit the water
-should seem to be healthfull, if not helpfull: for it retaineth this
-extraordinary quality, that the same is waightier than the ordinary of
-his kind, and will continue the best part of a yeere without alteration
-or sent or taste, only you shall see it represent many colours,
-like the Rain-bowe which (in my conceite) argueth a running throu
-some minerall veine and therewithall a possessing of some vertue." I
-must give one more quotation from Carew before I finish with him,
-about a well at Saltash:--"I had almost forgotten to tell you that
-there is a well in this towne whose water will not boyle peason to
-a seasonable softnes."
-
-The holy wells in Cornwall are very numerous; the greater part were
-in olden times enclosed in small baptisteries. Luckily the poor people
-believe that to remove any of the stones of the ruins of these chapels
-would be fatal to them and to their children, and for that reason a
-great number yet remain. It is considered unlucky, too, to cart away
-any of the druidical monuments ("pieces of ancientcy"), and many
-are the stories told of the great misfortunes that have fallen on
-men who have so done. The innocent oxen or horses who drag them away
-are always sure to die, and their master never prosper. Persistent
-ill-luck also follows any one defiling these wells; and a tradition
-is current in one of the "West Country" parishes, of a gentleman,
-who, after he had washed his dogs, afflicted with the mange, in its
-holy well, fell into such poverty that his sons were obliged to work
-as day labourers. Mr. T. Q. Couch, in Notes and Queries, vol. x.,
-gives this legend in connection with St. Nunn's well in Pelynt:--"An
-old farmer once set his eyes upon the granite basin and coveted it;
-for it was not wrong in his eyes to convert the holy font to the base
-uses of the pig's stye; and accordingly he drove his oxen and wain to
-the gateway above for the purpose of removing it. Taking his beasts
-to the entrance of the well, he essayed to drag the trough from its
-ancient bed. For a long time it resisted the efforts of the oxen,
-but at length they succeeded in starting it, and dragged it slowly
-up the hill-side to where the wain was standing. Here, however, it
-burst away from the chains which held it, and, rolling back again to
-the well, made a sharp turn and regained its old position, where it
-has remained ever since. Nor will any one again attempt its removal,
-seeing that the farmer, who was previously well-to-do in the world,
-never prospered from that day forward. Some people say, indeed,
-that retribution overtook him on the spot, the oxen falling dead,
-and the owner being struck lame and speechless."
-
-This St. Nunn's well is not the "boussening" well formerly mentioned,
-but another dedicated to the same saint, and is resorted to as a
-divining and wishing well; it is commonly called by the people of that
-district the "Piskies' well." Pins are thrown into it, not only to
-see by the bubbles which rise on the water whether the wisher will get
-what he desires, but also to propitiate the piskies and to bring the
-thrower good luck. This county has many other divining wells which were
-visited at certain seasons of the year by those anxious to know what
-the future would bring them. Amongst them the Lady of Nant's well, in
-the parish of Colan, was formerly much frequented on Palm Sunday, when
-those who wished to foretell their fate threw into the water crosses
-made of palms. There was once in Gulval parish, near Penzance, a well
-which was reported to have had great repute as a divining well. People
-repaired to it to ask if their friends at a distance were well or ill,
-living or dead. They looked into the water and repeated the words:
-
-
- "Water, water, tell me truly,
- Is the man that I love duly
- On the earth, or under the sod,
- Sick or well? in the name of God."
-
-
-Should the water bubble up quite clear, the one asked for was in
-good health; if it became puddled, ill; and should it remain still,
-dead. Of the wells of St. Roche, St. Maddern (now Madron), and St. Uny,
-I have spoken in the first part of this work.
-
-The waters from several wells are used for baptismal rites (one near
-Laneast is called the "Jordan"), and the children baptized with water
-from the wells of St. Euny (at the foot of Carn Brea, Redruth) and
-of Ludgvan (Penzance), &c., it was asserted could never be hanged
-with a hempen rope; but this prophecy has unfortunately been proved
-to be false. The water from the latter was famed too as an eye-wash,
-until an evil spirit, banished for his misdeeds by St. Ludgvan, to
-the Red Sea, spat into it from malice as he passed. The Red Sea is the
-favourite traditional spot here for the banishment of wicked spirits,
-and I have been told stories of wicked men whose souls, immediately
-after their death, were carried off to well-known volcanoes.
-
-Almost all these holy wells were once noted for the curing of diseases,
-but the water from St. Jesus' well, in Miniver, was especially famed
-for curing whooping-cough. St. Martin's well, in the centre of Liskeard
-at the back of the market, known as "Pipe Well," from the four iron
-pipes through which four springs run into it, was formerly not only
-visited for the healing qualities of its chief spring, but for a
-lucky stone that stood in it. By standing on this stone and drinking
-of the well's water, engaged couples would be happy and successful in
-their married life. It also conferred magical powers on any person
-who touched it. The stone is still there, but has now been covered
-over and has lost its virtue.
-
-The saints sometimes lived by the side of the holy wells named after
-them, notably St. Agnes (pronounced St. Ann), who dyed the pavement
-of her chapel with her own blood. St. Neot in whose pool were always
-three fish on which he fed, and whose numbers never grew less. [5]
-St. Piran, the titular saint of tin-miners, who lived 200 years and
-then died in perfect health. Of these three saints many miraculous
-deeds are related; but they would be out of place in this work, and
-I will end my account of the wells by a description of St. Keyne's,
-more widely known outside Cornwall through Southey's ballad than
-any of the others. It is situated in a small valley in the parish
-of St. Neot, and was in the days of Carew and Norden arched over
-by four trees, which grew so closely together that they seemed but
-one trunk. Both writers say the trees were withy, oak, elm, and ash
-(by withy I suppose willow was meant). They were all blown down by a
-storm, and about 150 years ago, Mr. Rashleigh, of Menabilly, replaced
-them with two oaks, two elms, and one ash. I do not know if they are
-living, but Mr. J. T. Blight in 1858, in his book on Cornish Crosses,
-speaks of one of the oaks being at that time so decayed that it had to
-be propped. The reputed virtue of the water of St. Keyne's well is,
-(as almost all know), that after marriage "whether husband or wife
-come first to drink thereof they get the mastery thereby."--Fuller.
-
-
- "In name, in shape, in quality,
- This well is very quaint;
- The name, to lot of 'Kayne' befell,
- No ouer--holy saint.
-
- "The shape, four trees of diuers kinde,
- Withy, oke, elme, and ash,
- Make with their roots an arched roofe,
- Whose floore this spring doth wash.
-
- "The quality, that man or wife,
- Whose chance or choice attaines,
- First of this sacred streame to drinke,
- Thereby the mastry gaines."--Carew.
-
-
-Southey makes a discomfited husband tell the story, who ends thus:
-
-
- "I hasten'd as soon as the wedding was done,
- And left my wife in the porch;
- But i'faith she had been wiser than me,
- For she took a bottle to church."
-
-
-St. Keyne not only thus endowed her well, but during her stay at
-St. Michael's Mount she gave the same virtue to St. Michael's
-chair. This chair is the remains of an old lantern on the
-south-west angle of the tower, at a height of upwards of 250
-feet from low water. It is fabled to have been a favourite seat of
-St. Michael's. Whittaker, in his supplement to Polwhele's History of
-Cornwall, says, "It was for such pilgrims as had stronger heads and
-bolder spirits to complete their devotions at the Mount by sitting
-in this St. Michael's chair and showing themselves as pilgrims to
-the country round;" but it most probably served as a beacon for
-ships at sea. To get into it you must climb on to the parapet, and
-you sit with your feet dangling over a sheer descent of at least
-seventy feet; but to get out of it is much more difficult, as the
-sitter is obliged to turn round in the seat. Notwithstanding this,
-and the danger of a fall through giddiness, which, of course, would be
-certain death, for there is not the slightest protection, I have seen
-ladies perform the feat. Curiously enough Southey has also written a
-ballad on St. Michael's chair, but it is not as popular as the one
-before quoted; it is about "Richard Penlake and Rebecca his wife,"
-"a terrible shrew was she." In pursuance of a vow made when Richard
-"fell sick," they went on a pilgrimage to the Mount, and whilst he
-was in the chapel,
-
-
- "She left him to pray, and stole away
- To sit in St. Michael's chair.
-
- "Up the tower Rebecca ran,
- Round and round and round;
- 'Twas a giddy sight to stand atop
- And look upon the ground.
-
- "'A curse on the ringers for rocking
- The tower!' Rebecca cried,
- As over the church battlements
- She strode with a long stride.
-
- "'A blessing on St. Michael's chair!'
- She said as she sat down:
- Merrily, merrily rung the bells,
- And out Rebecca was thrown.
-
- "Tidings to Richard Penlake were brought
- That his good wife was dead;
- 'Now shall we toll for her poor soul
- The great church bell?' they said.
-
- "'Toll at her burying,' quoth Richard Penlake,
- 'Toll at her burying,' quoth he;
- 'But don't disturb the ringers now
- In compliment to me.'"
-
-
-Old writers give the name of "Caraclowse in clowse" to St. Michael's
-Mount, which means the Hoar Rock in the Wood; and that it was at one
-time surrounded by trees is almost certain, as at very low tides in
-Mount's Bay a "submarine forest," with roots of large trees, may still
-be clearly seen. At these seasons branches of trees, with leaves,
-nuts, and beetles, have been picked up.
-
-Old folks often compared an old-fashioned child to St. Michael's Mount,
-and quaintly said, "she's a regular little Mount, St. Michael's Mount
-will never be washed away while she's alive."
-
-Folk-lore speaks of a time when Scilly was joined to the mainland,
-which does not seem very improbable when we remember that within the
-last twenty-five years a high road and a field have been washed away
-by the sea between Newlyn and Penzance. An old lady, whose memory went
-back to the beginning of the present century, told me that she had
-often seen boys playing at cricket in some fields seaward of Newlyn,
-of which no vestige in my time remained.
-
-But the Lyonnesse, as this tract of land (containing 140 parish
-churches) between the Land's End and Scilly was called, and where,
-according to the Poet Laureate, King Arthur met his death-wound,
-
-
- "So all day long the noise of battle roll'd
- Among the mountains by the winter sea,
- Until King Arthur's Table, man by man,
- Had fallen in Lyonnesse about their lord,
- King Arthur...."
-
-
-is reputed to have been suddenly overwhelmed by a great flood. Only
-one man of all the dwellers on it is said to have escaped death, an
-ancestor of the Trevilians (now Trevelyan). He was carried on shore by
-his horse into a cove at Perran. Alarmed by the daily inroad of the
-sea, he had previously removed his wife and family. Old fishermen of
-a past generation used to declare that on clear days and moonlight
-nights they had often seen under the water the roofs of churches,
-houses, &c., of this submerged district.
-
-Whether the memory of this flood is perpetuated by the old proverb,
-"As ancient as the floods of Dava," once commonly current in West
-Cornwall, but which I have not heard for years, I know not, as I have
-never met with any one who could tell me to what floods it referred.
-
-Tradition also speaks of a wealthy city in the north of Cornwall,
-called Langarrow, which for its wickedness was buried in sand, driven
-in by a mighty storm. All that coast as far west as St. Ives is sand,
-known as "Towans," and the sand is always encroaching.
-
-There is a little church now near Padstow, dedicated to St. Enodock,
-which is often almost covered by the shifting drifts. It is in a
-solitary situation, and service is only held there once a year,
-when a path to it has to be cut through the sand. It is said that
-the clergyman, in order to keep his emoluments and fees, has been
-sometimes obliged to get into it through a window or hole in the roof.
-
-About eight miles from Truro is the lost church of Perranzabuloe,
-which for centuries was supposed to have been a myth, but the shifting
-of the sand disclosed it in 1835.
-
-In Hayle Towans is buried the castle of Tendar, the Pagan chief who
-persecuted the Christians, and in the neighbouring parish of Lelant
-that of King Theodrick, who, after beheading, in Ireland, many saints,
-crossed over to Cornwall on a millstone.
-
-Many of the Cornish saints are reputed to have come into Cornwall in
-the same way as this king; but St. Ia, the patron saint of St. Ives,
-chose a frailer vessel. She crossed from Ireland on a leaf.
-
-The afore-mentioned lost city was most likely a very small place,
-as I asked an old woman three or four years ago, who lived not far
-from the little village of Gwithian, where I could get something I
-wanted, and she told me, "In the city."
-
-The bay between this place and St. Ives (St. Ives Bay) has the
-reputation of being haunted at stormy times before a shipwreck by a
-lady in white, who carries a lantern.
-
-At Nancledra, a village near St. Ives, was formerly a logan rock,
-which could only be moved at midnight; and children were cured of
-rickets by being placed on it at that hour. It refused to rock for
-those who were illegitimate.
-
-Not far from here is Towednack, and there is a legend to the
-effect that the devil would never allow the tower of its church to
-be completed, pulling down at night what had been built up in the
-day. When a person makes an incredible statement he is in West Cornwall
-told "To go to Towednack quay-head where they christen calves." (No
-part of this parish touches the sea.)
-
-Mr. Robert Hunt records a curious test of innocency which, not long
-since, was practised in this parish. "A farmer in Towednack having been
-robbed of some property of no great value was resolved, nevertheless,
-to employ a test which he had heard the 'old people' resorted to for
-the purpose of catching the thief. He invited all his neighbours into
-his cottage, and, when they were assembled, he placed a cock under the
-'brandice' (an iron vessel, formerly much employed by the peasantry
-in baking when this process was carried out on the hearth, the fuel
-being furze and ferns). Every one was directed to touch the brandice
-with his, or her, third finger, and say: 'In the name of the Father,
-Son, and Holy Ghost, speak.' Every one did as they were directed,
-and no sound came from beneath the brandice. The last person was a
-woman, who occasionally laboured for the farmer in his fields. She
-hung back, hoping to pass unobserved amongst the crowd. But her very
-anxiety made her a suspected person. She was forced forward, and
-most unwillingly she touched the brandice, when, before she could
-utter the words prescribed, the cock crew. The woman fell faint
-on the floor, and when she recovered, she confessed herself to be
-the thief, restored the stolen property, and became, it is said,
-'a changed character from that day.'"
-
-The following was told me by a friend. It took place in a school of one
-of our western parishes about sixty years ago:--"It was in the days of
-quill pens, and the master had lost his penknife. Every boy pleaded
-not guilty. At twelve the master said no boy should leave the school
-for half-an-hour, when he would return and see if they had found his
-knife. The door was locked, and at the appointed time he came back
-with a small, round table, on which he had inverted a 'half-strike'
-(4 gallons) measure. The table was placed in the middle of the gangway;
-the master stood by the side of it, and asked if they had found his
-knife. All said 'No!' 'Well then,' answered he, 'come out slowly one
-at a time and let each touch this measure with the right forefinger,
-and the bantam-cock under it will crow at the thief.' The boys went
-out boldly, as they passed touching the tub, but the master missed
-one whom from the first he had suspected. He again locked the door,
-searched the rooms, and there, under a desk, not in his own place,
-he found the boy hiding. He began to cry, confessed the theft, and
-gave up the knife."
-
-Another test of innocency, practised in bygone days, was to kindle a
-fire on one of the table-mên (large flat stones), so common in villages
-in West Cornwall. A stick lit at this was handed to the accused,
-who had to put out the fire by spitting on it. It is well-known that
-fear dries up saliva. It is still supposed in remote districts that
-no one can bear witness to a misdemeanour, seen through glass.
-
-I will describe another rough ordeal before I go on to the legends
-of the Land's End district. It is called "Riding the hatch," or
-"heps" (a half-door often seen at small country shops). Any man
-formerly accused of immorality was brought before a select number of
-his fellow parishioners, and by them put to sit astride the "heps,"
-which was shaken violently backwards and forwards: if he fell into the
-house he was judged innocent; but out on the road, guilty. When any
-one has been brought before his superiors and remanded he is still
-figuratively said "to have been made to ride the 'heps.'" Hands are
-washed, as by Pontius Pilate, to clear a person from crime, and to
-call any one "dirty-fingered" is to brand him as a thief.
-
-On a bench-end in Zennor church there is a very singular carving of
-a mermaid. To account for it Zennor folks say that hundreds of years
-ago a beautifully-attired lady, who came and went mysteriously, used
-occasionally to attend their church and sing so divinely that she
-enchanted all who heard her. She came year after year, but never aged
-nor lost her good looks. At last one Sunday, by her charms, she enticed
-a young man, the best singer in the parish, to follow her: he never
-returned, and was heard of no more. A long time after, a vessel lying
-in Pendower cove, into which she sailed one Sunday, cast her anchor,
-and in some way barred the access to a mermaid's dwelling. She rose up
-from the sea, and politely asked the captain to remove it. He landed
-at Zennor, and related his adventure, and those who heard it agreed
-that this must have been the lady who decoyed away the poor young man.
-
-Not far from St. Just is the solitary, dreary cairn, known as Cairn
-Kenidzhek (pronounced Kenidjack), which means the "hooting cairn,"
-so called from the unearthly noises which proceed from it on dark
-nights. It enjoys a bad reputation as the haunt of witches. Close
-under it lies a barren stretch of moorland, the "Gump," over it the
-devil hunts at night poor lost souls; he rides on the half-starved
-horses turned out here to graze, and is sure to overtake them at a
-particular stile. It is often the scene of demon fights, when one
-holds the lanthorn to give the others light, and is also a great
-resort of the pixies. Woe to the unhappy person who may be there
-after night-fall: they will lead him round and round, and he may
-be hours before he manages to get out of the place away from his
-tormentors. Here more than once fortunate persons have seen "the
-small people" too, at their revels, and their eyes have been dazzled
-by the sight of their wonderful jewels; but if they have ever managed
-to secrete a few, behold next morning they were nothing but withered
-leaves, or perhaps snail-shells.
-
-
- "Sennen Cove was much frequented by mermaids. This place was also
- resorted to by a remarkable spirit called the Hooper--from the
- hooping, or hooting sounds it was accustomed to make. In old times,
- according to tradition, a compact cloud of mist often came in from
- over the sea, when the weather was by no means foggy, and rested on
- the rocks called Cowloc, thence it spread itself like a curtain of
- cloud quite across Sennen Cove. By night a dull light was mostly
- seen amidst the vapour, with sparks ascending as if a fire burned
- within it: at the same time hooping sounds were heard proceeding
- therefrom. People believed the misty cloud shrouded a spirit, which
- came to forewarn them of approaching storms, and that those who
- attempted to put to sea found an invisible force--seemingly in the
- mist--to resist them. A reckless fisherman and his son, however,
- disregarding the token, launched their boat and beat through the
- fog with a "threshal" (flail); they passed the cloud of mist which
- followed them, and neither the men nor the hooper were ever more
- seen in Sennen Cove. This is the only place in the county where
- any tradition of such a guardian spirit is preserved."--Bottrell.
-
-
-The same author tells a story of a reputed astrologer called Dionysius
-Williams, who lived in Mayon, in Sennen, a century ago. He found his
-furze-rick was diminishing faster than it ought, and discovered by
-his art that some women in Sennen Cove were in the habit of taking it
-away at night. The very next night, when all honest folks should be
-in bed, an old woman from the Cove came as was her wont to his rick
-for a "burn" [6] of furze. She made one of no more than the usual size
-but could not lift it, neither could she after she had lightened her
-"burn" by half. Frightened, she tried to take out the rope and run
-away, but she could neither draw it out nor move herself. Of course
-Mr. Williams had put a spell upon her, and there she had to remain
-in the cold all night. He came out in the morning and released her,
-giving her, as she was poor, the furze. Neither she nor the other
-women ever troubled him again.
-
-Before proceeding any further, to make an allusion in the next
-legend intelligible, I must say something about Tregeagle (pronounced
-Tregaygle), the Cornish Bluebeard, who was popularly supposed to have
-sold his soul to the devil, that his wishes might be granted for a
-certain number of years; and who, in addition to several other crimes,
-is accused of marrying and murdering many rich heiresses to obtain
-their money. One day, just before his death, he was present when one
-man lent a large sum to another without receiving receipt or security
-for it (the money was borrowed for Tregeagle). Soon after Tregeagle's
-death the borrower denied that he had ever had it, and the case
-was brought into Bodmin Court to be tried, when the defendant said,
-"If Tregeagle ever saw it I wish to God that Tregeagle may come into
-court and declare it." No sooner were the words spoken than Tregeagle
-appeared, and gave his witness in favour of the plaintiff, declaring
-"that he could not speak falsely; but he who had found it so easy to
-raise him would find it difficult to lay him." The money was paid,
-but the wretched man was followed night and day by the spirit,
-and great labour had the parsons and wise men before they could
-finally rid him of his tormentor. There are many versions of this
-transaction. Tregeagle himself is said in another to have received the
-money for an estate of which he was steward, and not to have entered
-it in his books. His ghost was doomed to do many impossible things,
-such as to empty Dosmery pool, near Bodmin Moor, with a limpet shell
-that had a hole in the bottom. This pool had the reputation, too,
-of being bottomless; but it has lately been cut into and drained by
-the workers of the granite quarries. Strange tales are told in that
-neighbourhood of his appearing to people, and of his dismal howls
-at not being able to fulfil his tasks. Mothers all over Cornwall
-when their children are loudly crying may be often heard to declare
-"that they are roaring worse than Tregeagle." "A tradition of the
-neighbourhood says that on the shores of this lonely mere (Dosmery
-pool) the ghosts of bad men are ever employed in binding the sand
-in bundles with 'beams' (bands) of the same. These ghosts, or some
-of them, were driven out (they say horsewhipped out) by the parson
-from Launceston."--H. G. T. Notes and Queries, December, 1850.
-
-Tregeagle had also to remove the sand from one cove to another,
-where the sea always returned it. It was on one of these expeditions
-that either by accident or design he dropped a sackful at the mouth
-of Loe-pool, near Helston. (When in wet seasons the waters of this
-pool rise to such a height as to obstruct the working of the mills
-on its banks, and heavy seas have silted up the sand at its mouth,
-the Mayor of Helston presents by ancient custom two leather purses
-containing three halfpence each as his dues to the lord of Penrose who
-owns Loe-pool, and asks for permission to cut a passage through the
-bar to the sea). Another of Tregeagle's tasks is to make and carry
-away a truss of sand bound with a rope of sand from Gwenvor (the
-cove at Whitsand Bay) near the Land's End. But his unquiet spirit
-finds no rest, for whilst he is trying to do his never-ending work
-the devil hunts him from place to place, until he hides for refuge
-in a hermit's ruined chapel on St. Roche's rocks (East Cornwall).
-
-When the sea roars before a storm, people in the Land's End district
-say "Tregeagle is calling," and often, too, his voice may be heard
-lamenting around Loe-pool. [7]
-
-The substance of the following I had from a Penzance man (H. R. C.),
-to whom I must own I am indebted for much information about Cornish
-folk-lore. All his life he has in his business mingled with the
-peasantry of West Cornwall, and, unlike myself, he comes from a long
-line of Cornishmen.
-
-"You know Gwenvor Sands, in Whitsand Bay, at the Land's End, and
-have heard of the unresting spirit of Tregeagle, by whom that spot is
-haunted. He foretells storms, and calls before the wind reaches home. I
-have often heard him howling before a westerly hurricane in the still
-of midnight at my house in Penzance, a distance of ten miles."
-
-Tradition tells that on these sands, many centuries ago, some
-foreigners landed, and fought a great battle with the inhabitants,
-under King Arthur, on Vellan-drucher Moor. "Where Madron, Gulval, and
-Zennor meet, there is a flat stone where Prince Arthur and four British
-kings dined, and the four kings collected the native Cornish who fought
-under them at the battle of Vellan-drucher."--(Bottrell.) This was
-long before the Spaniards (pronounced Spanyers) in 1595 came ashore
-at the same place from a galley "high by day" (in broad daylight),
-and burnt Vellan-dreath, a mill close by.
-
-These foreigners are popularly supposed to be red-haired Danes, and
-they stayed so long "that the birds built in the rigging of their
-ships." In all the western parishes of Cornwall there has existed
-time out of mind a great antipathy to certain red-haired families,
-who are said to be their descendants, and, much to their disgust,
-they are often hailed as Danes (pronounced Deanes). Indeed this
-dislike was carried so far that few would allow any members of their
-families to intermarry with them. In addition to the usual country
-gossip in the beginning of this century amongst the women of this
-district whilst knitting at their doors (for the Cornish are famous
-"knitsters"), or sitting round "breeding" (netting) fishing-nets, they
-had one never-failing topic of conversation in their fears that the
-foreigners would land once more on Gwenvor Sands, or at Priest's Cove,
-[8] in Pendeen, near St. Just. Who these strangers were to be they
-were not at all sure, but they knew that the red-haired Danes were to
-come again, when Vellan-drucher (a water mill-wheel) would once more
-be worked with blood, and the kings for the last time would dine around
-the Garrick Zans (Table Mên); and the end of the world would come soon
-after: for had not Merlin so prophesied more than a thousand years
-ago? Garrick Zans is the old name for a large flat stone, the Table Mên
-(pronounced Mayon), at Sennen, near the Land's End, and seven mythical
-Saxon kings are said to have dined at it when on a visit to Cornwall,
-A.D. 600. "Around it old folk went nine times daily, from some notion
-that is was lucky and good against witchcraft."--(Bottrell.)
-
-Off the Land's End is a very striking rock rising out of the sea. It
-is known as the Irish Lady, from the fact that an Irish vessel
-was once wrecked on it, and out of all on board one poor lady alone
-managed to scramble up to the top; but no boat could get to her, and,
-exhausted by fatigue, she fell into the water, and was drowned. Her
-spirit still haunts the spot. This is most probably a fanciful tale,
-as the rock bears some resemblance to a human figure.
-
-"During a dreadful thunderstorm and hurricane on the 30th January,
-1648, the day on which King Charles was beheaded, a large stone
-figure of a man, called the 'Armed Knight,' which stood in an upright
-position at the extremity of the Land's End, forty fathoms above the
-level of the sea, was thrown down. On the same day a ship riding
-in St. Ives Bay, having on board the king's wardrobe and other
-furniture belonging to the royal family, bound for France, broke
-from her moorings, and ran ashore on the rocks of Godrevy Island,
-where all on board, about sixty persons, were drowned, except one
-man and a boy."--G. S. Gilbert's Cornwall.
-
-The name of Armed Knight has been transferred to another pile of rocks
-off the Land's End. The "stone figure" thrown down was most probably
-a natural formation, as one of the rocks there now bears the fanciful
-name of Dr. Johnson's Head, from a supposed likeness. Other versions
-of this legend say "that the Armed Knight was only ninety feet high,
-with an iron spire on its top."
-
-Porthgwarra in olden times was known as Sweethearts' Cove from the
-following circumstance: The daughter of a well-to-do farmer loved a
-sailor, who was once one of her father's serving-men. Her parents,
-especially her mother, disapproved of the match; and when the young
-man returned from sea and came to see his sweetheart, he was forbidden
-the house. The lovers however met, and vowed to be true to each other,
-Nancy saying, "That she would never marry any other man," and William,
-"That, dead or alive, he would one day claim her as his bride." He
-again went to sea, and for a long time no tidings came, neither from
-nor of him. Poor Nancy grew melancholy, and spent all her days, and
-sometimes nights, looking out seaward from a spot on the cliff, called
-then Nancy's Garden, now Hella Point. She gradually became quite mad;
-and one night fancied she heard her lover tapping at her bed-room
-window, and calling her to come out to him, saying: "Sleepest thou,
-sweetheart? Awaken, and come hither, love. My boat awaits us at the
-cove. Thou must come this night, or never be my bride." She dressed,
-went to the cove, and was never seen again. Tradition says that
-the same night William appeared to his father, told him that he had
-come for his bride, and bade him farewell; and that next day the news
-arrived of his having been drowned at sea. Bottrell gives this legend
-under the title of "The Tragedy of Sweet William and Fair Nancy."
-
-Not far from the parish of St. Levan is a small piece of
-ground--"Johanna's Garden," which is fuller of weeds than of
-flowers. The owner of it was one Sunday morning in her garden gathering
-greens for her dinner, when she saw St. Levan going by to catch some
-fish for his. He stopped and greeted her, upon which she reproved him
-for fishing on a Sunday, and asked him what he thought would be his
-end if he did so. He tried to convince her that it was not worse than
-picking greens, but she would not listen to reason. At last St. Levan
-lost patience, and said, "From this time for ever thou shalt be known,
-if known at all, as the Foolish Johanna, and thy garden shall ever
-continue to bear, as now, more hemlocks and nettles than leeks and
-lentils. Mark this! to make thy remembrance the more accursed for all
-time to come, if any child of thy name be baptised in the waters of
-Parchapel-well (close at hand) it shall become a fool, like thyself,
-and bad luck follow it."--Bottrell.
-
-There is a cleft-stone in St. Levan churchyard called St. Levan's
-stone; but it is said to have been venerated in the days of King
-Arthur; and Merlin, who once visited these parts with him, uttered
-this prophecy concerning it:--
-
-
- "When, with panniers astride,
- A pack-horse can ride
- Through St. Levan's stone,
- The world will be done."
-
-
-Unless some earthquake splits it further the world will last thousands
-of years longer.
-
-On an almost inaccessible granite peak seaward of the pile of rocks
-known as Castle Treryn (pronounced Treen), once the haunt and
-meeting-place of witches, on the summit of which is perched the
-far-famed Cornish logan-rock, is a sharp peak with a hole in it,
-large enough to insert a hand. At the bottom lay an egg-shaped stone,
-traditionally called the key of the castle, which, although easily
-shifted, had for ages defied all attempts at removal. It was said that
-should any one ever succeed in getting it out, Castle Treryn--in fact
-the whole cairn--would immediately disappear. It was unfortunately
-knocked out by the men who replaced the logan-rock, thrown down by
-Lieutenant Goldsmith. Its position was often altered by heavy seas,
-and from it the old folk formerly foretold the weather.
-
-In Buryan parish, named after an Irish saint, a king's daughter,
-who came into Cornwall with some of her companions in the fifth
-century, is the famous circle of Dawns Myin, or the Merry Maidens,
-originally consisting of nineteen upright stones. They are nineteen
-maidens, who for their sin of dancing on a Sunday were all turned
-into stone. Two mênhirs in a neighbouring field are the pipers, who
-at the same time suffered the same fate. Of these and other stone
-circles an old writer says, "No man when counting them can bring the
-stones twice the same number."
-
-Not far from Buryan, between Sennen and Penzance, is a very
-solitary weird spot--a disused Quakers' burial-ground. In its lonely
-neighbourhood is sometimes seen by a privileged few, "high by day,"
-the spirit of a huntsman, followed by his dogs. He is dressed in the
-hunting costume of bygone ages; he suddenly appears (for neither
-his horse's hoofs nor his dogs' feet make any sound), jumps over
-an adjacent hedge, and is as suddenly lost to view. I do not know
-if tradition has ever connected this huntsman with Wild Harris of
-Kenegie, [9] who was killed when hunting by a fall from his horse--it
-was frightened by a white hare, the spirit of a deserted maiden,
-which crossed its path. His ghost, in his hunting-dress, appeared
-standing at the door of his house the night he was buried--the funeral,
-according to an old custom, had taken place at midnight. For years
-after he might be met in the vicinity of his home, and he and his
-boon companions were often heard carousing at nights in a summer-house
-on the bowling-green. Few then cared to pass Kenegie after dark, for
-his was said not to be the only spirit that haunted the place. Wild
-Harris's ghost was finally laid to rest by a famous ghost-laying
-parson, and put as a task to count the blades of grass nine times in
-an enclosure on the top of Castle-an-Dinas, an old earth fortification
-near where he is said to have met his death. [10] Ghosts only "walk"
-(appear) in the parish where their bodies were buried.
-
-On the opposite side of Buryan to the Quakers' burial-ground is
-the parish of Paul (St. Pol-de-Leon). Its church was burnt by the
-Spaniards in 1595. They landed on a rock, said to have been named
-after Merlin--Merlin's car, and marched from Paul to Penzance, which
-they also fired in several places. I am afraid the inhabitants did
-not make a very bold stand against them; for Merlin had prophesied
-centuries before--
-
-
- "That they should land on the rock of Merlin,
- Who would burn Paul, Penzance, and Newlyn."
-
-
-And this caused them to lose courage, and falsify the old proverb:
-
-
- "Car and Pen, Pol and Tre,
- Would make the devil run away."
-
-
-Close by the highway, where the Buryan road joins the high-road
-from Paul to Penzance, is a smoothly-cut, conical granite stone,
-popularly supposed to have been placed there in memory of some woman
-who was found murdered at that spot, with nothing on to identify her,
-and with only a thimble and ring in her pocket. It really marks the
-place where an ancient gold ring, three inches and a half in diameter,
-bearing the motto, "In hac spe vivo," was discovered in 1781. In the
-same parish, a short walk from this place, are some Druidical remains,
-which have the curious name of "Kerris roundago." Some stones taken
-from it to repair Penzance pier were fatal to the horses who drew them,
-although they were young and healthy.
-
-In the adjacent parish of Newlyn, a fishing village, the favourite
-resort of artists, a great deal of gossiping on summer evenings
-goes on around the small wells (here called peeths), whilst the
-women wait patiently for each in turn to fill her earthen pitchers;
-some of the most industrious bring their knitting in their pockets
-with them. Opposite one of these wells, towering over St. Peter's
-church, is a striking pile of rocks, "Tolcarn." On the summit are
-some curious markings in the stones, which, when a child, I was told
-were the devil's footprints; but the following legend, which I give
-on the authority of the Rev. W. S. Lach-Szyrma, Vicar of St. Peter's,
-is quite new to me:--
-
-"The summit of the rock is reticulated with curious veins of elvan,
-about which a quaint Cornish legend relates that the Bucca-boo, or
-storm-god of the old Cornish, once stole the fishermen's net. Being
-pursued by Paul choir, who sang the Creed, he flew to the top of Paul
-hill and thence over the Coombe to Tolcarn, where he turned the nets
-into stone."
-
-We have now reached the town of Penzance, and through its streets
-folks of the last generation often heard rumbling at midnight an
-old-fashioned coach drawn by headless horses; or saw a procession of
-coffins slowly wending its way to the churchyard. It was unlucky to
-meet this, as death was sure soon to follow, and tradition speaks of a
-woman who accidentally struck against one and died in the same night. A
-coach with headless horses and coachman, also just before Christmas,
-went through the streets of Penryn; this coachman had the power of
-spiriting away people who met and stared at him, unless they turned
-their heads and averted the evil by some mystical signs. In Penzance
-town were many haunted houses, but space will only allow of my noticing
-a few. One in Chapel Street (formerly Our Lady's Street) was tenanted
-by the spirit of Mrs. Baines, an eccentric old lady. At the back
-of her house was a very fine orchard well stocked with fruit-trees,
-which the boys were too fond of visiting. She determined at last that
-her gardener should watch for them, armed with an old blunderbuss,
-charged with peas and small shot. She gave him strict orders should
-he see any one, to say one, two, three, and then fire. He watched two
-nights, but the boys were too cunning for him, and still the fruit
-went. On the third, Mrs. Baines, thinking to catch him napping, went
-herself into the garden and began to shake the apples down from one of
-the trees. Some say that the man recognised his mistress, and, vexed
-at her suspecting him, said one, two, three, as quickly as he could
-utter the words, and fired; others, that he was sleeping, and awakened
-by the noise she made, shot her by mistake, exclaiming, "I know-ee,
-you thief, I do; now I'll sarve-ee out, I will." Terrified after he
-had done the deed, he ran off into the country and there hid himself
-for some days. The poor old lady was more frightened than hurt, and
-all the shot were successfully extracted by her doctor; but very soon
-after this adventure she died. From this time her house and grounds
-began to have an evil reputation; Mrs. Baines's ghost, dressed in
-antiquated garb, a quaint lace cap on her powdered hair, lace ruffles
-hanging from her sleeves, and a short mode mantle over her shoulders,
-was often seen walking in the gardens or standing under an apple-tree,
-leaning on the gold-headed cane she always carried. Indoors, too,
-her high-heeled shoes were plainly heard night after night tapping on
-the floors as she paced up and down the rooms, which noise was often
-varied by the whirring of her spinning-wheel. For some time the house
-was unoccupied, now it is divided into two, and the ghost has been
-laid to rest. But long after Mrs. Baines ceased to appear her wheel
-was heard. At last it was discovered that some leather, which had
-been nailed around a door to keep out draughts, was loose in places,
-and that the whistling of the wind through this made the peculiar
-sound. Mr. Bottrell says "that her spirit was laid by a parson, whose
-name he thinks was Singleton, and he succeeded in getting her away
-to the Western Green (west of Penzance), which was then spread over
-many acres of land, where the waves now roll. [11] Here this powerful
-parson single-handed bound her to spin from the banks, ropes of sand
-for the term of a thousand years, unless she, before that time, spun
-a sufficiently long and strong one to reach from St. Michael's Mount
-to St. Clement's Isle (across the bay)." About a stone's throw from
-Mrs. Baines's house, on an eminence above Quay street, stood in her
-days Penzance Chapel of Ease (for Penzance was then in Madron parish),
-called our Lady's or St. Mary's Chapel. On the same site was built, in
-1835, the present parish church of St. Mary's. Here, in the memory of
-a few who still survive, a gentleman in the early part of this century
-did penance, and afterwards walked from thence through the streets to
-his house, wrapped in a sheet, with a lighted taper in his hand. It
-was usual then, as now, for the Mayor and Corporation of Penzance,
-with the mace-bearers and constables, to go once a month in state
-to church. Before the reading of the first lesson the mace-bearers
-left, and visited the public-houses, in order to see that they were
-shut during service time. When the sermon began they came back and
-returned to their seats in order to be in readiness to escort the
-Mayor home. Quay street was once the most fashionable part of Penzance,
-but the large houses are now divided into smaller tenements; in some
-of them bits of finely-moulded ceilings, &c., still exist. One of the
-houses reputed to have been haunted was torn down in 1813, when the
-skeleton of a man was found built into a wall. It was, of course,
-put down to be the sailor's whose spirit was so often seen there,
-and who (tradition said) had been murdered in that house for the sake
-of his money. It was well known that he had brought back great riches
-from foreign parts. There is a myth that Sir Walter Raleigh landed
-at Penzance Quay when he returned from Virginia, and on it smoked the
-first tobacco ever seen in England, but for this statement I believe
-there is not the slightest foundation. Several western ports, both
-in Devon and Cornwall, make the same boast.
-
-It is a fact, however, that the news of Nelson's death was first
-heard here. It was brought into the port by two fishermen, who had
-it from the crew of a passing vessel. A small company of strolling
-actors were playing that night at the little theatre then standing
-over some stables in Chapel street, and the play was stopped for a
-few moments whilst one of the actors told the audience.
-
-Another haunted house, at the opposite side of Penzance, is celebrated
-in a poem called "The Petition of an Old Uninhabited House," written
-and published in 1811, by the Rev. C. V. Le Grice, who was then Vicar
-of Madron. He was a friend of Charles Lamb, who mentions him in his
-"Essay on Christ's Hospital." About this house a lady once told me a
-strange story, that I will relate. Forty years ago, she, a perfect
-stranger to the place, never having been in Penzance before, came
-to it with her husband and her first child, for she was then a young
-wife. As they meant to settle in the town, they went to this hotel,
-where they intended staying until they could get a suitable house. On
-the evening of their arrival, her husband having gone out, she sat
-alone before the fire nursing her child, when she suddenly saw a
-little old man, in a very old-fashioned dress, come into the room. He
-sat down in a chair near her, looked steadfastly into the fire,
-and, after some time, without saying a word, he rose and left. On
-her husband's return, she told him of her queer visitor. The next
-morning they made enquiries about him, and found that the hotel had
-been built on the site of the old uninhabited house; that nearly the
-whole of it had been destroyed, but a few of the best rooms remained;
-and that they were in a haunted chamber. She declared that she could
-never sleep there another night, and, temporarily, they engaged some
-furnished lodgings. These old rooms are now pulled down and billiard
-and other rooms cover the place where they stood.
-
-Outside the boundary-stone, west of Penzance, stands, in its own
-grounds, a house to which additions have been made by many succeeding
-generations. Tradition, of course, gave it a ghost. With the other
-members of my family I lived there for several years, but none of
-us ever saw it. I am bound, however, to state that we never slept in
-the haunted chamber. For a short period it was occupied by a groom,
-who one morning came to me with a very long face, and said he dared
-not sleep there any more, for some mysterious being came night after
-night, and pulled all the bed-clothes off him; rather than do so,
-he would sleep in the harness-room.
-
-Still further west of Penzance is a much larger house, to which,
-like the former, many additions have been made. And up its avenue,
-after dark, a carriage may be often heard slowly making its way
-until it reaches the hall-door, where it stops. In this house, about
-sixty years ago, lived, in very great style, a gentleman, who was a
-regular autocrat, and of him one of his old servants related to me
-this anecdote, which is curious as an illustration of the manners of
-those times. When in his employ, he gave an answer to some question,
-which afterwards his master discovered to be an untruth. The next
-Sunday he made him, as the congregation came out, stand at Madron
-church door, by a tombstone covered with loaves of bread. Of these,
-he had to give one to each poor person that passed, and say, in an
-audible tone, "I, William ----, last week told my master a lie."
-
-Mr. G. B. Millett, in his Penzance Past and Present, gives a tale well
-known in this district, about the drinking habits of our ancestors,
-which, as I am now on the subject of manners, I will quote.
-
-"A particular gentleman, not far from Penzance, loved good liquor,
-and one evening had gathered some of his jovial companions together,
-determined to make a night of it. His wife, having had some experience
-of such gatherings before, with wise precaution, saw as much wine
-taken out of the cellar as she thought would be good for her husband
-and his friends. Then, safely locking the strong oak door, she put the
-key in her pocket, and announced her intention of spending the evening
-with some lady friends. The hours were passing pleasantly away, and,
-with a smile of inward satisfaction, she was congratulating herself
-upon the success of her forethought, when a heavy stumbling noise
-was heard upon the stairs, and shortly afterwards two burly footmen
-staggered into the room, groaning under the weight of a ponderous
-cellar door, with its posts and lintel, which had been sent by their
-master for the mistress to unlock."
-
-The manor of Conerton, which at one time nearly included the whole
-of West Penwith, had many privileges in Penzance. Before the days of
-county courts the lord held a monthly court here for the trial of
-small cases not criminal. Its prison, a wretched place (visited by
-Howard), no longer exists, but people were confined there early in
-this century--sometimes for long periods. I was once shown a beautiful
-patchwork quilt made by a poor woman, who had been imprisoned for debt.
-
-Until within the last fifty years every butcher in Penzance market had
-to pay to the bailiff of this manor at Christmas a marrow-bone or a
-shilling. The first butcher who refused to pay it also defied one of
-the bye-laws of the market that compelled them to wear white sleeves
-over their blue blouses. He was brought before the magistrates, and
-declared "that he would be incarcerated before he would do it." The
-following is a favourite story handed down amongst the butchers from
-father to son. A solicitor in Penzance had a very large dog that was in
-the habit of coming into their market and stealing joints of meat from
-the stalls. One day one of them went to the lawyer, and said,--"Please
-sir, could I sue the owner of a dog for a leg of mutton stolen from my
-stall?" "Certainly, my good man." "Then, please sir, the dog is yours,
-and the price of the mutton is 4s. 6d." The money was paid, and the
-man was going away in triumph, when he was called back by these words:
-"Stay a moment, my good man, a lawyer's consultation is 6s. 8d., you
-owe me the difference:" which sum the discomfited butcher had to pay.
-
-Every stream in Cornwall however small is called a river (pronounced
-revvur). One flows into the sea west of Penzance, between it and
-Newlyn, known as Laregan, and another at the east in Gulval parish,
-as Ponsandane river. There is an old rhyme about them that runs thus:
-
-
- "When Ponsandane calls to Laregan river,
- There will be fine weather.
- But we may look for rain
- When Laregan calls to Ponsandane."
-
-
-Years ago there was a marsh between Penzance and Newlyn, now covered
-by the sea, known to the old people as the "Clodgy;" when the sea
-moaned there they said, "Clodgy is calling for rain." Sometimes at
-the present day it is "Bucca" is calling, Bucca being the nickname
-in Penzance for the inhabitants of Newlyn.
-
-
- "Penzance boys up in a tree,
- Looking as wisht (weak, downcast) as wisht can be;
- Newlyn 'Buccas,' strong as oak,
- Knocking them down at every poke."
-
-
-The weather at Mount's Bay is also foretold by the look of the Lizard
-land, which lies south:
-
-
- "When the Lizard is clear, rain is near."
-
-
-The marsh on Marazion Green still exists, and not many years ago
-no one cared to cross it after nightfall, especially on horseback,
-for at a certain spot close by the marsh a white lady was sure to
-arise from the ground, jump on the rider's saddle, and, like the
-"White Lady of Avenel," ride with him pillion-fashion as far as the
-Red river [12] that runs into the sea just below the smelting-works
-at Chyandour, a suburb of Penzance. The last person who saw her
-was a tailor of this town, who died in 1840. He was commonly called
-"Buck Billy," from his wearing till the day of his death a pigtail,
-a buff waistcoat, and a blue coat with yellow buttons.
-
-Marazion, or Market-jew, which latter is a corruption of its old
-Cornish name, Marghaisewe, meaning a Thursday's market, is a small
-town exactly opposite St. Michael's Mount. Until its present church
-was built its mayor sat in a very high seat with his back against a
-window. This is the origin of the Cornish proverb: "In your own light,
-like the mayor of Market-jew." This mayor is jokingly said to have
-three privileges. The first is, "That he may sit in his own light;"
-the second, "Next to the parson;" and the third, "If he see a pig in
-a gutter he may turn it out and take its place." [13]
-
-In the churchyard of the neighbouring parish of St. Hilary is
-a monument to the Rev. John Penneck, M.A., who, in the early part
-of the last century, was Chancellor of Exeter Cathedral. His ghost
-is very eccentric, sometimes getting into a passion, and on these
-occasions raising a great storm of wind.
-
-In the parish of Breage, near the sea, about four miles from Marazion,
-are the ruins of Pengersick Castle, of which only some fragments of
-walls and a square tower now stand. Some of the upper rooms in the
-latter have fallen in, and they are all in a state of decay. The
-lower have oak-panels curiously carved and painted, but time has
-almost effaced the designs. The most perfect is one representing
-"Perseverance," under which are the following lines:
-
-
- "What thing is harder than the rock?
- What softer is than water cleere?
- Yet wyll the same, with often droppe,
- The hard rock perce as doth a spere.
- Even so, nothing so hard to attayne,
- But may be hadde, with labour and payne."
-
-
-So many are the legends told of the former inhabitants of Pengersick,
-that it would be almost impossible at this date to decide which is
-the original. These ruins stand on the site of a much older castle,
-and in it dwelt, far back in the dark ages, a very wicked man, who,
-when he was fighting in foreign parts, forgetting his wife at home,
-courted a king's daughter, who gave him a magic sword, which ensured
-in every battle the victory to its owner. He deceived and left her;
-but she, with her son in her arms, followed him to his home by the
-Mount. There she met him, and upbraided him with his cruelty, and
-in a fit of passion he threw them both into the sea. The lady was
-drowned, and after her death she was changed into a white hare, which
-continually haunted the old lord; but her boy was picked up alive by a
-passing ship. The lord's wife afterwards died, and he married again a
-woman as bad as himself, reputed to be a witch, who was very cruel to
-her step-son, who lived with his father at the castle. One night there
-was a great storm in Mount's Bay, and the young man went down to the
-shore to see if there were any vessels in distress, and spied on the
-beach an almost exhausted sailor, who had been washed in by the waves,
-and whom he bade his servants carry to his home, and put into his own
-bed. When he revived, all were struck by the marvellous resemblance
-to the young heir; and they conceived a great affection for each
-other. Together they went to Marazion to see if they could find the
-vessel from whose deck the stranger had fallen into the sea. It was
-safe in harbour, and the captain, whom the sailor had always thought
-to be his father, told him then for the first time, "How, when he
-was an infant, he had rescued him from drowning where last night he
-had nearly lost his life." Thus they were discovered to be brothers,
-and a day or two after, when out hunting, guided by the white hare,
-they accidentally came upon the miraculous sword that had disappeared
-when his mother was drowned. Then these two brothers sailed away from
-Cornwall, and dwelt in peace in the land of a strange princess; where
-the Cornishman studied, under a celebrated master, astrology and all
-other occult sciences. After some time the old lord of Pengersick met
-his death in this wise: As he was riding out one fine morning, the
-white hare suddenly sprang up in front of his horse and startled it,
-so that it ran madly with its rider into the sea, where both were
-swallowed up. When this news was brought to him, the Cornishman
-bade his brother an affectionate farewell, and, with his wife, a
-learned princess, went back to Pengersick, where they lived happily
-for several generations, for amongst many other wonderful things,
-the young lord had discovered an elixir of life which, had they so
-wished, would have kept them alive to the present day. (See Bottrell.)
-
-In addition to being well versed in occult lore, Pengersick's wife
-was a fine musician; she could with her harp charm and subdue evil
-spirits, and compel the fish in Mount's Bay, also the mermaids who
-then dwelt there, to come out of the sea.
-
-Another account of the old lord's death says that he and a party of
-his friends were dining in his yacht around a silver table when she
-went down, and all on board perished. This happened off Cudden Point,
-which juts into the sea just opposite Pengersick. Children living there
-formerly used to go down to the beach at low water to try and find
-this silver table. (A ship laden with bullion is reported to have been
-lost here in the time of Queen Elizabeth.) "The present castle," one
-tradition says, "was built in the reign of Henry VIII. by a merchant
-who had acquired immense wealth beyond the seas, and who loaded an ass
-with gold, and broke its back. He sold the castle to a Mr. Milliton,
-who, having slain a man, shut himself up in it to escape punishment."
-
-Another legend says that Sir William Milliton built it, and, soon after
-its completion, married a very rich but extremely ugly and shrewish
-woman, of whom he tried by various ways to rid himself but in vain. One
-day, after a desperate quarrel, he begged her forgiveness, and asked
-her, in proof of having pardoned him, to sup with him that evening
-in a room overlooking the sea. She agreed; and at the conclusion of
-the feast they pledged each other in goblets of rich wine. Then Sir
-William's looks altered, and, in a fierce voice, he said, "Woman,
-now prepare for death! You have but a short time to live, as the
-wine that you have just drunk was poisoned." "Then we die together,"
-she answered, "for I had my suspicions, and mixed the contents of the
-goblets." Up to this time the moon, which was at its full, had been
-shining brightly through the open windows, for it was a warm summer
-night, when suddenly a frightful storm of thunder and lightning arose,
-the winds lashed the waves to fury, and the moon was darkened. The
-servants, alarmed by this, and the unearthly fiendish yells that came
-from the banqueting hall, rushed upstairs, and there found the bodies
-of their master and mistress dead on the floor; and through the open
-window they saw, by the light of the moon which for a moment shone
-through a rift in the clouds, their souls borne away on the wings of
-a demon in the shape of a bird.
-
-The original name of Breage parish was Pembro; but St. Breaca, hearing
-that the inhabitants were at a loss to raise the money for a peal of
-bells, offered to extricate them from their difficulty on condition
-that they should call the parish after her. The condition was accepted,
-the bells were hung, and the parish henceforth was known as that of
-St. Breage.--Through Rev. S. Rundle.
-
-St. Germoe (Geronicus) an Irish king, who was converted to Christianity
-in the fifth century, is said to have been the foster-son of Breaca
-(or Breage), with whom he crossed over into Cornwall where they
-settled. Two churches in adjoining parishes are dedicated to them;
-St. Germoe is reputed to have been the founder of his, and there is
-a curious structure at the north-east of the churchyard, known as
-St. Germoe's chair or King Germoe's throne.
-
-"There is more than one story attached to this chair. One is to the
-effect that the saint sat in the central chair with two assessors,
-one on either side of him; another legend is that the priests rested
-in the chair; whilst a third is that pilgrims to the tomb of the saint
-also rested therein. Be that as it may, however, it is possible that
-this is a shrine, and that the body of St. Germoe rests underneath
-it."--Rev. W. A. Osborne, Transactions Penzance Natural History
-Society, 1886, 1887.
-
-At Great Work Mine (Huel Vor) near by, a narrow level (not far down)
-is still thought to have been made by Christian slaves, when the
-first church at Germoe was built.
-
-
- "Germoe, little Germoe lies under a hill,
- When I'm in Germoe I count myself well;
- True love's in Germoe, in Breage I've got none,
- When I'm in Germoe I count myself at home."--
-
- Through Rev. S. Rundle.
-
-
-All Cornishmen at one time were supposed to be "wreckers," and from
-the peninsular-shape of their county came the proverb, "'Tis a bad
-wind that blows no good to Cornwall." But the dwellers in Breage and
-Germoe must in olden times, from the following distich, have been
-held in worse repute than their neighbours:
-
-
- "God keep us from rocks and shelving sands,
- And save us from Breage and Germoe men's hands."
-
-
-The most noted and daring Cornish smuggler of the last century,
-Coppinger, a Dane, lived on the north coast, and of him a legendary
-catalogue of dreadful tales is told, all to be found in the
-Rev. R. S. Hawker's book, the Footprints of Former Men in Far
-Cornwall. He lays the scene of his exploits in the neighbourhood
-of Hartland Bay, my informant near Newquay. He swam ashore here
-in the prime of life, in the middle of a frightful storm, from a
-foreign-rigged vessel that was seen in the offing, and of which nothing
-more was ever heard or known. Wrapped in a cloak, that tradition says
-he tore from off the shoulders of an old woman who was on the beach,
-he jumped up behind a farmer's daughter, who had ridden down to see
-the wreck, and was by her taken to her father's house, where he was
-fed, clothed, and most hospitably received. He was a fine, handsome,
-well-built man, and gave himself out to be most highly connected in
-his own country. He soon won the young woman's affections, and at her
-father's death, which took place not long after, he easily induced her
-to marry him; but it was far from a happy union. Luckily they had but
-one child--a deaf and dumb idiot, who had inherited his father's cruel
-disposition, and delighted in torturing all living things. It is even
-said that he cunningly killed one of his young playmates. Coppinger,
-after his marriage, organized a band of smugglers, and made himself
-their captain; and quickly through his misdeeds earned the title
-of cruel Coppinger. One legend relates that he once led a Revenue
-cutter into a dangerous cove, of which he alone knew the soundings,
-and that he and his crew came out of it in safety, but the other
-vessel with all on board perished. Mr. Hawker calls Coppinger's ship
-the "Black Prince," and says he had it built for himself in Denmark,
-and that men who had made themselves in any way obnoxious to him on
-land were carried on board her, and compelled by fearful oaths to
-enrol themselves in her crew.
-
-In 1835 an old man of the age of ninety-seven related to this writer
-that when a youth he had been so abducted, and after two years'
-service he had been ransomed by his friends with a large sum. "And
-all," said the old man, very simply, "because I happened to see
-one man kill another, and they thought I should mention it." The
-same author gives him a wonderfully fleet horse, which no one but
-Coppinger could master, and says that on its back he made more than
-one hairbreadth escape. He has also a marvellous account of his end,
-in which he disappears as he came, in a vessel which he boarded in
-a storm of thunder, lightning, and hail. As soon as he was in her,
-"she was out of sight in a moment, like a spectre or a ghost." For
-this he quotes the following verse:--
-
-
- "Will you hear of the cruel Coppinger?
- He came from a foreign kind;
- He was brought to us from the salt water,
- He was carried away by the wind."
-
-
-The one thing certain about him is, that at one time he amassed money
-enough by smuggling to buy a small freehold estate near the sea, the
-title-deeds of which, signed with his name, still exist. But in his
-old age, I have been told, he was reduced to poverty, and subsisted
-on charity.
-
-That in those bygone days smuggling was thought no sin every one
-knows. And who has not heard the oft-quoted apocryphal anecdote of
-the Cornish clergyman, who--when he was in the middle of his sermon
-and some one opened the church door and shouted in, "A wreck! a
-wreck!"--begged his parishioners to wait whilst he took off his gown
-that they might all start fair.
-
-The following is, however, a genuine letter of the last century from
-a vicar in the eastern part of the county to a noted smuggler of
-that district:--
-
-
- "Martin Rowe, you very well know,
- That Cubert's vicar loves good liquor,
- One bottle's all, upon my soul.
- You'll do right to come to-night;
- My wife's the banker, she'll pay for the anker."
-
-
-To the same jovial vicar is credited this grace, given to his hostess'
-horror at her table after he had dined out several days in succession,
-and had rabbits offered him, a dish he detested:--
-
-
- "Of rabbits young and rabbits old,
- Of rabbits hot and rabbits cold,
- Of rabbits tender, rabbits tough,
- I thank the Lord we've had enough."
-
-
-Inland from Breage is the small hamlet of Leed's-town (called after
-the Duke of Leeds, who has property in Cornwall). It is the seat of the
-following short story:--"The Leed's-town ghost runs up and down stairs
-in a house during the night, and then sits in a corner of the room
-weeping and sleeking her hair. It is the ghost of a young woman who
-was engaged to be married to a man who refused to become her husband
-until she gave him certain deeds kept in a box in the above room. As
-soon as the deeds were in his possession, he realised the property and
-escaped to America, leaving the luckless girl to bemoan her loss. She
-went mad: night and day she was searching for her deeds; sometimes she
-would sit and wail in the spot where the box had been. At length she
-died: her spirit, however, had no rest, and still constantly returns
-to keep alive the memory of man's perfidy."--Through Rev. S. Rundle.
-
-Close to Leed's-town, at the foot of Godolphin-hill, is the old house,
-or hall, of Godolphin. The basement-floor of the original house
-alone remains: it consists of a long façade supported by pillars
-of white granite, the interior containing many objects of interest
-well worth a visit. Opposite the inhabited part of the house is the
-King's room, opening on the King's garden. (The title of King's
-room was given to it from the legend that Charles II. once slept
-there.) You could leave it by five ways; as there were three doors,
-one exit through the floor, and another through the roof. Godolphin
-is held by a very curious tenure, said to have originated in a bet
-between the representatives of the Godolphin and St. Aubyn families
-on a snail race. As the Godolphin snail was being beaten, its owner
-pricked it with a pin to make it go faster, but it drew in its horns
-and refused to move, consequently the other won. The following is the
-ceremony which takes place every Candlemas. Before sunrise a person,
-appointed as reeve by the Rev. St. Aubyn Molesworth St. Aubyn,
-the lord of the manor of Lamburn, in the parish of Perranzabuloe
-(near Truro), knocks at the ancient outer door of the quadrangle,
-and repeats this demand thrice:--"Oyez! Oyez! Oyez! Here come I
-the reeve of the manor of Lamburn, to demand my lord's dues, eight
-groats and a penny in money, a loaf, a cheese, a collar of brawn,
-and a jack of the best ale in the house. God save the Queen and the
-lord of the manor." It is said at the outer door of the quadrangle,
-at the inner door, and for the third and last time at the table in
-the kitchen (which is one of the oldest and not the least interesting
-rooms). The above high lordship is paid by the Duke of Leeds to
-the St. Aubyn family, to whom should they fail an heir the estate
-reverts. There is another curious tenure in this part of Cornwall,
-which as I am on the subject I will, before proceeding further,
-quote. "The parsonage of St. Grade, with a small portion of land,
-including an orchard, is held of the manor of Erisey by the following
-tenure, viz., that on Easter-day, yearly, the parson provide a dinner
-for the master and mistress of Erisey house, and their man and maid,
-with a pan of milk for a greyhound bitch."--Lake, Helston and Lizard.
-
-The old manor-house of Erisey is in Ruan Major (near the Lizard),
-and of one of the family the following story is told:--"He was
-dancing with other ladies and gentlemen at Whitehall before James
-I., and, through the violent motion and action of his body in the
-middle of the dance, had his cap slip from his head and fall to the
-ground; but he instantly with his foot tossed it on his head again,
-and proceeded without let or hindrance with his part in that dance,
-to the admiration of all who saw it, which gave occasion to King James
-to enquire who that active gentleman was, and being told that his name
-was Erisey, he forthwith replied, 'I like the gentleman very well,
-but not his name of Heresey!'" The rector of Ruan Minor by ancient
-usage and prescription (which is always admitted) claims a right of
-sending a horse into a certain field in the parish of Landewednack,
-whenever it is cropped with corn, and taking away as many sheaves as
-the horse can carry away on its back.
-
-"At Jew's Lane Hill, near Godolphin, a Jew is said to have hung himself
-on a tree still pointed out, and was buried beneath the road. His ghost
-appears in the shape of a bull and a fiery chariot. This superstition
-has been known for generations."--M. H., through Rev. S. Rundle.
-
-
-
-
-CORNWALL STONE.
-
-"I remember this stone a rough cube about three feet in height;
-it stood by the wayside forty or fifty years ago about a quarter
-of a mile from the old Godolphin mansion near the coast, where the
-nobility and gentry of the county were wont periodically to assemble
-to hear the news from Court. The servants who waited on their masters
-at the banquet diligently listened to the conversation, and afterwards
-spread the information thus collected among the crowd assembled for
-the purpose around Cornwall stone."--G. F. W., Western Antiquary, 1881.
-
-An old writer on the Scilly Isles mentions a rock on Bryher, one
-of the smallest of the islands, where the neighbours were wont to
-collect to hear and repeat the news. He calls it the News Rock.
-
-Between Helston and the Lizard lies the parish of St. Keverne; unlike
-the other parishes of Cornwall it contains no mines. To account for
-this it is said that St. Keverne cursed it when he lived there, for
-the want of respect shown him by its inhabitants. Hence the proverb
-"No metal will run within the sound of St. Keverne's bells."
-
-St. Just, from the Land's End district, once paid a visit to
-St. Keverne, who entertained him for several days to the best of his
-power. After his departure his host missed some valuable relics, and
-determined to go in pursuit of his late guest, and try, if possible,
-to get them from him. As he was passing over Crousadown, about two
-miles from St. Keverne church, he pocketed three large stones, each
-weighing about a quarter of a ton, to use if St. Just should offer
-any resistance. He overtook him at a short distance from Breage
-and taxed him with the theft, which was indignantly denied. From
-words the saints came to blows, and St. Keverne flung his stones
-with such effect that St. Just ran off, throwing down the relics as
-he ran. These stones lay for centuries where they fell, about four
-hundred yards from Pengersick Lane, as when taken away by day, they
-were in bygone times always brought back at night.
-
-Going along the coast from Breage to the Lizard the solitary church of
-Gunwalloe is passed, built so close to the sea that the waves wash its
-graveyard walls. It is said to have been erected as a thank-offering by
-some man who escaped drowning when shipwrecked. "In the sandbanks near
-it (or, as others say, at Kennack cove), the notorious buccaneer Avery
-is reported to have buried several chests of treasure previously to his
-leaving England on the voyage from which he never returned. So strongly
-did this opinion prevail that Mr. John Knill, collector of the Customs
-at St. Ives, procured about the year 1770 a grant of treasure trove,
-and expended some money in a fruitless search."--Rev. C. A. Johns,
-Week at the Lizard.
-
-Near by is Mullion parish, of which the celebrated ghost-layer,
-the Rev. Thomas Flavel, who died in 1682, was the vicar, and the
-following quaint lines to his memory may still be read in the chancel
-of his church:--
-
-
- "Earth take thine earth, my sin let Satan havet,
- The world my goods, my soul my God who gavet;
- For from these four, Earth, Satan, World, and God,
- My flesh, my sin, my goods, my soul I had."
-
-
-Of him the Rev. C. A. Johns writes:--"This Thomas Flavel, during his
-life, attained great celebrity for his skill in the questionable art
-of laying ghosts. His fame still lingers in the memories of the more
-superstitious of the inhabitants through the following ridiculous
-stories. On one occasion when he had gone to church his servant-girl
-opened a book in his study, whereupon a host of spirits sprang up all
-round her. Her master observed this, though then occupied at church,
-closed his book, and dismissed the congregation. On his return home
-he took up the book with which his servant had been meddling, and
-read backwards the passage which she had been reading, at the same
-time laying about him lustily with his walking-cane, whereupon all
-the spirits took their departure, but not before they had pinched
-the servant-girl black and blue. His celebrity, it seems, was not
-confined to his own parish, for he was once called on to lay a very
-troublesome ghost in an adjoining parish. As he demanded the large
-fee of five guineas for his services, two of the persons interested
-resolved to assure themselves, by the evidence of their own eyes,
-that the ceremony was duly performed. They accordingly, without
-apprising one another of their intention, secreted themselves
-behind two graves in the churchyard a short time before the hour
-named for the absurd rites. In due time the ghost-layer entered it
-with a book in one hand and a horsewhip in the other. On the first
-smack of the whip the watchers raised their heads simultaneously,
-caught a glimpse of each other, and were both so terrified that they
-scampered off in opposite directions, leaving the operator to finish
-his business as he might. So popular are superstitions of this kind,
-and so long do they linger, that to the present day a spot is pointed
-out on the downs, named 'Hervan Gutter,' where Thomas Flavel's own
-ghost was laid by a clergyman, of whom he said before his death,
-'When he comes I must go.' In olden days there were several of these
-ghost-laying clergymen in Cornwall, of whom, before going on with the
-legends of the parishes, I will mention three known in folk-lore. In
-the parish of Ladock, on the east side of Truro, dwelt rather more
-than a century ago the famed ghost-layer, the Rev. Mr. Woods, who,
-when walking, usually carried an ebony stick with a silver head,
-on which was engraved a pentacle, and on a broad silver ring below
-planetary signs and mystical figures. Of him Mr. Bottrell tells many
-thrilling tales; I will only give the substance of one. Mr. Woods was
-usually a match for most demons, whom he would change into animals
-and thrash with his whip; but one more cunning than the rest defied
-him, by taking the shape of an unknown coal-black bird, and perching
-on the church tower, from whence during divine service he made all
-sorts of queer noises, disturbing the congregation, and inciting the
-irreverent to laughter. He was too high up to be exorcised or reached
-with the whip. At last the clergyman, at his wit's end, remembered
-that the Evil One could not endure the sight of innocent children,
-and he sent his clerk round to all the mothers of his parish who had
-unchristened children, asking them to bring them to church on the
-next Sunday to have the rite performed. As he was a great favourite
-with his people all the mothers, and they were eight, readily agreed
-to come. But as twelve is the mystical number he invited four other
-mothers whose children had recently been baptised, to come as well,
-and bring their children and sponsors with them. The eight children
-were christened, and the parson walked out of church followed by the
-twelve mothers with their infants in their arms. The clerk arranged
-them in lines five deep, the mothers in front, opposite the belfry
-door. Mr. Woods directed each to pass her child from one to the other
-of its sponsors, and then hand it to him that he might hold it up for
-the demon to see; but for some time the cunning bird hid himself behind
-a pinnacle, and nothing would induce him to look, until one of the
-children, growing tired, began to cry, and all the others chimed in,
-screaming in chorus at the top of their voices. Then the demon hopped
-down from his perch and peered over the parapet to try and find out
-what could be the matter. The sight of the twelve children had such
-an effect upon him that he too gave an unearthly yell and flew away
-never to re-appear. The church bells were soon after put in order,
-and it is well known that no evil spirit ever ventures within sound
-of their ringing."
-
-"One of the three Jagos, who were Vicars of Wendron, was much renowned
-for his powers of necromancy. He was in the habit of taking people to
-St. Wendron Cross, where a man called Tucker was buried, and asking
-them whether they had a mind to see Tucker man; he would make him rise
-from the dead as a mark of delicate attention to them."--Cornubiana,
-Rev. S. Rundle, Penzance Natural History Society, 1885-1886.
-
-I will close this list of worthies by a short notice of Parson Dodge,
-a vicar of Talland, a village on the south coast of Cornwall, and then
-give an encounter of the famous Nonconformist divine, John Wesley,
-with some spirits whom he vanquished at St. Agnes on the north. The
-church of Talland is not in the centre of the parish, but near the
-sea; a legend accounts for its position thus: It was begun at a spot
-called Pulpit, but each night a voice was heard saying:
-
-
- "If you will my wish fulfil,
- Build the church on Talland hill;"
-
-
-and the stones put up by day were removed. (Tales similar to this
-are told of many Cornish churches. The work of removal is sometimes
-carried on by the devil; at Altarnon he was accompanied by a hare
-and a deer.) Of this church, about a hundred and fifty years ago,
-the Rev. Richard Dodge was vicar. He had such command over the
-spirit-world that he could raise and lay ghosts at his will, and by
-a nod of his head banish them to the Red Sea. His parishioners looked
-up to him with great awe, and were afraid of meeting him at midnight,
-as he was sure then, whip in hand, to be pursuing and driving away the
-demons, that in all kinds of shapes were to be seen hovering around
-him. Amongst his other eccentricities he was fond of frequenting his
-churchyard at the dead of night. Parson Dodge's fame was not confined
-to his own immediate district, and one day he received a letter from
-a fellow-clergyman, the Rev. Grylls, rector of Lanreath, asking his
-assistance in exorcising a man habited in black, who drove a sable
-coach, drawn by headless horses, across Black-a-down (a neighbouring
-moor), as this apparition, when they happened to meet it, frightened
-his people almost out of their wits. He acceded to this request, and
-late at night the two clergymen rode to the spot, where they waited
-for some time, but seeing nothing decided to separate and return to
-their respective homes. Mr. Dodge, however, had not gone very far when
-his horse obstinately refused to proceed a step further in a homeward
-direction: this he interpreted to be a sign from heaven which he must
-obey, and giving it the rein he allowed it to go as it willed. It
-wheeled round and went back at a great pace to the moor. Here through
-the gloom he saw standing the black coach with the headless horses:
-its driver had dismounted, and the Rev. Grylls lay in a swoon at
-his feet. Mr. Dodge was terribly alarmed, but managed to keep his
-presence of mind, and began to recite a prayer: before he could finish
-it the driver said--"Dodge is come! I must be gone!" jumped on to his
-seat and disappeared for ever. Mr. Grylls' parishioners now arrived
-in search of their rector; they knew there must be something amiss,
-for his horse, startled by the horrible spectres, had thrown its
-rider and galloped off, never stopping until it reached its stable
-(his friend's, through fright, had also been, until the apparition
-vanished, almost unmanageable). They found him senseless, supported
-in Mr. Dodge's arms; but he soon revived, and they took him home,
-although it was some days before his reason recovered from the shock. A
-much fuller account of this may be found in the History of Polperro,
-by Mr. T. Q. Couch. It has also been published by Mr. Robert Hunt in
-his Popular Romances of the West of England. The Rev. R. S. Hawker,
-in his Footprints of Former Men in Far Cornwall, gives some very
-interesting extracts from the "Diurnal" of one Parson Rudall, of
-Launceston, who in 1665, with the sanction of his Bishop, laid the
-Botathen ghost--the spirit of a young woman by name Dorothy Dinglet,
-who could not rest in her grave--"Unquiet because of a certain sin." It
-is a very well-known fact that the Rev. John Wesley was a firm believer
-in supernatural agencies; he compiled a book of ghost-stories, that
-was lent to me when I was about ten years old by a kind but ignorant
-woman, the reading of which caused me many sleepless nights. "On one
-occasion Wesley could, when at St. Agnes, find no place to pass the
-night save a house which had the reputation of being haunted. However,
-he was not deterred; he entered and went to bed. But he could not
-rest, for there was a terrible tumult below; the sound of carriages
-was heard, the noise of feet, and fearful oaths. At length he could
-bear it no longer; he descended, and then found the large hall
-filled with guests. They greeted him with loud welcome, and begged
-him to be seated. He consented, saying, however, that he must say
-grace first. This remark was hailed with roars of laughter. Nothing
-daunted he began--"Jesus, the Name high over all." He did not finish;
-in a moment the lights were extinguished, he was alone, and from that
-time the house was no more haunted.--Through Rev. S. Rundle.
-
-Clergymen in Cornwall are still supposed to be able to drive out
-evil spirits. A poor, half-crazed woman, yet living in Madron parish,
-near Penzance, went about ten years since to the house of a clergyman
-then residing there, and asked him to walk around her, reading some
-passages from the Bible, to exorcise the ghost of her dead sister,
-who had entered into her, she said, and tormented her in the shape
-of a small fly, which continually buzzed in her ear. Once before the
-Board of Guardians she talked sensibly for some time, then suddenly
-stopped and exclaimed, shaking her head: "Be quiet, you brute! don't
-you see I am talking to the gentlemen?"
-
-We must now, after this long digression, return to Mullion. Between
-it and the Lizard is a fine headland, the Rill, and on its summit
-are a number of loose, rough stones, known as the Apron String,
-which the country people say were brought here by an evil spirit,
-who intended to build with them a bridge across to France for the
-convenience of smugglers. He was hastening along with his load,
-which he carried in his apron, when one of its strings broke, and in
-despair he gave up the idea. On the opposite side of the Lizard, at the
-mouth of Helford river, stands the church of St. Anthony in Meneage;
-like that of Gunwalloe it is little above the level of the sea, and
-is, also according to tradition, a votive offering. Some people of
-high rank, crossing over from Normandy to England, were caught in a
-storm, and in their peril vowed to St. Anthony that they would build
-a church in his honour if he would bring them safe into harbour. The
-saint heard their prayers, and the church was erected on the spot
-where they landed. Helford river, in Carew's days, was the haunt
-of pirates, and of it he says: "Falmouth's ower neere neighbourhood
-lesseneth his vse and darkeneth his reputation, as quitting it onely
-to the worst sort of Seafarers, I mean Pirats, whose guilty breasts
-with an eye in their backs, looke warily how they may goe out, ere
-they will aduenture to enter, and this at unfortified Hailford cannot
-be controlled, in which regard it not vnproperly brooketh his common
-term of Helford and the nickname of Stealford."
-
-On the subject of pirates a friend writes:--"The popular play of 'The
-Pirates of Penzance' had not its origin in that town, but in the little
-fishing village of Penberth, near the Land's End; but that, alas! is
-in its 'custom port.' The captain of the pirate vessel, and all his
-ship's crew, were wrestlers. They would go out to the small Spanish,
-Dutch, and other merchant ships, and would ask for provisions, or
-tender assistance, and on making sure that the ship was unarmed they
-would overpower the sailors and plunder it. This was before the time
-when the Trinity Corporation had begun its work on our Cornish coast.
-
-From Helford we will proceed to Penryn--the scene of Lillo's play,
-"Fatal Curiosity." The legend on which it is founded is as follows:
-A gentleman who had rashly squandered his own and his wife's fortune,
-sent their only son early into the world to seek his. During his
-absence his parents were reduced to penury; but he prospered, returned
-home, and sought them out. He did not at first disclose to them who
-he was, intending to do so later on, but begged to be allowed to rest
-in their house, and whilst he was sleeping asked his mother to take
-charge of a casket for him. Her curiosity impelled her to open it,
-and her avarice was so inflamed at the sight of the rich jewels it
-contained that she incited her husband by prayers and reproaches to
-murder the poor young man. After the fatal deed was done, the unhappy
-pair discovered him to be their son.
-
-It has been said that a party of Spaniards landed at Penryn in 1565,
-intending to plunder the town, but were alarmed by the sound of a
-drum beaten by some strolling players, and made a hasty retreat.
-
-Before the year 1600 there were only a few houses where Falmouth
-now stands, called Pennycomequick, which name tradition declares
-was given it from the following: A woman, who had been a servant to
-a Mr. Pendarves, left his employ, and went there to reside, where, I
-suppose, she kept an ale-house, as the story says that he ordered her
-to brew a cask of ale, and on a certain day he and some friends would
-come and drink it. The ale was brewed; but in the meantime a Dutch
-vessel put into the creek, and she sold it all to the sailors. When
-her former master and his friends arrived at the appointed time,
-he was of course very angry. Her excuse was that the "penny comed so
-quick" that she could not refuse it. The name really means the head
-of the valley of the creek.
-
-There is a pyramidal monument at the south end of Falmouth erected
-by one of the Killigrews to the memory of Sir Walter Raleigh, who
-had been entertained by an ancestor at their family-seat of Arwenack,
-when there was only one other house in the place. There is a red stain
-on it, "A blood-mark," the old people said, "that would not wash out,
-splashed there from the body of a man employed in making it, who fell
-from its top and was killed."
-
-On the coast just outside the town is Gyllanvaes, or William's Grave,
-which is pointed out as the place where King Henry I.'s son, who was
-drowned on his passage from Normandy to England, was buried.
-
-On the opposite side of Falmouth harbour, where St. Anthony's church
-now stands, was formerly the priory of St. Mary de Vale, and King
-Henry VIII. is reported to have landed here in 1537, and told the
-prior that it would soon be destroyed, and he with all his brethren
-turned out. It was; but the prior left his curse behind him, and the
-first holder of the lands lost all his family by untimely deaths,
-and he himself committed suicide.
-
-Of all the creeks up the Fal from Falmouth to Truro, most marvellous
-tales of smugglers and their daring deeds are told; and of King
-Harry's passage, where a ferry-boat crosses the river, this legend:
-That it is called after bluff King Hal, who forded it with his queen
-(sometimes Katherine of Arragon) on his back. To have accomplished
-this feat he must have been taller than the sons of Anak, for in the
-middle the water is several fathoms deep.
-
-At the head of one of these creeks is Veryan parish. And there
-is a tradition that should its church clock strike on the Sunday
-morning during the singing of the hymn before the sermon, or before
-the Collect against Perils at Evening Prayer (which does not often
-happen), there will be a death in the parish before the next Sunday.
-
-On a hill near Veryan is a barrow, in which Gerennius, a mythical king
-of Cornwall, was said to have been buried many centuries ago, with
-his crown on his head, lying in his golden boat with silver oars. It
-was opened in 1855, when nothing but a kistvaen (a rude stone chest)
-containing his ashes was found. His palace of Dingerein was in the
-neighbouring village of Gerrans. A subterranean passage, now known as
-Mermaid's Hole, one day discovered when ploughing a field, was supposed
-to have led from it to the sea. Treasures of great value are reputed to
-be hidden under all the Cornish menhirs and barrows. Carew tells of a
-gentleman who was persuaded that by digging under a menhir near Fowey
-he would get great riches. "Wherefore, in a faire moone-shine night,
-thither with certaine good fellowes hee hyeth to dig it up. A working
-they fall, their labour shortneth, their hope increaseth, a pot of
-gold is the least of their expectation. But see the chance. In midst
-of their toyling the skie gathereth clouds, the moonelight is overcast
-with darknesse, downe fals a mightie showre, up riseth a blustering
-tempest, the thunder cracketh, the lightning flasheth. In conclusion,
-our money-seekers washed instead of loden, or loden with water instead
-of yellow earth, and more afraid than hurt, are forced to abandon their
-enterprise and seeke shelter of the next house they could get into."
-
-Malpas (pronounced Mopus) ferry was, nearly a century ago, kept by
-a woman called "Jenny Mopus," who was quite a character. "Wemmin and
-pigs" she used to declare were the worst things to ferry across.
-
-The water bounds of the borough of Truro are renewed every six years,
-and the following curious ceremony takes place: On reaching the limits
-of their jurisdiction, the mayor, town clerk, members of corporation,
-&c., go on shore, when a writ for the sum of 999l. 19s. 11 3/4d. is
-produced against a person present, selected beforehand. He is
-arrested by the bailiff of the borough, on which two of the party
-offer themselves as bail, and the prisoner is liberated. Not far
-from Perranworthal is one of the most celebrated Cornish Tol-mên,
-Mên-an-tol, or holed stones. This is an immense egg-shaped mass
-of granite, perched on a dreary hill nearly 700 feet above the
-sea, and is thought to weigh 750 tons. It is generally known as
-the Cornish Pebble, and is supported on the points of two other
-stones leaving a hollow space beneath. In this it differs from
-other Mên-an-tol which have the orifice in the centre of the stone
-(hence their name). There are many in the county. The one at Madron
-is sometimes called the Crick Stone. It gets this name because in
-days not very long ago people afflicted with rheumatism, sciatica,
-&c., in May, and at certain other seasons of the year, crawled on
-all fours nine times around these Mên-an-tol from east to west, and,
-if thin enough, squeezed themselves through the aperture. This was
-then thought such a sovereign remedy for these diseases that parents
-brought their weak-backed children and carried them around. To work
-the charm properly there must always be two people, one of each sex,
-who stand one on each side of the stone. The child, if a male, must
-first be passed from the woman to the man; if a girl, from the man
-to the woman, and always from the left of the one to the right of
-the other. Some sort of divination, too, was formerly practised on
-these Mên-an-tol by pins laid cross-ways on the top.
-
-In the parish of St. Dennis the church is dedicated to that saint. And
-when St. Dennis had his head cut off at Paris, blood, a legend says,
-fell on the stones of this churchyard; a similar occurrence often
-afterwards foretold other calamities. [14] The exact centre of the
-county is reputed to be a hole in a field at Probus, a neighbouring
-parish.
-
-At Boconnoc, near Lostwithiel, not long ago stood the stump of an
-old oak, in which, in 1644, when Charles I. made this seat his
-head-quarters, the royal standard was fixed. It bore variegated
-leaves. According to tradition, they changed colour when an attempt
-was made to assassinate the king whilst he was receiving the sacrament
-under its branches. The ball passed through the tree, and a hole in
-its trunk was formerly pointed out in confirmation of the story.
-
-Heath, in his Description of Cornwall, 1750, speaks of two other trees
-of the same kind to be seen in this county. "In Lanhadron Park," he
-says, "there grows an oak that bears leaves speckled with white, as
-another, called Painter's Oak, grows in the hundred of East. Some are
-of opinion that divers ancient families of England are preadmonished
-by oaks bearing strange leaves." A turtle-dove is said to be seen
-by the Bassetts of Tehidy, in Camborne, before death, and to another
-Cornish family a white bird appears.
-
-The church of St. Neot, in the parish of St. Neot, is celebrated
-for its beautifully-painted glass. One of the windows contains many
-legends of this saint, but they have all been too fully described by
-other writers to require a lengthy notice from me. St. Neot is the
-reputed brother of King Alfred, and lived some hundreds of years before
-the present church dedicated to him was erected. But folk-lore has it
-that it was built at night entirely by his own hands, and that he drew
-from a neighbouring quarry, by the help of reindeer, all the stones
-he used in the building. He is described as a man of short stature,
-and tradition also says that after the church was finished he found
-that he was not tall enough to reach the keyhole of the door, and
-could not therefore unlock it. To remedy this defect he put a stone
-opposite (still pointed out), from which, when he stood on it, he could
-throw the key into the lock with unerring precision. About a mile
-to the west of it, is an elevated spot with a square entrenchment;
-an ancient granite cross stands at one corner. There is a story
-attached to it which runs thus:--The crows in this neighbourhood
-were in his time so numerous that the farmers could not, fearing
-the mischief they might do in their absence, leave their fields and
-young crops to attend St. Neot's discourses. He, on hearing of it,
-determined to put a stop both to the excuse and the thieving habits
-of the birds, and one day ordered them all to enter this enclosure,
-from whence they could not stir until he gave the signal; upon which
-they all immediately flew away and returned no more.
-
-"The church of St. Mawgan, in Kerrier, was formerly at Carminowe,
-at the end of the parish. It was removed thence to its present site
-on account of the ghoulish propensities of the giants, who used to
-dig up the dead from their graves. The inhabitants tried in vain
-to destroy them by making deep pits, and covering them over with
-'sprouse' (light hay or grass) so that the unwary giants, walking
-over them as on firm ground, might fall into them and be killed. As
-this project failed, they were reluctantly compelled to remove the
-church to its present place, beyond the reach of their troublesome
-neighbours."--Rev. S. Rundle, Penzance Natural History Society,
-1885-1886.
-
-The fine old mansion of Cottrell, situated on the River Tamar, was
-built in the reign of Henry VII.; it belongs to the Earl of Mount
-Edgcumbe, and is full of quaint treasures, many of the rooms and the
-furniture they contain dating from the time of Queen Elizabeth. But
-the only part that concerns us is a little chapel in the woods perched
-on a rock overhanging the river, of which this legend is told. It was
-erected by Sir Richard Edgcumbe, who was a partizan to Henry, Duke of
-Richmond, the rival of Richard III. A party of soldiers were sent to
-take him prisoner, but he managed to elude them and escaped into the
-woods, where his pursuers were so close upon his heels that he would
-certainly have been captured had not his cap, as he was climbing down
-this rock, fallen off his head and floated on the stream. On seeing
-it the men, thinking that Sir Richard had in despair drowned himself,
-gave up the chase. He shortly after crossed over to Brittany, where
-he stayed until the news came of the defeat and death of the king,
-when he returned home, and, in gratitude for his miraculous escape,
-caused this chapel to be built.
-
-Dupath Well, not far from Cottrell, was, according to tradition, the
-scene of a desperate duel between two Saxons, called by one authority
-Colan and Gotlieb, who were both suitors for the hand of the fair lady
-Gither; but the Rev. R. S. Hawker, who has written a ballad on part
-of the legend, gives the name of Siward to the younger and favoured
-one who killed his rival, but who himself in the combat received a
-wound from which he soon after died. The same author has also put
-into verse the well-known story of Bottreaux bells. Bottreaux is
-the parish church of Boscastle, a corruption of Bottreaux castle,
-and its tower is, and always has been, silent. When it was built
-the inhabitants, who had long been jealous of the beautiful peal at
-Tintagel, a neighbouring village, aided by the Lord of Bottreaux,
-raised enough money to buy a set for themselves, cast by a famous
-London founder. But when the ship that brought them was nearly
-in port the sound of Tintagel bells was in the calm evening borne
-across the water. The pilot, a native of that parish, hearing them,
-piously crossed himself, and thanked God that he should soon be safe
-on shore. On this the captain grew very wroth, and said, "Thank the
-ship and the canvas at sea, thank God on shore." "No!" meekly replied
-the pilot, "we should thank God at sea as well as on land." At this
-the captain grew still more angry, swore and blasphemed, and with
-an oath exclaimed, "Not so, thank yourself and a fair wind." Upon
-which a violent storm suddenly arose, the ship became unmanageable,
-struck on a rock, and went down. All on board, with the exception of
-the pilot, were drowned. Above the roar of the winds and waves the
-eager watchers from the shore, who were waiting for the arrival of
-the vessel with her precious freight, could hear the solemn tolling
-of their bells. And still before a gale their warning chimes sound
-from their ocean bed, but woe to the unhappy ship's crew that hears
-them, for wreck, misfortunes, and deaths are sure to follow. The
-following proverb would seem to infer that Boscastle, as well as no
-bells, has no market: "All play and no play, like Boscastle Market,
-which begins at twelve o'clock and ends at noon." Mevagissey church,
-on the opposite coast, has neither tower nor bells, and there is a
-standing joke against its people that they sold their bells to pay
-the cost of pulling down the tower.
-
-Gorran men, who live in an adjoining parish, seem in former days
-to have been rivals to the famous "Wise men of Gotham," from the
-absurd deeds attributed to them, such as "Trying to throw the moon
-over the cliffs," "Building a hedge to keep in the moonlight,"
-&c. The inhabitants of more than one parish in Cornwall are said
-"to have built a hedge to keep in the 'guckaw' (cuckoo)." In fact,
-of nearly all the parishes in the county some joke is current in the
-neighbouring villages.
-
-Not far from Boscastle is the beautiful waterfall of St. Nighton's
-Kieve, and close by are the ruins of a cottage, once the habitation
-of two ladies, who took possession of it at night. They evidently
-had seen better days, but their names and from whence they came
-remain a mystery, as from the date of their arrival they held no
-communication with the outer world. They kept no servant, and from
-the villagers bought for themselves the necessaries of life, asking
-but few questions, and not answering any. At first they took long
-solitary walks in the most secluded spots of the district; when met
-they were rarely conversing, and never spoke to a stranger. These walks
-were gradually discontinued, and one day a rumour spread through the
-village that one of the poor ladies was dead. Tradition says that the
-neighbours found the other weeping silent tears by the side of the
-corpse. After the funeral the survivor daily grew more infirm and but
-rarely left the house, and one morning soon after, no smoke issuing
-from the chimneys of the cottage, the villagers peeped in through
-the uncurtained windows and saw her sitting dead in her chair. The
-friends were buried in one grave, and their secret died with them.
-
-In Wellcombe church, near Morwenstow, against the font in the north
-wall is a door called the "devil's door," opened at baptisms at the
-Renunciation, that the devil, which is then supposed to come out of
-the child, may be able to get away.
-
-Trecarrel, in East Cornwall, formerly belonged to the Trecarrels,
-the last of whom built Launceston church. A singular story has been
-handed down from the sixth century of the birth and death of his
-only son. His father is described as having been very learned in
-philosophy, astrology, astronomy, and other sciences; and it is said
-that, having surveyed the planetary orbs just as his child was about to
-be brought into the world, he perceived that the time was unfavourable
-to its birth, and foreboded a speedy and accidental death to the
-child. Overcome with these gloomy ideas he hastened to the house,
-and requested the midwife to delay the birth (if it were possible)
-for one hour; but nature, conspiring with fate on the downfall of his
-house, turned a deaf ear to his entreaties, and a son was born, to the
-great joy of all present except to him who was the most interested
-in the event. The child, however, grew up in a very promising way,
-until a servant-maid, having placed him to stand near a bowl of water
-in order to wash him, chanced to have forgotten the towel, and having
-stepped into another room to procure one, on her return found the
-boy dead, having fallen into the water with his head foremost: and
-in consequence of this unfortunate event the father spent a large
-part of his large property in charitable purposes, and in building
-and repairing churches in the county of Cornwall.--J. C. Gilbert.
-
-A story of a similar nature is related of one of the Arundells,
-of whom it had been foretold "that he should die in the sands." To
-prevent this he left his house of Efford, near Stratton, and took up
-his abode at Trerice, another of his estates, about three-and-a-half
-miles from Newquay. But the Earl of Oxford, having surprised and
-taken St. Michael's Mount, Sir John Arundell, who was then sheriff
-of Cornwall, marched there to besiege and retake it for the king,
-Edward IV. Here his fate overtook him, for in a skirmish on Marazion
-sands he lost his life, and was buried in the chapel at the Mount. A
-funeral procession goes through Stratton before the death of the
-Bathes of Kilkhampton.
-
-Between Stratton and the village of Marham, about half-a-mile from
-the former town, in the orchard of Binamy farm-house, is an old
-quadrangular moat, all that remains to show where stood the castle
-of the Blanchminsters, an old family now, I believe, extinct in
-this neighbourhood. Of one of them, who lived in the reign of Edward
-I. and went with him on a crusade, folk-lore still tells some strange
-but--through the lapse of time--vague tales. His name was Ranulph de
-Blanchminster, corrupted by the country people into old Blowmanger,
-and it is said that after he had been absent for two or three years
-in the Holy Land, his wife, I suppose thinking that he was dead,
-married another baron. On his return he shut himself up alone in his
-castle, with the drawbridge generally raised to keep off intruders. No
-one was with him when he died; but after his death a will was found
-leaving the greater part of his property for the benefit of the poor
-of the parish of Stratton. His effigy may be seen in the church,
-in the habit of a Crusader, grasping a sword, with his feet resting
-on the back of a lion. Through his interest Stratton had the charter
-of its market. His spirit haunts Binamy grounds (avoided after dark
-by the superstitious) in the form of a hare, which always starts out
-of the moat and manages to elude the dogs.
-
-Of the doings of the famous Grenvilles of Stow,--Sir Beville, the
-brave Royalist leader, who lost his life at the battle of Lansdowne in
-1643,--Admiral Sir Richard, immortalized by Tennyson in his ballad
-"The Revenge,"--and of his son, Sir John, who served under Sir
-Walter Raleigh and died at sea,--I shall say nothing, these noted
-men belonging more to history than folk-lore.
-
-Under the same head, too, may be classed the Cornish female
-Whittington, Thomasine Bonaventure, of St. Mary Wike (now Week
-St. Mary), who lived in the fourteenth century; the daughter of
-a labourer, she herself was a shepherdess. A London merchant, when
-travelling in Cornwall, lost himself on our moors, and accidentally met
-her with her sheep. He asked of her the way, and was so much struck by
-her good looks and intelligence that he begged her from her parents
-and took her back with him to be a servant to his wife. In her new
-situation she conducted herself with so much propriety that on his
-wife's death he courted and married her. Soon after he himself died,
-and left her a wealthy widow. Her next marriage was to a much richer
-man, named Henry Gall. Widowed a second time, and again inheriting
-her husband's money, she took for her third and last husband Sir
-John Percival, Lord Mayor of London. Him, too, she outlived, and
-after his death returned to her native village, where she employed
-her great riches in works of charity. Amongst her other good deeds
-she founded and endowed a chantry there, together with a free school,
-and lodgings for masters, scholars, and officers.
-
-The Rev. R. S. Hawker, in his book before-quoted, has a legend which
-he calls "The first Cornish Mole. A Morality." I, however, suspect
-it to be a pure invention of this author; but as it is very pretty,
-I will give the substance of it. Alice of the Coombe was a very
-beautiful, but proud and vain, damsel; the only child of her widowed
-mother, with whom she dwelt at Morwenstow. It chanced one day that
-they, with all the neighbouring gentry, had been bidden to a grand
-banquet at Stow; and, as she had set her love on the great and noble
-Sir Beville Grenville, its owner, Alice, to win his affections,
-dressed herself in her richest robe--"a woven velvet, glossy and
-soft"--and put on her fairest jewellery. Her mother, when she saw
-her thus attired, struck by her exceeding grace and beauty, said,
-"Often shall I pray to-night that the Grenville heart may yield. Aye,
-thy victory shall be my prayer." The haughty maiden replied, "With
-the eyes I now see in that glass, and with this vesture, meet for a
-queen, I lack no trusting prayer." At this a sudden cry was heard,
-and the damsel disappeared from their sight for ever. Shortly after,
-the Coombe gardener discovered in the garden a small, unknown hillock,
-and on top of it shone a ring, which was recognized as the one the
-lady wore on the day she vanished. A close examination showed that
-an old Cornish couplet was now traced on it, which the parish priest
-interpreted to mean--
-
-
- "The earth must hide
- Both eyes with pride."
-
-
-As he uttered these words a low cry was heard at his feet, and there
-"They beheld, O wondrous and strange! a small dark creature, clothed
-in a soft velvet skin, in texture and in hue like the robe of Lady
-Alice, and they saw as it groped into the earth that it moved along
-without eyes in everlasting night." "She, herself had become
-
-
- THE FIRST MOLE
- OF THE HILLOCKS OF CORNWALL."
-
-
-Before finishing this section of my work I must say a few words about
-the Islands of Scilly and their legends. The Rev. H. J. Whitfield,
-M.A., in 1852, published a book on this subject, but his legends are
-for the most part purely fictitious, and its title, Scilly and its
-Legends, a little misleading.
-
-The Scilly Isles, just off the Land's End, are very numerous,
-but only five are inhabited; some are mere rocks in the sea, and,
-counting those, they are said to be a hundred and fifty. The largest is
-St. Mary's, and the dwellers on it are apt to look with contempt on the
-inhabitants of the other islands (the Off Islands). The word Scilly
-is sometimes derived from Sullèh, rocks dedicated to the sun, and
-sometimes from Sillyas, a conger. This fish is very plentiful on these
-coasts, and a ridiculous rhyme says that Scilly fare consists of--
-
-
- "Scads and 'tates, scads and 'tates,
- Scads, and 'tates, and conger,
- And those who can't eat scads and 'tates--
- Oh, they must die of hunger."
-
-
-Occasionally the saying runs: "Oh! the Scillonians live on fish and
-'taties every day, and conger-pie for Sundays."
-
-In the beginning of this century, before steam-boats were invented,
-when communication between Scilly and Penzance (the mainland) depended
-upon wind and weather, in winter its people were often reduced to
-great straits for want of provisions, which gave rise to the proverb,
-"There is always a feast or a fast in Scilly." This is, however, now
-far from being the truth, and it is one of the most prosperous parts
-of Great Britain; its inhabitants, as a rule, are well educated, they
-are noted for their courteous manners; and for its beautiful scenery
-Scilly is well worth a visit. The dialect of its poorer people, as also
-the tones of their voices (each island has its peculiarity), differ
-from those of the same class in West Cornwall. Their pronunciation
-rather resembles the Irish. Thread with them is tread, the th at the
-beginning of words being rarely sounded, pint is point, and point pint.
-
-Irreverent people declare that when Ireland was made some little bits
-of earth fell from the shovel and formed Scilly. Certain it is that
-when St. Patrick drove out all venomous reptiles from the former place
-he did the same kind service to the latter. The island of St. Agnes
-was particularly favoured, for until recently there was not a rat on
-it, they were introduced from a wrecked vessel.
-
-Small as St. Mary's is (about three miles long and nine around)
-it boasts of two capitals; the modern one dates from the time of
-Queen Elizabeth, and is called Hugh Town; before that Old Town was
-the principal village. At the east of Old Town Bay is Tolman Point
-(a corruption, I suppose, of Tôl Mên, the holed stone). Of it an old
-legend says when Scilly was under the monks of Tavistock, and Old
-Town the only port of St. Mary's, that they drew a chain from "Tollman
-head" across the entrance, and levied a toll from all who embarked and
-landed there, not excepting the fishermen. It was abolished by Richard
-Plantagenet, who, coming disguised to the port, was not recognized by
-the friar in charge, who demanded from him his dues. Upon which Earl
-Richard, in a fit of passion, struck him dead at his feet. According
-to Leland, "Inniscan longid to Tavestock, and there was a poor celle
-of monkes of Tavestock. Sum caulle this Trescau."
-
-There was a settlement of Benedictine monks here long before the Norman
-Conquest; their cell was dedicated to St. Nicholas. St. Nicholas,
-as well as St. Peter, is the patron saint of fishermen; the former
-also takes school-boys under his protection. Fragments of Tresco
-Abbey which was then founded still exist. It was independent until
-the reign of Edward I., when it was joined to Tavistock. The same
-monarch, Edward I., made Ranulph de White Monastery (supposed to be
-Ranulph de Blankminster, or Randolph de Blancheminster), according to
-an old archive, constable of these islands, with the castle of Ennor,
-in Old Town, on his "Paying yearly, at the feast of St. Michael the
-Archangel, 300 birds, called puffins, or 6s. 8d." Traces of these
-monastic visitors are to be found in a pile of rocks at St. Mary's,
-called Carn Friars (a farm near by bears the same name), and one of the
-most highly cultivated and sheltered spots, where a few trees grow,
-is known as Holy Vale. Whitfield places a nunnery there, and says
-Holy Vale takes its name from a miraculous rosebush that grew in it,
-and that "One of its flowers was deemed to have the power, if worn,
-to preserve its bearer from mortal sin," but no other authority
-mentions it.
-
-Giants, of course, frequently played a great part in the history of
-Scilly. Buzza's Hill, just beyond Hugh Town (St. Mary's), commemorates
-a giant of the name of Bosow, who made his home on its summit (now
-crowned by a Spanish windmill), and from whom the family of Bosow were
-descended. One of the finest promontories on the same island is Giant's
-Castle--Troutbeck says, built by the Danes. Here, too, is Giant's
-Chair, where the Arch Druid used in former days to sit and watch
-the sun rise. Druidical remains are scattered all over the different
-islands, and the many "barrows" are known as "giants' graves." "In
-the old abbey gardens at Tresco is a curious stone, about four feet
-long, two feet wide, and six inches in thickness, in an upright
-position. Near the top are two holes, one above the other (one being
-somewhat larger than the other), through which a man might pass his
-hand. It is supposed to be an old Druidical betrothal or wishing-stone,
-and used before the monks built the abbey at Tresco. Young people,
-engaged to be married, would pass their hands through the holes, and,
-joining them together, would so plight their troth. As a wishing-stone,
-or to break a spell, a ring would be passed through the holes with
-some incantations."--J. C. Tonkin's Guide to the Isles of Scilly.
-
-The finest headland on St. Mary's is Peninnis, and some of the
-sheltered nooks under its rocks have rather curious names. One
-of them is known as Sleep's Abode (or Parlour), and close by is
-Pitt's Parlour, which commands a lovely view; it is so called after
-a Mr. Pitt, who, when on a visit to Scilly, spent his summer evenings
-there with a chosen party of friends. An old lady, a native of Scilly,
-long since dead, told me that tradition said Mr. Pitt came to Scilly
-in consequence of a bet he made with a gentleman (I believe the then
-governor of the islands), who, when in London, spoke in the highest
-terms of the morality of its women, and offered to lay a heavy wager
-that not a single courtesan could be found there. Mr. Pitt took up
-the bet, travelled down to Scilly, and for a long time seemed likely
-to lose it; but at last, by a large bribe, he overcame the virtue of
-one very poor woman, and, in gratitude, allowed her a small pension
-until her death.
-
-At the foot of Peninnis is Piper's Hole (in which there is a pool
-of fresh water). This is said to be the entrance of a subterranean
-passage leading to the island of Tresco, where another Piper's Hole
-is shown as the exit. Old people told marvellous tales of rash people
-venturing in so far that they never returned, but died in it overcome
-by fatigue--the passage being too narrow for them to turn. Also
-of dogs who disappeared in the hole at St. Mary's, and after many
-days crept out from the one in Tresco, very emaciated, and almost
-hairless. The Rev. J. W. North, in his Week in the Isles of Scilly,
-has an interesting account of Piper's Hole at Tresco.
-
-Half-way down Giant's Castle, the steep carn before mentioned on
-St. Mary's, lies a very inaccessible cave known as Tom Butt's Bed,
-from the fact that a boy of that name hid himself there in Queen
-Anne's time three days and three nights out of sight of the press-gang.
-
-The wreck of Sir Cloudesley Shovel in 1707, upon Gilston Rock, in Porth
-Hellick Bay, near Old Town, is of course a matter of history. Very
-many traditions have, however, gathered around this sad event, related
-by many authors. I must briefly retell them, as no book of this kind
-would be complete without them.
-
-The admiral, accompanied by the whole of his fleet, was returning
-home from Toulon, after the capture of Gibraltar, in his ship the
-Association. When they were off Scilly, on October 22nd, 1707, the
-weather became thick and dirty, and orders were given "to lie-to." This
-was in the afternoon. Later on, about six, Sir Cloudesley again made
-sail, but two hours after his ship showed signals of distress, which
-were answered from several of the others. In two minutes she struck on
-the Gilston Rock, sank immediately, and all on board perished. The
-Eagle and the Romney with their crews shared the same fate; the
-Firebrand also was lost, but her captain with most of her men were
-saved. "The other men-of-war with difficulty escaped by having timely
-notice." In this storm between fifteen hundred and two thousand people
-were drowned in one night.
-
-A day or two before this took place, one man, a native of Scilly, is
-said to have persistently warned the officer of the watch on board
-the Association that unless their ship's course was altered she,
-with all the fleet, would soon be on the Scilly rocks amongst the
-breakers. These warnings so exasperated the officer that he repeated
-them to his admiral, and he, vexed that a common sailor should think
-that he knew better than his superiors how to navigate a vessel,
-summarily ordered him to be hanged at the yard-arm for inciting the
-others to insubordination and mutiny. The man before his execution
-begged, as a great favour, that the chaplain should be allowed to
-read him one of the Psalms. His request was granted, and he chose the
-109th, repeating after the reader in a loud voice all the curses it
-contains. And with his last breath he prophesied that the admiral, with
-those who saw him hanged, would find a watery grave. Up to that time
-the weather had been fair, but as soon as his body had been committed
-to the sea it changed, the wind began to blow, and his shipmates
-were horrified to see the corpse out of its winding-sheet, face up,
-following in their wake, and even before their vessel struck they
-gave themselves up for lost men. Some say that Sir Cloudesley's body
-came ashore on a hatch, on which he had endeavoured to save himself,
-with his favourite little dog dead by his side. Others, that after
-the wreck it was cast naked on Porth Hellick beach, where it was
-discovered by a soldier, who took off his ring which he still wore,
-and buried him in the sands.
-
-Another account, on the authority of Robert, second Lord Romney, Sir
-Cloudesley Shovel's grandson, runs thus:--"There is one circumstance
-relating to Sir Cloudesley Shovel's death that is known to very few
-persons, namely, he was not drowned, having got to shore, where,
-by the confession of an ancient woman, he was put to death. This,
-many years after, when on her death-bed, she revealed to the minister
-of the parish, declaring she could not die in peace until she had
-made this confession, as she was led to commit this horrid deed for
-the sake of plunder. She acknowledged having, among other things,
-an emerald ring in her possession, which she had been afraid to sell
-lest it should lead to a discovery. This ring, which she delivered
-to the minister, was by him given to James, Earl of Berkeley, at his
-particular request, Sir Cloudesley Shovel and himself having lived
-on the strictest footing of friendship."
-
-In the place and manner of his burial all traditions agree. Where he
-lay is still pointed out--a bare spot surrounded by green grass. And
-the Scillonians will tell you that, because he so obstinately refused
-to hear a warning, and wantonly threw away so many lives, God, to
-keep alive the memory of this great wickedness, permits nothing to
-grow on his grave.
-
-Another legend has it that the man who gave the warning escaped death,
-as the storm suddenly arose whilst the Psalm was being read, before
-the order for his execution could be carried out, and that he was
-the only person on board the Association who was not drowned.
-
-When Lady Cloudesley Shovel heard of the wreck, she asked that a
-search might be made for her husband's body. A soldier showed a ring
-which he had in his possession, which was immediately recognised as
-Sir Cloudesley Shovel's. The body was dug up and identified by the
-marks of his wounds. The ring was forwarded to his wife, and she, in
-gratitude for the soldier's kindness in giving her husband a decent
-burial, rewarded him with a pension for life. Sir Cloudesley's body
-was embalmed, first taken to Plymouth by sea, where for some time
-it lay in state, and finally to London, where it was interred in
-Westminster Abbey.
-
-The abbey at Tresco, formerly under the jurisdiction of the monks
-of St. Nicholas [15] at Tavistock, has been already mentioned. The
-abbey house, built on its site, is the seat of Mr. Dorrien Smith (the
-Proprietor, as the Scillonians call him). The gardens that surround it
-are very beautiful, and famed for the tropical plants that here grow
-out of doors. There is an anecdote related of one of the inhabitants
-of Tresco, who, when asked what they did for firewood in a spot where
-no trees grew, answered, "We kindle our fires from the loppings of
-our geranium hedges." Tresco, like St. Levan, at the Land's End,
-was in bygone days the favourite haunt of witches. A poor man there
-walking out at nightfall had the misfortune to meet with a party of
-them taking a moonlight ride on their broomsticks. A relation of his
-was one of the number, and she warned him, in a stentorian voice,
-that if he ever mentioned what he had accidentally seen, he should
-bear the marks of their wrath until his dying day. For a long time
-the secret weighed heavily upon him, and at last he could not refrain
-from telling his wife. The witches, in revenge, turned his black hair
-white in a single night.
-
-The Rev. H. G. Whitfield, in his Legends of Scilly, gives some
-marvellous tales of the family of "Dick the Wicked." They were
-all hardened wreckers, who generations ago lived on this island,
-and who also had the gift of second sight. Dick himself, according
-to this writer, when ill and unrepentant, was, by Satanic agency,
-taken out of his bed and borne, wrapt in a long loose coat, which
-he was in the habit of wearing, some considerable distance from his
-house. Here his friends discovered him on the following morning.
-
-On this island stands Cromwell's castle, built during his
-Protectorate. Old people thought that he in person visited it. The
-large china tankard, out of which he was said to have drunk his
-breakfast-beer, still exists. On a hill above are the ruins of
-Charles's castle. Scilly always remained loyal and true to the
-unfortunate monarch, and this verse of a ballad told me by a Scillonian
-was not written of one of them:
-
-
- "In Cromwell's days I was for him,
- But now, my boys, I'm for the king;
- For I can turn, boys, with the tide,
- And wear my coat on the strongest side."
-
-
-St. Warna, who presided over wrecks, was the patron saint of St. Agnes,
-another of the principal islands. She crossed over here from Ireland
-in a wicker-boat covered with hides, and landed at St. Warna's
-bay. Like many other saints she had her holy-well; and often the
-superstitious inhabitants of St. Agnes (five families in all),
-who enjoyed the reputation of being the most daring and unscrupulous
-amongst the Scilly wreckers of those days, threw crooked pins into it,
-and daily invoked and prayed her to send them "a rich wreck." There
-was no church on it then, and its people rarely visited the other
-islands. But it chanced one fine morning the entire population started
-in their boats for the church of Ennor, in St. Mary Old Town, as two of
-them wished to be married. After the ceremony was over the clergyman
-in the presence of most of his parishioners, who had assembled to
-witness it (between whom and the men of St. Agnes there was always
-a bitter feud), rebuked them for their lawless deeds. They, angry at
-being put to shame before their enemies, answered with many profane
-and mocking words, and were with difficulty restrained from coming to
-blows. So incensed were they that they took no notice of the signs
-which heralded a coming storm, and hastily got on board their boats
-to return to their own home, which none of them were ever destined
-to reach, as it broke with great fury when they were about half-way
-across. When close to land and the rowers were straining every nerve
-to get there, one wave larger than the rest broke over them, and every
-soul found a watery grave. This was of course said to be a judgment
-on them for their wicked ways. (Leland briefly chronicles it.) From
-that time St. Warna's well was neglected; there was no one left the
-day after twelfth-day, as had been the custom, to clean it out and
-return her thanks for her bounty: it gradually got filled with stones,
-and at the present day is little more than a hole.
-
-There is a curious labyrinth on this island called "Troy-town," which
-it is popularly supposed to represent; but all intricate places in
-Cornwall are so denominated, and I have even heard nurses say to
-children when they were surrounded by a litter of toys that they
-looked as if they were in Troy-town.
-
-A peculiar mode of punishment was formerly practised in Scilly. The
-offenders were placed in a chair called a "ducking chair," and publicly
-at St. Mary's quay-head "ducked" in the salt water.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-FAIRIES.
-
-
-The fairies of Cornwall may be divided into four classes, the Small
-People, the Pixies (pronounced Piskies or or Pisgies), the Spriggans,
-and the Knockers. The first are harmless elfish little beings known
-all over England, whose revels on fine summer nights have often been
-described by those favoured individuals who have accidentally had
-the privilege of seeing them. As a rule they, however, wish to think
-themselves invisible, and in this county it is considered unlucky to
-call them by the name of fairies. The stories told about them by our
-old folk differed but slightly from those related elsewhere. There
-was the well-known cow that gave the finest yield of milk, and
-retained it all the year round when others of the herd ran dry, but
-always ceased the flow at a certain time, and if efforts were made to
-draw more from her, kicked over the the milking-pail. The milkmaid
-discovered that the cow belonged to the small people, by reason of
-her wearing in her hat a bunch of flowers having in it a four-leaved
-clover, which rendered them visible, when she saw them climbing up
-the cow's legs and sucking at her teats. The greedy mistress, when
-the maid told her of this discovery, contrary to advice, washed the
-poor animal all over with salt water, which fairies particularly
-dislike (as well as the smell of fish and grease), in order to
-drive them away. Of course she succeeded in her object, and by so
-doing brought nothing but ill-luck for ever after on herself and
-family. When unmolested, fairies bring good fortune to places they
-frequent; but they are spiteful if interfered with, and delight in
-vexing and thwarting people who meddle with them. It is well known
-"that they can't abear those whom they can't abide." Then there were
-the tales of persons spirited away to fairyland, to wait upon the
-small people's children and perform various little domestic offices,
-where the time has passed so pleasantly that they have forgotten all
-about their homes and relations, until by doing a forbidden thing they
-have incurred their master's anger. They were then punished by being
-thrown into a deep sleep, and on awakening found themselves on some
-moor close to their native villages. These unhappy creatures never,
-after their return, settled down to work, but roamed about aimlessly
-doing nothing, hoping and longing one day to be allowed to go back
-to the place from whence they had been banished. They had first put
-themselves into the fairies' power by eating or drinking something
-on the sly, when they had surprised them at one of their moonlight
-frolics; or by accepting a gift of fruit from the hands of one of
-these little beings. There are also two or three legends of curious
-women, who by underhand dealings have got hold of a mysterious box of
-green ointment belonging to the fairies, which, rubbed on the eyes,
-gave them the power of seeing them by daylight, when they look old,
-withered, and grey, and hate to be spied upon by mortals. These women
-are always interrupted when they have put the ointment on one eye
-before they have time to anoint both, and by an inadvertent speech
-they invariably betray their ill-gotten knowledge. They cannot resist
-making an exclamation when they see a fairy pilfering or up to some
-mischievous trick. Neither can they keep the secret of the side on
-which they see, and they are quickly made to pay the penalty of their
-misdeeds by a well-directed blow from the elf's fist, which deprives
-them of the sight of that eye for ever. All these old wives' tales
-are fully related by Mr. Bottrell in his three series of Traditions,
-&c., of West Cornwall.
-
-Fairies haunt the ancient monuments of this county, and are supposed
-to be the beings who bring ill-luck on the destroyers of them. "Not
-long ago a woman of Moushal (a village near Penzance) told me that
-troops of small people, not more than a foot-and-a-half high, used,
-on moonlight nights, to come out of a hole in the cliff, opening on
-to the beach, Newlyn side of the village, and but a short distance
-from it. The little people were always dressed very smart, and if
-anyone came near them would scamper away into the hole. Mothers often
-told their children that if they went under cliffs by night the small
-people would carry them away into 'Dicky Danjy's hole.'"--Bottrell.
-
-These small people are said to have been half-witted people who had
-committed no mortal sin, but who, when they died, were not good
-enough to go to Heaven. They are always thought, in some state,
-to have lived before.
-
-The small people go about in parties, but pisky in his habits, at
-least in West Cornwall, is a solitary little being. I gather however,
-from Mr. T. Q. Couch's History of Polperro that in the eastern part
-of the county the name of Pisky is applied indiscriminately to both
-tribes. He says two only of them are known by name, and quotes the
-following rhyme:
-
-
- "Jack o' the lantern! Joan the wad,
- Who tickled the maid and made her mad;
- Light me home, the weather's bad."
-
-
-Here in the west he is a ragged merry little fellow (to laugh like
-a pisky is a common Cornish simile), interesting himself in human
-affairs, threshing the farmer's corn at nights, or doing other
-work, and pinching the maidservants when they leave a house dirty at
-bed-time. Margery Daw, in our version of the nursery-song, meets with
-punishment at his hands for her misdoings--
-
-
- "See saw, Margery Daw,
- Sold her bed and lay upon straw;
- Sold her bed and lay upon hay,
- And pisky came and carried her away.
- For wasn't she a dirty slut
- To sell her bed and lie in the dirt?"
-
-
-Should the happy possessor of one of these industrious, unpaid fairy
-servants (who never object to taking food left for them by friends)
-express his thanks aloud, thus showing that he sees him, or try to
-reward him for his services by giving him a new suit of clothes,
-he leaves the house never to return, and in the latter case may be
-heard to say:
-
-
- "Pisky fine, pisky gay!
- Pisky now will fly away."
-
-
-Or in another version:
-
-
- "Pisky new coat, and pisky new hood,
- Pisky now will do no more good."--(T.Q.C.)
-
-
-Mr. Cornish, the Town Clerk of Penzance, mentioned at an antiquarian
-meeting recently held in that town, "that there was a brownie still
-existing in it; that a gentleman, whose opinion he would take on many
-matters, had told him that he had often seen it sitting quietly by
-the fireside." When mischievously inclined pisky often leads benighted
-people a sad dance; like Will of the Wisp, he takes them over hedges
-and ditches, and sometimes round and round the same field, from which
-they in vain try to find their way home (although they can always see
-the path close at hand), until they sit down and turn their stockings
-the wrong side out, as an old lady, born in the last century, whom I
-well knew, once told me she had done. To turn a pocket inside out has
-the same effect. But to quote the words of a late witty Cornish doctor,
-"Pisky led is often whiskey led."
-
-Mr. T. Q. Couch in his before-mentioned book has two or three amusing
-stories of their merry pranks. One is called "A Voyage with the
-Piskies." A Polperro lad meeting them one night as he was going
-on an errand heard them say in chorus, "I'm for Portallow Green"
-(a place in the neighbourhood). Repeating the cry after them,
-"quick as thought he found himself there surrounded by a throng
-of laughing piskies." The next place they visited was Seaton Beach,
-between Polperro and Plymouth; the third and last cry was "I'm for the
-King of France's cellar." Again he decided on joining them, dropped the
-bundle he was carrying on the sands, and "immediately found himself in
-a spacious cellar, engaged with his mysterious companions in tasting
-the richest wines." Afterwards they strolled through the palace, where
-in a room he saw all the preparations made for a feast, and could not
-resist the temptation of pocketing one of the rich silver goblets from
-the table. The signal for their return was soon given, and once more
-he found himself on Seaton Beach, where he had just time to pick up
-his bundle before he was whisked home. All these voyages were made
-in the short space of five minutes. When on his return he told his
-adventures they were listened to with incredulity until he produced the
-goblet, which proved the truth of his tale. After having been kept for
-generations this trophy has disappeared. "These little creatures seem
-sometimes," Mr. Couch says, "to have delighted in mischief for its own
-sake. Old Robin Hicks, who formerly lived in a house at 'Quay Head'
-(Polperro), has more than once, on stormy winter nights, been alarmed
-at his supper by a voice sharp and shrill--'Robin! Robin! your boat
-is adrift.' Loud was the laughter and the tacking of hands (clapping)
-when they succeeded in luring Robin as far as the quay, where the
-boat was lying safely at its moorings."
-
-Another of his legends is about a fisherman of his district, John
-Taprail, long since dead, who was, on a frosty night, aroused
-from his sleep by a voice which called to him that his boat was
-in danger. He went down to the beach to find that some person had
-played a practical joke on him. As he was returning he saw a group
-of piskies sitting in a semicircle under a much larger boat belonging
-to one of his neighbours. They were dividing a heap of money between
-them by throwing a piece of gold alternately into each of the hats
-which lay before them. John was covetous, and forgot that piskies
-hate to be spied upon; so he crept up and pushed his hat slily in
-with the others. When the pile was getting low he tried to get off
-with his booty without their detecting the fraud. He had got some
-distance before the cheat was discovered; then they pursued him in
-such hot haste that he only escaped with his treasure by leaving his
-coat-tails in their hands. "The pisky's midwife" is common,--a mortal
-who has been decoyed into fairyland discovers it by accidentally
-rubbing her eye with a bit of soap whilst washing the baby. Like
-those who have stolen and applied the green ointment, she loses
-the sight of it by a blow from an angry pisky's fist. She meets and
-recognizes the father at a fair where, as usual, he is pilfering,
-and foolishly asks after the welfare of mother and child. But all
-these stories in West Cornwall would be told of the "small people,"
-as well as the well-known "Colman Grey" (of course the name varies),
-which relates how a farmer one day found a poor, half-starved looking
-bantling, sitting alone in the middle of a field, whom he took home
-and fed until he grew quite strong and lively. A short time after a
-shrill voice was suddenly heard calling thrice upon "Colman Grey." Upon
-which the imp cried "Ho! ho! ho! my daddy is come!" flew through the
-keyhole, and was never heard of after. Unbaptised children were, in
-this county at the beginning of the century, said to turn, when they
-died, into piskies; they gradually went through many transformations
-at each change, getting smaller until at last they became "Meryons"
-[16] (ants) and finally disappeared. Another tradition is that they
-were Druids, who, because they would not believe in Christ, were for
-their sins condemned to change first into piskies; gradually getting
-smaller, they too, as ants, at last are lost. It is on account of
-these legends considered unlucky to destroy an ant's nest, and a
-piece of tin put into one could, in bygone days, through pisky power
-be transmuted into silver, provided that it was inserted at some
-varying lucky moment about the time of the new moon.
-
-Moths were formerly believed in Cornwall to be departed souls, and
-are still, in some districts, called piskies.
-
-There is also a green bug which infests bramble-bushes in the late
-autumn that bears the same name, and one of the reasons assigned for
-blackberries not being good after Michaelmas is that pisky spoils them
-then. Pisky is in some places invoked for luck at the swarming of bees.
-
-It was once a common custom in East Cornwall, when houses were built,
-to leave holes in the walls by which these little beings could enter;
-to stop them up would drive away good luck. And in West Cornwall
-knobs of lead, known as pisky's paws or pisky feet, were placed at
-intervals on the roofs of farm-houses to prevent the piskies from
-dancing on them and turning the milk sour in the dairies.
-
-Country people in East Cornwall sometimes put a prayer book under a
-child's pillow as a charm to keep away piskies. I am told that a poor
-woman, near Launceston, was fully persuaded that one of her children
-was taken away and a pisky substituted, the disaster being caused
-by the absence of a prayer book on one particular night.--H. G. T.,
-Notes and Queries, December, 1850.
-
-Small round stones, known as "Pisky Grinding Stones," are occasionally
-found in Cornwall; they are most probably parts of old spindles.
-
-If piskies are kind and helpful little beings, spriggans or sprites
-are spiteful creatures, never doing a good turn for anyone. It is
-they who carry off poor babies from their mothers, when they have
-been obliged to leave them for a few hours alone, putting their own
-ugly, peevish brats in their cradles, who never thrive under the
-foster-mother's care, in spite of all the trouble they may bestow
-upon them. Mr. Bottrell tells the story of a spriggan, a married
-man with a family, who took the place of a poor woman's child one
-evening when she was at work in the harvest field. For although an
-innocent baby held in the arms is thought in Cornwall to protect
-the holder from mischief caused by ghosts and witches, it has no
-power over these creatures, who are not supposed to have souls. The
-scene of this legend was under Chapel Carn Brea, on the old road from
-Penzance to St. Just in Penwith. The mother, Jenny Trayer by name,
-was first alarmed on her return one night from her work in the harvest
-field by not finding her child in its cradle, but in a corner of the
-kitchen where in olden days the wood and furze for the then general
-open fires were kept. She was however too tired to take much notice,
-and went to bed, and slept soundly until the morning. From that time
-forth she had no peace; the child was never satisfied but when eating
-or drinking, or when she had it dandling in her arms. The poor woman
-consulted her neighbours in turn as to what she should do with the
-changeling (as one and all agreed that it was). One recommended her
-to dip it on the three first Wednesdays in May in Chapel Uny Well,
-[17] which advice was twice faithfully carried out in the prescribed
-manner. The third Wednesday was very wet and windy, but Jenny
-determined to persevere in this treatment of her ugly bantling,
-and holding the brat (who seemed to enjoy the storm) firmly on her
-shoulders, she trudged off. When they got about half-way, a shrill
-voice from behind some rocks was heard to say,
-
-
- "Tredrill! Tredrill!
- Thy wife and children greet thee well."
-
-
-Not seeing anyone, the woman was of course alarmed, and her fright
-increased when the imp made answer in a similar voice,
-
-
- "What care I for wife or child,
- When I ride on Dowdy's back to the Chapel Well,
- And have got pap my fill?"
-
-
-After this adventure, she took the advice of another neighbour, who
-told her the best way to get rid of the spriggan and have her own
-child returned was "to put the small body upon the ashes' pile, and
-beat it well with a broom; then lay it naked under a church stile;
-there leave it and keep out of sight and hearing till the turn of
-night; when nine times out of ten the thing will be taken away and
-the stolen child returned." This was finally done; all the women of
-the village after it had been put upon a convenient pile "belabouring
-it with their brooms," upon which it naturally set up a frightful
-roar. After dark it was laid under the stile, and there next morning
-the woman "found her own 'dear cheeld' sleeping on some dry straw,"
-most beautifully clean and wrapped in a piece of chintz. "Jenny nursed
-her recovered child with great care, but there was always something
-queer about it, as there always is about one that has been in the
-fairies' power--if only for a few days."
-
-There are many other tales of changelings, but they resemble each other
-so much that they are not worth relating. In the one before quoted from
-Mr. Bottrell he gives a third charm for getting a child restored, as
-follows: "Make by night a smoky fire, with green ferns and dry. When
-the chimney and house are full of smoke as one can bear, throw the
-changeling on the hearthstone; go out of the house, turn three times
-round; when one enters, the right child will be restored." Spriggans,
-too, guard the vast treasures that are supposed to be buried beneath
-our immense carns and in our cliff castles. No matter if the work
-be carried on by night or by day, they are sure to punish the rash
-person who ventures to dig in hopes of securing them. When he has
-got some way down, he finds himself surrounded by hundreds of ugly
-beings, in some cases almost as tall as he, who scare the unhappy
-man until he loses all control over himself, throws down his tools,
-and rushes off as fast as he can possibly go. The fright often makes
-him so ill that he has to lie for days in bed. Should he ever summon
-up courage to return to the spot, he will find the pit refilled,
-and no traces to show that the ground had been disturbed.
-
-Knockers (pronounced knackers) are mine fairies, popularly supposed to
-be (as related elsewhere) the souls of the Jews who crucified Christ,
-sent by the Romans to work as slaves in the tin mines. In proof of
-this, they are said never to have been heard at work on Saturdays, nor
-other Jewish festivals. They are compelled to sing carols at Christmas
-time. Small pieces of smelted tin found in old smelting-works are
-known as "Jews' bowels." These fairies haunt none but the richest tin
-mines, and many are reputed to have been discovered by their singing
-and knocking underground; and miners think when they hear them that
-it is a sign of good luck, because when following their noises they
-often chance on lodes of good ore. When a miner goes into an "old
-level" and sees a bright light, it is a sure sign that he will find
-tin there. Knockers like spriggans are very ugly beings, and, if you
-do not treat them in a friendly spirit, very vindictive. "As stiff as
-Barker's knee" is a common saying in Cornwall; he having in some way
-angered the knockers, either by speaking of them disrespectfully or
-by not leaving (as was formerly the custom) a bit of his dinner on the
-ground for them (for good luck), they in revenge threw all their tools
-in his lap, which lamed him for the rest of his life. Mr. Bottrell
-tells a similar story of a man named Tom Trevorrow, who when he was
-working underground heard the knockers just before him, and roughly
-told them "to be quiet and go." Upon which, a shower of stones fell
-suddenly around him, and gave him a dreadful fright. He seems however
-to have quickly got over it, and soon after, when eating his dinner,
-a number of squeaking voices sang,
-
-
- "Tom Trevorrow! Tom Trevorrow!
- Leave some of thy 'fuggan' [18] for bucca,
- Or bad luck to thee to-morrow!"
-
-
-But Tom took no notice and ate up every crumb, upon which the knockers
-changed their song to
-
-
- "Tommy Trevorrow! Tommy Trevorrow!
- We'll send thee bad luck to-morrow;
- Thou old curmudgeon, to eat all thy fuggan,
- And not leave a 'didjan' [19] for bucca."
-
-
-After this such persistent ill-luck followed him that he was obliged
-to leave the mine.
-
-Bucca is the name of a spirit that in Cornwall it was once thought
-necessary to propitiate. Fishermen left a fish on the sands for bucca,
-and in the harvest a piece of bread at lunch-time was thrown over the
-left shoulder, and a few drops of beer spilled on the ground for him,
-to ensure good luck. Bucca, or bucca-boo, was, until very lately
-(and I expect in some places still is) the terror of children, who
-were often when crying told "that if they did not stop he would come
-and carry them off." It was also the name of a ghost; but now-a-days
-to call a person a "great bucca" simply implies that you think him
-a fool. There were two buccas--
-
-
- "'Bucca Gwidden,' the white, or good spirit,
- 'Bucca Dhu,' the black, malevolent one."
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-SUPERSTITIONS:
-
-MINERS', SAILORS', FARMERS'.
-
-
-Although Cornish miners, or "tinners" as they are generally called,
-are a very intelligent, and since the days of Wesley a religious body
-of men, many of their old-world beliefs still linger. To this day it is
-considered unlucky to make the form of a cross on the sides of a mine,
-and when underground you may on no account whistle for fear of vexing
-the knockers and bringing ill-luck, but you may sing or even swear
-[20] without producing any bad effect. Down one mine-shaft a black
-goat is often seen to descend, but is never met below; in another
-mine a white rabbit forebodes an accident.
-
-"The occurrence of a black cat in the lowest depths of a mine will warn
-the older miners off that level until the cat is exterminated."--Thomas
-Cornish, Western Antiquary, October, 1887.
-
-A hand clasping the ladder and coming down with, or after a miner,
-foretells misfortune or death. This superstition prevails, also,
-in the slate quarries of the eastern part of the county.
-
-The miners in the slate quarries of Delabole have a tradition that
-the right hand of a miner, who committed suicide, is sometimes seen
-following them down the ladders, grasping the rings as they let
-them go, holding a miner's light between the thumb and finger. It
-forebodes ill to the seer.--Esmè Stuart. See "Tamsin's Choice,"
-Longman, June, 1883.
-
-Miners, too, had some superstition in regard to snails, known in
-Cornwall as "bullhorns;" for if they met one on their way to work
-they always dropped a bit of their dinner or some grease from their
-lanthorn before him for good-luck.
-
-Miraculous dreams are related; warnings to some miners, which have
-prevented on particular days their going down below with their
-comrades, when serious accidents have happened and several have
-lost their lives. Rich lodes, too, have been discovered through the
-dreams of fortunate women, who have been shown in them where their
-male relatives should dig for the hidden treasure.
-
-"'Dowsing' (divining with the rod) is of course believed in here as
-elsewhere, and some men are known as noted 'dowsers.' A forked twig
-of hazel (also called a 'dowser') is used by our Cornish miners to
-discover a vein of ore; it is held loosely in the hand, the point
-towards the 'dowser's' breast, and it is said to turn round when the
-holder is standing over metal."
-
-Miners still observe some quaint old customs; a horse-shoe is sometimes
-placed on a convenient part of the machinery, which each, as he goes
-down to his day's work, touches four times to ensure good-luck. These
-must be "Tributers" (pronounced trib-ut-ers), who work on "trib-ut,"
-when a percentage is paid on ores raised; in contradistinction to
-"Tut-workers," who are paid by the job.
-
-A miner, going underground with shoes on, will drive all the mineral
-out of the mine.--Cornubiana, Rev. S. Rundle.
-
-In 1886, at St. Just in Penwith two men of Wheal Drea had their hats
-burnt one Monday morning, after the birth of their first children.
-
-Three hundred fathoms below the ground at Cook's Kitchen mine, near
-Camborne, swarms of flies may be heard buzzing, called by the men,
-for some unknown reason, "Mother Margarets." From being bred in the
-dark, they have a great dislike to light.
-
-Swallows in olden times were thought to spend the winter in deep,
-old disused Cornish tin-works; also in the sheltered nooks of its
-cliffs and cairns. It is the custom here to jump on seeing the first
-in spring.
-
-A water-wagtail, in Cornwall a "tinner," perching on a window-sill,
-is the sign of a visit from a stranger.
-
-Carew says--"The Cornish tynners hold a strong imagination, that in
-the withdrawing of Noah's floud to the sea the same took his course
-from east to west, violently breaking vp, and forcibly carrying with
-it the earth, trees, and rocks, which lay anything loosely neere the
-vpper face of the ground. To confirme the likelihood of which supposed
-truth, they doe many times digge vp whole and huge timber-trees, which
-they conceiue at that deluge to haue been ouerturned and whelmed."
-
-Miners frequently in conversation make use of technical proverbs,
-such as "Capel rides a good horse." Capel is schorl, and indicates
-the presence of tin. "It's a wise man that knows tin" alludes to the
-various forms it takes. To an old tune they sing the words--
-
-
- "Here's to the devil, with his wooden spade and shovel,
- Digging tin by the bushel, with his tail cocked up."
-
-
-And on the signboard of a public-house in West Cornwall a few years
-ago (and probably still) might be read--
-
-
- "Come all good Cornish boys [21] walk in,
- Here's brandy, rum, and shrub, and gin;
- You can't do less than drink success
- To copper, fish, and tin."
-
-
-Miners believe that mundic (iron pyrites) being applied to a wound
-immediately cures it; of which they are so sure that they use no
-other remedy than washing it in the water that runs through the mundic
-ore.--A Complete History of Cornwall, 1730.
-
-It is an easy transition from mines to fish, the next staple
-industry of Cornwall, and to the superstitions of its fishermen and
-sailors. Fish is a word in West Cornwall applied more particularly
-to pilchards (pelchurs). They frequent our coasts in autumn.
-
-
- "When the corn is in the shock,
- Then the fish are on the rock."
-
-
-And if on a close foggy day in that season you ask the question,--"Do
-you think it will rain?" the answer often is--"No! it is only het
-(heat) and pelchurs," that sort of weather being favourable for
-catching them.
-
-"A good year for fleas is a good year for fish," the proverb says;
-and when eating a pilchard the flesh must be always taken off the bone
-from the tail to the head. To eat them from head to tail is unlucky,
-and would soon drive the fish from the shore. There are many other
-wise sayings about pilchards; but I will only give one more couplet,
-which declares that--
-
-
- "They are food, money, and light,
- All in one night." [22]
-
-
-Should pilchards when in bulk [23] make a squeaking noise, they are
-crying for more, and another shoal will quickly be in the bay.
-
-Fishermen dread going near the spot where vessels have been wrecked,
-as the voices of the drowned often call to them there, especially
-before a storm. Sometimes their dead comrades call them by their
-names, and then they know for certain that they will soon die; and
-often when drowning the ghosts of their friends appear to them. They
-are seen by them sometimes taking the form of animals.
-
-Mr. Bottrell speaks of a farmer's wife who was warned of her son's
-death by the milk in the pans ranged round her dairy being agitated
-like the sea waves in a storm. There is a legend common to many
-districts of a wrecker who rushed into the sea and perished, after
-a voice had been heard to call thrice, "The hour is come, but not
-the man." He was carried off by the devil in a phantom ship seen in
-the offing. But ships haunted with seamen's ghosts are rarely lost,
-as the spirits give the sailors warning of storms and other dangers.
-
-In a churchyard near the Land's End is the grave of a drowned captain,
-covered by a flat tombstone; proceeding from it formerly the sound of a
-ghostly bell was often heard to strike four and eight bells. The tale
-goes that when his vessel struck on some rocks close to the shore,
-the captain saw all his men safely off in their boat, but refused
-himself to leave the ship, and went down in her exactly at midnight,
-as he was striking the time. His body was recovered, and given decent
-burial, but his poor soul had no rest. An unbelieving sailor once
-went out of curiosity to try if he could hear this bell; he did,
-and soon after sailed on a voyage from which he never returned.
-
-Spectre ships are seen before wrecks; they are generally shrouded in
-mist; but the crew of one was said to consist of two men, a woman,
-and a dog. These ships vanish at some well-known point. Jack Harry's
-lights, too, herald a storm; they are so called from the man who
-first saw them. These appear on a phantom vessel resembling the one
-that will be lost.
-
-On boarding a derelict, should a live cat or other animal be found, it
-is thrown into the sea and drowned, under the idea that if any living
-thing is in her, the finders can claim nothing from the owners. In
-fact she is not a derelict.
-
-The apparition of a lady carrying a lanthorn always on one part of the
-Cornish coast [24] foretells a storm and shipwrecks. She is supposed
-to be searching for her child who was drowned, whilst she was saved,
-because she was afraid to trust it out of her arms. For the legends
-of "The Lady of the Vow" and "The Hooper or Hooter of Sennen Cove,"
-see ante, p. 71. [25] Mermaids are still believed in, and it is very
-bad to offend them, for by their spite harbours have been filled up
-with sand. They, however, kindly take idiot children under their
-protection. The lucky finder of one of their combs or glasses has
-the power (as long as it remains in his possession) of charming
-away diseases.
-
-Boats are said to come to a sudden standstill when over the spot where
-lies the body of a drowned man, for whom search is being made. The
-body is supposed to rise when drowned, on the seventh, eighth,
-or ninth day. Sailors regard many things as bad omens, such "as a
-loaf of bread turned upside-down on a table." (This will bring some
-ship to distress.) They will not begin a voyage on Childermas-day,
-nor allow a piece of spar-stone (quartz) to be carried on board a
-vessel: that would ensure her striking on a rock. Of course, they
-neither whistle when there, nor speak of hares, two most unlucky
-things; and should they meet one of these animals on their way to
-the place of embarkation they think it far wiser to turn back home,
-and put off sailing for a tide. Hares (as already noticed) play
-a great part in Cornish folk-lore. The following amusing story I
-had from a friend:--"Jimmy Treglown, a noted poacher living in a
-village of West Cornwall, became converted at a revival meeting;
-he was tempted on his way to class-meeting one Sunday morning soon
-after by the devil in the form of a beautiful hare. Jimmy said,
-'There thee art, my dear; but I waan't tooch thee on a Sunday--nor
-yet on a weeky day, for that matter.' He went briskly on his way for
-a few paces, and then, like Lot's wife, he was tempted to look behind
-him. Alas! in Jimmy's own words, 'There she was in her seat, looking
-lovely. I tooked up a stone, and dabbed at her. Away she runned,
-and fare-ee well, religion. Mine runned away with her. I went home,
-and never went to class no more. [26] You see it was the devil, and
-'simmen to me' (seeming) I heard 'un laugh and say, 'Ah! ah! Jimmy,
-boy, I had thee on the hip then. Thee must confess thee'st had a fair
-fall.' So I gave in, and never went nigh the 'people' (Wesleyans)
-no more. Nobody should fire at hares of this sort, except with a
-silver bullet; they often appear as white, but the devil knowed I
-couldn't be fooled with a white 'un.'" Nothing is too ridiculous
-to be told of hares. Another old man from St. Just (still living)
-once recited this anecdote in our kitchen, and from his grave manner
-evidently expected it to be believed:--"I was out walking (he said)
-one Sunday morning, when I saw a hare in a field which I longed to
-have; so I shied a bit of 'codgy wax' (cobbler's wax), the only thing
-I had in my pocket, at 'un, when he ran away. What was my surprise
-on getting over a stile to see two hares in the next field face to
-face, the 'codgy wax' had stuck to the nose of the first, and he in
-his fright had runned against the other, and was holden 'un fast,
-too. So I quietly broke the necks of both, and carried em home."
-
-"The grapes are sour" is in Cornwall often changed to "Lev-un go! he's
-dry eaten after all," as the old man said when he couldn't catch
-the hare.
-
-Sailors and fishermen have naturally many weather proverbs, of which
-I will give a few:--
-
-"A north wind is a broom for the Channel."
-
-"A Saturday's moon is a sailor's curse."
-
-"A Saturday's and Sunday's moon Comes once in seven years too soon."
-
-"Between twelve and two you'll see what the day will do."
-
-"A southerly wind with a fog bring an easterly wind in 'snog'
-(with certainty)."
-
-"Friday's noon is Sunday's doom."
-
-"Friday and the week are never alike."
-
-"There's never a Saturday in the year But what the sun it doth
-appear," etc.
-
-"Weather dogs" are pillars of light coloured like the rainbow, which
-appear on the horizon generally over the sea in unsettled weather,
-and always foretell storms. The inland dwellers of Cornwall have also
-their wise sayings on this subject. Rooks darting around a rookery,
-sparrows twittering, donkeys braying, are signs of rain. Cats running
-wildly about a house are said to bring storms on their tails. Some of
-their omens are simply ludicrous, such as "We may look for wet when a
-cat, in washing its face, puts its paw over its ear," or when "hurlers"
-(small sparks) play about the bars of a grate. A cock crowing on a
-stone is a sign of fine weather; on the doorstep, of a stranger. But
-here it is well known "That fools are weather-wise," and "That those
-that are weather-wise are rarely otherwise."
-
-In West Cornwall, not very long ago farmers, before they began to
-break up a grass field or plough for sowing, always turned the faces
-of the cattle attached to the plough towards the west and solemnly
-said, "In the name of God let us begin," and then with the sun's
-course proceeded on their work. Everything in this county, even
-down to such a small thing as taking the cream off the milk-pans set
-round the dairy, must for luck be done from left to right. Invalids,
-on going out for the first time after an illness, must walk with,
-not against, the sun, for fear of a relapse.
-
-Farmers here are taught that if they wish to thrive they must "rise
-with the craw (crow), go to bed with the yow (ewe)," not be "like
-Solomon the wise, who was loth to go to bed and loth to rise," for
-does not "the master's eye make the mare fat?" "A February spring,"
-according to one proverb, "is not worth a pin," and another says "a dry
-east wind raises the spring." Sayings current in other counties, such
-as "a peck of March dust is worth a king's ransom," are also quoted,
-but those I shall not give. There should be as many frosty mornings in
-May as in March, for "a hot May makes a fat church-hay." A wet June
-makes a dry September. "Cornwall will stand a shower every day, and
-two for Sundays." There is always a black month before Christmas. The
-farmer too is told--
-
-
- "A rainbow in the morn, put your hook in the corn;
- A rainbow in the eve, put your hook in the sheave."
-
-
-In Cornwall, as well as in Devon, there is an old prophecy quoted
-to the effect, that "in the latter days there will be no difference
-between summer and winter, save in the length of the days and the
-greenness of the leaf." It is erroneously asserted to be in the
-Bible.--Cornubiana, Rev. S. Rundle, Transactions Penzance Natural
-History Society, etc., 1885-1886.
-
-"Countrymen in Cornwall, if the breeze fail whilst they are winnowing,
-whistle to the spriggan, or air spirit, to bring it back."--Comparative
-Folk-lore, Cornhill, 1876.
-
-A swarm of bees in May is worth a "yow" (ewe) and lamb same day. It is
-considered lucky in these parts for a stray swarm to settle near your
-house; and if you throw a handkerchief over it you may claim it as your
-own. To sell them is unlucky; but you may have an understanding with
-a purchaser that he will give you an equivalent for your bees. The
-inside of hives should be rubbed with "scawnsy buds" (elderflowers)
-to prevent a new swarm from leaving them. Honey should be always
-taken from the hive on St. Bartholomew's Day, he being the patron
-saint of bees. Of course all the principal events happening in the
-families to whom they belonged, in this as in other counties, were
-formerly whispered to them, that the bees might not think themselves
-neglected, and leave the place in anger. At a recent meeting of the
-Penzance Natural History and Antiquarian Society a gentleman mentioned
-that when a boy he had seen thirty hives belonging to Mr. Joshua Fox,
-of Tregedna, tied up in crape (an universal practice) because of a
-death in the Fox family. Another at the same time said that when,
-some years since, the landlady of the "First and Last" Inn, at the
-Land's End, died, the bird-cages and flower-pots were also tied with
-crape, to prevent the birds and plants from dying. When withering,
-because this has not been done, if the plants be remembered in time
-and crape put on the pots, they may revive. Enquiring a short time ago
-what had become of a fine maiden-hair fern that we had had for years,
-I was told "that we had neglected to put it into mourning when a near
-relative of our's had died, or to tell it of his death; and therefore
-it had gradually pined away." After a death, pictures, but especially
-portraits of the deceased, are also supposed to fade. Snails as well
-as bees are thought here to bring luck, for "the house is blest where
-snails do rest." Children on meeting them in their path, for some
-reason stamp their feet and say,
-
-
- "Snail! snail! come out of your hole,
- Or I will beat you black as a coal."
-
-
-Another Cornish farmers' superstition is that "ducks won't lay until
-they have drunk 'Lide' (March) water;" and the wife of one in 1880
-declared "that if a goose saw a Lent lily (daffodil) before hatching
-its goslings it would, when they came forth, destroy them." Some
-witty thieves, many years ago, having stolen twelve geese from a
-clergyman in the eastern part of the county, tied twelve pennies and
-this doggerel around the gander's neck--
-
-
- "Parson Peard, be not afeard,
- Nor take it much in anger,
- We've bought your geese at a penny a-piece,
- And left the money with the gander."
-
-
-Hens must never be put to sit on an even number of eggs, eleven or
-thirteen are lucky numbers; Basilisks are hatched from cock's eggs.
-
-When cocks crow children are told that they say,
-
-
- "Cock-a-doodle-doo!
- Grammer's lost her shoe,
- Down by the barley moo (mow),
- And what will grammer do,
- Cock-a-doodle-doo."
-
-
-Moles in this county are known as "wants," and once in the Land's End
-district I overtook an old man and asked him what had made so many
-hillocks in a field through which we were passing. His answer was,
-"What you rich people never have in your houses, 'wants.'"
-
-To this day in Cornwall, when anything unforeseen happens to our small
-farmers, or they have the misfortune to lose by sickness some of their
-stock, they still think that they are "ill-wished," and start off
-(often on long journeys) to consult a "pellar," or wise man, sometimes
-called "a white witch" (which term is here used indiscriminately for
-persons of both sexes). The following I had from a dairy-man I know,
-who about twelve years ago quarrelled with a domestic servant, a woman
-living in a neighbouring house. Soon after, from some reason, two or
-three of his cows died; he was quite sure, he told me, that she had
-"overlooked" and "ill-wished" him. To ease his mind he had consulted a
-"pellar" about the matter, who had described her accurately to him,
-and, for payment, removed the "spell" (I do not know what rites were
-used), telling him to look at his watch and note the hour, as he would
-find, when he returned home, that a cow he had left sick would have
-begun at that moment to recover (which he says it did). The "pellar"
-also added, "The woman who has 'ill-wished' you will be swaddled in
-fire and lapped in water;" and by a strange coincidence she emigrated
-soon after, and was lost in the ill-fated Cospatrick, that was burnt
-at sea.
-
-Water from a font is often stolen to sprinkle "ill-wished" persons
-or things.
-
-The two next examples were communicated to me by a friend: "Some
-twenty-six years ago a farmer in a neighbouring village (West Cornwall)
-sustained during one season continual losses from his cows dying
-of indigestion, known as 'loss of cud,' 'hoven-blown,' etc. After
-consulting an old farrier called Armstrong he was induced to go to a
-'pellar' in Exeter. His orders were to go home, and, on nearing his
-farm, he would see an old woman in a field hoeing turnips, and that
-she was the party who had cast the 'evil eye' on him. When he saw her
-he was to lay hold of her and accuse her of the crime, then tear off
-some of her dress, take it to his farm, and burn it with some of the
-hair from the tails of his surviving stock. These directions were
-fully carried out, and his bad health (caused by worry) improved,
-and he lost no more cows. A spotted clover that grew luxuriantly that
-summer was no doubt the cause of the swelling." "Another farmer in
-the same village eighteen years since lost all his feeding cattle
-from pleuro-pneumonia; believing them to be 'ill-wished' by a woman,
-he also consulted the Exeter 'pellar.' He brought home some bottles
-of elixir, potent against magic, and made an image of dough, pierced
-it from the nape of the neck downward, in the line of the spine,
-with a very large blanket-pin. In order to make the agonies of the
-woman with the 'evil eye' excruciating in the last degree, dough
-and pin were then burnt in a fire of hazel and ash. The cure failed,
-as anyone acquainted with the disease might have forecast."
-
-Besides those remedies already mentioned for curing cattle, you may
-employ these:--"Take some blood from the sick animal by wounding him;
-let the blood fall on some straw carefully held to the place--not
-a drop must be lost; burn the straw; when the ill-wisher will be
-irresistibly drawn to the spot; then by violence you can compel him
-to take off the spell." Or, "Bleed one animal to death to save the
-whole herd."
-
-A local newspaper, in 1883 (Cornishman), gives the
-following:--"Superstitions die hard.--A horse died the other day on
-a farm in the neighbourhood of St. Ives. Its carcase was dragged on a
-Sunday away up to the granite rock basins and weather-worn bosses of
-Trecoben hill, and there burnt, in order to drive away the evil spell,
-or ill-wishing, which afflicted the farm where the animal belonged." I,
-a few years since, saw a dying cat taken out of a house on a mat, by
-two servants, that it might not die inside and bring ill-luck. "In 1865
-a farmer in Portreath sacrificed a calf, by burning, for the purpose of
-removing a disease which had long followed his horses and cows." And
-in another case a farmer burnt a living lamb, to save, as he said,
-"his flock from spells which had been cast on them."--Robert Hunt.
-
-The Cornishman, in another paragraph, says:--"Our Summercourt (East
-Cornwall) correspondent witnessed an amusing affair on Thursday
-morning (April, 1883). Seeing a crowd in the street, he asked the
-reason, and found that a young lady was about to perform the feat
-of throwing a pig's nose over a house for good luck! This is how
-it was done. The lady took the nose of a pig, that was killed the
-day before, in her right hand, stood with her back to the house,
-and threw the nose over her head, and over the house, into the
-back garden. Had she failed in the attempt her luck was supposed to
-be bad." "Whet your knife on Sunday, you'll skin on Monday," is a
-very old Perranuthnoe and St. Hilary (West Cornwall) superstition,
-so that, however blunt your knife may be, you must use it as it is,
-lest by sharpening it you bring ill-luck on the farmer, and he lose
-a sheep or bullock. Mr. T. Q. Couch, W. Antiquary, 1883, says of one,
-"He is an old-fashioned man, and, amongst his other 'whiddles' (whims),
-keeps a goat amongst his cattle for the sake of keeping his cows from
-slipping their calves." Branches of care (mountain ash) were, in the
-east of the county, hung over the cattle in their stalls to prevent
-their being "ill-wished," also carried in the pocket as a cure and
-prevention of rheumatism. "Rheumatism will attack the man who carries
-a walking stick made of holly."--Cornubiana, Rev. S. Rundle.
-
-The belief in witchcraft in West Cornwall is much more general
-than most people imagine. Several cases have lately come under
-my own notice; one, that of a man-servant in our employ who broke
-a blood-vessel, and for a long time was so ill that his life was
-despaired of. He was most carefully attended by a Penzance physician,
-who came to see him three times a day. But directly that his strength
-began to return he asked permission to go to Redruth to consult a
-"pellar," as he was quite sure that he had been "overlooked" and
-"ill-wished." An old Penzance man, afflicted with rheumatism, who
-gained his living by selling fruit in the streets, fancied himself
-ill-wished. He went to Helston to see a "wiseman" residing there,
-to whom he paid seven-and-sixpence, with a further promise of five
-pounds on the removal of the "spell." As he was too poor to pay this
-himself a brother agreed to do it for him, but somehow failed to
-perform his contract. Now the poor old man thinks that the pellar's
-ill-wishes are added to his former pains.
-
-The "pellars" wore formerly magical rings, with a blue stone in them,
-said to have been formed by snakes breathing on hazel-twigs. Our
-country-people often searched for these stones.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHARMS, Etc.
-
-
-Many are the charms against ill-wishing worn by the ignorant. I will
-quote some mentioned by Mr. Bottrell: "A strip of parchment inscribed
-with the following words forming a four-sided acrostic:--
-
-
- S A T O R
- A R E P O
- T E N E T
- O P E R A
- R O T A S
-
-
-"At the time of an old lady's decease, a little while ago, on
-her breast was found a small silk bag containing several charms,
-among others a piece of parchment, about three inches square, having
-written on one side of it 'Nalgah' (in capital letters); under this
-is a pen-and-ink drawing something like a bird with two pairs of
-wings, a pair extended and another folded beneath them. The creature
-appears to be hovering and at the same time brooding on a large egg,
-sustained by one of its legs, whilst it holds a smaller egg at the
-extremity of its other leg, which is outstretched and long. Its
-head, round and small, is unlike that of a bird. From the rudeness
-of the sketch and its faded state it is difficult to trace all the
-outlines. Under this singular figure is the word 'Tetragrammaton'
-(in capitals); on the reverse in large letters--
-
-
- 'Jehovah.'
- 'Jah, Eloim.'
- 'Shadday.'
- 'Adonay.'
- 'Have mercy on a poor woman.'
-
-
-"A pellar of great repute in the neighbourhood tells me that this
-is inscribed with two charms, that Nalgah is the figure only. The
-Abracadabra is also supplied, the letters arranged in the usual
-way. Another potent spell is the rude draft of the planetary signs
-for the Sun, Jupiter, and Venus, followed by a cross, pentagram,
-and a figure formed by a perpendicular line and a divergent one
-at each side of it united at the bottom. Under them is written,
-'Whosoever beareth these tokens will be fortunate, and need fear no
-evil.' The charms are folded in a paper on which is usually written,
-'By the help of the Lord these will do thee good,' and inclosed in
-a little bag to be worn on the breast."
-
-People in good health visited these pellars every spring to get
-their charms renewed, and bed-ridden people who kept theirs under
-their "pillow-beres" were then visited by the pellar for the same
-purpose. "Of amulets mention must be made of certain small crystal
-balls called 'kinning stones,' held in high esteem for cure of ailments
-of the eye. I examined one of these 'kinning stones' recently,
-which had been lent to a person with a bad eye, who on recovering
-from his ailment had returned it to the owner. It proved to be a
-translucent, blueish-white globular crystal, about one-and-a-quarter
-inch in diameter; in texture, horny rather than vitreous; apparently
-not made of glass, but perhaps of rock crystal; pierced by a hole
-containing a boot lace for suspension; having striæ running through
-the substance of the crystal perpendicular to the hole. It had been
-for many generations in possession of the family of the owner, who
-valued it very highly, 'but was willing to lend it to anyone to do
-good.' This kind of amulet is worn around the neck, the bad eye being
-struck with the crystal every morning. There are other 'kinning stones'
-within reach, but examples are not common; their virtues are familiar
-to the people, and instances are to be met with among the country folk,
-whose recovery from a 'kinning' in the eye ('kennel,' West Cornwall)
-is attributed solely to the use of these charms."--Notes on the
-Neighbourhood of Brown Willy (North Cornwall), Rev. A. H. Malan, M.A.
-
-In every small Cornish village in olden times (and the race is not yet
-extinct) lived a charmer or "white witch." Their powers were not quite
-as great as those of a pellar, but they were thoroughly believed in,
-and consulted on every occasion for every complaint. They were not
-only able to cure diseases, but they could, when offended, "overlook"
-and ill-wish the offender, bringing ill-luck on him, and also on his
-family and farm-stock. The seventh son of the seventh son, or seventh
-daughter of the seventh daughter, were born with this gift of charming,
-and made the most noted pellars; but anyone might become a witch who
-touched a Logan rock nine times at midnight. These Logan rocks are
-mentioned elsewhere as being in Cornwall their favourite resorts,
-and to them they went, it is said, riding on ragwort stems, instead
-of the traditional broomsticks.
-
-Or, he might, says another authority, use the following charm: "Go
-to the chancel of a church to sacrament, hide away the bread from
-the hands of the priest, at midnight carry it around the church from
-south to north, crossing east three times. The third time a big toad,
-open-mouthed, will be met, put the bread in it; as soon as swallowed
-he will breathe three times upon the man, and from that time he will
-become a witch. Known by five black spots diagonally placed under the
-tongue." There is also a strange glare in the eye of a person who can
-"overlook," and the eyelids are always red.
-
-Witches could in this country change themselves into toads, as well as
-hares. Mr. Robert Hunt relates the story of one who met her death in
-that form, and Mr. T. Q. Couch tells the tale of a sailor who was a
-"witch," who received several injuries whilst in the shape of that
-animal. When a very small child, having a "kennel" (an ulcer) on my
-eye, I was unknown to my parents taken by an old servant to a Penzance
-"charmer," who then made a great deal of money by her profession. All
-I can remember about it is, that she breathed on it, made some curious
-passes with her hands and muttered some incantation.
-
-About twelve years ago, a woman who lived in the "west country"
-(Land's End district) as well as being a "white witch was a famous
-knitster," and we amongst others frequently gave her work. When she
-brought it back she was treated by our maids, who lived in great fear
-of her "ill-wishing" them, to the best our kitchen could afford;
-and many were the marvellous stories she told me of her power to
-staunch blood, etc., when doctors failed. It was not necessary for
-her to see the person; she could cure them sitting by her fireside if
-they were miles away. Witches are also consulted about the recovery
-of stolen property, which, by casting their spells over the thief,
-it is still supposed they can compel him to return.
-
-A part of Launceston Castle is locally known as Witch's Tower, from
-the tradition that one was burnt at its foot; no grass grows on the
-spot. Another is said to have met with the same fate on a flat stone
-close to St. Austell market-house.
-
-"Charms are still in use by the simple-minded for thrush, warts,
-and various complaints; also for the cure of cattle, when some evil
-disposed person has 'turned a figure upon (i.e. bewitched) them;'
-and white witches--those who avert the evil eye--have not yet ceased
-out of the land."--Notes on the Neighbourhood of Brown Willy (North
-Cornwall), Rev. A. H. Malan, M.A.
-
-I will give some of their charms culled from various sources, and
-remedies for diseases still used in Cornwall:--Take three burning
-sticks from the hearth of the "overlooker," make the patient cross
-over them three times and then extinguish with water. Place nine
-bramble-leaves in a basin of "Holy Well's water, pass each leaf over
-and from the diseased part, repeating three times to each leaf. Three
-virgins came from the east, one brought fire, the others brought
-frost. Out fire! In frost! In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy
-Ghost." Or take a stick of burning furze from the hearth, pass over
-and above the diseased part, repeating the above nine times. If
-you can succeed by any means in drawing blood from the "ill-wisher"
-you are certain to break and remove the spell. Stick pins into an
-apple or potatoe, carry it in your pocket, and as it shrivels the
-"ill-wisher" will feel an ache from every pin, but this I fancy does
-not do the person "overlooked" any good. Another authority says,
-"Stick pins into a bullock's heart, when the 'ill-wisher' will feel
-a stab for every one put in, and in self-defence take off the curse."
-
-A friend writes, "An old man called Uncle Will Jelbart, who had been
-with the Duke of Kent in America, and also a very long time in the
-Peninsular, about forty years ago lived in West Cornwall; he had a
-small pension, and in addition made a good income by charming warts,
-wildfire (erysipelas), cataracts, etc. He used to spit three times and
-breathe three times on the part affected, muttering, 'In the name of
-the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost I bid thee begone.' For cataract he
-pricked the small white 'dew-snail' (slug), found about four a.m.,
-with a hawthorn spine, and let a drop fall into the eye; and in the
-case of skin diseases occasionally supplemented the charm with an
-ointment made of the juice extracted from house-leeks and 'raw-cream;'
-he sometimes changed the words and repeated those which with slight
-variations are known all over Cornwall--'Three virgins,' etc.
-
-"The crowfoot locally known as the 'kenning herb' is in some districts
-used in incantations for curing 'kennings' or 'kennels' (ulcers in
-the eye).
-
-
- 'Three ladies (or virgins) come from the east:
- One with fire and two with frost;
- Out with thee, fire, and in with thee, frost:
- In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.'
-
-
-"This is often said nine times over a scald. In prose it begins thus:
-'As I passed over the river Jordan, I met with Christ. He said, What
-aileth thee? Oh Lord, my flesh doth burn. The Lord said unto me,
-Two angels,'" etc.
-
-A lady once told me that about forty years ago she was taken to a
-"charmer," who stood in a Cornish market-place on fixed days, to
-have her warts cured. The remedies for this childish complaint are
-very numerous. I once had my forehead rubbed with a piece of stolen
-beef, which was then buried in a garden, to send them away, the idea
-being that as the beef decayed the warts would fall off or dwindle
-gradually. There are two or three other ways of getting rid of them
-of a similar kind. Touch each wart with a new pin, enclose them in a
-bottle, either bury them in a newly-made grave of the opposite sex, or
-at four cross-roads; as the pins rust, the warts will disappear. Or,
-touch them with a knot made in a piece of string (there should be as
-many knots as there are warts), bury it; when the rope decays so will
-the warts. The two next are selfish remedies. Touch each wart with
-a pebble, put the stones in a bag, throw them away, and the finder
-will get them and they will leave you. Or, in coming out of church,
-wish them on some part of another person's body (or on a tree); they
-will go from you and appear on him, or on the spot named. One method
-employed by professional "charmers" is to take two pieces of charred
-stick from a fire, form them into a cross and place them on the warts,
-and repeat one of the formulæ above quoted. Yet another is to wash
-the hands in the moon's rays focussed in a dry metal basin, saying,
-
-
- "I wash my hands in this thy dish,
- Oh man in the moon, do grant my wish,
- And come and take away this."
-
-
-The moon too is invoked for the curing of corns. "Corns down here! No
-corns up there!" is repeated nine times. The fore-finger pointing
-first to the ground and then to the sky.
-
-When pricked by a thorn, use one of the following charms:--
-
-
- "Christ was of a virgin born:
- And he was pricked by a thorn,
- And it did never 'bell' (fester),
- And I trust in Jesus this never will."
-
-
-Or,
-
-
- "Christ was crowned with thorns,
- The thorns did bleed but did not rot,
- No more shall thy--(mentioning the part affected):
- In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost."
-
-
-In prose: "When Christ was upon the middle earth the Jews pricked
-him, his blood sprung up into heaven, his flesh never rotted nor
-'fustered,' no more I hope will not thine. In the name," etc.--From
-Mr. T. Q. Couch, who gives two others very similar.
-
-
-
-
-FOR TETTERS.
-
-
- "Tetter, tetter, thou hast nine sisters,
- God bless thee, flesh, and preserve thee, bone;
- Perish thou, tetter, and be thou gone:
- In the name," etc.
-
- "Tetter, tetter, thou hast eight sisters," etc.
-
-
-This charm is thus continued until it comes to the last, which is,--
-
-
- "Tetter, tetter, thou hast no sister," etc.--Bottrell.
-
-
-
-
-TOOTHACHE.
-
-In prose and verse slightly varied, common in all parts of the
-county,--
-
-
- "Christ passed by his brother's door,
- Saw Peter his brother lying on the floor;
- What aileth thee, brother?--
- Pain in thy teeth?
- Thy teeth shall pain thee no more:
- In the name of," etc.
-
-
-This is to be worn in a bag around the neck. Mr. T. Q. Couch gives
-this charm in prose. It begins thus: "Peter sat at the gate of the
-Temple, and Christ said unto him, What aileth thee?" etc. Another
-remedy against toothache is, always in the morning to begin dressing
-by putting the stocking on the left foot.--Through Rev. S. Rundle.
-
-A knuckle-bone is often carried in the pocket as a cure and preventive
-of cramp. I once saw an old woman turn out her pocket; amongst its
-contents, as well as the knuckle-bone, was the tip of an ox-tongue
-kept for good luck.
-
-Slippers on going to bed are, when taken off, for the same complaint
-often placed under the bed with the soles upwards, or on their heels
-against the post of the bed with their toes up. The following is
-from Mr. T. Q. Couch: "The cramp is keenless, Mary was sinless when
-she bore Jesus: let the cramp go away in the name of Jesus." All the
-charms published by the above-named author in his History of Polperro
-were taken from a manuscript book, which belonged to a white witch.
-
-When a foot has "gone to sleep" I have often seen people wet their
-forefingers in their mouths, stoop and draw the form of a cross on
-it. This is said to be an infallible remedy. Mr. Robert Hunt has a
-rather similar cure for hiccough: "Wet the forefinger of the right
-hand with spittle, and cross the front of the left shoe (or boot)
-three times, repeating the Lord's Prayer backwards." The most popular
-cure with children is a heaping spoonful of moist sugar. A sovereign
-remedy for hiccough and almost every complaint is a small piece of
-a stale Good Friday bun grated into a glass of cold water. This bun
-is hung up in the kitchen from one year to the other. Bread baked on
-this day never gets mouldy.
-
-
-
-
-FOR A STRAIN.
-
-
- "Christ rode over the bridge,
- Christ rode under the bridge;
- Vein to vein, strain to strain,
- I hope God will take it back again."
-
-
-
-
-FOR AGUE.
-
-When our Saviour saw the cross, whereon he was to be crucified, his
-body did shake. The Jews said, "Hast thou an ague?" Our Saviour said,
-"He that keepeth this in mind, thought, or writing, shall neither be
-troubled with ague or fever."
-
-
-
-
-FOR WILDFIRE (Erysipelas).
-
-
- "Christ, he walketh over the land,
- Carried the wildfire in his hand,
- He rebuked the fire, and bid it stand;
- Stand, wildfire, stand (three times repeated):
- In the name of," etc.--T. Q. Couch.
-
-
-Mr. Robert Hunt gives in his book on Old Cornwall a Latin charm for
-the staunching of blood. I find, however, on making inquiries that
-it is not the one generally used, which is as follows:
-
-
- "Christ was born in Bethlehem,
- Baptised in the river Jordan;
- There he digged a well,
- And turned the water against the hill,
- So shall thy blood stand still:
- In the name," etc.
-
-
-There are other versions all much alike. A prose one runs thus:
-"Baptised in the river Jordan when the water was wild, the water was
-good, the water stood, so shall thy blood. In the name," etc.--T. Q. C.
-
-The Rev. S. Rundle says a charmer once told him the charm for
-staunching blood consisted in saying a verse from the Psalms; but
-she could not read, and he was inclined to believe the form was,
-"Jesus came to the river Jordan, and said, 'Stand,' and it stood;
-and so I bid thee, blood, stand. In the name," etc. For bleeding
-at the nose, a door-key is often placed against the back. Cuts are
-plugged with cobwebs, flue from a man's hat, tobacco leaves, and
-occasionally filled with salt.
-
-Club-moss is considered good for eye diseases. On the third day of
-the moon, when the thin crescent is seen for the first time, show it
-the knife with which the moss for the charm is to be cut, and repeat,
-
-
- "As Christ healed the issue of blood,
- So I bid thee begone:
- In the name of," etc.
-
-
-Mr. Robert Hunt says,
-
-
- "Do thou cut what thou cuttest for good!"
-
-
-"At sun-down, having carefully washed the hands, the club-moss is
-to be cut kneeling. It is to be carefully wrapped in a white cloth,
-and subsequently boiled in water taken from the spring nearest its
-place of growth. This may be used as a fomentation. Or the club-moss
-made into an ointment with butter made from the milk of a new cow."
-
-A "stye" on the eye is often stroked nine times with a cat's tail;
-with a wedding ring taken from a dead woman's, or a silver one from
-a drowned man's, hand. The belief in the efficacy of a dead hand in
-curing diseases in Cornwall is marvellous. I, in a short paper read at
-an Antiquarian meeting, gave this instance, related to me by a medical
-man about ten years ago (now dead). A day or two after, a number of
-other cases in proof of my statement appeared, to my surprise, in our
-local papers, which, as well as my own, I will transcribe. "Once I
-attended a poor woman's child for an obstinate case of sore eyes. One
-day when leaving the house the mother said to me, 'Is there nothing
-more, doctor, I can do for my little girl?' I jokingly answered,
-'Nothing, unless you care to stroke them with a dead man's hand.' About
-a week after I met the woman in the streets, who stopped me, and said,
-'My child's eyes are getting better at last, doctor.' I expressed
-myself pleased that the ointment I had given her was doing good. To
-my astonishment, she replied, 'Oh, it is not that, we never used it;
-we took your advice about the dead man's hand.' Until she recalled
-it to my memory, I had quite forgotten my foolish speech." "I am one
-of those who can bear testimony to the fact of a cure having been
-effected by the means above-named. I was born with a disfigurement on
-my upper lip. My mother felt a great anxiety about this, so my nurse
-proposed that a dead man's hand should be passed seven times over my
-lip. I was taken to the house of one Robin Gendall, Causewayhead,
-Penzance, who at that time was lying dead, and his hand was passed
-over my lip in the manner named. By slow degrees my friends had the
-satisfaction of seeing that the charm had taken effect."--Octogenarian.
-
-"I may add my testimony to Miss Courtney's remarks as to the belief
-in Cornwall in the virtue of the touch of a diseased part by a dead
-man's hand. A case came under my knowledge at Penzance of a child who
-had from birth a peculiar tuberous formation at the junction of the
-nose with the forehead, which the medical men would not cut for fear of
-severing veins. The child was taken by her mother to a friend's house,
-in which were lying the remains of a young man who had just died from
-consumption. The deceased's hand was passed over the malformation seven
-times, and it soon began to grow smaller and smaller." "I have myself
-seen the child since Miss Courtney read her paper (November, 1881),
-and, though the mark is still apparent, I am assured it is surely,
-if slowly, disappearing. A relation of mine also tells me that, like
-Miss Courtney, she was taken to the Penzance witch for the purpose
-of having a 'stye' removed from one of her eyes by charming."--Tramp.
-
-I was told of many other cases--one by another surgeon; but it would
-be useless to repeat them. I will end with one I have taken from
-Notes and Queries, December, 1859:--
-
-"A lady, who was staying lately at Penzance, attended a funeral,
-and noticed that whilst the clergyman was reading the burial service
-a woman forced her way through the pall-bearers to the edge of the
-grave. When he came to the passage, 'Earth to earth, ashes to ashes,
-dust to dust,' she dropped a white cloth upon the coffin, closed her
-eyes, and apparently said a prayer. On making inquiries as to the cause
-of this proceeding, this lady found that a superstition exists amongst
-the peasantry in that part, that if a person with a sore be taken
-secretly to a corpse, the dead hand passed over the sore place, and
-the bandage afterwards be dropped upon the coffin during the reading
-of the burial service, a perfect cure will be the result. This woman
-had a child with a bad leg, and she had followed this superstition with
-a firm belief in its efficacy. The peasants, also, to the present day
-wear charms, believing they will protect them from sickness and other
-evils. The wife of the clergyman of the parish was very charitable
-in attending the sick and dispensing medicines, and one day a woman
-brought her a child having sore eyes to have them charmed, having more
-faith in that remedy than in medicines. She was greatly surprised to
-find that medicines only were given to her."--E. R.
-
-There is no virtue in the dead hand of a near relation. A curious
-old troth plight was formerly practised in Cornwall: The couple broke
-a wedding ring taken from the finger of a corpse, and each kept one
-half. The editor of a local paper (Cornishman) once obtained a piece
-of rope, with which a man was hanged, for a poor woman who had walked
-fourteen miles to Bodmin in the hopes of getting it, that she might
-effect the cure of her sore eyes.
-
-The Rev. S. Rundle writes that "a Cornish surgeon recommended a charmer
-as being more efficacious than himself in curing shingles. According
-to the same authority, a liquid composed of bramble and butter-dock
-leaves is poured on the place, whilst a light stick is waved over the
-decoction by the charmer, who repeats an incantation." It is popularly
-supposed in Cornwall that should shingles meet around your waist,
-you would die. The cures and charms against epilepsy are also very
-numerous, and very generally used here. Thirty pence are collected at
-the church door by the person afflicted, from one of the opposite sex,
-changed for sacrament money (silver), and made into a ring to be worn
-day and night. Very lately, at St. Just-in-Penwith, a young woman
-begged from young men pennies to buy a silver ring, a remedy which
-she believed would cure her fits. Another charm, which it requires a
-person of strong nerves to perform, is to walk thrice round a church
-at midnight, then enter and stand before the altar. In connection
-with this rite the Rev. S. Rundle relates the following:--"At Crowan
-(a village in West Cornwall), an epileptic subject entered the church
-at midnight. As he was groping his way through the pitchy dark, his
-heart suddenly leaped, and almost stood still. He uttered shriek upon
-shriek, for his hand had grasped a man's head. He thought it was the
-head of the famous Sir John St. Aubyn. He was removed in a fainting
-state, and it was then discovered that he had seized the head of the
-sexton, who had come in to see that nothing was done to frighten the
-man. The unfortunate fellow never recovered from the shock, but died in
-a lunatic asylum." "A middle-aged Camborne man was subject to violent
-fits until two years ago, when some one told him to kill a toad, put
-one of its legs in a bag, and wear it suspended by a string around
-his neck. He did so, and has never had a fit since."--Cornishman,
-December, 1881.
-
-"In Cornwall a black cock is buried on the spot where the person is
-first attacked by epilepsy" (to avert a similar attack).--Comparative
-Folk-Lore, Cornhill, 1876.
-
-For other charms see Addenda, A Bundle of Charms, by the
-Rev. A. H. Malan, M.A.
-
-Toads are also worn as charms for other diseases in this county:--"On
-the 27th July, 1875, I was lodging with a very intelligent grazier
-and horse-dealer, at Tintagel, Cornwall, when he was knocked down by
-a very serious attack of quinsey, to which he had been subject for
-many years. He pulled through the crisis; and on being sufficiently
-recovered he betook himself to a 'wise woman' at Camelford. She
-prescribed for him as follows:--'Get a live toad, fasten a string
-around its throat, and hang it up till the body drops from the head;
-then tie the string around your own neck, and never take it off,
-night or day, till your fiftieth birthday. You'll never have quinsey
-again.' When I left Tintagel, I understood that my landlord, greatly
-relieved in mind, had already commenced the operation."--Augustus
-Jessop, D.D.
-
-When a kettle won't boil, instead of the old adage, "A watched pot
-never boils," Cornish people say, "There is a toad or a frog in
-it." It is here considered lucky for a toad to come into the house.
-
-This charm for yellow jaundice I culled from the Western Antiquary. "I
-was walking in a village churchyard near the town of St. Austell
-(I think in the autumn of 1839), when I saw a woman approach an open
-grave. She stood by the side of it and appeared to be muttering some
-words. She then drew out from under her cloak a good-size baked
-meal-cake, threw it into the grave and then left the place. Upon
-inquiry I found the cake was composed of oatmeal mixed with dog's
-urine, baked, and thrown into the grave as a charm for the yellow
-jaundice. This cure was at that time commonly believed in by the
-peasantry of the neighbourhood."--Joseph Cartwright, March, 1883.
-
-Snakes avoid and dread ash-trees; a branch will keep them away. Our
-peasantry believe however much you may try to kill quickly an adder
-or snake, it will never die before sunset. Mr. Robert Hunt says,
-"When an adder is seen, a circle is to be rapidly drawn around it and
-the sign of the cross made within it, whilst the first two verses of
-the 68th Psalm are repeated." This is to destroy it; there are also
-charms to be said for curing their bites, when they are apostrophised
-"under the ashen leaf." The following old charm is to make them
-destroy themselves, by twisting themselves up to nothing:--
-
-
- "Underneath this 'hazelen mot' [27]
- There's a 'braggaty' [28] worm, with a speckled throat,
- Now! nine 'double' [29] hath he.
- Now from nine double, to eight double,
- From eight double, to seven double,
- From seven double, to six double,
- From six double, to five double,
- From five double, to four double,
- From four double, to three double,
- From three double, to two double,
- From two double, to one double,
- Now! no double hath he."
-
-
-The words of charms must be muttered (they lose their efficacy
-if recited aloud), and the charmer must never communicate them to
-one of the same sex, for that transfers the power of charming to
-the other person. Of superstitious rites practised for the cure of
-whooping-cough, etc., I will speak a little further on. Cornishmen in
-the last century from their cradles to their graves might have been
-guided in their actions by old women's "widdles" (superstitions),
-some as already shown are still foolishly followed; but I hope that
-few people are silly enough at the present day to leave their babies'
-heads a twelvemonth unwashed, under the mistaken notion that it would
-be unlucky to do it.
-
-I have often and very recently seen the creases in the palms of
-children's hands filled with dirt; to clean them before they were a
-year old would take away riches--they would live and die poor. Their
-nails, too, for the same period should be bitten, not cut, for that
-would make them thieves. Hair at no age must be cut at the waning of
-the moon, that would prevent its growing luxuriantly; locks shorn off
-must be always burnt, it is unlucky to throw them away; then birds
-might use them in their nests and weave them in so firmly that there
-would be a difficulty in your rising at the last day. Children's first
-teeth are burnt to prevent dog's or "snaggles" irregular teeth coming
-in their stead. Coral necklaces are worn to ensure easy teething;
-the beads are said to change their colour when the wearer is ill. "All
-locks are unlocked to favour easy birth (or death)."--A. H. Bickford,
-M.D., Camborne, 1883. Cornishmen in the West are said to be born with
-tails; they drop off when the Tamar is crossed.
-
-"A popular notion amongst old folks is, that when a boy is born on the
-waning moon the next birth will be a girl, and vice versâ. They also
-say that when a birth takes place on the growing of the moon, the next
-child will be of the same sex." A child born in the interval between
-the old and new moons is fated to die young, and babies with blue
-veins across their noses do not live to see twenty-one. A cake called
-a groaning cake is made in some houses in Cornwall after the birth
-of a child, of which every caller is expected to partake. The mother
-often carries "a groaning cake" when she is going to be "upraised"
-(churched); this she gives to the first person she meets on her way.
-
-"Kimbly" is the name of an offering, generally a piece of bread or
-cake, still given in some rural districts of this county to the
-first person met when going to a wedding or a christening. It is
-sometimes presented to anyone who brings the news of a a birth to
-an interested party. Two young men, I knew about thirty years ago,
-were taking a walk in West Cornwall; crossing over a bridge they met a
-procession carrying a baby to the parish church, where the child was
-to be baptised. Unaware of this curious custom, they were very much
-surprised at having a piece of cake put into their hands. A magistrate
-wrote to the Western Morning News, in January, 1884, saying, that on
-his way to his petty sessions he had had one of these christening
-cakes thrust into his hand, but unluckily he did not state in what
-parish this happened. This called forth several letters on the subject,
-parts of which I will quote.
-
-"About thirty years ago at the christening of a brother (in the Meneage
-district, Helston), and when the family party were ready for the walk
-to the afternoon service in Cury church, I well recollect seeing the
-old nurse wrap in a pure white sheet of paper what she called the
-'cheeld's fuggan.' [30] This was a cake with plenty of currants and
-saffron, about the size of a modern tea-plate. It was to be given to
-the first person met on returning, after the child was christened. It
-happened that, as most of the parishioners were at the service, no one
-was met until near home, almost a mile from the church, when a tipsy
-village carpenter rambled around a corner, right against our party, and
-received the cake. Regrets were expressed that the 'cheeld's fuggan'
-should have fallen to the lot of this notoriously evil liver, and
-my idea was that it was a bad omen. However as my brother has always
-been a veritable Rechabite, enjoys good health, a contented mind, and
-enough of this world's goods to satisfy every moderate want, no evil
-can thus far be traced to the mischance."--J. C., Western Morning News.
-
-"'Kimbly' in East Cornwall is the name of a thing, commonly a piece
-of bread, which is given under peculiar circumstances at weddings and
-christenings. When the parties set out from the house to go to church,
-or on their business, one person is sent before them with this selected
-piece of bread in his or her hand (a woman is commonly preferred for
-this office), and the piece is given to the first individual that
-is met. I interpret it to have some reference to the idea of the
-evil eye and its influence, which might fall on the married persons
-or on the child, which is sought to be averted by this unexpected
-gift. It is also observed in births, in order that by this gift envy
-may be turned away from the infant or happy parents. This 'kimbly'
-is commonly given to the person bringing the first news to those
-interested in the birth."--T. Q. Couch, Western Morning News.
-
-"I witnessed this custom very frequently at Looe, in South-east
-Cornwall, from fifty to sixty-five years ago. I believe it is correct
-to say that this gift was there a small cake, made for the occasion,
-and termed the 'christening-crib,' a crib of bread or cake being a
-provincialism for a bit of bread," etc.--William Pengelly, Western
-Morning News.
-
-Children, when they leave small bits of meat, etc., on their plates,
-are in Cornwall often told "to eat up their cribs."
-
-"On the afternoons of Good Friday, little girls of Carharrack, in the
-parish of Gwennap (West Cornwall), take their dolls to a stream at
-the foot of Carnmarth, and there christen them. Occasionally a young
-man will take upon himself the office of minister, and will sprinkle
-and name the dolls."--Charles James, Gwennap.
-
-The Rev. S. Rundle, Vicar of Godolphin, says, "That once he was
-sent for to baptise a child, around whose neck hung a little bag,
-which the mother said contained a bit of a donkey's ear, and that
-this charm had cured the child of a most distressing cough."
-
-"In some parts of Cornwall it is considered a sure sign of being
-sweethearts if a young man and woman 'stand witness together,'
-i.e. become godfather and godmother of the same child."--T. C. But
-not in all, for I remember once hearing in Penzance a couple refuse
-to do so, saying that it was unlucky. "First at the font, never at
-the altar." When I was young, old nurses often breathed in babies'
-mouths to cure the thrush, thrice repeating the second verse of the
-Eighth Psalm, "Out of the mouths of babes and sucklings," etc. "May
-children and 'chets' (kittens) never thrive," and it is unlucky to
-"tuck" (short coat) children in that month.
-
-
- "Tuck babies in May,
- You'll tuck them away."
-
-
-It is of course considered an unfortunate month for marriages. Neither
-should babies "be tucked" on a week day, but on a Sunday, which day
-should also be chosen for leaving off any article of clothing; as then
-you will have the prayers of every congregation for you, and are sure
-not to catch cold. A friend lately sent me the following charm of one
-year's duration which prevents your feeling or taking a cold. "Eat a
-large apple at Hallow-een under an apple-tree just before midnight; no
-other garment than a bed-sheet should be worn. A kill or cure remedy."
-
-An empty cradle should never be rocked unless you wish to have a
-large family, for--
-
-
- "Rock the cradle empty
- You'll rock the babies plenty."
-
-
-Rev. S. Rundle says, "It is unlucky to rock an empty cradle, as the
-child will die."--Cornubiana.
-
-The jingles which follow are often repeated by Cornish nurse-maids
-with appropriate actions to amuse their little charges. First,
-touching each part of the face as mentioned with the forefinger,
-
-
- "Brow brender, [31]
- Eye winker,
- Nose dropper,
- Mouth eater,
- Chin chopper,
- Tickle-tickle."
-
-
-Second--
-
-
- "Tap a tap shoe, [32] that would I do,
- If I had but a little more leather.
- We'll sit in the sun till the leather doth come,
- Then we'll tap them both together."
-
-
-Here the two little feet are struck lightly one against the other.
-
-Several letters have lately appeared in the Western Morning News,
-giving different versions of the old rhymes--
-
-
- "Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,
- Pray bless the bed that I 'lay' on,
- Four corners to my bed,
- Four angels there are spread,
- Two 'to' foot and two 'to' head,
- And six will carry me when I'm dead."
-
-
-Although attributed by the correspondents to Cornwall, I have always
-understood that they were known all over England.
-
-Children with rickets were taken by their parents on the three first
-Sundays in May to be dipped at sunrise in one of the numerous Cornish
-holy wells, and then put to sleep in the sun, with sixpence under their
-heads. Small pieces torn from their clothes were left on the bushes
-to propitiate the pixies. For the same disease they were passed nine
-times through a Mên-an-tol (holed stone). A man stood on one side,
-and a woman on the other, of the stone. The child was passed with
-the sun from east to west, and from right to left; a boy from the
-woman to the man, a girl from the man to the woman. This order is
-always, in these charms, strictly observed. As lately as 1883, in
-the village of Sancred, West Cornwall, a little girl, suffering from
-whooping-cough, was passed from a man to a woman nine times under a
-donkey's belly; a little boy standing the while at the donkey's head
-feeding it with "cribs" of wheaten bread. My informant did not know
-if on this occasion any incantation was repeated. Another family, he
-tells me, some years back were in the same neighbourhood cured of the
-whooping-cough by donkey's hair, which was dried on the baking iron of
-the open hearth, reduced to powder, and administered to them. There
-are very various ways of doing this, one is between thin slices of
-bread and butter. Some authorities say the latter ingredients must
-belong to a couple called John and Joan. Mr. Robert Hunt gives a
-charm which in a measure combines the two above-mentioned. "The child
-must be passed naked nine times over the back and under the belly
-of a female donkey. Three spoonfuls of milk drawn from the teats of
-the animal, three hairs cut from its back, and three from its belly,
-are to stand in the milk three hours, and to be given in three doses
-repeated on three mornings." Mr. Hunt also says, "There were some
-doggerel lines connected with the ceremony which have escaped my
-memory, and I have endeavoured in vain to find anyone remembering
-them. They were to the effect that as Christ placed the cross on the
-ass's back when he rode into Jerusalem and so rendered the animal holy,
-if the child touched where Jesus sat it should cough no more." I will
-quote another of Mr. Hunt's charms. "Gather nine spar-stones (quartz)
-from a running stream, taking care not to interrupt the free passage
-of the water in doing so. Then dip a quart of water from the stream,
-which must be taken in the direction in which the stream runs--by
-no means must the vessel be dipped against the stream. Then make the
-nine stones red-hot, and throw them into the quart of water. Bottle
-the prepared water, and give the afflicted child a wine-glass of this
-water for nine mornings." Other remedies are to cross the child over
-running water nine times, or under a bramble bough bent into the ground
-(this latter and through a cleft ash are also tried for hernia). Some
-nurses take children, with whooping-cough, out for a walk, in hopes of
-meeting a man on a white or piebald horse. Should they be fortunate
-enough to do so, they ask the rider how they can cure the patient:
-his advice is always implicitly followed.
-
-Children with dirty habits are often told that a "mousey pasty"
-shall be cooked for their dinners.
-
-Cornish children are warned by their nurses not to grimace, lest,
-whilst so doing, the wind should change and their faces always remain
-contorted. There is another form in which this warning is often given:
-"Don't make mock of a 'magum' (May-game), for you may be struck comical
-yourself one day." "Magum" in most cases means a facetious person,
-one who is full of merry pranks; and the expressions, "He's a reg'lar
-magum," or "He's full of his magums," are often heard. But the idea
-intended to be conveyed in the first saying is that it is wrong to
-make fun of a person suffering from an infirmity, which may at any
-time afflict the jeerer. The puritanical notion of Sunday lingers in
-the belief in Cornwall that it is unlucky to use a scissors on that
-day, even to cut your nails; you must
-
-
- "Cut them on Monday, before your fast you break,
- And you'll have a present in less than a week."
-
-
-Children here are pleased to see "gifts" (white spots) on their
-thumb-nails, as
-
-
- "Gifts on the thumb are sure to come,
- But gifts on the finger are sure to linger."
-
-
-Occasionally white spots on the five fingers are named as follows:
-"A gift, a friend, a foe, a true lover, a journey to go." Should the
-little ones, when picking flowers, sting themselves with nettles, they
-are of course in this locality, as elsewhere in England, taught to rub
-the spot with dock-leaves, repeating the words, "In dock, out nettle;"
-but they are often told in addition to wet the place affected with
-their spittle, and make a cross over it with their thumb-nails, pressed
-down as heavily as possible. School-boys and school-girls often years
-ago practised a cruel jest on their more innocent companions. They
-induced them to pick a nettle by saying "Nettles won't sting this
-month." When the children were stung and complained, the retort was,
-"I never said they would not sting you." The blue scabious in Cornwall
-is never plucked. It is called the devil's bit, and the superstition
-is handed down from one generation of children to another that, should
-they transgress and do so, the devil will appear to them in their
-dreams at night. But anyone who wishes to dream of the devil should
-pin four ivy-leaves to the corners of his pillow. Flowers plucked from
-churchyards bring ill-luck, and even visitations from spirits on the
-plucker. Wrens and robins are sacred in the eyes of Cornish boys, for
-
-
- "Hurt a robin or a wran,
- Never prosper, boy nor man."
-
-
-A groom who had, when a lad, shot a robin and held it in one of his
-hands told me that it shook ever after. But they always chase and try
-to kill the first butterfly of the season; and, should they succeed,
-they will overcome their enemies--I suppose, in football, etc.
-
-"To hear the first cuckoo of spring on the right ear is lucky, on the
-left unlucky; as many times as it repeats its notes will the number
-of years be before the hearer is married. The cuckoo song--
-
-
- 'In April, come he will,
- In May, he sings all day,
- In June, he alters his tune,
- In July, he prepares to fly,
- Come August, go he must'--
-
-
-is known all over the county, with additions and slight variations,
-such as--
-
-
- 'In March, he sits upon his perch,
- In Aperel, he tunes his bell.'"
-
- --South-east Cornwall, W. Pengelly.
-
-
-"A bat in Cornwall is called an 'airy-mouse;' village boys address
-it as it flits over their heads in the following rhymes--
-
-
- 'Airy-mouse, airy-mouse! fly over my head,
- And you shall have a crust of bread,
- And when I brew, or when I bake,
- You shall have a piece of my wedding cake.'"
-
- --Polperro, T. Q. Couch.
-
-
-Sometimes in West Cornwall they say--
-
-
- "Bit-bat! bit-bat! come under my hat."
-
-
-Earwigs they hold in detestation, as they believe that, should they
-get into their ears, they will cause madness. There is a legend popular
-amongst them which relates that a poor man was once driven frantic by
-a very queer sensation in his head. At last, not being able to bear
-it any longer, he went into a meat-market, laid it down upon a block,
-and asked a butcher to chop it off. Whilst in this recumbent position
-an earwig crept out of his ear, and the pain instantly ceased. Our
-school-boys have other fallacies, such as, the pain caused by a
-"custice," i.e. a stroke across the palm of the hand with a cane,
-may be neutralised by placing two hairs on it crossways. Also that
-the wound made by a nail can be kept from festering by wrapping the
-nail in a piece of fat bacon to prevent its rusting.
-
-School-girls' superstitions are more sentimental, and often connected
-with wishing. If, when talking together, one accidentally makes a
-rhyme, she wishes; and, should she be asked a question before she
-speaks again, to which she can answer Yes, she thinks that she is
-sure to get it. When an eyelash falls out its owner puts it on the
-tip of her nose, wishes and blows at it; should she blow it off,
-she will have her wish. Should she by chance hear a dog dreaming,
-she stands up, puts a foot on each side of it, and then wishes. Years
-ago one gravely told me that if I wanted to know a dog's dreams I
-must throw a pocket-handkerchief over it when sleeping and keep it
-there until it awoke; then, before getting into bed, put it under
-my pillow, and I should have the same dream. Dreams in Cornwall are
-always said to go by contraries. "If you dream of the dead you will
-hear tell of the living," etc. To dream anyone is kissing you is a
-sign of deceit. "Of fruit out of season, trouble without reason."
-
-
- "A Friday's dream on Saturdays told
- Is sure to come true, be it ever so old."
-
-
-To see if a friend loves her, a Cornish girl pulls out a hair from her
-friend's head, and then tries to suspend it by the root from the palm
-of her own hand. If this can be done the test is successful. When a
-little older there are many ways in which our maidens "try for their
-sweethearts." A few of the rules prescribed for these rites, which
-have been handed down from generation to generation, may be worth
-transcribing. "Draw a bracken fern, cut it at the bottom of the stalk;
-there you will find your lover's initials." Take an apple-pip between
-the forefinger and the thumb, flip it into the air, saying, "North,
-south, east, west, tell me where my love doth rest," and watch the
-direction in which it falls. Go into the fields at the time of the
-new moon and pluck a piece of herb yarrow; put it when going to bed
-under your pillow, saying--
-
-
- "Good night, fair yarrow,
- Thrice good night to thee;
- I hope before to-morrow's dawn
- My true love I shall see."
-
-
-If you are to be married your sweetheart will appear to you in
-your dreams.
-
-"Look out of your bed-room window on St. Valentine's morn, note the
-first man you see, and you will marry the same, or one of the name."
-
-To lose your apron or your garter shows that your lover is thinking of
-you. Three candles burning at the same time is the sign of a wedding;
-and the girl who is nearest to the door, the cupboard, and the
-shortest candle, will be married first. When two people accidentally
-say the same thing at the same time the one who finishes first will
-be married first. There are a great number of omens similar to these
-last, equally stupid, and not worthy of notice.
-
-"Friday is a cross day for marriage," and "If you marry in Lent you'll
-live to repent." Should you in marrying
-
-
- "Change the name, and not the letter,
- You'll change for the worse, and not for the better."
-
-
-but it is lucky if your initials form a word.
-
-"The young men of a place, when they know that a person is paying
-attention to a girl or woman, seize hold of him, place him in a
-wheelbarrow, in which they wheel him up and down until they are tired,
-when they upset him on the nearest pile or in a pond. This is called
-riding in the 'one-wheel coach;' and to say that a man has ridden in
-the 'one-wheel coach' is tantamount to the expression that he has
-'gone-a-courting.'"--Rev. S. Rundle, Transactions Penzance Natural
-History Society, etc., 1885-1886.
-
-When a younger sister marries first the elder is said to dance in
-the "bruss" (short twigs of heath or furze), from an old custom
-of dancing without shoes on the furze prickles which get detached
-from the stalk. Only old maids can rear a myrtle, and they will
-not blossom when trained against houses where there are none. It is
-considered extremely unlucky here to break or lose your wedding-ring,
-also for a wedding-cake to crack after baking. A lady told me of one
-made for a couple she knew, which fell to pieces when taken out of
-the oven. Before the wedding-day came the bride had sickened of some
-disorder, was dead, and buried. A hole in a loaf, too, foretells a
-separation in a family; and to turn one upside down on a table wrecks
-a vessel. "If a hare cross the path of a wedding party, the bride or
-bridegroom will die within seven years."--Rev. S. Rundle, Cornubiana.
-
-"A young woman who has been three times a bridesmaid will never be
-a bride." "It was an old custom, religiously observed until lately
-in Zennor and adjacent parishes on the north coast of Cornwall,
-to waylay a married couple on their wedding night and flog them
-to bed with cords, sheep-spans, or anything handy for the purpose,
-believing that this rough treatment would ensure them happiness and the
-'heritage and gift that cometh of the Lord,' of a numerous family. At
-more modish weddings the guests merely entered the bridal chamber,
-and threw stockings in which stones or something to make weight were
-placed, at the bride and bridegroom in bed. The first one hit of the
-happy pair betokened the sex of their first-born."--Bottrell.
-
-Should there be a great discrepancy between the ages of the bride
-and bridegroom, or the marriage of a couple in any way be a matter
-of notoriety, they are in West Cornwall on their wedding night often
-treated to a "shallal," a serenade on tin-kettles, pans, marrow-bones,
-&c. Any great noise in this part of the county is described as being
-"a reg'lar shallal." In olden times (in fact the custom is not quite
-discontinued at the present day, for I heard a whisper of one having
-taken place in a small fishing-village two years ago) married people
-accused of immorality were in Cornwall punished by a "riding." I will
-give the description of one by Mr. T. Q. Couch.
-
-"A cart was got, donkeys were harnessed in, and a pair personating
-the guilty or suspected were driven through the streets, attended by
-a train of men and boys. At Polperro (East Cornwall) the attendants
-acted as trumpeters; the bullocks' horns used by the fishermen at sea
-for fog or night signals were always available for the purpose. The
-mummers were very cautious, by careful disguise in dress or voice,
-and avoiding of anything directly libellous in their rather ribald
-dialogue, to keep themselves out of the clutches of the law. I remember
-one riding when an old rusty cannon of the smuggling period was waked
-up from its long quiet for service for the occasion, and bursting,
-led to the mutilation of several and the death of one." On the borders
-of Devon and in that county this ceremony was known as a "mock-hunt."
-
-A lock of hair hanging down over the forehead is in Cornwall called
-"a widow's lock;" (and children are still here told when it falls down
-"to shed their hair back out of their eyes.") A foolish warning says,
-
-
- "Go thro' a gate when there's a stile hard by,
- You'll be a widow before you die."
-
-
-The sudden appearance of rats or mice in Cornish houses is said to
-be a certain forerunner of sickness and death. Many curious tales
-are told in confirmation of this superstition; one I particularly
-remember was in connection with a young man who was killed on the
-West Cornwall Railway. After the accident, they vanished as quickly
-as they came. It is also considered to be very unlucky for a bird
-to perch on the window-sill of a sick person's room, farewell then
-to all chances of recovery; and strange birds coming into a house
-(especially a robin through the back door) foretell the death of
-some one in it, or connected with the family. I was once where a
-little child lay dying, a small brown bird sang on the window-sill,
-the nurse told me that it was waiting to carry away the child's
-soul. "But when a flea bites a sick person he is sure not to be
-dangerously ill, as it is well known that they never bite those who
-have had their death-stroke." The superstitions that you cannot die
-easily on pillows stuffed with wild birds' feathers, and that life
-goes out with the tide, are as current here as in other places. Death
-in Cornwall is often spoken of as "going round land," and "gone dead"
-is a common idiom. A threat to kill is occasionally conveyed in the
-words "I will give you your quietus." In some cases it is supposed
-that life may be restored after death if when the breath stops the
-body be violently shaken. When a member of a family dies, his death
-it is said will bring two others with it, [33] from the idea that one
-misfortune never comes alone. A Cornish country vicarage was lately
-startled by the tolling at an unwonted hour of the church bell. On
-sending to ascertain the cause of the disturbance an "old inhabitant
-was found in the belfry, who had been engaged in the absence or
-illness of the usual sexton to dig the grave. He said in explanation
-that in his time it was always usual for the gravedigger to toll the
-bell three times before breaking the consecrated ground."--J. H. C.,
-Notes and Queries, 5th series, vol. ii., August, 1874.
-
-A corpse should never be carried to church by a new road, and should
-a hearse stop on its way to the churchyard there will soon be another
-death in the house. Singing funerals, or as they are called in Cornwall
-buryings (pronounced "berrins"), were once almost universal (and one
-may still occasionally be met). The mourners and friends following
-the coffin sang as they walked through the streets or lanes their
-favourite hymns, often to most elaborate tunes.
-
-
- "To shaw our sperrits lev-us petch [34]
- The laast new berrin tune."--Tregellas.
-
-
-Few people in old days were buried on the north side of a
-church. Flowers and shrubs planted in Cornish churchyards are never
-plucked, from the fear that the spirits of the departed will at night
-visit the desecrator. Should an urn found in a "barrow" be taken
-into a house, the person whose ashes it contained will haunt it;
-it must be broken up and the pieces hidden. Cross-roads, the former
-burying-place of suicides, are after nightfall avoided, such spots
-being haunted; but if you have courage to go there at midnight and
-wish, you will get your wish.
-
-With a few general superstitions I shall bring this part to an
-end. It is unlucky in Cornwall to see the new moon first over the left
-shoulder, or through a window, especially if the day should happen
-to be a Friday. To ensure good luck on your first sight of her, you
-should curtsey, spit on your money and turn it in your pocket. (A
-man well paid for any chance job early in the day calls it here "a
-hansel," and spits on the money for good luck.) If you particularly
-desire anything, look at the new moon and wish before you speak. You
-may also wish when you see a falling star, and if you can succeed in
-framing it before it disappears your wish will be granted. Seeing the
-new moon in the old moon's arms is a sign of a change in the weather,
-so is a star passing over it. The change will be for the worse if the
-moon goes over the star. "Herbs for drying must be gathered at full
-moon; winter fruit picked and stored at full moon, not to lose its
-plumpness. Timber should be felled on the bating of the moon, because
-the sap is then down, and the wood will be more durable."--Bottrell.
-
-Card-table Superstitions:--"Good luck in cards, bad luck in a husband
-(or wife)." "A shuffling cut is good for the dealer." "1 2 3 4 played
-in succession kiss the dealer." To cut an honour for the trump card is
-unlucky, for "When quality opens the door there is poverty behind;"
-but "Good luck lurks under a black deuce" (it should be touched by
-the cutter).
-
-Superstitions connected with the body:--A twitching in the eyelid is
-lucky; but you must not say when it comes nor when it goes.
-
-Right eye itching, a sign of laughter; but left over right, you'll
-cry before night.
-
-Right cheek burning, some one praising you; left one, abusing (a
-knot tied in the apron-string will cause the slanderer to bite his
-or her tongue); but left or right are both good at night. "If the
-cheek burns, someone is talking scandal of you. I have often heard
-the lines spoken:--
-
-
- Right cheek! left cheek! why do you burn?
- Cursed be she that doth me any harm;
- If she be a maid, let her be staid;
- If she be a widow, long let her mourn;
- But if it be my own true love--burn, cheek, burn!"--T. Q. Couch.
-
-
-Nose itching, you will be kissed, cursed, or vexed; or shake hands
-with a fool.
-
-Right hand itching, someone will pay or give you money; but the left
-you will be the payer. In regard to the former,
-
-
- "If you rub it on wood,
- It will be sure to come good."
-
- Sneeze on Sunday morning fasting,
- Enjoy your true love for everlasting.
-
-
-On every other morning it is lucky to sneeze once before breakfast;
-but not twice.
-
-Fire Superstitions:--A difficulty in kindling the fire in the mornings
-is a sign of anger; burning only on one side, of a separation in
-the family (some say of a wedding). A flake of smut on the bar
-of the grate shows that a stranger is coming to the house. Should
-the fire be burning brightly, he will bring good news; but if the
-contrary, bad. If after you poke the fire it burns up brightly, your
-sweetheart is in a good temper; but should it not improve he is in a
-bad one. A coal popping out of the fire is either a cradle or coffin,
-or a purse. It is allowed to cool and then examined to find out the
-shape; if pronounced to be a purse, it is shaken close to the ear,
-when should it jingle it is said to contain money. I once saw this done
-in a school by its mistress. It is unlucky to put a bellows on a table.
-
-"Ladies' trees," small branches of dried seaweed, are sometimes hung
-up in chimneys to protect houses from fire; or a Passover biscuit
-suspended by a string from a nail in the wall.
-
-A bright spark on a candle foretells a letter, but if pointed out it
-never arrives.
-
-There are so many unlucky omens in Cornwall that to believe in
-them all would make life miserable, and to enumerate them would
-fill a volume. The major part of them too are silly and not worth
-transcribing; three or four of them as examples will, I am quite sure,
-amply suffice. "A work begun on Friday is never ended."
-
-
- "If you sing afore bite,
- You'll cry before night."
-
-
-"It is unlucky to sing carols before Christmas;" or before the first
-"arish mow [35]" is made. Also, "To scat [36] hands before Christmas,"
-i.e., beat them for warmth.
-
-"It is unlucky to pour out water or any other liquor back-handed."
-
-"It is unlucky to lend, or say thank you for a pin." And
-
-
- "If you see a pin, and pass it by,
- You'll want a pin before you die."
-
-
-"It is unlucky to mend your clothes on you, for then you will never
-grow rich."
-
-It is unlucky to wear a hole in the bottom of a shoe, for
-
-
- "A hole in the sole,
- You'll live to spend whole."
-
-
-Servants who come to their places after noon never stay, etc., etc.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CORNISH GAMES.
-
-
-Many old games worth recording are still played by Cornish children,
-out of doors in summer, indoors in winter, and at their numerous
-school-treats. To those common elsewhere, other names in Cornwall are
-often given, and different words sung. Some well known thirty-five
-years ago, now (1890) live only in the memory of those who were
-children then, or linger in a very fragmentary state in some remote
-country districts. Such as
-
-
- "Here come three dukes a-riding."
-
-
-To play this the children were divided into two parties. In the first
-were only the three dukes; in the second the other players, who stood
-in a long line, linked hand in hand, facing them,--the mother in the
-middle, with her daughters ranged according to size on each side of
-her. One duke was chosen as spokesman, and he began the following
-dialogue, which was sung; the party singing advanced and retreated,
-whilst the others stood still:--
-
-
- "Here 'comes' three dukes a-riding, a-riding--
- Here 'comes' three dukes a-riding, to court your daughter Jane."
-
- "My daughter Jane is yet too young
- To bear your silly, flattering tongue."
-
- "Be she young or be she old,
- She for her beauty must and shall be sold."
-
- "So fare thee well, my lady gay,
- We'll take our horse and ride away,
- And call again another day."
-
- "Come back! come back! you Spanish knight,
- And clean your spurs, they are not bright."
-
- "My spurs are bright as 'rickety rock' (and richly wrought),
- And in this town they were not bought,
- And in this town they shan't be sold,
- Neither for silver, copper, nor gold.
- So fare thee well," etc.
-
- "Come back! come back! you Spanish Jack (or coxcomb)."
-
- "Spanish Jack (or coxcomb) is not my name,
- I'll stamp my foot (stamps) and say the same.
- So fare thee well," etc.
-
- "Come back! come back! you Spanish knight,
- And choose the fairest in your sight."
-
-
-The dukes retired, consulted together, and then selected one, singing--
-
-
- "This is the fairest I can see,
- So pray young damsel walk with me."
-
-
-When all the daughters had been taken away, they were brought back
-to their mother in the same order, the dukes chanting:--
-
-
- "We've brought your daughter, safe and sound,
- And in her pocket a thousand pound,
- And on her finger a gay gold ring,
- We hope you won't refuse to take her in."
-
- "I'll take her in with all my heart,
- For she and 'me' were loth to part."
-
-
-The Rev. S. Rundle, vicar of Godolphin, near Helston, saw some
-children lately in his neighbourhood playing a portion of this game,
-when to "Here comes three dukes a-riding" they added--"My rancy, dancy
-dukes." Mr. Halliwell Phillips, in his Nursery Rhymes and Tales of
-England, has published three versions of it, but the game as played
-in Cornwall has some additional couplets.
-
-
-
-
-PRAY, PRETTY MISS.
-
-For this--quite, I think, a thing of the past--the children (a boy
-and girl alternately) formed a ring. One stood in the middle holding
-a white handkerchief by two of its corners: if a boy he would single
-out one of the girls, dance backwards and forwards opposite to her,
-and sing--
-
-
- "Pray, pretty Miss, will you come out?
- Will you come out? will you come out?
- Pray, pretty Miss, will you come out,
- To help me in my dancing?"
-
-
-If the answer were "No!" spoken with averted head over the left
-shoulder, the rhyme ran--
-
-
- "Then you are a naughty Miss!
- Then you are a naughty Miss!
- Then you are a naughty Miss!
- Won't help me in my dancing."
-
-
-Occasionally three or four in turn refused. When the request was
-granted the words were changed to--
-
-
- "Now you are a good Miss!
- Now you are a good Miss!
- Now you are a good Miss!
- To help me in my dancing."
-
-
-The handkerchief was then carefully spread on the floor; the couple
-knelt on it and kissed: the child formerly in the middle joined the
-ring, and the other took his place, or if he preferred it, remained in
-the centre; in that case the children clasped hands and sang together--
-
-
- "Pray, pretty Miss (or Sir)," etc.
-
-
-The last to enter the ring had always the privilege of selecting the
-next partner.
-
-In all these childish games, to prevent disputes, and decide who shall
-be middleman, hide first, etc., one or other of the following formulæ
-is always recited by the eldest of the party, who as he repeats the
-words points with his forefinger at each player in succession until
-he comes to the end of the rhyme. The person then indicated goes out:--
-
-
- "Vizzery, vazzery, vozery-vem,
- Tizzery, tazzery, tozery-tem,
- Hiram, jiram, cockrem, spirem,
- Poplar, rollin, gem."
-
- "There stands a pretty maid in a black cap,
- If you want a pretty maid in a black cap,
- Please to take 'she.'"--(East Cornwall).
-
- "Ene, mene, mona, mi,
- Pasca, lara, bona (or bora), bi,
- Elke, belke, boh!"
-
- "Eggs, butter, cheese, bread,
- Stick, stack, stone, dead!"--(West Cornwall).
-
-
-To this latter there are several nonsensical modern editions.
-
-A game with a jingle somewhat like the first is played by children
-at Newlyn West, near Penzance, called--
-
-
- "Vesey, vasey, vum."
-
-
-One child is blindfolded, the others hide something, and shout--
-
-
- "Vesey, vasey, vum,
- Buck-a-boo has come!
- Find if you can and take it home,
- Vesey, vasey, vum!"
-
-
-A search is then made for the hidden object: when found the finder
-in his turn is blindfolded.
-
-After this digression I will give all the other forgotten games before
-describing those still played.
-
-
-
-
-"FRISKEE, FRISKEE, I WAS, AND I WAS."
-
-Known elsewhere as "Now we dance looby, looby, looby." To play it
-the children formed a ring and danced around, singing--
-
-
- "Friskee, friskee, I was, and I was
- A drinking of small beer."
-
-
-They then stopped suddenly and said, "Right arms in!" (all were
-extended towards the centre of the circle); "Right arms out!" (all
-wheeled round with arms outstretched in the contrary direction);
-"Shake yourselves a little and little and turn yourselves about." The
-circle was reformed, "Friskee," etc., was repeated, and the game went
-on until all the different parts of the body had been named.
-
-
-
-
-"FOOL, FOOL, COME TO SCHOOL."
-
-All the children in this game, except one who left the room, called
-themselves by the name of some bird, beast or fish. The child outside
-was brought in, and one chosen as schoolmaster said--
-
-
- "Fool! fool! come to school,
- And find me out the ----:"
-
-
-giving the assumed name of one of the players. If the fool fixed on
-the right person, he stayed in and the other went out, which of course
-involved re-naming; but if he made a mistake they all cried out--
-
-
- "Fool! fool! go back to school,
- And learn your letters better."
-
-
-He retired, pretended to knock his head against the door, and returned,
-when he was again asked in the same words to name some other player.
-
-Some of the games were much rougher, such as "Pig in the middle and
-can't get out," and "Solomon had a great dog."
-
-For the first, one of the children stood in the centre, whilst the
-others danced around him in a circle, saying, "Pig in the middle and
-can't get out." He replied, "I've lost my key but I will get out,"
-and threw the whole weight of his body suddenly on the clasped hands
-of a couple to try and unlock them. When he had succeeded he changed
-the words to, "I've broken your locks, and I have got out."
-
-One of the pair whose hands he had opened took his place, and he
-joined the ring.
-
-For the second, the players knelt in a line; the one at the head,
-in a very solemn tone, chanted, "Solomon had a great dog;" the others
-answered in the same way, "Just so" (this was always the refrain). Then
-the first speaker made two or three more ridiculous speeches, ending
-with, "And at last this great dog died, and fell down," giving at
-the same time a violent lurch against his next neighbour, who, not
-expecting it, fell against his, and so on to the end of the line.
-
-
-
-
-"SCAT" (Cornish for "slap").
-
-A paper-knife, or thin slip of wood, was placed by one player on
-his open palm. Another took it up quickly, and tried to "scat" his
-opponent's hand before he could draw it away. Sometimes a feint of
-taking the paper-knife was made three or four times before it was
-really done. When the "scat" was given, the "scatter" in his turn
-rested the knife on his palm.
-
-
-
-
-HOLE IN THE WALL.
-
-A person, who did not know the trick, was blindfolded, another stood
-in the corner of the room with his mouth open. The forefinger of
-the blindfolded player was carefully guided around the walls of the
-room to find the hole, until at last it was put into the open mouth,
-when it was sharply bitten.
-
-
-
-
-MALAGA, MALAGA RAISINS (a forfeit game).
-
-The players sat in a circle. One acquainted with the trick took a poker
-in his right hand, made some eccentric movements with it, passed it
-to his left, and gave it to his next neighbour on that side, saying,
-"Malaga, Malaga raisins, very good raisins I vow," and told him to
-do the same. Should he fail to pass it from right to left, when he
-in his turn gave it to his neighbour, without being told where the
-mistake lay he was made to pay a forfeit.
-
-
-
-
-SHE SAID, AND SHE SAID.
-
-This required a confederate, who left the room. The other in the secret
-asked a person inside to whisper to him whom she (or he) loved, then
-called in his companion, and the following dialogue was carried on:--
-
-
- "She said, and she said!
- And what did she say?"
-
- "She said that she loved."
-
- "And whom did she love?
- Suppose she said she loved ----?"
-
- "No! she never said that, whatever she said."
-
-
-An indefinite number of names were mentioned before the right one. When
-that came, to the surprise of the whisperer, the answer was--
-
-
- "Yes! she said that."
-
-
-The secret was very simple, the name of a widow or widower was always
-given before that whispered.
-
-The two next are played everywhere, but the words I believe are
-peculiar to Cornwall.
-
-
-
-
-DROP THE HANDKERCHIEF.
-
-This is much too common to require a description. I will therefore only
-give the doggerel, which is recited by the holder of the handkerchief
-as he walks around the ring:--
-
-
- "I sent a letter to my love,
- I carried water in my glove,
- And by the way I dropped it.
- I did so! I did so!
- I had a little dog that said 'Bow! wow!'
- I had a little cat that said 'Meow! meow!'
- Shan't bite you, shan't bite you,
- Shall bite you."
-
-
-Throws the handkerchief, and chases the girl.
-
-
-
-
-HOW MANY MILES TO BABYLON?
-
-To this game, known elsewhere as "Thread the Needle," the following
-lines are chanted:--
-
-
- "How many miles to Babylon?
- Three score and ten.
- Can I get there by candle-light?
- Yes! if your legs are long and straight.
- Then open your gates as high as the sky,
- And let King George and all his troops pass by."
-
-
-
-
-RULES OF CONTRARY.
-
-Four children hold a handkerchief by the four corners, one moves a
-finger over it saying, as fast as possible--
-
-
- "Here I go round the rules of contrary,
- Hopping about like a little canary,
- When I say 'Hold fast' leave go;
- When I say 'Leave go' hold fast."
-
-
-Any player making a mistake pays a forfeit.
-
-
-
-
-LADY QUEEN ANNE.
-
-A very pretty version of this old English game is often played at
-juvenile parties in Cornwall.
-
-One child is chosen to remain in the room, whilst the others go
-outside and consult together as to whom shall hold the ball (some small
-thing). They then troop in, with their hands either hidden under the
-skirts of their dresses, or clasped in such a way that Lady Queen Anne,
-by looking at them, cannot tell which has it; all repeating--
-
-
- "Here come we to Lady Queen Anne,
- With a pair of white gloves to cover our hand;
- As white as a lily, as fair as the rose,
- But not so fair as you may suppose."
-
- L. Q. A. "Turn, ladies, turn!"
-
- (Whirl round.) "The more we turn the more we may,
- Queen Anne was born on Midsummer day."
-
- L. Q. A. "The king sent me three letters, I never read them all,
- So pray, Miss ----, deliver the ball."
-
-
-Should she have guessed correctly, all the party curtsey, and say--
-
-
- "The ball is yours and not ours,
- You must go to the garden and gather the flowers."
-
-
-And the child who had the ball takes the queen's seat, whilst she
-retires with the others; but should she have made a mistake, the same
-party go out again, saying as they curtsey--
-
-
- "The ball is yours and not ours,
- (Repeat) We," etc.
-
-
-Mr. Halliwell Phillips, in his book before quoted, has shorter versions
-of this, with different rhymes.
-
-Another game which has descended from generation to generation is--
-
-
-
-
-OLD WITCH.
-
-The children chose from their party an old witch (who is supposed
-to hide herself) and a mother. The other players are the daughters,
-and are called by the names of the week. The mother says that she is
-going to market, and will bring home for each the thing that she most
-wishes for. Upon this they all name something. Then, after telling them
-upon no account to allow anyone to come into the house, she gives her
-children in charge of her eldest daughter Sunday, and goes away. In a
-moment, the witch makes her appearance, and asks to borrow some trifle.
-
-Sunday at first refuses, but, after a short parley, goes into the next
-room to fetch the required article. In her absence the witch steals the
-youngest of the children (Saturday), and runs off with her. Sunday,
-on her return, seeing that the witch has left, thinks there must be
-something wrong, and counts the children, saying, "Monday, Tuesday,"
-etc., until she comes to Saturday, who is missing. She then pretends
-to cry, wrings her hands, and sobs out--"Mother will beat me when
-she comes home."
-
-On the mother's return, she, too, counts the children, and,
-finding Saturday gone, asks Sunday where she is. Sunday answers,
-"Oh, mother! an old witch called, and asked to borrow ----, and,
-whilst I was fetching it, she ran off with Saturday." The mother
-scolds and beats her, tells her to be more careful in the future,
-and again sets off for the market. This is repeated until all the
-children but Sunday have been stolen. Then the mother and Sunday,
-hand in hand, go off to search for them. They meet the old witch,
-who has them all crouching down in a line behind her.
-
-Mother. Have you seen my children?
-
-O. W. Yes! I think, by Eastgate.
-
-The mother and Sunday retire, as if to go there, but, not finding them,
-again return to the witch, who this time sends them to Westgate,
-then to Southgate and Northgate. At last one of the children pops
-her head up over the witch's shoulder, and cries out, "Here we are,
-mother." Then follows this dialogue:--
-
-M. I see my children, may I go in?
-
-O. W. No! your boots are too dirty.
-
-M. I will take them off.
-
-O. W. Your stockings are too dirty.
-
-M. I will take them off.
-
-O. W. Your feet are too dirty.
-
-M. I will cut them off.
-
-O. W. Then the blood will stream over the floor.
-
-The mother at this loses patience, and pushes her way in, the witch
-trying in vain to keep her out. She, with all her children, then chase
-the witch until they catch her; when they pretend to bind her hand
-and foot, put her on a pile, and burn her, the children fanning the
-imaginary flames with their pinafores. Sometimes the dialogue after
-"Here we are, mother," is omitted, and the witch is at once chased.
-
-Mr. Halliwell Phillips calls this the "Game of the Gipsy," and gives
-some rhymes to which it is played, but I have never heard them in
-this county.
-
-The next, a game quite unknown to me, I took down from the lips of
-a little girl in West Cornwall, in 1882, who told me it was a great
-favourite with her and her playmates.
-
-
-
-
-GHOST AT THE WELL.
-
-One of the party is chosen for ghost (if dressed in white so much
-the better); she hides in a corner; the other children are a mother
-and daughters. The eldest daughter says:
-
-"Mother, mother, please give me a piece of bread and butter."
-
-M. Let me (or "leave me") look at your hands, child. Why, they are
-very dirty.
-
-E. D. I will go to the well and wash them.
-
-She goes to the corner, the ghost peeps up, and she rushes back,
-crying out--
-
-"Mother! mother! I have seen a ghost."
-
-M. Nonsense, child! it was only your father's nightshirt I have washed
-and hung out to dry. Go again.
-
-The child goes, and the same thing happens. She returns, saying--
-
-"Yes, mother! I have seen a ghost."
-
-M. Nonsense, child! we will take a candle, and all go together to
-search for it. The mother picks up a twig for a candle, and they
-set off. When they come near to the ghost, she appears from her
-hiding-place, mother and children rush away in different directions;
-the ghost chases them until she has caught one, who in her turn
-becomes ghost.
-
-
-
-
-MOTHER, MOTHER, MAY I GO OUT TO PLAY?
-
-I thought this game was a thing of the past, but I came on some
-children playing it in the streets of Penzance, in 1883. It may be
-played by any number, and, as in the two former games, one is chosen
-for mother. This is the dialogue:
-
-C. Mother, mother, may I (or we) go out to play?
-
-M. No, child! no, child! not for the day.
-
-C. Why, mother? why, mother? I won't stay long.
-
-M. Make three pretty courtesies, and away! begone!
-
-C. One for mammy, one for daddy, one for Uncle John.
-
-The child, as she mentions the names, spreads out the skirts of her
-dress and courtesies, after which she retires to a little distance,
-and then returns.
-
-M. Where, child! where, child! have you been all the day?
-
-C. Up to granny's.
-
-M. What have you been doing there?
-
-The answer to this is often "Washing dolls' clothes," but anything
-may be mentioned.
-
-M. What did she give you?
-
-The reply is again left to the child's fancy.
-
-M. Where's my share?
-
-C. The cat ate it. What's in that box, mother?
-
-M. Twopence, my child.
-
-C. What for, mother?
-
-M. To buy a stick to beat you, and a rope to hang you, my child.
-
-The child at this tries to snatch at the box, the mother chases her
-until she has caught her (when there are several children, until she
-has caught one), she then pretends to beat her, and puts her hands
-around her neck as if she were going to hang her.
-
-
-
-
-HERE I SIT ON A COLD GREEN BANK.
-
-The children form a ring around one of the party, who sits in the
-middle, and says:
-
-
- "Here I sit on a cold green bank,
- On a cold and frosty morning."
-
-
-Then those in the circle dance round her, singing:
-
-
- "We'll send a young man (or woman) to take you away,
- To take you away, to take you away;
- We'll send a young man to take you away,
- On a cold and frosty morning."
-
- Child. "Pray tell me what his name shall be?"
-
-
-Or,
-
-
- "Pray, whom will you send to take me away?"
-
- Circle. "We'll send Mr. ---- to take you away."
-
-
-This is repeated three times with the refrain, "On a cold," etc. after
-which the dancing and singing cease, and the child is asked, "Sugar,
-sweet, or vinegar, sour?" Her answer is always taken in a contrary
-sense, and sung, as before, three times, whilst the children circle
-round. The one in the middle then rises to her feet. The boy (or
-girl) named advances and kisses her, they change places, and the game
-begins again.
-
-
-
-
-JOGGLE ALONG.
-
-This is a very favourite open-air game. To play it there must be an
-uneven number. He (or she) stands in the middle, whilst the others,
-arm in arm, circle around him singing:--
-
-
- "Come all ye young men, with your wicked ways,
- Sow all your wild oats in your youthful days,
- That we may live happy, that we may live happy,
- That we may live happy when we grow old.
- The day is far spent, the night's coming on,
- Give us your arm, and we'll 'joggle along.'"
- That we may live happy, etc., etc.
-
-
-At the words "joggle along," they all drop the arm of the person they
-are leading, and try to catch the arm of the player in front of them,
-whilst the middle man tries at the same time to get a partner. Should
-he succeed, the player left without one takes his place. (Repeat.)
-
-I am indebted to the Rev. S. Rundle, vicar of Godolphin, for another
-set of words to this game, which he calls--
-
-
-
-
-THE JOLLY MILLER,
-
-And, under this title, a lady, two years since, saw some children
-playing it at St. Ives, in Cornwall.
-
-
- "There was a jolly miller, lived by himself,
- By grinding corn he got his wealth;
- One hand in the upper, the other in the bag,
- As the wheel went round, they all called 'Grab.'"
-
-
-In this county "Tom Tiddler's Ground" is known as "Mollish's Land,"
-"Cat and Mouse" as "The Duffan Ring," and "Blind Man's Buff" as
-"Blind Buck-a-Davy." To this last the following words are repeated,
-which I have never seen in print. One of the players takes the blind
-person by the shoulders, and says:
-
-"How many horses has your father got in his stables?"
-
-A. Three.
-
-"What colour are they?"
-
-A. Red, white, and grey.
-
-(Whirling him round.) "Then turn about, and twist about, and catch
-whom you may."
-
-To make barley bread (in other districts, "Cockley bread") this rhyme
-is used in West Cornwall:--
-
-
- "Mother has called, mother has said,
- 'Make haste home, and make barley bread.'
- Up with your heels, down with your head,
- That is the way to make barley bread."
-
-
-
-
-BOBBY BINGO.
-
-Of this, which is a very common game at school-treats in some parts
-of West Cornwall, I have only lately, through the kindness of the
-Rev. S. Rundle, succeeded in getting a description. He saw some
-children, in 1884, playing it in his parish (Godolphin, Helston). A
-ring is formed, into the middle of which goes a child holding a stick,
-the others with joined hands run round in a circle, singing--
-
-
- "There was a farmer had a dog,
- His name was Bobby Bingo;
- B. I. N. G. O.,
- His name was Bobby Bingo."
-
-
-When they have finished singing they cease running, whilst the one
-in the centre pointing with his stick asks them in turn to spell
-Bingo. If they all spell it correctly they again move round singing;
-but, should either of them make a mistake, he or she has to take the
-place of the middle man.
-
-
-
-
-WEIGH THE BUTTER, WEIGH THE CHEESE,
-
-is rather dangerous, and now but rarely played. Two children stand
-back to back with their arms locked. One stoops as low as he can,
-supporting the other on his back, and says, "Weigh the butter;" he
-rises, and the second stoops in his turn with "Weigh the cheese." The
-first repeats with "Weigh the old woman;" and it ends by the second,
-with "Down to her knees."
-
-
-
-
-LIBBETY, LIBBETY, LIBBETY-LAT.
-
-A game of a very different character, which pleases young children. The
-child stands before a hassock, and as if he were going up-stairs puts
-on it first his right and then his left foot, gradually quickening
-his steps, keeping time to the words:--
-
-
- "Libbety, libbety, libbety-lat,
- Who can do this? and who can do that?
- And who can do anything better than that?"
-
-
-This ends the games in which children of both sexes join. I must next
-give those exclusively for boys. I will begin by a very old one:
-
-
-
-
-SHIP SAIL
-
-is a game usually played with marbles; one boy puts his hand into his
-trousers pocket and takes out as many marbles as he feels inclined;
-he closes his fingers over them, and holds out his hand with the palm
-down to the opposite player, saying, "Ship sail, sail fast. How many
-men on board?" A guess is made by his opponent; if less, he has to
-give as many marbles as will make up the true number; if more, as
-many as he said over. But should the guess be correct he takes them,
-and then in his turn says "Ship sail," etc.
-
-
-
-
-BUCK SHEE, BUCK,
-
-is another game of chance, and is generally played by three boys in
-the following way. One stands with his back to a wall, the second
-stoops down with his head against the stomach of the first boy,
-"forming a back," the third jumps on it, and holds up his hand with
-the fingers distended, saying--
-
-
- "Buck shee, buck, shee buck,
- How many fingers do I hold up?"
-
-
-Should the stooper guess correctly, they all change places and the
-jumper forms the back. Another and not such a rough way of playing
-this game is for the guesser to stand with his face towards a wall,
-keeping his eyes shut.
-
-Leap-frog is known in Cornwall as "Leap the long-mare," and there is
-a curious variation of it called--
-
-
-
-
-ACCROSHAY.
-
-A cap or small article is placed on the back of the stooping boy
-by each in turn as he jumps over him. The first as he jumps says
-"Accroshay," the second "Ashotay," the third "Assheflay," and the last
-"Lament, lament, Leleeman's (or Leleena's) war." The boy who in jumping
-knocks off either of the things has to take the place of the stooper.
-
-
-
-
-BUCKEY-HOW.
-
-For this the boys divide into sides; one "stops at home," the other
-goes off to a certain distance agreed on beforehand and shouts
-"Buckey-how." The boys "at home" then give chase, and, when they
-succeed in catching an adversary, they bring him home and there he
-stays until all on his side are caught, when they in turn become
-the chasers.
-
-
-
-
-CUTTERS AND TRUCKLERS (SMUGGLERS).
-
-A remembrance of the old smuggling days. The boys divide into two
-parties; the "trucklers" try to reach some given point before the
-cutter catches them.
-
-
-
-
-MARBLE PLAYING
-
-is a favourite recreation with the young fishermen in West Cornwall;
-"Pits" and "Towns" are the common games. Boys who hit their nails are
-looked on with great contempt, and are said "to fire Kibby." When two
-are partners and one in playing accidentally hits the other's marble,
-he cries out "no custance," meaning that he has a right to put back
-the marble struck; should he fail to do so, it would be considered
-out of the game. To steal marbles is "to strakey."
-
-To make ducks and drakes with a stone on the water is in Cornwall
-called "Tic-Tac-Mollard."
-
-
-
-
-COCK-HAW.
-
-This game is, I believe, known in other counties as "Cob-nut," but
-in Cornwall the boys give the name of "Victor-nut" to the fruit of
-the common hazel, and play it to the words:
-
-
- "Cock-haw! First blaw! Up hat! Down cap! Victor!"
-
-
-The nut that cracks another is called a "cock battler."
-
-Children under the title of "Cock battler" often in country walks
-play a variation of Cock-haw with the "Hoary plantain," which they
-hold by the tough stem about two inches from the head; each in turn
-tries to knock off the head of his opponent's flower.
-
-
-
-
-WINKY-EYE.
-
-A rural game, played in the spring. An egg taken from a bird's nest
-is placed on the ground, at some distance off--the number of paces
-having been previously fixed. Blindfolded, one after the other,
-the players attempt with a stick to hit and break it.
-
-
-
-
-UPPA, UPPA HOLYE (pronounced oopa, oopa holly).
-
-When the writer was a boy, the following were the words used in the
-boys' game of fox-hunting. When the hounds (the boys) were "at fault"
-the leader cried--
-
-
- "Uppa, uppa holye,
- If you don't speak
- My dogs shan't folly."
-
- (East Cornwall. F. W. P. Jago, M.B., Plymouth.)
-
-
-Boys here, as probably elsewhere, are very fond of hitting each other
-and then running away, shouting--
-
-
- "Last blaw, never graw,
- For seven years to come."
-
-
-The old Cornish game of "Hurling" I have already described under the
-head of "Feasten Customs." Cricket, football, and lawn tennis are of
-course played in Cornwall.
-
-
-
-
-TOM TODDY,
-
-an old drinking game, now I expect known to but few. Each person in
-succession has to drink a glass of beer or spirits, on the top of
-which a piece of lighted candle has been put, whilst the others sing--
-
-
- "Tom Toddy es come hoam, come hoam,
- Tom Toddy es come hoam,
- Weth es eyes burnt, and his nawse burnt,
- And es eye-lids burnt also.
- Tom Toddy es," etc.
-
-
-Specimens of Cornish Provincial Dialect.--Uncle Jan Trenoodle.
-
-
-Of the old dance "Letterpooch," the name only is remembered.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-BALLADS, Etc.
-
-
-There are a few well-known old Cornish ballads, which have already been
-printed and reprinted; my apology for again introducing them here, must
-be, that a work of this kind would not be complete without them. "John
-Dory," "An old ballad on a Duke of Cornwall's Daughter," "The Stout
-Cripple of Cornwall," and "The Baarley Mow," may all be found in
-Specimens of Cornish Provincial Dialect, by Uncle Jan Trenoodle
-(Sandys); "Tweedily, Tweedily, Twee,"--Through Rev. S. Rundle, in
-Transactions Penzance Natural History and Antiquarian Society, 1887-88;
-"Ye sexes give ear to my fancy," T. Q. Couch, Polperro, Cornwall; and
-"A fox went forth one moonshining night," Edward Pole, in Notes and
-Queries, 1854; "The Long Hundred," a song of Numbers, W. Pengelly,
-Notes and Queries, 1873; "When shall we be married?" which I heard
-many years ago in Scilly, and of which I only remember three verses,
-I have never seen in print.
-
-The Rev. S. Baring Gould, M.A., is now making a collection of the
-"Traditional Ballads and Songs of the West of England." Part I. has
-been published; it contains "Sweet Nightingale," said to be a favourite
-with the miners of Cornwall and Devon; this must be in North Cornwall,
-as the nightingale is unknown in the western part of the county,
-scared away, according to the country-folk, "by the sweet singing of
-its men and women." And "The Hunting of Arscott of Tetcot," of which
-as it has been recast, I will only transcribe the first four lines.
-
-
- "In the month of November, in the year fifty-two (1652),
- Three jolly fox-hunters, all sons of the blue,
- Came o'er from Pencarrow, not fearing a wet coat,
- To have some diversion, with Arscott of Tetcot," etc.
-
-
-"Trelawny" was for many years supposed to be a genuine old Cornish
-ballad, and as such was accepted and admired by several well-known
-literary men; but it was written by the late Rev. R. Hawker, Vicar
-of Morwenstowe; only the lines--
-
-
- "And shall Trelawny die?
- Here's twenty thousand Cornishmen,
- Will know the reason why!"--
-
-
-being ancient.
-
-
-
-
-JOHN DORY.
-
-
- As it fell on a holy day,
- And upon a holytide a:
- John Dory brought him an ambling nag,
- To Paris for to ride a.
-
- And when John Dory to Paris was come,
- A little before the gate a;
- John Dory was fitted, the porter was witted,
- To let him in thereat a.
-
- The first man that John Dory did meet,
- Was good King John of France a;
- John Dory could well of his courtesie,
- But fell down in a trance a.
-
- A pardon, a pardon, my liege and my king,
- For my merry men and for me a:
- And all the churls in merry England
- I'll bring them bound to thee a.
-
- And Nichol was then a Cornish man
- A little beside Bohyde a;
- He manned him forth a goodly bark,
- With fifty good oars of a side a.
-
- Run up, my boy, into the main top,
- And look what thou can'st spy a;
- Who, ho! who, ho! a good ship do I see,
- I trow it be John Dory a.
-
- They hoist their sails both top and top,
- The mizen and all was tried a,
- And every man stood to his lot,
- Whatever should betide a.
-
- The roaring cannons then were plied,
- And dub-a-dub went the drum a:
- The braying trumpets loud they cried,
- To courage both all and some a.
-
- The grappling hooks were brought at length,
- The brown bill and the sword a;
- John Dory at length, for all his strength,
- Was clapt fast under board a.
-
-
-This song is mentioned by Carew in his Survey of Cornwall; in it he
-says--"the prowesse of one Nicholas, sonne to a widdow neere Foy is
-deskanted upon." (He was one of the "Fowey gallants.")
-
-
-
-
-AN OLD BALLAD,
-
-ON A DUKE OF CORNWALL'S DAUGHTER;
-
-WHO AFTER HER MARRIAGE TO A KING OF ALBION, WAS DIVORCED FOR THE SAKE
-OF A FAVOURITE MISTRESS; AND HER EXEMPLARY REVENGE ON THEM BOTH.
-
-
- When Humber in his wrathful rage
- King Albanact in field had slain,
- Whose bloody broils for to assuage,
- King Locrin then applied his pain;
- And with a host of Britons stout,
- At length he found king Humber out:
-
- At vantage great he met him then,
- And with his host beset him so,
- That he destroyed his warlike men,
- And Humber's power did overthrow;
- And Humber, which for fear did fly,
- Leapt into a river desp'rately;
-
- And being drowned in the deep,
- He left a lady there alive,
- Which sadly did lament and weep,
- For fear they should her life deprive.
- But by her face that was so fair,
- The king was caught in Cupid's snare:
-
- He took this lady to his love,
- Who secretly did keep it still;
- So that the queen did quickly prove,
- The king did bear her most good will:
- Which though by wedlock late begun,
- He had by her a gallant son.
-
- Queen Guendolin was griev'd in mind,
- To see the king was alter'd so:
- At length the cause she chanc'd to find,
- Which brought her to much bitter woe.
- For Estrild was his joy (God wot),
- By whom a daughter he begot.
-
- The Duke of Cornwall being dead,
- The father of that gallant queen:
- The king with lust being overlaid,
- His lawful wife he cast off clean:
- Who with her dear and tender son,
- For succour did to Cornwall run.
-
- Then Locrin crowned Estrild bright,
- And made of her his lawful wife:
- With her which was his heart's delight,
- He sweetly thought to lead his life.
- Thus Guendolin, as one forlorn,
- Did hold her wretched life in scorn.
-
- But when the Cornish men did know
- The great abuse she did endure,
- With her a number great did go,
- Which she by prayer did procure.
- In battle then they march'd along,
- For to redress this grievous wrong.
-
- And near a river called Store,
- The king with all his host she met;
- Where both the armies fought full sore,
- But yet the queen the field did get:
- Yet ere they did the conquest gain,
- The king was with an arrow slain.
-
- Then Guendolin did take in hand,
- Until her son was come to age,
- The government of all the land;
- But first her fury to assuage,
- She did command her soldiers wild,
- To drown both Estrild and her child.
-
- Incontinent then they did bring
- Fair Estrild to the river-side,
- And Sabrine, daughter to a king,
- Whom Guendolin could not abide;
- Who being bound together fast,
- Into the river they were cast:
-
- And ever since that running stream
- Wherein the ladies drowned were,
- Is called Severn through the realm,
- Because that Sabrine died there.
- Thus those that did to lewdness bend,
- Were brought unto a woful end.
-
-
-
-
-YE SEXES GIVE EAR.
-
-
- Ye sexes give ear to my fancy;
- In the praise of good women I sing.
- It is not of Doll, Kate, nor Nancy,
- The mate of a clown nor a king.
-
- Old Adam when he was created,
- Was lord of the universe round;
- But his happiness was not completed,
- Until that a helpmate was found.
-
- He had all things for food that was wanting,
- Which give us content in this life;
- He had horses and foxes for hunting,
- Which many love more than a wife.
-
- He'd a garden so planted by nature,
- As man can't produce in this life;
- But yet the all-wise great Creator
- Saw still that he wanted a wife.
-
- Old Adam was laid in a slumber,
- And there he lost part of his side;
- And when he awoke, in great wonder
- He beheld his most beautiful bride.
-
- With transport he gazed all on her,
- His happiness then was complete;
- And he blessed the bountiful Donor,
- Who on him bestowed a mate.
-
- She was not took out of his head,
- To reign or to triumph o'er man:
- She was not took out of his feet,
- By man to be trampled upon.
-
- But she was took out of his side,
- His equal and partner to be:
- Though they are united in one,
- Still the man is the top of the tree.
-
- Then let not the fair be despised
- By man, as she's part of himself;
- For a woman by Adam was prized
- More than the whole world with its pelf.
-
- Then man without woman's a beggar,
- Tho' of the whole world he's possessed;
- And a beggar that has a good woman,
- With more than the world he is blest.
-
-
-
-
-A FOX WENT FORTH.
-
-
- A fox went forth one moonshining night,
- And he prayed to the moon to give him good light,
- For he'd many miles to trot that night,
- Before he got home to his den O,
- His den O, his den O.
- For he'd many miles to trot that night,
- Before he got home to his den O.
-
- And when he came unto a wood,
- As on his hinder legs he stood,
- A little bit of goose will do me good,
- Before I get home to my den O.
- My den O, my den O.
-
- So off he set to a farmer's yard,
- The ducks and the geese were all of them scared;
- The best of you all shall grease my beard,
- Before I get home to my den O.
-
- He seized the great goose by the neck
- And flung it all across his back,
- The young ones cried out, quack, quack, quack,
- And the fox went home to his den O.
-
- Old mother Slipper-slopper jumped out of bed,
- She open'd the window and popp'd out her head,--
- John! John! John! the great goose is dead.
- And the fox has gone home to his den O.
-
- So John went up unto a hill,
- And blew his horn both loud and shrill;
- Says the fox This is very pretty music, still
- I'd rather be safe in my den O.
-
- But when he came unto the den,
- Where he had young ones, nine and ten,
- Crying out, Daddy Fox, you must go there again,
- For we think its a lucky town O.
-
- The fox and his wife they had such a strife,
- They never ate a better goose in all their life;
- They tore it abroad, without fork or knife,
- And the little ones pick'd the bones O.
-
-
-
-
-TWEEDILY, TWEEDILY, TWEE (North Cornwall).
-
-
- There was an old couple and they were poor;
- They lived in a house that had but one door,
- Tweedily, tweedily, twee.
-
- Now this old man went far from home,
- And left his old wife to stay at home,
- Tweedily, tweedily, twee.
-
- Now this old man came home at last,
- And found his door and windows fast,
- Tweedily, tweedily, twee.
-
- Ah, I've bin sick whilst you've gone,
- If you'd bin in the garden you could've heard me groan.
- Tweedily, tweedily, twee.
-
- An I'm sorry for that, cries he;
- An I'm sorry for that, cries he;
- Tweedily, tweedily, twee.
-
- Then pluck me an apple from yonder tree,
- That will I willingly do, cries he;
- That will I willingly do, cries he;
- Tweedily, tweedily, twee.
-
- Pop goes the ladder, and down goes he,
- An that's cleverly done, cries she;
- An that's cleverly done, cries she;
- Tweedily, tweedily, twee.
-
-
-
-
-WHEN SHALL WE BE MARRIED?
-
-
- When shall we be married, Willy, my pretty lad?
- To-morrow if you think it fit.
- Not before to-morrow, Willy, my pretty lad?
- Would you have me be married to-night?
- I should think the girl was mad.
-
- What shall we have for dinner, Willy, my pretty lad?
- Roast beef and plum pudding if you think it fit.
- Shan't we have anything else, Willy, my pretty lad?
- Would you have me to spend all my money?
- I should think the girl was mad.
-
- Who shall we have to dinner, Willy, my pretty lad?
- Father and mother, if you think it fit.
- Shan't we have anyone else, Willy, my pretty lad?
- Would you have me ask the king and queen?
- I should think the girl was mad.
-
-
-
-
-SWEET NIGHTINGALE.
-
-
- My sweetheart, come along,
- Don't you hear the fond song,
- The sweet notes of the nightingale flow?
- Don't you hear the fond tale
- Of the sweet nightingale,
- As she sings in the valley below?
-
- Pretty Betty, don't fail,
- For I'll carry your pail
- Safe home to your cot as we go;
- You shall hear the fond tale
- Of a sweet nightingale,
- As she sings in the valley below.
-
- Pray let me alone,
- I have hands of my own,
- Along with you, Sir, I'll not go,
- To hear the fond tale
- Of the sweet nightingale,
- As she sings in the valley below.
-
- Pray sit yourself down
- With me on the ground,
- On this bank where the primroses grow;
- You shall hear the fond tale
- Of the sweet nightingale,
- As she sings in the valley below.
-
- The couple agreed,
- And were married with speed,
- And soon to the church did they go;
- No more is she afraid
- For to walk in the shade,
- Nor sit in those valleys below.
-
-
-
-
-THE STOUT CRIPPLE OF CORNWALL.
-
-WHEREIN IS SHEWED HIS DISSOLUTE LIFE AND DESERVED DEATH.
-
-
- Of a stout cripple that kept the high-way,
- And begg'd for his living all time of the day,
- A story I'll tell you that pleasant shall be,
- The Cripple of Cornwall surnamed was he.
-
- He crept on his hands and his knees up and down,
- In a torn jacket and a ragged torn gown,
- For he had never a leg to the knee;
- The Cripple of Cornwall surnamed was he.
-
- He was of a stomach courageous and stout,
- For he had no cause to complain of the gout;
- To go upon stilts most cunning was he,
- With a staff on his neck most gallant to see.
-
- Yea, no good fellowship would he forsake,
- Were it in secret a horse for to take;
- His stool he kept close in a hollow tree,
- That stood from the city a mile, two, or three.
-
- Thus all the day long he begg'd for relief,
- And all the night long he played the false thief;
- For seven years together this custom kept he,
- And no man knew him such a person to be.
-
- There were few graziers went on the way,
- But unto the Cripple for passage did pay,
- And every brave merchant that he did descry,
- He emptied their purses ere they did pass by.
-
- The noble Lord Courtney, both gallant and bold,
- Rode forth with great plenty of silver and gold,
- At Exeter there a purchase to pay,
- But that the false Cripple the journey did stay.
-
- For why, the false Cripple heard tidings of late,
- As he sat for alms at the nobleman's gate;
- This is, quoth the Cripple, a booty for me,
- And I'll follow it closely as closely may be.
-
- Then to his companions the matter he mov'd,
- Which their false actions before had prov'd;
- They make themselves ready, and deeply they swear
- The money's their own before they come there.
-
- Upon his two stilts the Cripple did mount,
- To have the best share it was his full account,
- All clothed in canvass down to the ground,
- He took up his place his mates with him round.
-
- Then came the Lord Courtney with half-a-score men,
- Yet little suspecting these thieves in their den,
- And they perceiving them come to their hand,
- In a dark evening bid them to stand.
-
- Deliver thy purse, quoth the Cripple, with speed,
- We be good fellows and therefore have need,
- Not so, quoth Lord Courtney, but this I'll tell ye,
- Win it and wear it, else get none of me.
-
- With that the Lord Courtney stood in his defence,
- And so did his servants, but, ere they went hence,
- Two of the true men were slain in this fight,
- And four of the thieves were put to the flight.
-
- And while for their safeguard they run thus away,
- The jolly bold Cripple did hold them in play,
- And with his pike-staff he wounded them so,
- As they were unable to run or to go.
-
- With fighting the Lord Courtney was out of breath,
- And most of his servants were wounded to death,
- Then came other horsemen riding so fast,
- The Cripple was forced to fly at the last.
-
- And over a river that run there beside,
- Which was very deep, and eighteen foot wide,
- With his long staff and his stilts leaped he,
- And shifted himself in an old hollow tree;
-
- Then throughout the city was hue and cry made,
- To have these thieves apprehended and staid;
- The Cripple he creeps on his hands and his knees,
- And in the high-way great passing he sees.
-
- And as they came riding he begging doth say,
- O give me one penny, good masters, I pray,
- And thus unto Exeter creeps he along,
- No man suspecting that he had done wrong.
-
- Anon the Lord Courtney he spies in the street,
- He comes unto him and kisses his feet,
- God save your honor and keep you from ill,
- And from the hands of your enemies still.
-
- Amen, quoth Lord Courtney, and therewith threw down
- Unto the poor Cripple an English crown,
- Away went the Cripple, and thus he did think,
- Five hundred pounds more will make me to drink.
-
- In vain that hue and cry it was made,
- They found none of them though the country was laid,
- But this grieved the Cripple night and day,
- That he so unluckily missed of his play.
-
- Nine hundred pounds this Cripple had got
- By begging and thieving, so good was his lot;
- A thousand pound he would make it, he said,
- And then he would give over his trade.
-
- But as he striv'd his mind to fulfil,
- In following his actions so lewd and so ill,
- At last he was taken the law to suffice,
- Condemned and hanged at Exeter 'size.
-
- Which made all men amazed to see
- That such an impudent cripple as he
- Should venture himself such actions as they,
- To rob in such sort upon the high-way.
-
-
-
-
-THE BAARLEY MOW (a harvest song).
-
-
- Here's a health to the baarley mow, my braave boys,
- Here's a health to the baarley mow.
- We'll drenk et out of the jolly brown boul,
- Here's a health to the baarley mow.
-
- Chorus.
-
- Here's a health to the baarley mow, my braave boys,
- Here's a health to the baarley mow.
-
- We'll drenk et out of the nepperkin, [37] boys,
- Here's a health to the baarley mow.
- The nepperkin, and the jolly brown boul.
-
- Chorus.--Here's a health, etc.
-
- We'll drenk et out of the quaarter pint, boys,
- Here's a health to the baarley mow.
- The quaarter pint, nepperkin, and the jolly brown boul.
-
- Chorus.--Here's a health, etc.
-
-
-This goes on through very many verses until all the different parts
-of liquid measure are exhausted; the three last verses are--
-
-
- We'll drenk et out of the well, my braave boys,
- Here's a health to the baarley mow.
- The well, the hoosghead, [38] the haalf hoosghead, ainker, [39]
- the haalf ainker, gallon, the pottle, the quaart, the
- pint, the haalf a pint, quaarter pint, nepperkin,
- and the jolly brown boul.
-
- Chorus.--Here's a health, etc.
-
- We'll drenk et out of the rever, my boys,
- Here's a health to the baarley mow.
- The rever, the well, etc.
-
- Chorus.--Here's a health, etc.
-
- We'll drenk et out of the ocean, my boys,
- Here's a health to the baarley mow.
- The ocean, the rever, the well, etc.
-
- Chorus.--Here's a health, etc.
-
-
-"At Looe, in East Cornwall, it was usual forty years ago, and
-probably it is still, for labourers to sing 'The Long Hundred'
-(a song of numbers), when throwing ballast with shovels from a sand
-barge into a ship. The object was said to be threefold; 'to keep time
-(i.e. work simultaneously), to prevent anyone from shirking his share
-of work, and to cheer themselves for the labour,' which was by no
-means light. A shovelful of ballast was delivered by every man with
-each line of the song, which ran thus:--
-
-
-
-
-THE LONG HUNDRED.
-
-
- 'There goes one.
- One there is gone.
- Oh, rare one!
- And many more to come
- To make up the sum
- Of the hundred so long.
-
- 'There goes,' etc. on to twenty.
-
-
-"The song, it will be seen, consisted of twenty six-line stanzas;
-hence when it was completed, each man had thrown on board one hundred
-and twenty, i.e. 'a long hundred,' shovelfuls of ballast. After a
-pause both the song and the ballasting were resumed, and so on to
-the end."--W. Pengelly.
-
-There are a great many jingling local rhymes and modern dialect poems
-not worth recording; I will only quote two of the first:--
-
-
-
-
-ELICOMPANE.
-
-
- "What is your name?--Elicompane.
- Who gave you that name?--My master and dame.
- How long will you keep it?--As long as I like it.
- How long will that be?--As long as me and my master agree."
-
-
-Polwhele calls a tomtit "Elicompane;" and says "There is a vulgar
-tradition that it is a bird by day and a toad by night."
-
-
-
-
-UNCLE JAN DORY.
-
-
- "I'll tell 'ee a story 'bout Uncle Jan Dory,
- Who lived by the side of a well,
- He went to a 'plomp' (pump), and got himself drunk,
- And under the table he fell."
-
-
-The Cornish peasantry of the last century were very fond of riddles,
-but most of them will not bear repetition; they are (as well as many
-of their sayings and rhymes) much too broad for the taste of this
-generation, and would only be tolerated in the days when "a spade
-was called a spade." There are two exceptions that I know worth
-transcribing; one has already appeared with its answer, through
-the Rev. S. Rundle, in Transactions Penzance Natural History and
-Antiquarian Society, 1885-86.
-
-
- "Riddle me! riddle me right!
- Guess where I was to last Saturday night.
- Up in the old ivy tree,
- Two old foxes under me,
- Digging a grave to bury me.
- First I heard the wind blow,
- Then I heard the cock crow,
- Then I saw the chin-champ chawing up his bridle,
- Then I saw the work-man working hisself idle."
-
-
-Answer.--A young woman made an appointment to meet her sweetheart;
-arriving first at the place, she climbed into an ivy-covered tree
-to await his coming. He came in company with another man, and not
-seeing her "the two old foxes" began to dig a grave, in which from
-her hiding-place she heard that after murdering they intended putting
-her. The "chin-champ" was the horse on which they rode away, when they
-failed to discover her. "Working hisself idle," is working in vain.
-
-
- "As I went over London bridge
- Upon a cloudy day,
- I met a fellow, clothed in yellow,
- I took him up and sucked his blood,
- And threw his skin away."
-
-
-What was he? Answer.--An orange.
-
-With a nonsensical acrostic on the word Finis, well known in the
-beginning of this century, I must end this (I fear) long, rambling
-work.
-
-
- "F--for Francis,
- I--for Jancis,
- N--for Nich'las Bony;
- I--for John the water-man,
- S--for Sally Stony."
-
-
- M. A. Courtney.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ADDENDA.
-
-
-Helston Borough Bounds, page 20.--At the close of this ceremony eleven
-dozen buns are thrown amongst the crowd to be scrambled for. One is
-always reserved for the Mayor.
-
-Wells, page 65.--Some wells in Cornwall (not holy) were famed for
-their wonderful virtues: I will mention two. The water of the first,
-which was west of Penzance, was esteemed a sovereign cure for sore
-eyes. People from far and near visited it, and even carried away the
-water in bottles. It was, however, best if possible to walk to the well
-before breakfast, and there bathe the eyes. The second was at Castle
-Chûn, between Penzance and St. Just; its water endowed the drinkers
-with perpetual youth. Both have dried up within the last fifty years.
-
-Ghosts, page 99.--The following quaint story was told me by a girl
-whose grandmother was the friend mentioned.
-
-In the last century there lived in Trezelah (a hamlet in the
-parish of Gulval, near Penzance), a widow who had been deprived of
-her rights. Walking one day in the fields near her home she saw a
-strange spotted dog who seemed to know her; she met it a second time,
-and decided when she next went out to take a friend with her. Again
-she saw it (her friend did not), and said "In the Name of the Lord,
-speak to me." It changed into her husband, who told her to be ready at
-a certain time, when he would fetch her. Soon after, her friend being
-in the house, the woman, who was giving her children their supper, said
-"The time is come, I must be gone;" she then put on her sun-bonnet and
-went out. She was away about an hour, when she suddenly appeared with
-a great noise, as if someone had hurled her in through the door. Her
-story was that her husband had taken her up in his arms and carried
-her over the tree-tops as far as Ludgvan Church, where he deposited
-her on the Church-stile, from whence she saw a great many spirits,
-some good and some bad. The latter wanted her to join them, but her
-husband bade her remain where she was. What they told her was never
-known; but by their aid she got back her rights. Then her husband
-bore her home again by the way they had come; but before he parted
-from her said "I must take something from you; either your eyesight,
-or your hearing." She preferred losing the latter, and from that hour
-could never hear a word. One of her shoes that in her flight through
-the air had caught on a tree-top, seven years after was placed on
-her window-sill.
-
-Farmers' Superstitions, page 141.--"If you can throw fire over a
-witch you will break the spell." "Bleeding a white hen on a millstone
-prevents danger from the mill; for they say a mill will have blood
-every seven years."
-
-Charms, page 144.--"Some were provided with little bags of earth,
-teeth, or bones taken from a grave." "Most of the very religious
-folks had a verse of scripture, concluded with the comfortable
-assurance that by the help of the Lord the white witch hopes to do
-them good."--Bottrell.
-
-Epilepsy, page 154.--Another authority says that the thirty pence
-collected by thirty young men at the Church door is deposited for a
-half-crown, from which the centre is cut. The flat ring left is worn
-by the epileptic person day and night.--Through Rev. A. H. Malan, M.A.
-
- "The Bundle of Charms," Rev. A. H. Malan, M. A., is unavoidably
- omitted.
-
-Burning the Witch, page 180.--Still played. A pole about five feet
-long is placed with its ends resting on low stools, or bottles. On
-this a person sits lengthways with crossed ankles. He (or she) holds
-in his hand a long stick with a slit at one end, into which the paper
-effigy of the witch is stuck. This must be burnt at a candle placed
-on the floor at a short distance from the sitter; he must not support
-himself in any way, nor leave his perch.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NOTES
-
-
-[1] A very general one for poor people in some parts of the county
-on Christmas-eve was pilchards and unpeeled potatoes boiled together
-in one "crock."
-
-[2] Scat, a blow, a slap.
-
-[3] Uther is still used as a Christian name in Cornwall.
-
-[4] The Cornish manner of pronouncing the name of St. Clare.
-
-[5] Supposed to have been shads, vulgarly here called "Chuck-cheldern,"
-from the number of bones in them.
-
-[6] Burn, a, load, a burden.
-
-[7] A fuller account of Tregeagle and his wonderful doings may be
-found in Bottrell's Traditions, West Cornwall.
-
-[8] A monastery existed there, and in 1883 portions of the building
-were still standing.
-
-[9] A gentleman's seat in the parish of Gulval, near Penzance.
-
-[10] There is a small enclosure near the castle, where several
-members of the family of Hosking were interred, owing to a quarrel
-that Mr. Hosking had with the vicar of Ludgvan over some tithes. The
-last funeral took place in 1823. On one of the stones is inscribed,
-"It is virtue alone that consecrates this ground," and "Custom is
-the idol of fools."
-
-[11] The Penzance Promenade is built on part of it. In my childhood
-it was said to be one of the resorts of "Spring-heeled Jack," of whom
-I then lived in mortal dread.
-
-[12] A small stream coloured by running through tin mining works.
-
-[13] Marazion is no longer a Corporate town.
-
-[14] Dennis is a very common Cornish surname.
-
-[15] "Old Monk" is a term of contempt in Cornwall, applied to old
-or young men. "I saw the old monk coming down the garden" (a youth
-of twenty).
-
-[16] The word Meryons is also used in Cornwall as a term of endearment,
-"She's faather's little Meryon."
-
-[17] See ante, "Cornish Feasts and Feasten Customs."
-
-[18] Fuggan, a cake made of flour and raisins often eaten by miners
-for dinner.
-
-[19] Didjan, a tiny bit.
-
-[20] Some say you must neither whistle nor swear, but you may sing
-and laugh.
-
-[21] All men are boys in Cornwall.
-
-[22] Train-oil is expressed from them.
-
-[23] To "bulk" pilchards is to place them, after they have been rubbed
-with salt, in large regular heaps, alternately heads and tails.
-
-[24] St. Ives.
-
-[25] And "Cornish Feasts and Customs."
-
-[26] The illiterate Cornish often double their negatives: "I don't
-know, not I;" "I'll never do it, no, never no more."
-
-[27] Hazelen mot--root of a hazel tree.
-
-[28] Braggaty--spotted.
-
-[29] Double--a ring.
-
-[30] Fuggan, a flat cake.
-
-[31] Brend, to knit the brows.
-
-[32] Tap a shoe, to sole.
-
-[33] A similar superstition prevails about breakages, and a servant
-who has had the misfortune to break a valuable piece of china will
-sometimes smash a common basin or tea-cup to arrest the ill-luck.
-
-[34] "Pitch a tune," to give the keynote.
-
-[35] "Arish mow," a rick of corn made in the field where it was cut.
-
-[36] Scat, to slap.
-
-[37] A gill.
-
-[38] Cornish for hogshead.
-
-[39] Anker.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's Cornish Feasts and Folk-lore, by M. A. Courtney
-
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-
-Project Gutenberg's Cornish Feasts and Folk-lore, by M. A. Courtney
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Cornish Feasts and Folk-lore
-
-Author: M. A. Courtney
-
-Release Date: April 30, 2017 [EBook #54637]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CORNISH FEASTS AND FOLK-LORE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net/ for Project
-Gutenberg (This file was produced from images generously
-made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
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-</pre>
-
-<div class="front">
-<div class="div1 cover"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first"></p>
-<div class="figure cover-imagewidth"><img src="images/new-cover.jpg"
-alt="Newly Designed Front Cover." width="480" height="720"></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 titlepage"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first"></p>
-<div class="figure titlepage-imagewidth"><img src=
-"images/titlepage.png" alt="Original Title Page." width="440" height=
-"720"></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="titlePage">
-<div class="docTitle">
-<div class="mainTitle">CORNISH<br>
-FEASTS AND FOLK-LORE.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="byline">BY<br>
-<span class="docAuthor">MISS M. A. COURTNEY,</span><br>
-AUTHOR OF &ldquo;GLOSSARY OF WORDS USED IN WEST CORNWALL.&rdquo;<br>
-<i>REVISED AND REPRINTED FROM THE FOLK-LORE SOCIETY JOURNALS,
-1886&ndash;87.</i></div>
-<div class="docImprint">PENZANCE:<br>
-BEARE AND SON, 21, MARKET PLACE.<br>
-<span class="docDate">1890.</span></div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 imprint"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first xd25e157">BEARE AND SON, PRINTERS, PENZANCE.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="preface" class="div1 preface"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main"><i>PREFACE.</i></h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Few Cornish people are probably aware how wide-spread
-still with us is the belief in charms and charmers, ghosts, and all
-other superstitions; nor that there are witches in our county, shunned
-and dreaded by some who fear their supposed power to ill-wish those who
-offend them, and sought out by others who want by their aid to avert
-the evil eye, or by their incantations to remove the spells already
-cast on them and their cattle by an ill-wisher who has
-&ldquo;overlooked&rdquo; them.</p>
-<p>Folk-lore is an almost inexhaustible subject. There must be many
-charms in use here that have not come under my notice; a few are too
-coarse to record, as are some of the tales.</p>
-<p>A book on folk-lore cannot in this century contain original matter;
-it must be compiled from various sources. I have when quoting from
-other writers given my authority, and to communications from friends
-generally appended their names. To &ldquo;One and All&rdquo; I beg
-leave to tender my sincere thanks.</p>
-<p class="signed"><span class="sc">M. A. Courtney.</span> <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb1" href="#pb1" name="pb1">1</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="body">
-<div id="ch1" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<div class="figure"><img src="images/head1.png" alt=
-"CORNISH FEASTS AND &ldquo;FEASTEN&rdquo; CUSTOMS." width="563" height=
-"61"></div>
-<h2 class="main">CORNISH FEASTS AND &ldquo;FEASTEN&rdquo; CUSTOMS.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="xd25e179"><span class="xd25e179init">C</span>ornwall has
-always been a county largely given to hospitality, and, as &ldquo;all
-Cornish gentlemen are cousins,&rdquo; they have from time immemorial
-made it a practice to meet at each other&rsquo;s houses to celebrate
-their feasts and saints&rsquo; days.</p>
-<p>Since &ldquo;there are more saints in Cornwall than there are in
-heaven,&rdquo; these friendly gatherings must necessarily be very
-numerous. Each parish has its own particular saint to which its church
-is dedicated. The feasts held in their honour, probably dating from the
-foundation of the churches, are kept on the nearest Sunday and Monday
-to dedication day, called by the people &ldquo;feasten&rdquo; Sunday
-and Monday.</p>
-<p>Every family, however poor, tries to have a better dinner than usual
-on feasten Sunday; generally a joint of meat with a
-&ldquo;figgy-pudden&rdquo; (a baked or boiled suet-pudding with raisins
-in it).</p>
-<p>On the preceding Saturdays large quantities of &ldquo;plum
-cake&rdquo; are baked; light currant cakes raised with barm (yeast),
-and coloured bright yellow with saffron (as dear as
-&ldquo;saffern&rdquo; is a very common simile in Cornwall). This
-&ldquo;saffern cake&rdquo; at tea is often supplemented with
-&ldquo;heavy cake&rdquo; (a delicacy peculiar to the county), a rich
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb2" href="#pb2" name=
-"pb2">2</a>]</span>currant paste, about an inch thick, made with
-clotted cream, and eaten hot.</p>
-<p>The Western hounds meet in all the villages situated at a convenient
-distance from their kennel, at ten o&rsquo;clock on feasten Mondays,
-and, after a breakfast given by the squire of the parish to the
-huntsmen, start for their run from somewhere near the parish church
-(the &ldquo;church town&rdquo;). Three or four houses clustered
-together, and even sometimes a single house, is called in Cornwall
-&ldquo;a town,&rdquo; a farmyard is &ldquo;a town place,&rdquo; and
-London is often spoken of as &ldquo;Lunnon church town.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The first of the West Penwith feasts is that of Paul, a parish close
-to Penzance, which has not the Apostle Paul but <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Pol-de-Lion for its patron saint. It falls on the
-nearest Sunday to 10th of October. An old proverb says, &ldquo;Rain for
-Paul, rain for all,&rdquo; therefore, should the day be wet, it is of
-course looked upon by the young people as a bad sign for their future
-merry-makings. An annual bowling-match was formerly held on feasten
-Monday, between Paul and Mousehole men (Mousehole is a fishing village
-in the same parish); the last of them took place sixty years ago. Up to
-that time the bowling-green, an artificially raised piece of ground,
-was kept in order by the parishioners. No one in the neighbourhood now
-knows the game; the church schools are built on a part of the site, and
-the remainder is the village playground. If there were ever any other
-peculiar customs celebrated at Paul feast they are quite forgotten, and
-the Monday night&rsquo;s carousal at the public-houses has here, as
-elsewhere, given place to church and chapel teas, followed by concerts
-in the school-rooms, although there are still a few
-&ldquo;standings&rdquo; (stalls) in the streets, for the sale of
-gingerbread nuts and sweetmeats, and one or two swings and
-merry-go-rounds, largely patronised by children.</p>
-<p>October 12th. A fair, called Roast Goose Fair, is held at
-Redruth.</p>
-<p>On the nearest Saturday to Hallowe&rsquo;en, October 31st, the
-fruiterers of Penzance display in their windows very large apples,
-known locally as &ldquo;Allan&rdquo; apples. These were formerly bought
-by the inhabitants and all the country people from the neighbourhood
-(for whom Penzance is the market-town), and one was given to each
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb3" href="#pb3" name=
-"pb3">3</a>]</span>member of the family to be eaten for luck. The elder
-girls put theirs, before they ate them, under their pillows, to dream
-of their sweethearts. A few of the apples are still sold; but the
-custom, which, I have lately been told, was also observed at
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives, is practically dying out. On
-&ldquo;Allantide,&rdquo; at Newlyn West, two strips of wood are joined
-crosswise by a nail in the centre; at each of the four ends a lighted
-candle is stuck, with apples hung between them. This is fastened to a
-beam, or the ceiling of the kitchen, and made to revolve rapidly. The
-players, who try to catch the apples in their mouths, often get instead
-a taste of the candle.</p>
-<p>In Cornwall, as in other parts of England, many charms were tried on
-Hallowe&rsquo;en to discover with whom you were to spend your future
-life, or if you were to remain unmarried, such as pouring melted lead
-through the handle of the front door key. The fantastic shapes it
-assumed foretold your husband&rsquo;s profession or trade.</p>
-<p>Rolling three names, each written on a separate piece of paper,
-tightly in the centre of three balls of earth. These were afterwards
-put into a deep basin of water, and anxiously watched until one of them
-opened, as the name on the first slip which came to the surface would
-be that of the person you were to marry.</p>
-<p>Tying the front door key tightly with your left leg garter between
-the leaves of a Bible at one particular chapter in the Song of Solomon.
-It was then held on the forefinger, and when the sweetheart&rsquo;s
-name was mentioned it turned round.</p>
-<p>Slipping a wedding-ring on to a piece of cotton, held between the
-forefinger and thumb, saying, &ldquo;If my husband&rsquo;s name is to
-be &mdash;&mdash; let this ring swing!&rdquo; Of course, when the name
-of the person preferred was spoken, the holder unconsciously made the
-ring oscillate. I have, when a school-girl, assisted at these rites,
-and I expect the young people still practise them.</p>
-<p>In <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Cubert&rsquo;s parish, East
-Cornwall, is a celebrated Holy well, so named, the inhabitants say,
-from its virtues having been discovered on All Hallows-day. It is
-covered at high spring tides.</p>
-<p><abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Just feast (which, when the mines in
-that district were prosperous, was kept up with more revelry than
-almost any other) is always held on the nearest Sunday to All
-Saints&rsquo;-day. Formerly, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb4" href=
-"#pb4" name="pb4">4</a>]</span>on the Monday, many games were played,
-viz.&mdash;&ldquo;Kook, a trial of casting quoits farthest and nearest
-to the goal, now all but forgotten&rdquo; (Bottrell), wrestling, and
-kailles, or keels (ninepins), &amp;c. Much beer and
-&ldquo;moonshine&rdquo; (spirit that had not paid the duty) were drunk,
-and, as the <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Just men are proverbially
-pugnacious, the sports often ended with a free fight. A paragraph in a
-local paper for November, 1882, described a <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Just feast in those days as &ldquo;A hobble, a
-squabble, and a &lsquo;hubbadullion&rsquo; altogether.&rdquo; Rich and
-poor still at this season keep open house, and all the young people
-from <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Just who are in service for many
-miles around, if they can possibly be spared, go home on the Saturday
-and stay until the Tuesday morning. A small fair is held in the streets
-on Monday evening, when the young men are expected to treat their
-sweethearts liberally, and a great deal of &ldquo;foolish money&rdquo;
-that can be ill afforded is often spent.</p>
-<p>In many Cornish parishes the bells are rung on November 4th,
-&ldquo;Ringing night.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The celebration of Gunpowder Plot has quite died out in West
-Cornwall, but in Launceston, and in other towns in the eastern part of
-the county, it is still observed. As regularly as the 5th of November
-comes around, fireworks are let off, and bonfires lit, to lively music
-played by the local bands.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This year, 1884, &lsquo;Young Stratton&rsquo; celebrated the
-Fifth with much more than his customary enthusiasm. A good sum was
-raised by public subscription by the energy of Mr. C. A. Saunders. The
-Bude fife and drum band headed a grotesque procession, formed at
-Howl&rsquo;s Bridge, and second in order came a number of equestrian
-torch-bearers in all kinds of costumes, furnished by wardrobes of Her
-Majesty&rsquo;s navy, the Royal Marines, the Yeomanry, and numerous
-other sources. &lsquo;Guido Faux&rsquo; followed in his car, honoured
-by a postilion and a band of Christy Minstrels; then came foot
-torch-bearers, and a crowd of enthusiastic citizens, who
-&lsquo;hurraed&rsquo; to their hearts&rsquo; content. Noticeable were
-the banners, &lsquo;Success to Young Stratton,&rsquo; the Cornish arms,
-and &lsquo;God save the Queen.&rsquo; The display of fireworks took
-place from a field overlooking the town, and the inhabitants grouped
-together at points of vantage to witness <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb5" href="#pb5" name="pb5">5</a>]</span>the display. The bonfire was
-lit on Stamford Hill, where the carnival ended. Good order and good
-humour prevailed.&rdquo;&mdash;(<i>Western Morning News.</i>)</p>
-<p>When I was a girl, I was taught the following doggerel rhymes, which
-were on this day then commonly chanted:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Please to remember the fifth of November!</p>
-<p class="line">A stick or a stake, for King George&rsquo;s sake.</p>
-<p class="line">A faggot or rope, to hang the Pope.</p>
-<p class="line">For Gunpowder Plot, shall never be forgot,</p>
-<p class="line">Whilst Castle Ryan stands upon a rock.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">This was in Victoria&rsquo;s reign; where Castle Ryan
-stands I have never been able to learn.</p>
-<p>The old custom formerly practised in Camborne, of taking a
-marrow-bone from the butchers on the Saturday before the feast, which
-is held on the nearest Sunday to Martinmas, was, in 1884, revived in
-its original form. &ldquo;A number of gentlemen, known as the
-&lsquo;Homage Committee,&rsquo; went round the market with hampers,
-which were soon filled with marrow-bones, and they afterwards visited
-the public-houses as
-&lsquo;tasters.&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo;&mdash;(<i>Cornishman.</i>)</p>
-<p>One night in November is known in Padstow as &ldquo;Skip-skop
-night,&rdquo; when the boys of the place go about with a stone in a
-sling; with this they strike the doors, and afterwards slily throw in
-winkle-shells, dirt, &amp;c. Mr. T. Q. Couch says: &ldquo;They strike
-violently against the doors of the houses and ask for money to make a
-feast.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives, on the Saturday before
-Advent Sunday, &ldquo;Fair-mo&rdquo; (pig fair) is held. This town is
-much celebrated locally for macaroons; a great many are then bought as
-&ldquo;fairings.&rdquo; The <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives fishing
-(pilchard) season generally ends in November, consequently at this time
-there is often no lack of money.</p>
-<p>The feast of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Maddern, or Madron
-feast, which is also that of Penzance (Penzance being until recently in
-that parish), is on Advent Sunday.</p>
-<p>The last bull-baiting held here was on the &ldquo;feasten&rdquo;
-Monday of 1813, and took place in the field on which the Union is now
-built. The bull was supplied by a squire from Kimyel, in the
-neighbouring parish of Paul. A ship&rsquo;s anchor, which must have
-been carried up <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb6" href="#pb6" name=
-"pb6">6</a>]</span>hill from Penzance quay, a distance of nearly three
-miles, was firmly fixed in the centre of the field, and to it the bull
-was tied. Bull-baiting was soon after discontinued in Cornwall. The
-following account of the last I had from a gentleman who was well known
-in the county. He said, &ldquo;This I think took place in a field
-adjoining Ponsandane bridge, in Gulval parish, at the east of Penzance,
-in the summer of 1814. I remember the black bull being led by four men.
-The crowd was dispersed early in the evening by a severe thunderstorm,
-which much alarmed the people, who thought it (I was led to believe) a
-judgment from heaven.&rdquo;&mdash;(<abbr>T.S.B.</abbr>)</p>
-<p>The second Thursday before Christmas is in East Cornwall kept by the
-&ldquo;tinners&rdquo; (miners) as a holiday in honour of one of the
-reputed discoverers of tin. It is known as Picrous-day. Chewidden
-Thursday (White Thursday), another &ldquo;tinners&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo;
-holiday, falls always on the last clear Thursday before Christmas-day.
-Tradition says it is the anniversary of the day on which &ldquo;white
-tin&rdquo; (smelted tin) was first made or sold in Cornwall.</p>
-<p>On Christmas-eve, in East as well as West Cornwall, poor women,
-sometimes as many as twenty in a party, call on their richer neighbours
-asking alms. This is &ldquo;going a gooding.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At Falmouth the lower classes formerly expected from all the
-shopkeepers, of whom they bought any of their Christmas groceries, a
-slice of cake and a small glass of gin. Some of the oldest established
-tradespeople still observe this custom; but it will soon be a thing of
-the past.</p>
-<p>In some parts of the county it is customary for each household to
-make a batch of currant cakes on Christmas-eve. These cakes are made in
-the ordinary manner, coloured with saffron, as is the custom in these
-parts. On this occasion the peculiarity of the cakes is, that a small
-portion of the dough in the centre of each top is pulled up and made
-into a form which resembles a very small cake on the top of a large
-one, and this centre-piece is usually called &ldquo;the
-Christmas.&rdquo; Each person in a house has his or her especial cake,
-and every person ought to taste a small piece of every other
-person&rsquo;s cake. Similar cakes are also bestowed on the hangers-on
-of the establishment, such as laundresses, sempstresses, charwomen,
-&amp;c.; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb7" href="#pb7" name=
-"pb7">7</a>]</span>and even some people who are in the receipt of
-weekly charity call, as a matter of course, for their Christmas cakes.
-The cakes must not be cut until Christmas-day, it being probably
-&ldquo;unlucky to eat them sooner.&rdquo;&mdash;(Geo. C. Boase,
-<i>Notes and Queries</i>, 5th series, Dec. 21st, 1878.)</p>
-<p>The materials to make these and nearly all the cakes at this season
-were at one time given by the grocers to their principal customers.</p>
-<p>In Cornwall, as in other English counties, houses are at Christmas
-&ldquo;dressed up&rdquo; with evergreens, sold in small bunches, called
-&ldquo;Penn&rsquo;orths of Chris&rsquo;mas&rdquo;; and two hoops
-fastened one in the other by nails at the centres are gaily decorated
-with evergreens, apples, oranges, &amp;c., and suspended from the
-middle beam in the ceiling of the best kitchen. This is the
-&ldquo;bush,&rdquo; or &ldquo;kissing bush.&rdquo; At night a lighted
-candle is put in it, stuck on the bottom nail; but once or twice lately
-I have seen a Chinese lantern hanging from the top one.</p>
-<p>In a few remote districts on Christmas-eve children may be, after
-nightfall, occasionally (but rarely) found dancing around painted
-lighted candles placed in a box of sand. This custom was very general
-fifty years ago. The church towers, too, are sometimes illuminated.
-This of course, on the coast can only be done in very calm weather. The
-tower of Zennor church (Zennor is a village on the north coast of
-Cornwall, between <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives and <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Just) was lit up in 1883, for the first time since
-1866.</p>
-<p>When open chimneys were universal in farmhouses the Christmas stock,
-mock, or block (the log), on which a rude figure of a man had been
-chalked, was kindled with great ceremony; in some parts with a piece of
-charred wood that had been saved from the last year&rsquo;s
-&ldquo;block.&rdquo; A log in Cornwall is almost always called a
-&ldquo;block.&rdquo; &ldquo;Throw a block on the fire.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Candles painted by some member of the family were often lighted at
-the same time.</p>
-<p>The choir from the parish church and dissenting chapels go from
-house to house singing &ldquo;curls&rdquo; (carols), for which they are
-given money or feasted; but the quaint old carols, &ldquo;The first
-good joy that Mary had,&rdquo; &ldquo;I saw three ships come sailing
-in,&rdquo; common forty years ago, are now never heard. The natives of
-Cornwall have been <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb8" href="#pb8" name=
-"pb8">8</a>]</span>always famous for their carols; some of their tunes
-are very old. Even the Knockers, Sprig-gans, and all the underground
-spirits that may be always heard working where there is tin (and who
-are said to be the ghosts of the Jews who crucified Jesus), in olden
-times held mass and sang carols on Christmas-eve.</p>
-<p>In the beginning of this century at the ruined baptistery of
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Levan, in West Cornwall (Par-chapel
-Well), all the carol-singers in that district, after visiting the
-neighbouring villages, met and sang together many carols. Mr. Bottrell
-says, &ldquo;One was never forgotten, in which according to our West
-Country version, Holy Mary says to her dear Child:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&lsquo;Go the wayst out, Child Jesus,</p>
-<p class="line">Go the wayst out to play;</p>
-<p class="line">Down by God&rsquo;s Holy Well</p>
-<p class="line">I see three pretty children,</p>
-<p class="line">As ever tongue can tell.&rsquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">&ldquo;This for its sweet simplicity is still a
-favourite in the west.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>An old carol or ballad,</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Come and I will sing you,&rdquo; etc.,</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">known to many old people in all parts of the county,
-has been thought by some to be peculiar to Cornwall; but this is an
-error, as it has been heard elsewhere.</p>
-<p>At the plentiful supper always provided on this night,<a class=
-"noteref" id="xd25e349src" href="#xd25e349" name="xd25e349src">1</a>
-egg-hot, or eggy-hot, was the principal drink. It was made with eggs,
-hot beer, sugar, and rum, and was poured from one jug into another
-until it became quite white and covered with froth. A sweet giblet pie
-was one of the standing dishes at a Christmas dinner&mdash;a kind of
-mince-pie, into which the giblets of a goose, boiled and finely
-chopped, were put instead of beef. Cornwall is noted for its pies, that
-are eaten on all occasions; some of them are curious mixtures, such as
-squab-pie, which is made with layers of well-seasoned fat mutton and
-apples, with onions and raisins. Mackerel pie: the ingredients of this
-are mackerel and parsley stewed in milk, then covered with a paste and
-baked. When brought to table a hole is cut in the paste, <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb9" href="#pb9" name="pb9">9</a>]</span>and a basin
-of clotted cream thrown in it. Muggetty pie, made from sheep&rsquo;s
-entrails (muggets), parsley, and cream. &ldquo;The devil is afraid to
-come into Cornwall for fear of being baked in a pie.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There is a curious Christmas superstition connected with the Fogo,
-Vug, or Vow (local names for a cove) at Pendeen, in North <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Just.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;At dawn on Christmas-day the spirit of the &lsquo;Vow&rsquo;
-has frequently been seen just within the entrance near the cove, in the
-form of a beautiful lady dressed in white, with a red rose in her
-mouth. There were persons living a few years since who had seen the
-fair but not less fearful vision; for disaster was sure to visit those
-who intruded on the spirit&rsquo;s morning
-airing.&rdquo;&mdash;(Bottrell, <i>Traditions, &amp;c., West
-Cornwall</i>, 2nd series.)</p>
-<p>The following is an account by an anonymous writer of a Christmas
-custom in East Cornwall:&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In some places the parishioners walk in procession, visiting
-the principal orchards in the parish. In each orchard one tree is
-selected, as the representative of the rest; this is saluted with a
-certain form of words, which have in them the form of an incantation.
-They then sprinkle the tree with cider, or dash a bowl of cider against
-it, to ensure its bearing plentifully the ensuing year. In other places
-the farmers and their servants only assemble on the occasion, and after
-immersing apples in cider hang them on the apple-trees. They then
-sprinkle the trees with cider; and after uttering a formal incantation,
-they dance round it (or rather round them), and return to the farmhouse
-to conclude these solemn rites with copious draughts of cider.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In Warleggan, on Christmas-eve, it was customary for some of
-the household to put in the fire (bank it up), and the rest to take a
-jar of cider, a bottle, and a gun to the orchard, and put a small bough
-into the bottle. Then they said:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s to thee, old apple-tree!</p>
-<p class="line">Hats full, packs full, great bushel-bags full!</p>
-<p class="line">Hurrah! and fire off the gun.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">&mdash;(Old Farmer, Mid Cornwall, through T. Q. Couch,
-Sept. 1883, <i><abbr title="Western Antiquary">W.
-Antiquary</abbr></i>.) <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb10" href="#pb10"
-name="pb10">10</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The words chanted in East Cornwall were:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Health to thee, good apple-tree,</p>
-<p class="line">Pocket-fulls, hat-fulls, peck-fulls, bushel-bag
-fulls.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">An old proverb about these trees runs as
-follows:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Blossom in March, for fruit you may search,</p>
-<p class="line">Blossom in April, eat you will,</p>
-<p class="line">Blossom in May, eat night and day.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">&ldquo;At one time small sugared cakes were laid on
-the branches. This curious custom has been supposed to be a
-propitiation of some spirit.&rdquo;&mdash;(Mrs. Damant, Cowes, through
-Folk-Lore Society.)</p>
-<p>From Christmas to Twelfth-tide parties of mummers known as
-&lsquo;Goose or Geese-dancers&rsquo; paraded the streets in all sorts
-of disguises, with masks on. They often behaved in such an unruly
-manner that women and children were afraid to venture out. If the doors
-of the houses were not locked they would enter uninvited and stay,
-playing all kinds of antics, until money was given them to go away.
-&ldquo;A well-known character amongst them, about fifty years ago
-(1862), was the hobby-horse, represented by a man carrying a piece of
-wood in the form of a horse&rsquo;s head and neck, with some
-contrivance for opening and shutting the mouth with a loud snapping
-noise, the performer being so covered with a horse-cloth or hide of a
-horse as to resemble the animal, whose curvetings, biting and other
-motions he imitated. Some of these &lsquo;guise-dancers&rsquo;
-occasionally masked themselves with the skins of the head of bullocks
-having the horns on.&rdquo;&mdash;(<i>The Land&rsquo;s End
-District</i>, by R. Edmonds.)</p>
-<p>Sometimes they were more ambitious and acted a version of the old
-play, &ldquo;<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> George and the
-Dragon,&rdquo; which differed but little from that current in other
-countries.</p>
-<p>Bottrell, in his <i>Traditions in W. Cornwall</i> (2nd series),
-gives large extracts from another Christmas-play, &ldquo;Duffy and the
-Devil.&rdquo; It turns upon the legend, common in all countries, of a
-woman who had sold herself to a devil, who was to do her knitting or
-spinning for her. He was to claim his bargain at the end of three years
-if she could not find out his name before the time expired. Of course,
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb11" href="#pb11" name=
-"pb11">11</a>]</span>she gets it by stratagem; her husband, who knows
-nothing of the compact, first meets the devil, whilst out hunting, the
-day before the time is up, and makes him half-drunk. An old woman in
-Duffy&rsquo;s pay (Witch Bet) completes the work, and in that state the
-devil sings the following words, ending with his name, which Bet
-remembers and tells her mistress:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve knit and spun for her</p>
-<p class="line">Three years to the day;</p>
-<p class="line">To-morrow she shall ride with me</p>
-<p class="line">Over land and over sea.</p>
-<p class="line">Far away! far away!</p>
-<p class="line">For she can never know</p>
-<p class="line">That my name is
-&lsquo;Tarraway.&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Bet and some other witches then sing in
-chorus:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;By night and by day</p>
-<p class="line">We will dance and play</p>
-<p class="line">With our noble captain,</p>
-<p class="line">Tarraway! Tarraway!&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Mr. Robert Hunt in his <i>Romances and Drolls of Old
-Cornwall</i> has a variation of this play, in which the devil
-sings&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Duffy my lady, you&rsquo;ll never
-know&mdash;what?</p>
-<p class="line">That my name is Ferry-top,
-Ferry-top&mdash;top.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">These &ldquo;goose-dancers&rdquo; became such a terror
-to the respectable inhabitants of Penzance that the Corporation put
-them down about ten years since, and every Christmas-eve a notice is
-posted in conspicuous places forbidding their appearance in the
-streets, but they still perambulate the streets of <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Ives. Guise-dancing wit must have very much
-deteriorated since the beginning of the present century, as writers
-before that time speak of the mirth it afforded; and the saying,
-&ldquo;as good as a Christmas-play,&rdquo; is commonly used to describe
-a very witty or funny thing.</p>
-<p>It was the custom in Scilly eighty years ago for girls to go to
-church on Christmas morning dressed all in white, verifying the old
-proverb&mdash;&ldquo;pride is never a-cold.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;On Porthminster Beach on Christmas-day, as seen from the
-Malakoff, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives, at nine o&rsquo;clock in
-the morning the boys began to <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb12" href=
-"#pb12" name="pb12">12</a>]</span>assemble on the beach with their bats
-and balls. As soon as twelve youths arrived a game commenced, called
-&lsquo;Rounders.&rsquo; The first thing to be done was to right up the
-&lsquo;bickens.&rsquo; This accomplished, the sides were chosen in the
-following manner:&mdash;Two of the best players, whom we will call
-Matthew and Phillip, went aside and selected two objects&mdash;the new
-and old pier. The old pier was Matthew and the new pier was Phillip.
-After this was arranged the &lsquo;mopper&rsquo; selected the old pier,
-which meant he would rather have Matthew his side than Phillip. Then
-Phillip selected some one for his side; and so it went on until the
-whole twelve were elected one side or the other. Then they tossed up
-for the first innings. Phillip&rsquo;s side won the toss, and it was
-their luck to go in first. While they are taking off their jackets and
-getting ready to go in I will briefly describe the game.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The bickens, four in number, were piles of sand thrown up;
-each one being about ten yards from one another, and arranged so as to
-form a square. In the centre of the square the bowler was placed with
-ball in hand. Behind the batsman stands the &lsquo;tip,&rsquo; while
-the other four were off a long way waiting for the long hits. The coats
-off, in went the first batsman. The ball was thrown towards him and he
-tipped it. The tip instantly took the ball and threw it at the batsman,
-and hit him before he arrived at the first bicken, and he was
-consequently out. The second batsman had better luck; for on the ball
-being thrown to him he sent it out to sea, and by that means he ran a
-rounder, or in other words he ran around the four bickens without being
-hit by the ball. The next batsman went in. The ball was thrown to him,
-when, lo! it went whizzing into the bowler&rsquo;s hands and was
-caught. This unlucky hit and lucky catch got the whole side out, before
-three of them had a chance to show their skill. The other side then
-went in, laughing at the discomfiture of their opponents. The tables,
-however, were very soon turned; for the very first hit was caught, and
-this produced a row, and the game was broken up!</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I then went to the next lot: They were playing
-&lsquo;catchers.&rsquo; There is only one bicken required in this game,
-and at this stood a lad called Watty, with bat and ball in hand. At
-last he hit the ball, and <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb13" href=
-"#pb13" name="pb13">13</a>]</span>up it went flying in the air,
-descended, and passed through the hands of a boy named Peters. Peters
-took the ball from the sand and asked Watty, &lsquo;How many?&rsquo;
-Watty replied&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&lsquo;Two a good scat,<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e481src" href="#xd25e481" name="xd25e481src">2</a></p>
-<p class="line">Try for the bat.&rsquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">&ldquo;Peters threw the ball to the bicken, but it
-stopped about three lengths short. Watty took the ball up and again
-sent it a great way. The question was again asked, and Watty gave the
-same answer. Again the ball was thrown to the bicken, but this time
-with better success; for it stopped at the distance of the length of
-the bat and so was within the distance named. Williams then went in. He
-was a strong lusty fellow, and the ball was sent spinning along the
-sand. It was picked up by Curnow, who asked, &lsquo;How
-many?&rsquo;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&lsquo;Three a good scat,</p>
-<p class="line">Try for the bat.&rsquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">&ldquo;The ball was thrown home and rolled about three
-bats from the bicken. This point, however, was the breaking-up of the
-game, for Williams said it was more than three bats off, whilst Curnow
-maintained that it was not three bats off, and there being no chance of
-a compromise being arrived at the game was broken up.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The next party was one of young men. They were playing
-rounders with a wooden ball, instead of an india-rubber one, as is
-generally used. They were twelve each side, and the bickens were about
-20 yards distant. By this time the tide was out a great way, so that
-there was no fear of the ball being knocked to sea, as was the case
-with the other boys. When I got there they had been playing for about
-an hour, and the side that was in had been in about half of that time.
-The first hit I saw was &lsquo;a beauty!&rsquo; The ball was sent about
-75 yards, and the result was a rounder. Two or three other persons went
-in and did the same thing, and so the game went on for about an hour
-longer, when one of the fellows knocked up a catcher and was caught.
-This side had stayed in for about one hour and a half. The other side
-went in at about a quarter to three, and after playing about another
-hour they went home to tea. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb14" href=
-"#pb14" name="pb14">14</a>]</span></p>
-<p>&ldquo;I went to tea also, but was soon up in the Malakoff again. It
-was so dark that the play was stopped for the time. At about seven
-o&rsquo;clock the older part of the town began to congregate, and about
-a quarter-past seven they began to play &lsquo;Thursa.&rsquo; This game
-is too well known to need description, and I need only say that it was
-played about one hour, when they began to form a ring with the
-intention, I supposed, of playing that best of all games,
-&lsquo;Kiss-in-the-Ring<span class="corr" id="xd25e500" title=
-"Not in source">&rsquo;</span>.&rdquo;&mdash;(<i>Cornishman,
-1881.</i>)</p>
-<p>On <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Stephen&rsquo;s-day, 26th
-December, before the days of gun-licences, every man or boy who could
-by any means get a gun went out shooting, and it was dangerous to walk
-the lanes. The custom is said to have had its origin in the legend of
-one of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Stephen&rsquo;s guards being
-awakened by a bird just as his prisoner was going to escape. A similar
-practice prevailed in the neighbourhood of Penzance on &ldquo;feasten
-Monday,&rdquo; the day after Advent Sunday; but on that day I have
-never heard of any religious idea connected with it.</p>
-<p>In the week after Christmas-day a fair is held at Launceston (and
-also at Okehampton in Devonshire), called &ldquo;giglet fair&rdquo; (a
-&ldquo;giglet or giglot&rdquo; is a giddy young woman). It is
-principally attended by young people. &ldquo;At this &lsquo;giglet
-market,&rsquo; or wife-market, the rustic swain was privileged with
-self-introduction to any of the nymphs around him, so that he had a
-good opportunity of choosing a suitable partner if tired of a single
-life.&rdquo;&mdash;(Britton and Brayley&rsquo;s <i>Devon and
-Cornwall</i>.)</p>
-<p>It is unlucky to begin a voyage on Childermas
-(Innocents&rsquo;-day), also to wash clothes, or to do any but
-necessary household work.</p>
-<p>On New Year&rsquo;s-eve in the villages of East Cornwall, soon after
-dusk, parties of men, from four to six in a party, carrying a small
-bowl in their hands, went from house to house begging money to make a
-feast. They opened the doors without knocking, called out Warsail, and
-sang,&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;These poor jolly Warsail boys</p>
-<p class="line">Come travelling through the mire.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">This custom was common fifty years since, and may
-still be observed in remote rural districts. There is one saint whose
-name is <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb15" href="#pb15" name=
-"pb15">15</a>]</span>familiar to all in Cornwall, but whose sex is
-unknown. This saint has much to answer for; promises made, but never
-intended to be kept, are all to be fulfilled on next <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Tibbs&rsquo;s-eve, a day that some folks say
-&ldquo;falls between the old and new year;&rdquo; others describe it as
-one that comes &ldquo;neither before nor after Christmas.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Parties are general in Cornwall on New Year&rsquo;s-eve to watch in
-the New Year and wish friends health and happiness; but I know of no
-peculiar customs, except that before retiring to rest the old women
-opened their Bibles at hap-hazard to find out their luck for the coming
-year. The text on which the fore-finger of the right hand rested was
-supposed to foretell the future. And money, generally a piece of
-silver, was placed on the threshold, to be brought in the first thing
-on the following day, that there might be no lack of it for the year.
-Nothing was ever lent on New Year&rsquo;s-day, as little as possible
-taken out, but all that could be brought into the house. &ldquo;I have
-even known the dust of the floor swept inwards.&rdquo;&mdash;(T. Q.
-Couch, <i><abbr title="Western Antiquary">W. Antiquary</abbr></i>,
-September, 1883.)</p>
-<p>Door-steps on New Year&rsquo;s-day were formerly sanded for good
-luck, because I suppose people coming into the house were sure to bring
-some of it in with them sticking to their feet.</p>
-<p>Many elderly people at the beginning of the present century still
-kept to the &ldquo;old style,&rdquo; and held their Christmas-day on
-Epiphany. On the eve of that day they said &ldquo;the cattle in the
-fields and stalls never lay down, but at midnight turned their faces to
-the east and fell on their knees.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Twelfth-day (old Christmas-day) was a time of general feasting and
-merriment. Into the Twelfth-day cake were put a wedding-ring, a
-sixpence, and a thimble. It was cut into as many portions as there were
-guests; the person who found the wedding-ring in his (or her) portion
-would be married before the year was out; the holder of the thimble
-would never be married, and the one who got the sixpence would die
-rich. After candlelight many games were played around the open fires. I
-will describe one:&mdash;&ldquo;Robin&rsquo;s alight.&rdquo; A piece of
-stick was set on fire, and whirled rapidly in the hands of the first
-player, who repeated the words&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Robin&rsquo;s alight, and if he go out
-I&rsquo;ll saddle your back.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb16" href="#pb16" name=
-"pb16">16</a>]</span></p>
-<p>It was then passed on, and the person who let the spark die had to
-pay a forfeit.&mdash;(West Cornwall.)</p>
-<p>This game in East Cornwall was known as &ldquo;Jack&rsquo;s
-alive.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Jack&rsquo;s alive and likely to live,</p>
-<p class="line">If he die in my hand a pawn I&rsquo;ll give.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">In this county forfeits are always called
-&ldquo;pawns&rdquo;; they are cried by the holder of them,
-saying,&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s a pawn and a very pretty pawn!</p>
-<p class="line">And what shall the owner of this pawn do?&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">After the midnight supper, at which in one village in
-the extreme West a pie of four-and-twenty blackbirds always appeared,
-many spells to forecast the future were practised. The following
-account of them was given to me by a friend. He says&mdash;&ldquo;I
-engaged in them once at Sennen (the village at the Land&rsquo;s End)
-with a lot of girls, but as my object was only to spoil sport and make
-the girls laugh or speak, it was not quite satisfactory. I suppose the
-time to which I refer is over forty years ago. After making up a large
-turf fire, for hot &lsquo;umers&rsquo; (embers) and pure water are
-absolutely necessary in these divinations, the young people silently
-left the house in single file, to pull the rushes and gather the
-ivy-leaves by means of which they were to learn whether they were to be
-married, and to whom; and if any, or how many, of their friends were to
-die before the end of the year. On leaving and on returning each of
-these Twelfth-night diviners touched the &lsquo;cravel&rsquo; with the
-forehead and &lsquo;wished.&rsquo; The cravel is the tree that preceded
-lintels in chimney corners, and its name from this custom may have been
-derived from the verb &lsquo;to crave.&rsquo; Had either of the party
-inadvertently broken the silence before the rushes and ivy-leaves had
-been procured they would all have been obliged to retrace their steps
-to the house and again touch the cravel; but this time all went well.
-When we came back those who wished to know their fate named the rushes
-in pairs, and placed them in the hot embers: one or two of the engaged
-couples being too shy to do this for themselves, their friends, amidst
-much laughing, did it for them. The manner in which the rushes burned
-showed if the young people <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb17" href=
-"#pb17" name="pb17">17</a>]</span>were to be married to the person
-chosen or not: some, of course, burnt well, others parted, and one or
-two went out altogether. The couples that burnt smoothly were to be
-wedded, and the one named after the rush that lasted longest outlived
-the other. This settled, one ivy-leaf was thrown on the fire; the
-number of cracks it made was the number of years before the wedding
-would take place. Then two were placed on the hot ashes; the cracks
-they gave this time showed how many children the two would have. We
-then drew ivy-leaves named after present or absent friends through a
-wedding ring, and put them into a basin of water which we left until
-the next morning. Those persons whose leaves had shrivelled or turned
-black in the night were to die before the next Twelfth-tide, and those
-who were so unfortunate as to find their leaves spotted with red, by
-some violent death, unless a &lsquo;pellar&rsquo; (wise man) could by
-his skill and incantations grant protection. These prophecies through
-superstition sometimes unluckily fulfilled themselves.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>During the twelve days of Christmas card-playing was a very
-favourite amusement with all classes. Whilst the old people enjoyed
-their game of whist with &lsquo;swabbers,&rsquo; the young ones had
-their round games. I will append the rules of two or three for those
-who would like to try them.</p>
-<p>Whist (or whisk, as I have heard an old lady call it and maintain
-that that was its proper name) with &ldquo;swabbers.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This game, which was played as recently as 1880, nightly, by four
-maiden ladies at Falmouth, is like ordinary whist; but each player
-before beginning to play puts into the pool a fixed sum for
-&ldquo;swabs.&rdquo; The &ldquo;swab-cards&rdquo; are&mdash;ace and
-deuce of trumps, ace of hearts and knave of clubs. The four cards are
-of equal value; but should hearts be trumps the ace would count
-double.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Board-&rsquo;em,&rdquo; a round game that can be played by
-any number of players, from two to eight; it is played for fish, and
-there must never be less than six fish in the pool. Six cards are dealt
-to each person; and the thirteenth, if two are playing, the nineteenth
-if three, and so on, is turned up for trumps. The fore-hand plays; the
-next player, if he has one, must follow suit, if not, he may play
-another suit, or trump. The highest card of the original suit, if not
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb18" href="#pb18" name=
-"pb18">18</a>]</span>trumped, takes the trick and one or more fish,
-according to the number staked. If you have neither card in your hand
-that you think will make a trick you may decline to play, in which case
-you only lose your stake; but should you play and fail to take a trick
-you pay for the whole company, and are said to &ldquo;be
-boarded.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ranter-go-round&rdquo; was formerly played in four divisions
-marked with chalk upon a tea-tray; or even, in some cases, on a
-bellows&mdash;it is now played on a table, and is called &ldquo;Miss
-Joan.&rdquo; Any number of players may join in it. The first player
-throws down any card of any suit, and says:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line xd25e586">&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s a &mdash;&mdash; as you
-may see.</p>
-<p class="line"><i>2nd Player</i>&mdash;Here&rsquo;s another as good as
-he.</p>
-<p class="line"><i>3rd Player</i>&mdash;And here&rsquo;s the best of
-all the three.</p>
-<p class="line"><i>4th Player</i>&mdash;And here&rsquo;s Miss Joan,
-come tickle me.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">The holder of the fourth card wins the trick. He
-sometimes added the words wee-wee; but these are now generally omitted.
-If the person sitting next to the fore-hand has neither one of the
-cards demanded (one of the same value as the first played, in another
-suit), he pays one to the pool, as must all in turn who fail to produce
-the right cards. The player of the third may have the fourth in his
-hand, in which case all the others pay. The holder of the most tricks
-wins the game and takes the pool.</p>
-<p>I once, about thirty years since, at this season of the year, joined
-some children at Camborne who were playing a very primitive game called
-by them &ldquo;pinny-ninny.&rdquo; A basin turned upside down was
-placed in the centre of a not very large round table. The players were
-supplied with small piles of pins&mdash;not the well-made ones sold in
-papers, but clumsy things with wire
-heads&mdash;&ldquo;pound-pins.&rdquo; A large bottle full of them
-might, then, always be seen in the general shop window of every little
-country village. Each in turn dropped a pin over the side of the basin,
-and he whose pin fell and formed a cross on the top of the heap was
-entitled to add them to his own pile. This went on until one player had
-beggared all the others. Poor children before Christmas often begged
-pins to play this game, and their request was always granted by the
-gift of two. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb19" href="#pb19" name=
-"pb19">19</a>]</span></p>
-<p>A wishing-well, near <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Austell, was
-sometimes called Pennameny Well, from the custom of dropping pins into
-it. Pedna-a-mean is the old Cornish for
-&ldquo;heads-and-tails.&rdquo;&mdash;(See <i>Divination at <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Roche and Madron Well</i>.)</p>
-<p>All Christmas-cakes must be eaten by the night of Twelfth-tide, as
-it is unlucky to have any left, and all decorations must be taken down
-on the next day, because for every forgotten leaf of evergreen a ghost
-will be seen in the house in the course of the ensuing year. This
-latter superstition does not prevail, however, in all parts of
-Cornwall, as in some districts a small branch is kept to scare away
-evil spirits.</p>
-<p>January 24th, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Paul&rsquo;s-eve, is a
-holiday with the miners, and is called by them &lsquo;Paul
-pitcher-day,&rsquo; from a custom they have of setting up a
-water-pitcher, which they pelt with stones until it is broken in
-pieces. A new one is afterwards bought and carried to a beer-shop to be
-filled with beer.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There is a curious custom prevalent in some parts of Cornwall
-of throwing broken pitchers and other earthen vessels against the doors
-of dwelling-houses on the eve of the conversion of <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Paul, thence locally called &lsquo;Paul
-pitcher-night.&rsquo; On that evening parties of young people
-perambulate the parishes in which the custom is retained, exclaiming as
-they throw the sherds, &lsquo;<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Paul&rsquo;s-eve and here&rsquo;s a heave.&rsquo; According to the
-received notions the first heave cannot be objected to; but, upon its
-being repeated, the inhabitants of the house whose door is thus
-attacked may, if they can, seize the offenders and inflict summary
-justice upon them.&rdquo;&mdash;(<abbr>F.M.</abbr>, <i>Notes and
-Queries</i>, March, 1874.)</p>
-<p>I have heard of this practice from a native of East Cornwall, who
-told me the pitchers were filled with broken sherds, filth, &amp;c.</p>
-<p>The weather on <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Paul&rsquo;s-day
-still, with the old people, foretells the weather for the ensuing year,
-and the rhyme common to all England is repeated by them:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;If <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Paul&rsquo;s-day be fine and clear,&rdquo; &amp;c.</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first"><abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Blazey, a village in
-East Cornwall, is so named in honour of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Blaize, who is said to have landed at Par, a small neighbouring
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb20" href="#pb20" name=
-"pb20">20</a>]</span>seaport, when he came on a visit to England. His
-feast, which is held on 3rd February, would not be worth mentioning
-were it not for the fact that&mdash;&ldquo;This saint is invoked in the
-county for toothache, while applying to the tooth the candle that
-burned on the altar of the church dedicated to him. The same candles
-are good for sore-throats and curing diseases in
-cattle.&rdquo;&mdash;(Mrs. Damant, Cowes.)</p>
-<p>On the Monday after <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives feast, which
-falls on Quinquagesima Sunday, an annual hurling-match is held on the
-sands. Most writers on Cornwall have described the old game. The
-following account is taken from <i>The Land&rsquo;s End District</i>,
-1862, by R. Edmonds:&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A ball about the size of a cricket-ball, formed of cork, or
-light wood, and covered with silver, was hurled into the air, midway
-between the goals. Both parties immediately rushed towards it, each
-striving to seize and carry it to its own goal. In this contest, when
-any individual having possession of the ball found himself overpowered
-or outrun by his opponents, he hurled it to one of his own side, if
-near enough, or, if not, into some pool, ditch, furze, brake, garden,
-house, or other place of concealment, to prevent his adversaries
-getting hold of it before his own company could arrive.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The hurlers, quaintly says Carew (<i>Survey of Cornwall</i>, p. 74),
-&ldquo;<span lang="en">Take their next way ouer hills, dales, hedges,
-ditches&mdash;yea, and thorou bushes, briers, mires, plashes, and
-rivers whatsoever&mdash;so as you shall sometimes see twenty or thirty
-lie tugging together in the water, scrambling and scratching for the
-ball. A play verily both rude and rough.</span>&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Hurling between two or more parishes, and between one parish and
-another, has long ceased in Cornwall: but hurling by one part of a
-parish against another is still played at <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Ives, as well as other places in Cornwall. At
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives all the Toms, Wills, and Johns are
-on one side, while those having other Christian names range themselves
-on the opposite. At <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Columb (East
-Cornwall) the townspeople contend with the countrymen; at Truro, the
-married men with the unmarried; at Helston, two streets with all the
-other streets; on the 2nd of May, when their town-bounds are
-renewed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Fair-play is good play,&rdquo; is the hurlers&rsquo; motto.
-This is sometimes engraven on their balls in the old Cornish language.
-Private <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb21" href="#pb21" name=
-"pb21">21</a>]</span>families possess some of these balls won by their
-ancestors early in the last century that are religiously handed down as
-heirlooms.</p>
-<p>A Druidic circle at <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Cleer, in East
-Cornwall, is known as the Hurlers, from a tradition that a party of men
-hurling on a Sunday were there for their wickedness turned into
-stone.</p>
-<p>&lsquo;Peasen or Paisen Monday&rsquo; is the Monday before Shrove
-Tuesday; it is so called in East Cornwall from a custom of eating
-pea-soup there on this day. This practice was once so universal in some
-parishes that an old farmer of Lower <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Columb, who had a special aversion to pea-soup, left his home in the
-morning, telling his wife that he should not come back to dinner, but
-spend the day with a friend. He returned two or three hours after in
-great disgust, as at every house in the village he had been asked to
-stay and taste their delicious pea-soup.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This day also in East Cornwall bears the name of &lsquo;Hall
-Monday,&rsquo; why, I know not. And at dusk on the evening of the same
-day it is the custom for boys, and in some cases for those above the
-age of boys, to prowl about the streets with short clubs, and to knock
-loudly at every door, running off to escape detection on the slightest
-sign of a motion within. If, however, no attention be excited, and
-especially if any article be discovered, negligently exposed or
-carelessly guarded, then the things are carried away, and on the
-following morning are seen displayed in some conspicuous place, to
-disclose the disgraceful want of vigilance supposed to characterise the
-owner. The time when this is practised is called &lsquo;Nicky
-Nan&rsquo; night, and the individuals concerned are supposed to
-represent some imps of darkness, that seize on and expose unguarded
-moments.&rdquo;&mdash;(<i>Polperro</i>, p. 151, by T. Q. Couch.)</p>
-<p>A custom nearly similar to this was practised in Scilly in the last
-century.</p>
-<p>The dinner on Shrove Tuesday in many Cornish houses consists of
-fried eggs and bacon, or salt pork, followed by the universal pancake,
-which is eaten by all classes. It is made the full size of the pan, and
-currants are put into the batter.</p>
-<p>In Penzance large quantities of limpets and periwinkles are gathered
-in the afternoon by poor people, to be cooked for their <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb22" href="#pb22" name="pb22">22</a>]</span>supper.
-This they call &ldquo;going a-trigging.&rdquo; Any kind of shell-fish
-picked up at low water in this district is known as
-&ldquo;trig-meat.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Many other customs were formerly observed in Penzance on Shrove
-Tuesday, peculiar, I believe, to this town.</p>
-<p>Women and boys stood at the corners of the streets, with
-well-greased, sooty hands, which they rubbed over people&rsquo;s faces.
-I remember, not more than thirty years ago, seeing a little boy run
-into a house in a great hurry, and ask for what was he wanted. He had
-met a woman who had put her hands affectionately on each side of his
-face, and said, &ldquo;Your father has been looking for you, my
-dear.&rdquo; She had left the marks of her dirty fingers.</p>
-<p>The butchers&rsquo; market was always thoroughly cleaned in the
-afternoon, to see if the town hose were in perfect repair, and great
-merriment was often excited by the firemen turning the full force of
-the water on some unwary passer-by.</p>
-<p>People, too, were occasionally deluged by having buckets of water
-thrown over them. Every Shrove Tuesday after dusk men and boys went
-about and threw handfuls of shells, bottles of filth, etc., in at the
-doors. It was usual then for drapers to keep their shops open until a
-very late hour; and I have been told that boys were occasionally bribed
-by the assistants to throw something particularly disagreeable in on
-the floors, that the masters might be frightened, and order the shops
-to be shut. Still later in the evening signs were taken down, knockers
-wrenched off, gates unhung and carried to some distance. This last was
-done even as far down as 1881. Pulling boats up and putting them in a
-mill-pool (now built over) was a common practice at Mousehole in the
-beginning of the century.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In Landewednack, on Shrove Tuesday, children from the ages of
-six to twelve perambulate the parish begging for
-&lsquo;Col-perra&rsquo; (probably an old Cornish word); but, whatever
-be its meaning, they expect to receive eatables or half-pence. As few
-refuse to give, they collect during the day a tolerable booty, in the
-shape of money, eggs, buns, apples, etc. The custom has existed from
-time immemorial, but none of the inhabitants are acquainted with its
-origin.&rdquo;&mdash;(<i>A Week in the Lizard</i>, by <abbr title=
-"Reverend">Rev.</abbr> C. A. Johns, <abbr>B.B.</abbr>, <abbr title=
-"The Folklore Society">F.L.S.</abbr>) <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb23" href="#pb23" name="pb23">23</a>]</span></p>
-<p>I have been favoured by the <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S.
-Rundle, Godolphin, with the formula repeated by the children on this
-occasion (now almost forgotten): &ldquo;Hen-cock, han-cock, give me a
-&lsquo;tabban&rsquo; (morsel), or else &lsquo;Col-perra&rsquo; shall
-come to your door.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Boys at <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives, Scilly, and other
-places, went about with stones tied to strings, with which they struck
-the doors, saying:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Give me a pancake, now! now! now!</p>
-<p class="line">Or I&rsquo;ll knock in your door with a row, tow,
-tow!&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">This custom has only lately (if it has yet) quite died
-out. The rhyme at Polperro ran thus:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Nicky, Nicky, Nan,</p>
-<p class="line">Give me some pancake, and then I&rsquo;ll be gone,</p>
-<p class="line">But if you give me none</p>
-<p class="line">I&rsquo;ll throw a great stone,</p>
-<p class="line">And down your door shall come.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first xd25e769"><span class="sc">T. Q. Couch.</span></p>
-<p>Cock-fighting at Shrovetide was once a very favourite amusement in
-Cornwall, and in some of the most remote western villages has until
-recently been continued. &ldquo;The Cock-pit&rdquo; at Penzance, a
-small part of which still remains as a yard at the Union Hotel,
-belonged to and was kept up by the Corporation until (I think) the
-beginning of the present century.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sir Rose Price, when young, was a great patron of the pit
-between the years 1780&ndash;1790. His father disapproved, and in
-consideration of his son giving up cock-fighting bought him a pack of
-hounds, the first foxhounds west of
-Truro.&rdquo;&mdash;(<abbr>T.S.B.</abbr>)</p>
-<p>&ldquo;At <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Columb, about sixty years
-ago, on Shrove Tuesday, each child in a dame&rsquo;s school was
-expected by the mistress to bring an egg, and at twelve o&rsquo;clock
-the children had an egg-battle. Two children stood facing each other,
-each held an egg, and struck the end of it against that of the opponent
-lengthwise, the result being that one or both were broken.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;An unbroken egg was used again and again to fight the rest,
-and so the battle raged until all, or all but one, of the eggs were
-broken. The child who at the end of the fight held a sound egg was
-considered to be the conqueror, and was glorified accordingly.
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb24" href="#pb24" name=
-"pb24">24</a>]</span>To save the contents of the eggs, which were the
-perquisite of the mistress, she held a plate beneath; and at the end of
-the battle the children were dismissed. And the old lady having picked
-out all the broken shells, proceeded to prepare her pancakes, of which
-she made her dinner.&rdquo;&mdash;(Fred. W. P. Jago, <abbr title=
-"Bachelor of Medicine">M.B.</abbr>, Plymouth, <i><abbr title=
-"Western Antiquary">W. Antiquary</abbr></i>, March, 1884.)</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It must be now about thirty years ago that I was a
-day-scholar at the National School of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Columb, and it was the custom then for each boy and girl to bring an
-egg. One of the senior boys stood at a table and wrote the name of the
-donor upon each. At about eleven o&rsquo;clock the schoolmaster would
-produce a large punchbowl, and as he took up each egg he read the name,
-and broke the egg into the bowl. Eggs at that time were sold at three
-for a penny.&rdquo;&mdash;(<abbr>W. B.</abbr>, Bodmin, <i><abbr title=
-"Western Antiquary">W. Antiquary</abbr></i>, March, 1884.)</p>
-<p>In the eastern part of the county at the beginning of Lent a straw
-figure dressed in cast-off clothes, and called
-&ldquo;Jack-o&rsquo;-lent,&rdquo; was not long since paraded through
-the streets and afterwards hung. Something of this kind is common on
-the Continent.</p>
-<p>The figure is supposed to represent Judas Iscariot. A slovenly
-ragged person is sometimes described as a
-&ldquo;Jack-o&rsquo;-lent.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>1st March.&mdash;In Mid-Cornwall, people arise before the sun is up,
-and sweep before the door to sweep away fleas.&mdash;(T. Q. Couch,
-<i><abbr title="Western Antiquary">W. Antiquary</abbr></i>, September,
-1883.)</p>
-<p>5th March.&mdash;<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Piran&rsquo;s day is
-a miners&rsquo; holiday. <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Piran is the
-patron saint of &ldquo;tinners,&rdquo; and is popularly supposed to
-have died drunk. &ldquo;As drunk as a Piraner&rdquo; is a Cornish
-proverb.<a id="xd25e827" name="xd25e827"></a></p>
-<p>The first Friday in March is another miners&rsquo; holiday,
-&ldquo;Friday in Lide.&rdquo; It is marked by a serio-comic custom of
-sending a young man on the highest &ldquo;bound,&rdquo; or hillock, of
-the &ldquo;works,&rdquo; and allowing him to sleep there as long as he
-can, the length of his siesta being the measure of the afternoon nap of
-the &ldquo;tinners&rdquo; throughout the ensuing twelve
-months.&mdash;(T. Q. Couch.) Lide is an obsolete term for the month of
-March still preserved in old proverbs, such as &ldquo;Ducks won&rsquo;t
-lay &lsquo;till they&rsquo;ve drunk Lide water.<a id="xd25e831" name=
-"xd25e831"></a></p>
-<p>Of a custom observed at Little Colan, in East Cornwall, on Palm
-Sunday, Carew says: &ldquo;<span lang="en">Little Colan is not worth
-observation, unlesse <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb25" href="#pb25"
-name="pb25">25</a>]</span>you will deride or pity their simplicity, who
-sought at our Lady Nant&rsquo;s well there to foreknowe what fortune
-should betide them, which was in this manner. Upon Palm Sunday these
-idle-headed seekers resorted thither with a Palme cross in one hand and
-an offring in the other. The offring fell to the Priest&rsquo;s share,
-the crosse they threwe into the well; which if it swamme the party
-should outliue the yeere; if it sunk a short ensuing death was boded;
-and perhaps not altogether vntimely, while a foolish conceite of this
-&lsquo;halsening&rsquo; myght the sooner helpe it
-onwards.</span>&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Holy Thursday.&mdash;On that Thursday, and the two following
-Thursdays, girls in the neighbourhood of Roche, in East Cornwall,
-repair to his holy or wishing well before sunrise. They throw in
-crooked pins or pebbles, and, by the bubbles that rise to the surface,
-seek to ascertain whether their sweethearts will be true or false.
-There was once a chapel near this well, which was then held in great
-repute for the cure of all kinds of diseases, and a granite figure of
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Roche stood on the arch of the building
-that still covers it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Goody Friday&rdquo; (Good Friday) was formerly kept more as a
-feast than a fast in Cornwall. Every vehicle was engaged days
-beforehand to take parties to some favourite place of resort in the
-neighbourhood, and labourers in inland parishes walked to the nearest
-seaport to gather &ldquo;wrinkles&rdquo; (winkles), &amp;c.</p>
-<p>On the morning of Good Friday at <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Constantine, in West Cornwall, an old custom is still observed of going
-to Helford river to gather shell-fish (limpets, cockles, &amp;c.); this
-river was once famous for oysters, and many were then bought and eaten
-on this day.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Near Padstow, in East Cornwall, is the tower of an old church
-dedicated to <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Constantine. In its
-vicinity the feast of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Constantine used
-to be annually celebrated, and has only been discontinued of late
-years. Its celebration consisted in the destruction of limpet-pies, and
-service in the church, followed by a hurling
-match.&rdquo;&mdash;(Murray&rsquo;s <i>Cornwall</i>.) Another writer
-says: &ldquo;The festival of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Constantine&rdquo; (March 9th) &ldquo;was until very lately kept at
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Merran&rdquo; (Constantine and Merran
-are now one parish) &ldquo;by an annual hurling match, on which
-occasion the owner of Harlyn&rdquo; (a house in the neighbourhood)
-<span class="corr" id="xd25e871" title=
-"Not in source">&ldquo;</span>had from time immemorial supplied
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb26" href="#pb26" name=
-"pb26">26</a>]</span>the silver ball. We are informed, on good
-authority, that a Shepherd&rsquo;s family, of the name of Edwards, held
-one of the cottages in Constantine for many generations under the
-owners of Harlyn, by the annual render of a Cornish pie, made of
-limpets, raisins, and sweet herbs, on the feast of <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Constantine.&rdquo;&mdash;(Lysons&rsquo; <i>Magna
-Britannia</i>.)</p>
-<p>At <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Day a fair was formerly held on
-Good Friday, now changed to Easter Monday.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;On Good Friday, 1878, I saw a brisk fair going on in the
-little village of Perran Porth, Cornwall, not far from the curious
-oratory of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Piran, known as
-Perranzabuloe.&rdquo;&mdash;(<abbr>W. A. B. C.</abbr>, <i>Notes and
-Queries</i>, April 23rd, 1881.)</p>
-<p>But, although many still make this day a holiday, the churches are
-now much better attended. Good Friday cross-buns of many kinds are sold
-by the Cornish confectioners; some, highly spiced, are eaten hot with
-butter and sugar; a commoner bun is simply washed over the top with
-saffron, and has a few currants stuck on it. There is one peculiar, I
-believe, to Penzance: it is made of a rich currant paste highly covered
-with saffron; it is about an eighth of an inch thick, and four inches
-in diameter, and is marked with a large cross that divides it into four
-equal portions.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In some of our farmhouses the Good Friday bun may be seen
-hanging to a string from the bacon-rack, slowly diminishing until the
-return of the season replaces it by a fresh one. It is of sovereign
-good in all manners of diseases afflicting the family or cattle. I have
-more than once seen a little of this cake grated into a warm mash for a
-sick cow.&rdquo;&mdash;(T. Q. Couch, Polperro.) There is a superstition
-that bread made on this day never gets mouldy.</p>
-<p>Many amateur gardeners sow their seeds on Good Friday; superstition
-says then they will all grow. &ldquo;There is a widely known belief in
-West Cornwall, that young ravens are always hatched on Good
-Friday.&rdquo;&mdash;(T. Cornish, <i><abbr title="Western Antiquary">W.
-Antiquary</abbr></i>, October, 1887.)</p>
-<p>On Easter Monday, at Penzance, it was the custom within the last
-twenty years to bring out in the lower part of the town, before the
-doors, tables, on which were placed thick gingerbread cakes with
-raisins in them, cups and saucers, etc., to be raffled for with cups
-and <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb27" href="#pb27" name=
-"pb27">27</a>]</span>dice, called here &ldquo;Lilly-bangers.&rdquo;
-Fifty years since a man, nicknamed Harry Martillo, with his wife, the
-&ldquo;lovelee,&rdquo; always kept one of these &ldquo;lilly-banger
-stalls&rdquo; at Penzance on market day. He would call attention to his
-gaming-table by shouting&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been in Europe, Ayshee, Afrikee, and
-Amerikee,</p>
-<p class="line">And come back and married the lovelee.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">I have heard that both used tobacco in three ways, and
-indulged freely in rum, also &ldquo;tom-trot&rdquo; (hardbake),
-strongly flavoured with peppermint. Of course a lively market would
-influence the dose, and as for &ldquo;lovelee,&rdquo; it must have been
-in Harry&rsquo;s partial eyes.&mdash;(<abbr>H.R.C.</abbr>)</p>
-<p>&ldquo;<span lang="en">Upon little Easter Sunday, the freeholders of
-the towne and mannour of Lostwithiel, by themselves or their deputies,
-did there assemble, amongst whom one (as it fell to his lot by turne),
-bravely apparelled, gallantly mounted, with a crowne on his head, a
-scepter in his hand, a sword borne before him, and dutifully attended
-by all the rest also on horseback, ride thorow the principal streete to
-the Church; there the Curate in his best &lsquo;<i>beseene</i>&rsquo;
-solemne receiud him at the Church-yard stile, and conducted him to
-heare diuine seruice; after which he repaired with the same pompe to a
-house fore-prouided for that purpose, made a feast to his attendants,
-kept the table&rsquo;s end himselfe, and was serued with kneeling,
-assay, and all other rites due to the estate of a Prince; with which
-dinner the ceremony ended, and every man returned home
-again.</span>&rdquo;&mdash;(Carew.)</p>
-<p>The ancient custom of choosing a mock mayor was observed at
-Lostwithiel, on 10th October, 1884, by torchlight, in the presence of
-nearly a thousand people. The origin of both these customs is now quite
-forgotten. &ldquo;A custom still existing at <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> John&rsquo;s, Helston, and also at Buryan. The last
-mayor of the Quay, Penzance, was Mr. Robinson, a noted authority on sea
-fishing, etc. He died about ten years
-ago.&rdquo;&mdash;(<abbr>H.R.C.</abbr>)</p>
-<p>April 1st. The universal attempts at fooling on this day are carried
-on in Cornwall as elsewhere, and children are sent by their
-schoolfellows for penn&rsquo;orths of pigeon&rsquo;s milk, memory
-powder, strap-oil, etc., or with a note telling the receiver &ldquo;to
-send the fool <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb28" href="#pb28" name=
-"pb28">28</a>]</span>farther.&rdquo; When one boy succeeds in taking in
-another, he shouts after him, Fool! fool! the &ldquo;guckaw&rdquo;
-(cuckoo).</p>
-<p>Towednack&rsquo;s (a village near <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Ives) &ldquo;Cuckoo&rdquo; or &ldquo;Crowder&rdquo; feast is on the
-nearest Sunday to the 28th April. Tradition accounts for the first name
-by the story of a man who there gave a feast on an inclement day in the
-end of April. To warm his guests he threw some faggots on the fire (or
-some furze-bushes), when a cuckoo flew out of them, calling
-&ldquo;Cuckoo! cuckoo!&rdquo; It was caught and kept, and he resolved
-every year to invite his friends to celebrate the event. This, too, is
-said to be the origin of the feast.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Crowder&rdquo; in Cornwall means a fiddler, and the fiddle is
-called a &ldquo;crowd.&rdquo; In former days the parishioners of
-Towednack were met at the church door on &ldquo;feasten&rdquo; day by a
-&ldquo;crowder,&rdquo; who, playing on his &ldquo;crowd,&rdquo; headed
-a procession through the village street, hence its second name.</p>
-<p>The only May-pole now erected in Cornwall is put up on April 30th,
-at Hugh Town, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Mary&rsquo;s, Scilly.
-Girls dance round it on May-day with garlands of flowers on their
-heads, or large wreaths of flowers from shoulder to waist. Dr. Stephen
-Clogg, of Looe, says that &ldquo;May-poles are still to be seen on
-May-day, at Pelynt, Dulver, and East and West
-Looe.&rdquo;&mdash;(<i><abbr title="Western Antiquary">W.
-Antiquary</abbr></i>, August, 1884.) In the beginning of this century,
-boys and girls in Cornwall sat up until twelve o&rsquo;clock on the eve
-of May-day, and then marched around the towns and villages with Musical
-Instruments, collecting their friends to go a-maying. May-day is
-ushered in at Penzance by the discordant blowing of large tin horns. At
-daybreak, and even earlier, parties of boys, five or six in number,
-assemble at the street corners, from whence they perambulate the town
-blowing their horns and conchshells. They enter the gardens of detached
-houses, stop and bray under the <span class="corr" id="xd25e959" title=
-"Source: bedroom">bed-room</span> windows, and beg for money. With what
-they collect they go into the country, and at one of the farmhouses
-they breakfast on bread and clotted cream, junket, &amp;c. An
-additional ring of tin (a penn&rsquo;orth) is added to his horn every
-year that a boy uses it.</p>
-<p>Formerly, on May-morn, if the boys succeeded in fixing a &ldquo;May
-bough&rdquo; over a farmer&rsquo;s door before he was up, he was
-considered <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb29" href="#pb29" name=
-"pb29">29</a>]</span>bound to give them their breakfasts; and in some
-parts of the county, should the first comer bring with him a piece of
-well-opened hawthorn, he was entitled to a basin of cream.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In West Cornwall it is the custom to hang a piece of furze to
-a door early in the morning of May-day. At breakfast-time the one who
-does this appears and demands a piece of bread and cream with a basin
-of &lsquo;raw-milk&rsquo; (milk that has not been scalded and the cream
-taken off).</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In Landrake, East Cornwall, it was the custom to give the
-person who plucked a fern as much cream as would cover it. It was also
-a practice there to chastise with stinging nettles any one found in bed
-after six on May-morning.&rdquo;&mdash;(<abbr title=
-"Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle, Vicar, Godolphin.)</p>
-<p>Young shoots of sycamore, as well as white thorn, are known as May
-in Cornwall, and from green twigs of the former and from green stalks
-of wheaten corn the children of this county make a rude whistle, which
-they call a &ldquo;feeper.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Until very lately parties of young men and women rose betimes on
-May-day and went into the country to breakfast; going a &ldquo;a
-junketing&rdquo; in the evening has not yet been discontinued.</p>
-<p>At Hayle, on May-day (1883), as usual, groups of children, decorated
-with flowers and gay with fantastic paper-clothes, went singing through
-the streets. In the evening bonfires were lit in various parts of the
-town, houses were illuminated with candles, torches and fire-balls
-burnt until a late hour. The last is a new and dangerous plaything: a
-ball of tow or rags is saturated with petroleum, set fire to, and then
-kicked from one place to another; it leaves a small track of burning
-oil wherever it goes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;On May-morning, in Polperro, the children and even adults go
-out into the country and fetch home branches of the narrow-leaved elm,
-or flowering boughs of white thorn, both of which are called
-&lsquo;May.&rsquo; At a later hour all the boys sally forth with
-bucket, can, or other vessel, and avail themselves of a license which
-the season confers&mdash;to &lsquo;dip&rsquo; or wellnigh drown,
-without regard to person or circumstance, the passenger who has not the
-protection of a piece of &lsquo;May&rsquo; conspicuously stuck in his
-dress; at the same time they sing, &lsquo;The first of May is
-Dipping-day.&rsquo; This manner of keeping <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb30" href="#pb30" name="pb30">30</a>]</span>May-day
-is, I have heard, common in Cornwall. We are now favoured with a call
-from the boy with his pretty garland, gay with bright flowers and
-gaudily-painted birds&rsquo;-eggs, who expects some little gratuity for
-the sight.&rdquo;&mdash;(T. Q. Couch.)</p>
-<p>&ldquo;At East and West Looe the boys dress their hats with flowers,
-furnish themselves with bullocks&rsquo; horns, in which sticks of two
-feet long are fixed, and with these filled with water they parade the
-streets and dip all persons who have not the sprig of May in their
-hats.&rdquo;&mdash;(Bond.)</p>
-<p>&ldquo;First of May you must take down all the horse-shoes (that are
-nailed over doors to keep out witches, &amp;c.) and turn them, not
-letting them touch the ground.&rdquo;&mdash;(Old farmer, Mid-Cornwall,
-through T. Q. Couch, <i><abbr title="Western Antiquary">W.
-Antiquary</abbr></i>, September, 1883.)</p>
-<p>May-day at Padstow is Hobby-horse day. A hobby-horse is carried
-through the streets to a pool known as Traitor&rsquo;s-pool, a quarter
-of a mile out of the town. Here it is supposed to drink: the head is
-dipped into the water, which is freely sprinkled over the spectators.
-The procession returns home, singing a song to commemorate the
-tradition that the French, having landed in the bay, mistook a party of
-mummers in red cloaks for soldiers, hastily fled to their boats and
-rowed away.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The May-pole on the first of May at Padstow has only been
-discontinued within the last six or eight years (1883). It was erected
-in connection with the &lsquo;Hobby-horse&rsquo; festival by the young
-men of the town, who on the last eve of April month would go into the
-country, cut a quantity of blooming yellow furze, and gather the
-flowers then in season, make garlands of the same; borrow the largest
-spar they could get from the shipwright&rsquo;s yard, dress it up with
-the said furze and garlands, with a flag or two on the top, and hoist
-the pole in a conspicuous part of the town, when the
-&lsquo;Mayers,&rsquo; male and female, would dance around it on that
-festival-day, singing&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&lsquo;And strew all your flowers, for summer is come
-in to-day.</p>
-<p class="line">It is but a while ago since we have strewed ours</p>
-<p class="line">In the merry morning of May,&rsquo; &amp;c.</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">&ldquo;The May-pole was allowed to remain up from a
-week to a <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb31" href="#pb31" name=
-"pb31">31</a>]</span>fortnight, when it was taken down, stripped, and
-the pole returned.&rdquo;&mdash;(Henry Harding, Padstow,
-<i><abbr title="Western Antiquary">W. Antiquary</abbr></i>, August,
-1883.)</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Formerly all the respectable people at Padstow kept this
-anniversary, decorated with the choicest flowers; but some unlucky day
-a number of rough characters from a distance joined in it, and
-committed some sad assaults upon old and young, spoiling all their nice
-summer clothes, and covering their faces and persons with smut. From
-that time&mdash;fifty years since&mdash;(1865) the procession is formed
-of the lowest.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The May-pole was once decorated with the best flowers, now
-with only some elm-branches and furze in blossom. The horse is formed
-as follows: The dress is made of sackcloth painted black&mdash;a fierce
-mask&mdash;eyes red, horse&rsquo;s head, horse-hair mane and tail;
-distended by a hoop&mdash;some would call it frightful. Carried by a
-powerful man, he could inflict much mischief with the snappers, &amp;c.
-No doubt it is a remnant of the ancient plays, and it represents the
-devil, or the power of darkness. They commence singing at sunrise.</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<h4>&lsquo;<span class="sc">The Morning-Song.</span></h4>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&lsquo;Unite and unite, and let us all unite,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1023">For summer is comen to-day;</p>
-<p class="line">For whither we are going we all will unite,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1023">In the merry morning of May.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&lsquo;Arise up, Mr. &mdash;&mdash;, and joy you
-betide,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1023">For summer is comen to-day;</p>
-<p class="line">And bright is your bride that lays by your side,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1023">In the merry morning of May.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&lsquo;Arise, up Mrs. &mdash;&mdash;, and gold be your
-ring,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1023">For summer is comen to-day;</p>
-<p class="line">And give us a cup of ale, the merrier we shall sing</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1023">In the merry morning of May.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&lsquo;Arise up, Miss &mdash;&mdash;, all in your smock
-of silk,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1023">For summer is comen to-day;</p>
-<p class="line">And all your body under as white as any milk,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1023">In the merry morning of May.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&lsquo;The young men of Padstow might if they
-would,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1023">For summer is comen to-day;</p>
-<p class="line">They might have built a ship and gilded her with
-gold,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1023">In the merry morning of May.</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb32" href="#pb32" name=
-"pb32">32</a>]</span></p>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&lsquo;Now fare you well, and we bid you good
-cheer,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1023">For summer is comen to-day;</p>
-<p class="line">He will come no more unto your house before another
-year,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1023">In the merry morning of
-May.&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class="first xd25e769">(George Rawlings, September 1st, 1865,
-through R. Hunt, <abbr title=
-"Fellow of the Royal Society">F.R.S.</abbr>, <i>Droles, &amp;c., Old
-Cornwall</i>.)</p>
-<p>Mr. Rawlings all through his song has written &ldquo;For summer has
-come unto day,&rdquo; but this is clearly a mistake. He also gives
-another which he calls the &ldquo;May-Song,&rdquo; but it is not as
-well worth transcribing: it bears in some parts a slight resemblance to
-that sung at the Helston Hal-an-tow.</p>
-<p>Mr. George C. Boase, in an article on &ldquo;The Padstow
-May-Songs,&rdquo; has many additional verses in &ldquo;The
-Morning-Song.&rdquo; He also gives &ldquo;The Day-Song,&rdquo; sung in
-honour of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> George, of which I will quote
-the first verse, and the last paragraph of his paper.</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Awake, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> George,
-our English knight O!</p>
-<p class="line">For summer is a-come and winter is a-go,</p>
-<p class="line">And every day God give us His grace,</p>
-<p class="line">By day and by night O!</p>
-<p class="line">Where is <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> George, where
-is he O!</p>
-<p class="line">He is out in his long boat, all on the salt sea O!</p>
-<p class="line">And in every land O! the land that ere we go.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line"><i>Chorus</i>&mdash;And for to fetch the summer home,
-the summer and the May O!</p>
-<p class="line"><span class="hemistich">Chorus&mdash;</span> For the
-summer is a-come and the winter is a-go, etc.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class="first">The only account of &ldquo;The Hobby-horse&rdquo;
-found in the Cornish histories is in Hitchins and Drew&rsquo;s
-<i>Cornwall</i> (vol. i., p. 720; vol. ii., pp. 525, 529), where it is
-stated that there is a tradition of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-George on horseback having visited the neighbourhood of Padstow, where
-the indentation of his horse&rsquo;s hoofs caused a spring of water to
-arise. The spot is still known as <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-George&rsquo;s well, and water is said to be found there even in the
-hottest summer.&mdash;(<i><abbr title="Western Antiquary">W.
-Antiquary</abbr></i>.)</p>
-<p>In East Cornwall they have a custom of bathing in the sea on the
-three first Sunday mornings in May. And in West Cornwall children were
-taken before sunrise on those days to the holy wells, notably to that
-of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Maddern (Madron), near Penzance, to
-be there dipped into the running water, that they might be cured of the
-rickets and <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb33" href="#pb33" name=
-"pb33">33</a>]</span>other childish disorders. After being stripped
-naked they were plunged three times into the water, the parents facing
-the sun, and passed round the well nine times from east to west. They
-were then dressed, and laid by the side of the well, or on an
-artificial mound re-made every year, called <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Maddern&rsquo;s bed, which faced it, to sleep in the
-sun: should they do so and the water bubble it was considered a good
-sign. Not a word was to be spoken the whole time for fear of breaking
-the spell.</p>
-<p>A small piece torn (not cut) from the child&rsquo;s clothes was hung
-for luck (if possible out of sight) on a thorn which grew out of the
-chapel wall. Some of these bits of rag may still sometimes be found
-fluttering on the neighbouring bushes. I knew two well-educated people
-who in 1840, having a son who could not walk at the age of two, carried
-him and dipped him in Madron well (a distance of three miles from their
-home,) on the first two Sundays in May; but on the third the father
-refused to go. Some authorities say this well should be visited on the
-first three Wednesdays in May; as was for the same purpose another holy
-well at Chapel Euny (or <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Uny) near
-Sancred.</p>
-<p>The Wesleyans hold an open-air service on the first three Sunday
-afternoons in May, at a ruined chapel near Madron well, in the south
-wall of which a hole may be seen, through which the water from the well
-runs into a small baptistry in the south-west corner.</p>
-<p>Parties of young girls to this day walk there in May to try for
-sweethearts. Crooked pins, or small heavy things, are dropped into the
-well in couples; if they keep together the pair will be married; the
-number of bubbles they make in falling shows the time that will elapse
-before the event. Sometimes two pieces of straw formed into a cross,
-fastened in the centre by a pin, were used in these divinations. An old
-woman who lived in a cottage at a little distance formerly frequented
-the well and instructed visitors how to work the charms; she was never
-paid in money, but small presents were placed where she could find
-them. Pilgrims from all parts of England centuries ago resorted to
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Maddern&rsquo;s well: that was famed, as
-was also her grave, for many miraculous cures. The late <abbr title=
-"Reverend">Rev.</abbr> R. S. Hawker, Vicar of Morwenstow, in East
-Cornwall, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb34" href="#pb34" name=
-"pb34">34</a>]</span>published a poem, called &ldquo;The Doom Well of
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Madron,&rdquo; on one of the ancient
-legends connected with it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A respectable tradesman&rsquo;s wife in Launceston tells me
-that the townspeople here say that a swelling in the neck may be cured
-by the patients going before sunrise on the first of May to the grave
-of the last young man (if the patient be a woman), to that of the last
-young woman (if a man) who had been buried in the churchyard, and
-applying the dew, gathered by passing the hand three times from the
-head to the foot of the grave, to the part affected by the ailment. I
-may as well add that the common notion of improving the complexion by
-washing the face with the early dew in the fields on the first of May
-prevails in these parts (East Cornwall), and they say that a child who
-is weak in the back may be cured by drawing him over the grass wet with
-the morning dew. The experiment must be thrice performed, that is, on
-the mornings of the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd of May.&rdquo;&mdash;(<abbr>H. G.
-T.</abbr>, <i>Notes and Queries</i>, 14th December, 1850.)</p>
-<p>The 8th of May is at Helston given up to pleasure, and is known as
-Flora-day, Flurry-day, Furry-day, and Faddy. To &ldquo;fade&rdquo;
-meant in old English to dance from country to town. A legend says this
-day was set apart to commemorate a fight between the devil and
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Michael, in which the first was
-defeated. The name Helston has been fancifully derived from a large
-block of granite which until 1783 was to be seen in the yard of the
-Angel hotel, the principal inn of the place. This was the stone that
-sealed Hell&rsquo;s mouth, and the devil was carrying it when met by
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Michael. Why he should have burdened
-himself with such a &ldquo;large pebble&rdquo; (as Cornish miners call
-all stones) is quite unknown. The fight and overthrow are figured on
-the town-seal.</p>
-<p>The week before Flora-day is in Helston devoted to the
-&ldquo;spring-clean,&rdquo; and every house is made &ldquo;as bright as
-a new pin,&rdquo; and the gardens stripped of their flowers to adorn
-them.</p>
-<p>The revelry begins at day-break, when the men and maidservants with
-their friends go into the country to breakfast; these are the
-&ldquo;Hal-an-tow.&rdquo; They return about eight, laden with green
-boughs, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb35" href="#pb35" name=
-"pb35">35</a>]</span>preceded by a drum and singing an old song, the
-first verses of which ran thus:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Robin Hood and Little John</p>
-<p class="line">They both are gone to fair, O!</p>
-<p class="line">And we will to the merry greenwood</p>
-<p class="line">To see what they do there, O!</p>
-<p class="line">And for to chase&mdash;O!</p>
-<p class="line">To chase the buck and doe.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line"><i>Refrain</i>&mdash;With Hal-an-tow! Rumbelow!</p>
-<p class="line"><span class="hemistich">Refrain&mdash;</span> For we
-are up as soon as any O!</p>
-<p class="line"><span class="hemistich">Refrain&mdash;</span> And for
-to fetch the summer home,</p>
-<p class="line"><span class="hemistich">Refrain&mdash;</span> The
-summer and the May O!</p>
-<p class="line"><span class="hemistich">Refrain&mdash;</span> For
-summer is a-come O!</p>
-<p class="line"><span class="hemistich">Refrain&mdash;</span> And
-winter is a-gone O!</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class="first">The whole of this song may be found with the music in
-the <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> Baring Gould&rsquo;s
-&ldquo;Songs of the West,&rdquo; and the first verse set to another
-tune in <i>Specimens of Cornish Provincial Dialect</i>, by Uncle Jan
-Trenoodle. (Sandys.)</p>
-<p>The Hal-an-tow are privileged to levy contributions on strangers
-coming into the town.</p>
-<p>Early in the morning merry peals are rung on the church-bells, and
-at nine a prescriptive holiday is demanded by the boys at the
-grammar-school. At noon the principal inhabitants and visitors dance
-through the town. The dancers start from the market-house, and go
-through the streets; in at the front doors of the houses that have been
-left open for them, ringing every bell and knocking at every knocker,
-and out at the back, but if more convenient they dance around the
-garden, or even around a room, and return through the door by which
-they entered. Sometimes the procession files in at one shop-door,
-dances through that department and out through another, and in one
-place descends into a cellar. All the main streets are thus traversed,
-and a circuit is made of the bowling-green, which at one end is the
-extreme limit of the town. Two beadles, their wands wreathed with
-flowers, and a band with a gaily-decorated drum, head the procession.
-The dance ends with &ldquo;hands across&rdquo; at the assembly room of
-the Angel hotel, where there is always a ball in the evening.
-Non-dancers are admitted to <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb36" href=
-"#pb36" name="pb36">36</a>]</span>this room by a small payment (which
-must be a silver coin), paid as they go up the stairs either to the
-landlord or a gentleman,&mdash;one stands on each side of the door. The
-gentlemen dancers on entering pay for their partners, and by
-established custom, should they be going to attend the evening ball,
-they are bound to give them their tickets, gloves, and the first dance.
-The tradespeople have their dance at a later hour, and their ball at
-another hotel.</p>
-<p>The figure of the Furry dance, performed to a very lively measure,
-is extremely simple. To the first half of the tune the couples dance
-along hand-in-hand; at the second the first gentleman turns the second
-lady and the second gentleman the first. This change is made all down
-the set. Repeat.</p>
-<p>I have appended the tune, to which children have adopted the
-following doggerel:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="figure musicwidth"><img src="images/music.png" alt=
-"Music score." width="545" height="151"></div>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;John the bone (beau) was walking home,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">When he met with Sally Dover,</p>
-<p class="line">He kissed her once, he kissed her twice,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">And he kissed her three times
-over.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Some writers have made the mistake of imagining that
-the tune sung to the Hal-an-tow and the Furry dance are the same.</p>
-<p>Formerly, should any person in Helston be found at work on
-Flora-day, he was set astride on a pole, then carried away on
-men&rsquo;s shoulders to a wide part of the Cober (a stream which
-empties itself into Loe-pool close by), and sentenced to leap over it.
-As it was almost impossible to do this without jumping into the water,
-the punishment was remitted by the payment of a small fine towards the
-day&rsquo;s amusement. Others say the offender was first made to jump
-the Cober and then set astride on a pole to dry. <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb37" href="#pb37" name="pb37">37</a>]</span></p>
-<p>In many of the villages around Helston the children, on Flora-day,
-deck themselves with large wreaths, which they wear over one shoulder
-and under the other arm; and at Porthleven I observed, in 1884, in
-addition to these wreaths, several children with large white
-handkerchiefs arranged as wimples, kept on their heads with garlands of
-flowers.</p>
-<p>One of the first objects on entering the village of <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Germans (East Cornwall) is the large walnut-tree, at
-the foot of what is called Nut-tree Hill. Many a gay May-fair has been
-witnessed by the old tree. In the morning of the 28th of the month
-splendid fat cattle from some of the largest and best farms in the
-county quietly chewed the cud around its trunk; in the afternoon the
-basket-swing dangled from its branches filled with merry, laughing boys
-and girls from every part of the parish. On the following day the mock
-mayor, who had been chosen with many formalities, remarkable only for
-their rude and rough nature, starting from some
-&ldquo;bush-house&rdquo; where he had been supping too freely of the
-fair-ale, was mounted on wain or cart, and drawn around it, to claim
-his pretended jurisdiction over the ancient borough, until his
-successor was chosen at the following fair. Leaving the nut-tree, which
-is a real ornament to the town, we pass by a spring of water running
-into a large trough, in which many a country lad has been drenched for
-daring to enter the town on the 29th of May without the leaf or branch
-of oak in his hat.&mdash;(R. Hunt, <abbr title=
-"Fellow of the Royal Society">F.R.S.</abbr>, <i>Drolls, &amp;c., Old
-Cornwall</i>.)</p>
-<p>The wrestlers of Cornwall and their wrestling-matches are still
-famous, and in the May of 1868 4,000 assembled one day on Marazion
-Green, and 3,000 the next, to see one. The wrestlers of this county
-have a peculiar grip, called by them &ldquo;the Cornish-hug.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Any odd, foolish game is in West Cornwall called a May-game
-(pronounced May-gum), also a person who acts foolishly; and you
-frequently hear the expression&mdash;&ldquo;He&rsquo;s a reg&rsquo;lar
-May-gum!&rdquo; There is a proverb that says&mdash;&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t
-make mock of a May-gum, you may be struck comical yourself one
-day.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Whit-Sunday.&mdash;It was formerly considered very unlucky in
-Cornwall to go out on this day without putting on some new thing.
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb38" href="#pb38" name=
-"pb38">38</a>]</span>Children were told that should they do so
-&ldquo;the birds would foul them as they walked along.&rdquo; A new
-ribbon, or even a shoe-lace, would be sufficient to protect them.
-Whit-Monday is generally kept as a holiday, and is often made an excuse
-for another country excursion, which, if taken in the afternoon, ends
-at some farm-house with a tea of Cornish &ldquo;heavy-cream
-cake,&rdquo; followed (in the evening) by a junket with
-clotted-cream.</p>
-<p>Carew speaks of a feast kept in his time on Whit-Monday at the
-&ldquo;Church-house&rdquo; of the different parishes called a
-&ldquo;Church-ale.&rdquo; It was a sort of large picnic, for which
-money had been previously collected by two young
-men&mdash;&ldquo;wardens,&rdquo; who had been previously appointed the
-preceding year by their last &ldquo;foregoers.&rdquo; This custom has
-long ceased to exist.</p>
-<p>The Wesleyans (Methodists) in Cornwall hold an open-air service on
-Whit-Monday at Gwennap-pit. The pit is an old earth-round, excavated in
-the hill-side of Carn Marth, about three miles from the small village
-of Gwennap, and one from Redruth. This amphitheatre, which is then
-usually filled, is capable of holding from four to five thousand
-people, and is in shape like a funnel. It is encircled from the bottom
-to the top with eighteen turf-covered banks, made by cutting the earth
-into steps. It is admirably adapted for sound, and the voice of the
-preacher, who stands on one side, about half way up, is distinctly
-heard by the whole congregation. Wesley, when on a visit to Cornwall,
-preached in Gwennap-pit to the miners of that district, and this was
-the origin of the custom. Many excursion-trains run to Redruth on
-Whit-Monday, and a continuous string of vehicles of every description,
-as well as pedestrians, may be seen wending their way from the station
-to the pit, which is almost surrounded by &ldquo;downs,&rdquo; and in a
-road close by rows of &ldquo;standings&rdquo; (stalls) are erected for
-the sale of &ldquo;fairings.&rdquo; An annual pleasure-fair goes on at
-the same time at Redruth, and many avail themselves of the
-excursion-trains who have not the least intention of attending the
-religious service.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In Mid-Cornwall, in the second week of June, at <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Roche and in one or two adjacent parishes, a curious
-dance is performed at their annual &lsquo;feasts.&rsquo; It enjoys the
-rather undignified name of <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb39" href=
-"#pb39" name="pb39">39</a>]</span>&lsquo;Snails&rsquo; creep,&rsquo;
-but would be more properly called &lsquo;The Serpent&rsquo;s
-Coil.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The following is scarcely a perfect description of
-it:&mdash;The young people being all assembled in a large meadow, the
-village band strikes up a simple but lively air, and marches forward,
-followed by the whole assemblage, leading hand-in-hand (or more closely
-linked in case of engaged couples), the whole keeping time to the tune
-with a lively step. The band or head of the serpent keeps marching in
-an ever-narrowing circle, whilst its train of dancing followers becomes
-coiled around it in circle after circle. It is now that the most
-interesting part of the dance commences, for the band, taking a sharp
-turn about, begins to retrace the circle, still followed as before, and
-a number of young men with long, leafy branches in their hands as
-standards, direct this counter-movement with almost military
-precision.&rdquo;&mdash;(W. C. Wade, <i><abbr title=
-"Western Antiquary">W. Antiquary</abbr></i>, April, 1881.)</p>
-<p>A game similar to the above dance is often played by Sunday-school
-children in West Cornwall, at their out-of-door summer-treats, called
-by them &ldquo;roll-tobacco.&rdquo; They join hands in one long line,
-the taller children at the head. The first child stands still, whilst
-the others in ever-narrowing circles dance around singing, until they
-are coiled into a tight mass. The outer coil then wheels sharply in a
-contrary direction, followed by the remainder, retracing their
-steps.</p>
-<p>23rd of June. In the afternoon of Midsummer-eve little girls may be
-still occasionally met in the streets of Penzance with garlands of
-flowers on their heads, or wreaths over one shoulder.</p>
-<p>This custom was, within the last fifty years, generally observed in
-West Cornwall. And in all the streets of our towns and villages groups
-of graceful girls, rich as well as poor, all dressed in white, their
-frocks decorated with rows of laurel-leaves (&ldquo;often spangled with
-gold-leaf&rdquo;&mdash;Bottrell), might in the afternoon have been seen
-standing at the doors, or in the evening dancing along with their
-brothers or lovers.</p>
-<p>In Penzance, and in nearly all the parishes of West Penwith,
-immediately after nightfall on the eves of <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> John and <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Peter, the
-23rd and 28th of June, lines of tar-barrels, occasionally broken by
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb40" href="#pb40" name=
-"pb40">40</a>]</span>bonfires, were simultaneously lighted in all the
-streets, whilst, at the same time, bonfires were kindled on all the
-cairns and hills around Mount&rsquo;s Bay, throwing the outlines in
-bold relief against the sky. &ldquo;Then the villagers, linked in
-circles hand-in-hand, danced round them to preserve themselves against
-witchcraft, and, when they burnt low, one person here and there
-detached himself from the rest and leaped through the flames to insure
-himself from some special evil. The old people counted these fires and
-drew a presage from them.&rdquo;&mdash;(Bottrell.)</p>
-<p>Regularly at dusk the mayor of Penzance sent the town-crier through
-the streets to give notice that no fireworks were allowed to be let off
-in the town; but this was done simply that he should not be held
-responsible if any accident happened, for he and all in Penzance knew
-quite well that the law would be set at defiance. Large numbers of men,
-women, and boys came up soon after from the quay and lower parts of the
-town swinging immense torches around their heads; these torches
-(locally known as &ldquo;to&rsquo;ches&rdquo;) were made of pieces of
-canvas about two feet square, fastened in the middle either to a long
-pole or a strong chain, dipped until completely saturated in tar. Of
-course they required to be swung with great dexterity or the holder
-would have been burnt. The heat they gave out was something dreadful,
-and the smoke suffocating. Most of the inhabitants dressed in their
-oldest clothes congregated in groups in the street, and a great part of
-the fun of the evening consisted in slyly throwing squibs amongst them,
-or in dispersing them by chasing them with hand-rockets. The greatest
-good humour always prevailed, and although the revellers were thickest
-in a small square surrounded by houses, some of them thatched, very few
-accidents have ever happened. A band stationed here played at
-intervals. No set-pieces were ever put off, but there were a few
-Roman-candles. Between ten and eleven a popular mayor might often have
-been seen standing in the middle of this square (the Green Market),
-encircled by about a dozen young men, each holding a lighted
-hand-rocket over the mayor&rsquo;s head. The sparks which fell around
-him on all sides made him look as if he stood in the centre of a
-fountain of fire. The proceedings finished by the boys and girls
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb41" href="#pb41" name=
-"pb41">41</a>]</span>from the quay, whose torches had by this time
-expired, dancing in a long line hand in hand through the streets, in
-and out and sometimes over the now low burning tar-barrels, crying out,
-&ldquo;An eye, an eye.&rdquo; At this shout the top couple held up
-their arms, and, beginning with the last, the others ran under them,
-thus reversing their position. A year or two ago, owing to the
-increasing traffic at Penzance, the practice of letting off squibs and
-crackers in the streets was formally abolished by order of the mayor
-and corporation. Efforts are still made and money collected for the
-purpose of reviving it, with some little success; but the Green Market
-is no longer the scene of the fun. A few boys still after dusk swing
-their torches, and here and there some of the old inhabitants keep up
-the custom of lighting tar-barrels or bonfires before their doors. A
-rite called the Bonfire Test was formerly celebrated on this night. Mr.
-R. Hunt, <abbr title="Fellow of the Royal Society">F.R.S.</abbr>, has
-described it in his <i>Drolls, &amp;c. Old Cornwall</i>:&mdash;&ldquo;A
-bonfire is formed of faggots of furze, ferns, and the like. Men and
-maidens, by locking hands, form a circle, and commence a dance to some
-wild native song. At length, as the dancers become excited, they pull
-each other from side to side across the fire. If they succeed in
-treading out the fire without breaking the chain, none of the party
-will die during the year. If, however, the ring is broken before the
-fire is extinguished, &lsquo;bad luck to the weak hands,&rsquo; as my
-informant said (1865). All the witches in West Cornwall used to meet at
-midnight on Midsummer-eve at Trewa (pronounced Troway), in the parish
-of Zennor, and around the dying fires renewed their vows to their
-master, the Devil. Zennor boasts of some of the finest coast scenery in
-Cornwall, and many remarkable rocks were scattered about in this
-neighbourhood; several of them (as does the cromlech) still remain, but
-others have been quarried and carted away, amongst them one known as
-Witches&rsquo; Rock, which if touched nine times at midnight kept away
-ill-luck, and prevented people from being &lsquo;over-looked&rsquo;
-(ill-wished).&rdquo;</p>
-<p>On Midsummer-day (June 24th) two pleasure fairs are held in
-Cornwall: one at Pelynt, in the eastern part of the county, where in
-the evening, from time immemorial, a large bonfire has been always
-lighted in an adjoining field by the boys of the neighbourhood
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb42" href="#pb42" name=
-"pb42">42</a>]</span>(some writers fix on the summer solstice as the
-date of Pelynt fair, but this, I believe, is an error); and the second
-on the old quay at Penzance. It is called &ldquo;Quay Fair,&rdquo; to
-distinguish it from Corpus Christi fair, another and much larger one
-held at the other extremity of the town, and which lasts from the eve
-of Corpus Christi until the following Saturday. Quay fair was formerly
-crowded by people from the neighbouring inland towns and villages;
-their principal amusement was to go out for a short row, a great number
-in one boat, the boatmen charging a penny a head. This was taking a
-&ldquo;Pen&rsquo;nord of Say.&rdquo; When not paid for, a short row is
-a &ldquo;Troil.&rdquo; (Troil is Old-Cornish for a feast).</p>
-<p>Although this fair has not yet been discontinued, the number of
-those attending it grows less and less every year, and not enough money
-is taken to encourage travelling showmen to set up their booths. The
-old charter allowed the public-houses at the quay to keep open all
-night on the 24th of June, but such is no longer the case. Quay fair
-was sometimes known as Strawberry fair, and thirty years ago many
-strawberries were sold at it for twopence a quart. They were not
-brought to market in pottles, but in large baskets containing some
-gallons, and were measured out to the customers in a tin pint or quart
-measure. They were eaten from cabbage-leaves. Before the end of the
-day, unless there were a brisk sale, the fruit naturally got much
-bruised. They are still sold in the same way, but are not nearly as
-plentiful. Many of the strawberry fields, through which the public
-footpaths often went, have been turned up, and are now used for growing
-early potatoes. On <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> John&rsquo;s-day
-Cornish miners place a green bough on the shears of the engine-houses
-in commemoration of his preaching in the wilderness.</p>
-<p>This day is with Cornish as with other maidens a favourite one for
-trying old love-charms. Some of them rise betimes, and go into the
-country to search for an even &ldquo;leafed&rdquo; ash, or an even
-&ldquo;leafed&rdquo; clover. When found, the rhymes they repeat are
-common to all England.</p>
-<p>An old lady, a native of Scilly, once gave me a most graphic
-description of her mother and aunt laying a table, just before midnight
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb43" href="#pb43" name=
-"pb43">43</a>]</span>on <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-John&rsquo;s-day, with a clean white cloth, knives and forks, and bread
-and cheese, to see if they should marry the men to whom they were
-engaged. They sat down to it, keeping strict silence&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;For, if a word had been spoken,</p>
-<p class="line">The spell would have been broken.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">As the clock struck twelve, the door (which had
-purposely been left unbarred) opened, and their two lovers walked in,
-having, as they said, met outside, both compelled by irresistible
-curiosity to go and see if there were anything the matter with their
-sweethearts.</p>
-<p>It never entered the old lady&rsquo;s head that the men probably had
-an inkling of what was going on, and to have hinted that such was the
-case would, I am quite sure, have given dire offence.</p>
-<p>The following charm is from the <i><abbr title=
-"Western Antiquary">W. Antiquary</abbr></i>:&mdash;Pluck a rose at
-midnight on <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> John&rsquo;s-day, wear it to
-church, and your intended will take it out of your
-button-hole.&mdash;(Old Farmer, Mid-Cornwall, through T. Q. Couch.)</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was believed that if a young maiden gathered a rose on
-Midsummer-day, and folding it in white paper, forbore to look at it or
-mention what she had done until the following Christmas-day, she would
-<i>then</i> find the flower fresh and bright; and further if she placed
-it in her bosom and wore it at church, the person most worthy of her
-hand would be sure to draw near her in the porch, and beseech her to
-give him the rose.&rdquo;&mdash;Neota&mdash;Launcells. Charlotte
-Hawkey.</p>
-<p>In connection with Midsummer bonfires, I mentioned those on
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Peter&rsquo;s-eve; although they are no
-longer lighted at Penzance, the custom (never confined to West
-Cornwall) is in other places still observed. Many of the churches in
-the small fishing villages on the coast are dedicated to this saint,
-the patron of fishermen, and on his tide the towers of these churches
-were formerly occasionally illuminated.</p>
-<p>On <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Peter&rsquo;s-eve, at Newlyn West,
-in 1883, many of the men were away fishing on the east coast of
-England, and the celebration of the festival was put off until their
-return, when it took place with more than usual rejoicings. The
-afternoon was given up to aquatic <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb44"
-href="#pb44" name="pb44">44</a>]</span>sports, and in the evening, in
-addition to the usual bonfires and tar-barrels, squibs, hand and
-sky-rockets were let off. The young people finished the day with an
-open-air dance, which ended before twelve. In this village effigies of
-objectionable characters, after they have been carried through the
-streets, are sometimes burnt in the <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Peter&rsquo;s bonfire. I have often in Cornwall heard red-haired people
-described &ldquo;as looking as if they were born on bonfire
-night.&rdquo; At Wendron, and many other small inland mining villages,
-the boys at <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Peter&rsquo;s-tide fire off
-miniature rock batteries called &ldquo;plugs.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>I must now again quote from Mr. T. Q. Couch, and give his account of
-how this day is observed at Polperro.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The patron saint of Polperro is <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Peter, to whom the church, built on the seaward hill
-(still called chapel hill) was dedicated. His festival is kept on the
-10th of July (old style). At Peter&rsquo;s-tide is our annual feast or
-fair. Though a feeble and insignificant matter, it is still with the
-young the great event of the year. On the eve of the fair is the
-prefatory ceremony of a bonfire. The young fishermen go from house to
-house and beg money to defray the expenses. At nightfall a large pile
-of faggots and tar-barrels is built on the beach, and, amid the cheers
-of a congregated crowd of men, women, and children (for it is a favour
-never denied to children to stay up and see the bonfire), the pile is
-lighted. The fire blazes up, and men and boys dance merrily round it,
-and keep up the sport till the fire burns low enough, when they
-venturously leap through the flames. It is a most animated scene, the
-whole valley lit up by the bright red glow, bringing into strong relief
-front and gable of picturesque old houses, each window crowded with
-eager and delighted faces, while around the fire is a crowd of ruddy
-lookers-on, shutting in a circle of impish figures leaping like
-salamanders through the flames.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The next day the fair begins, a trivial matter, except to the
-children, who are dressed in their Sunday clothes, and to the village
-girls in their best gowns and gaudiest ribbons. Stalls, or
-&lsquo;standings,&rsquo; laden with fairings, sweetmeats, and toys,
-line the lower part of Lansallos Street, near the strand. There are,
-besides, strolling <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb45" href="#pb45"
-name="pb45">45</a>]</span>Thespians; fellows who draw unwary youths
-into games of hazard, where the risk is mainly on one side;
-ballad-singers; <i>penny-peep</i> men, who show and describe to
-wondering boys the most horrid scenes of the latest murder; jugglers
-and tumblers also display their skill. In the neighbouring inn the
-fiddler plays his liveliest tunes at twopence a reel, which the swains
-gallantly pay. The first day of the fair is merely introductory, for
-the excitement is rarely allayed under three. The second day is much
-livelier than the first, and has for its great event the
-wrestling-match on the strand, or perhaps a boat-race. On the third day
-we have the mayor-choosing, never a valid ceremony, but a broad
-burlesque. The person who is chosen to this post of mimic dignity is
-generally some half-witted or drunken fellow, who, tricked out in
-tinsel finery, elects his staff of constables, and these, armed with
-staves, accompany his chariot (some jowster&rsquo;s huckster&rsquo;s
-cart, dressed with green boughs) through the town, stopping at each
-inn, where he makes a speech full of large promises to his listeners,
-of full work, better wages, and a liberal allowance of beer during his
-year of mayoralty. He then demands a quart of the landlord&rsquo;s ale,
-which is gauged with mock ceremony, and if adjudged short of measure
-is, after being emptied, broken on the wheel of the car. Having
-completed the perambulation of the town, his attendants often make some
-facetious end of the pageant by wheeling the mayor in his chariot with
-some impetus into the tide.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Polperro</i>, 1871, pp.
-156&ndash;159.</p>
-<p>The ceremony of choosing a mock mayor was also observed at Penryn
-(near Falmouth), but it took place in the autumn, on a day in September
-or October, when hazel-nuts were ripe, and &ldquo;nutting day&rdquo;
-was kept by the children and poor people. The journeymen tailors went
-from Penryn and Falmouth to Mylor parish, on the opposite side of the
-river Fal. There they made choice of the wittiest among them to fill
-that office. His title was the &ldquo;Mayor of Mylor.&rdquo; When
-chosen, he was borne in a chair upon the shoulders of four strong men
-from his &ldquo;<span lang="en">goode towne of Mylor</span>&rdquo; to
-his &ldquo;<span lang="en">anciente borough of Penryn</span>.&rdquo; He
-was preceded by torch-bearers and two town-sergeants, in gowns and
-cocked hats, with <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb46" href="#pb46"
-name="pb46">46</a>]</span>cabbages instead of maces, and surrounded by
-a guard armed with staves. Just outside Penryn he was met with a band
-of music, which played him into the town. The procession halted at the
-town-hall, where the mayor made a burlesque speech, often a clever
-imitation of the phrases and manners of their then sitting
-parliamentary representative. This speech was repeated with variations
-before the different inns, the landlords of which were expected to
-provide the mayor and his numerous attendants liberally with beer. The
-day&rsquo;s proceedings finished with a dinner at one of the
-public-houses in Penryn. Bonfires, &amp;c., were lighted, and fireworks
-let off soon after dusk. It was popularly believed that this choosing
-of a mock mayor was permitted by a clause in the town charter.</p>
-<p>A festival, supposed to have been instituted in honour of
-Thomas-&agrave;-Beckett, called &ldquo;Bodmin-Riding,&rdquo; was
-(although shorn of its former importance) until very recently held
-there on the first Monday and Tuesday after the 7th of July.</p>
-<p>In the beginning of this century all the tradespeople of the town,
-preceded by music and carrying emblems of their trades, walked in
-procession to the Priory. They were headed by two men, one with a
-garland and the other with a pole, which they presented and received
-back again from the master of the house as the then representative of
-the Prior. Mr. T. Q. Couch had the following description of this
-ceremony from those who took part in its latest celebration:&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A puncheon of beer having been brewed in the previous
-October, and duly bottled in anticipation of the time, two or more
-young men, who were entrusted with the chief management of the affair,
-and who represented &lsquo;the Wardens&rsquo; of Carew&rsquo;s
-Church-ales, went round the town (Bodmin) attended by a band of
-drummers and fifers, or other instruments. The crier saluted each house
-with&mdash;&lsquo;To the people of this house, a prosperous morning,
-long life, health, and a merry riding.&rsquo; The musicians then struck
-up the riding-tune, a quick and inspiriting measure, said by some to be
-as old as the feast itself. The householder was solicited to taste the
-riding-ale, which was carried round in baskets. A bottle was usually
-taken in, and it was acknowledged by such a sum as the means or
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb47" href="#pb47" name=
-"pb47">47</a>]</span>humour of the townsmen permitted, to be spent on
-the public festivities of the season. Next morning a procession was
-formed (all who could afford to ride mounted on horse or ass, smacking
-long-lashed whips), first to the Priory to receive two large garlands
-of flowers fixed on staves, and then in due order to the principal
-streets to the town-end, where the games were formerly opened. The
-sports, which lasted two days, were of the ordinary
-sort&mdash;wrestling, foot-racing, jumping in sacks, &amp;c. It is
-worthy of remark that a second or inferior brewing from the same wort
-was drunk at a minor merry-making at Whitsuntide.&rdquo;&mdash;(Popular
-Antiquities, <i>Journal Royal Institute of Cornwall</i>, 1864.)</p>
-<p>In former days the proceedings ended in a servants&rsquo;-ball, at
-which dancing was kept up until the next morning&rsquo;s
-breakfast-hour.</p>
-<p>A very curious carnival was originally held under a Lord of Misrule,
-in July, on Halgaver Moor, near Bodmin, thus quaintly described by
-Carew:&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;<span lang="en">The youthlyer sort of Bodmin townsmen vse to
-sport themselves by playing the box with strangers whom they summon to
-Halgauer. The name signifieth the Goat&rsquo;s Moore, and such a place
-it is, lying a little without the towne, and very full of quauemires.
-When these mates meet with any rawe seruing-man or other young master,
-who may serue and deserue to make pastime, they cause him to be
-solemnely arrested, for his appearance before the Maior of Halgauer,
-where he is charged with wearing one spurre, or going vntrussed, or
-wanting a girdle, or some such felony. After he had been arraygned and
-tryed, with all requisite circumstances, iudgement is given in formal
-terms, and executed in some one vngracious pranke or other, more to the
-skorne than hurt of the party condemned. Hence is sprung the prouerb
-when we see one slouenly appareled to say he shall be presented at
-Halgauer Court (or take him before the Maior of Halgauer).</span></p>
-<p>&ldquo;<span lang="en">But now and then they extend this merriment
-with the largest, to preiudice of ouer-credulous people, persuading
-them to fight with a dragon lurking in Halgauer, or to see some strange
-matter there, which concludeth at least with a trayning them into the
-mire.</span>&rdquo;&mdash;(<i>Survey of Cornwall.</i>) <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb48" href="#pb48" name="pb48">48</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Heath says in his <i>Description of Cornwall</i>, &ldquo;These
-sports and pastimes were so liked by King Charles II., when he touched
-at Bodmin on his way to Scilly, that he became a brother of the jovial
-society.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Taking-day.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;An old custom, about which
-history tells us nothing, is still duly observed at Crowan, in West
-Cornwall. Annually, on the Sunday evening previous to Praze-an-beeble
-fair (July 16th) large numbers of the young folk repair to the parish
-church, and at the conclusion of the service they hasten to Clowance
-Park, where still large crowds assemble, collected chiefly from the
-neighbouring villages of Leeds-town, Carnhell-green, Nancegollan,
-Blackrock, and Praze. Here the sterner sex select their partners for
-the forthcoming fair, and, as it not unfrequently happens that the
-generous proposals are not accepted, a tussle ensues, to the intense
-merriment of passing spectators. Many a happy wedding has resulted from
-the opportunity afforded for selection on &lsquo;Taking-day&rsquo; in
-Clowance Park.&rdquo;&mdash;(<i>Cornishman</i>, July, 1882.)</p>
-<p>At <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives, on the 25th July,
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> James&rsquo;s-day, they hold a quiennial
-celebration of the &ldquo;Knillian-games.&rdquo; These have been fully
-described by the late J. S. Courtney in his <i>Guide to Penzance</i>,
-as follows:&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Near <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives a pyramid on the
-summit of a hill attracts attention. This pyramid was erected in the
-year 1782, as a place of sepulture for himself, by John Knill, Esq.,
-some time collector of the Customs at <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Ives, and afterwards a resident in Gray&rsquo;s Inn, London, where he
-died in 1811. The building is commonly called &lsquo;Knill&rsquo;s
-Mausoleum&rsquo;; but Mr. Knill&rsquo;s body was not there deposited,
-for, having died in London, he was, according to his own directions,
-interred in <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Andrew&rsquo;s church,
-Holborn. The pyramid bears on its three sides respectively the
-following inscriptions, in relief, on the granite of which it is built:
-&lsquo;Johannes Knill, 1782.&rsquo; &lsquo;I know that my Redeemer
-liveth.&rsquo; &lsquo;Resurgam.&rsquo; On one side there is also Mr.
-Knill&rsquo;s coat-of-arms, with his motto, &lsquo;<span lang="la">Nil
-desperandum</span>.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In the year 1797, Mr. Knill, by a deed of trust, settled upon
-the mayor and capital burgesses of the borough of <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Ives, and their successors for ever, an annuity of
-ten pounds, as a rent-charge, to <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb49"
-href="#pb49" name="pb49">49</a>]</span>be paid out of the manor of
-Glivian, in the parish of Mawgan, in this county, to the said mayor and
-burgesses in the town-hall of the said borough, at twelve o&rsquo;clock
-at noon, on the feast of the Nativity of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-John (Midsummer-day) in every year; and, in default, to be levied by
-the said mayor and burgesses by distress on the said manor. The ten
-pounds then received are to be immediately paid by the mayor and
-burgesses to the mayor, the collector of customs, and the clergyman of
-the parish for the time being, to be by them deposited in a chest
-secured by three locks, of which each is to have a key; and the box is
-left in the custody of the mayor.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Of this annuity a portion is directed to be applied to the
-repair and support of the mausoleum; another sum for the establishment
-of various ceremonies to be observed once every five years; and the
-remainder &lsquo;to the effectuating and establishing of certain
-charitable purposes.&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The whole affair has, however, been generally treated with ridicule.
-In order, therefore, to show that Mr. Knill intended a considerable
-portion of his bequest to be applied to really useful purposes, we
-annex a copy of his regulations for the disposal of the money:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;First. That, at the end of every five years, on the feast-day
-of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> James the Apostle, <i>Twenty</i>-five
-pounds shall be expended as follows, viz. <i>Ten</i> pounds in a dinner
-for the Mayor, Collector of Customs, and Clergyman, and two persons to
-be invited by each of them, making a party of nine persons, to dine at
-some tavern at the borough. <i>Five</i> pounds to be equally divided
-among ten girls, natives of the borough, and daughters of seamen,
-fishermen, or tinners, each of them not exceeding ten years of age, who
-shall between ten and twelve o&rsquo;clock in the forenoon of that day
-dance, for a quarter of hour at least, on the ground adjoining the
-Mausoleum, and after the dance sing the 100th Psalm of the Old Version,
-&lsquo;to the fine old tune&rsquo; to which the same was then sung in
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives church.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;<i>One</i> pound to the fiddler who shall play to the girls
-while dancing and singing at the Mausoleum, and also before them on
-their return home therefrom. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb50" href=
-"#pb50" name="pb50">50</a>]</span></p>
-<p>&ldquo;<i>Two</i> pounds to two widows of seamen, fishermen, or
-tinners of the borough, being 64 years old or upwards, who shall attend
-the dancing and singing of the girls, and walk before them immediately
-after the fiddler, and certify to the Mayor, Collector, and Clergyman
-that the ceremonies have been duly performed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;<i>One</i> pound to be laid out in white ribbons for
-breast-knots for the girls and widows, and a cockade for the fiddler,
-to be worn by them respectively on that day and the Sunday following.
-<i>One</i> pound to purchase account-books from time to time and pay
-the Clerk of the Customs for keeping the accounts. The remaining
-<i>Five</i> pounds to be paid to a man and wife, widower, or widow, 60
-years of age or upwards, the man being an inhabitant of <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Ives, and a seaman, fisherman, tinner, or labourer,
-who shall have bred up to the age of ten years and upwards, the
-greatest number of legitimate children by his or her own labour, care,
-and industry, without parochial assistance, or having become entitled
-to any property in any other manner.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Secondly. When a certain sum of money shall have accumulated
-in the chest, over and above what may have been required for repairs of
-the Mausoleum and the above payments, it is directed that on one of the
-fore-mentioned days of the festival &lsquo;<i>Fifty</i>&rsquo; pounds
-shall be distributed in addition to the
-&lsquo;<i>Twenty-five</i>&rsquo; pounds spent quiennially in the
-following manner; that is <i>Ten</i> pounds to be given as a
-marriage-portion to the woman between 26 and 36 years old, being a
-native of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives, who shall have been
-married to a seaman, fisherman, tinner, or labourer, residing in the
-borough, between the 31st of December previously, and that day
-following the said feast-day, that shall appear to the Mayor,
-Collector, and Clergyman, the most worthy, &lsquo;regard being had to
-her duty and kindness to her parents, or to her friends who have
-brought her up.&rsquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;<i>Five</i> pounds to any woman, single or married, being an
-inhabitant of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives, who in the opinion
-of the aforesaid gentlemen shall be the best knitter of
-fishing-nets.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;<i>Five</i> pounds to be paid to the woman, married or
-single, inhabitant of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives, or
-otherwise, who shall, by the same authorities, be deemed to be the best
-curer and packer of pilchards for exportation. <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb51" href="#pb51" name="pb51">51</a>]</span></p>
-<p>&ldquo;<i>Five</i> pounds to be given between such two follower-boys
-as shall by the same gentlemen be judged to have best conducted
-themselves of all the follower-boys in the several concerns, in the
-preceding fishing-season. (A follower is a boat that carries a tuck-net
-in pilchard-fishing.)</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And <i>Twenty-five</i> pounds, the remainder of the said
-<i>Fifty</i>, to be divided among all the Friendly Societies in the
-borough, instituted for the support of the Members in sickness or other
-calamity, in equal shares. If there be no such Society, the same to be
-distributed among ten poor persons, five men and five women,
-inhabitants of the borough, of the age of 64 years or upwards, and who
-have never received parochial relief.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The first celebration of the Knillian games, which drew a large
-concourse of people, took place in Knill&rsquo;s lifetime on July 25th,
-1801.</p>
-<p>The chorus then sung by the 10 virgins was as follows:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&lsquo;Quit the bustle of the bay,</p>
-<p class="line">Hasten, virgins, come away:</p>
-<p class="line">Hasten to the mountain&rsquo;s brow,</p>
-<p class="line">Leave, oh! leave, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives
-below.</p>
-<p class="line">Haste to breathe a purer air,</p>
-<p class="line">Virgins fair, and pure as fair.</p>
-<p class="line">Quit <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives and all her
-treasures,</p>
-<p class="line">Fly her soft voluptuous pleasures,</p>
-<p class="line">Fly her sons and all the wiles</p>
-<p class="line">Lurking in their wanton smiles;</p>
-<p class="line">Fly her splendid midnight halls,</p>
-<p class="line">Fly the revels of her balls,</p>
-<p class="line">Fly, oh! fly, the chosen seat</p>
-<p class="line">Where vanity and fashion meet!</p>
-<p class="line">Thither hasten: form the ring,</p>
-<p class="line">Round the tomb in chorus sing.&rsquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">These games have been repeated every five years up to
-the present time.</p>
-<p>Morvah feast, which is on the nearest Sunday to the 1st August, is
-said to have been instituted in memory of a wrestling-match, throwing
-of quoits, &amp;c., which took place there one Sunday, &ldquo;when
-there were giants in the land.&rdquo; On the following Monday there was
-formerly a large fair, and although Morvah is a very small village
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb52" href="#pb52" name=
-"pb52">52</a>]</span>without any attractions, the farmers flocked to it
-in great numbers to drink and feast, sitting on the hedges of the small
-fields common in West Cornwall. &ldquo;Three on one horse, like going
-to Morvah Fair,&rdquo; is an old proverb.</p>
-<p>On August 5th a large cattle-fair is held in the village of
-Goldsithney, in the parish of Perran-Uthnoe. Lysons, in 1814,
-says:&mdash;&ldquo;There is a tradition that this fair was originally
-held in Sithney, near Helston, and that some persons ran off with the
-glove, by the suspension of which to a pole the charter was held, and
-carried it off to this village, where, it is said, the glove was hung
-out for many years at the time of the fair. As some confirmation of the
-tradition of its removal it should be mentioned that the lord of the
-manor, a proprietor of the fair, used to pay an acknowledgment of one
-shilling per annum to the churchwardens of Sithney.&rdquo; The same
-author makes the statement that Truro fair, on November 19th, belongs
-to the proprietors of Truro Manor, as high lords of the town, and that
-a glove is hung out at this fair as at Chester; he also says that these
-same lords claim a tax called smoke-money from most of the houses in
-the borough.</p>
-<p>In Cornwall the last sheaf of corn cut at harvest-time is &ldquo;the
-neck.&rdquo; This in the West is always cut by the oldest reaper, who
-shouts out, &ldquo;I hav&rsquo;et! I hav&rsquo;et! I
-hav&rsquo;et!&rdquo; The others answer, &ldquo;What hav&rsquo;ee? What
-hav&rsquo;ee? What hav&rsquo;ee?&rdquo; He replies, &ldquo;A neck! A
-neck! A neck!&rdquo; Then altogether they give three loud hurrahs. The
-neck is afterwards made into a miniature sheaf, gaily decorated with
-ribbons and flowers; it is carried home in triumph, and hung up to a
-beam in the kitchen, where it is left until the next harvest. Mr.
-Robert Hunt says that &ldquo;after the neck has been cried three times
-they (the reapers) change their cry to &lsquo;we yen! we yen!&rsquo;
-which they sound in the same prolonged and slow manner as before, with
-singular harmony and effect three times.&rdquo; After this they all
-burst out into a kind of loud, joyous laugh, flinging up their hats and
-caps into the air, capering about, and perhaps kissing the girls. One
-of them gets the &ldquo;neck,&rdquo; and runs as hard as he can to the
-farm-house, where the dairy-maid or one of the young female domestics
-stands at the door prepared with a pail of <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb53" href="#pb53" name="pb53">53</a>]</span>water.
-If he who holds the &ldquo;neck&rdquo; can manage to get into the house
-in any way unseen, or openly by any other way than the door by which
-the girl stands with the pail of water, then he may lawfully kiss her;
-but if otherwise he is regularly soused with the contents of the
-bucket.</p>
-<p>The object of crying the &ldquo;neck&rdquo; is to give notice to the
-surrounding country of the end of the harvest, and the meaning of
-&ldquo;we yen&rdquo; is <i>we have ended</i>.</p>
-<p>The last sheaf of the barley-harvest (there is now but little grown)
-was the &ldquo;crow-sheaf,&rdquo; and when cut the same ceremony was
-gone through; but instead of &ldquo;a neck,&rdquo; the words &ldquo;a
-crow&rdquo; were substituted.</p>
-<p>When &ldquo;the neck&rdquo; is cut at the house of a squire, the
-reapers sometimes assemble at the front of the mansion and cry
-&ldquo;the neck,&rdquo; with the addition of these words, &ldquo;and
-for our pains we do deserve a glass of brandy, strong beer, and a
-bun.&rdquo;&mdash;(John Hills, Penryn, <i><abbr title=
-"Western Antiquary">W. Antiquary</abbr></i>, October, 1882.)</p>
-<p>In East Cornwall &ldquo;the neck,&rdquo; which is made into a
-slightly different shape, is carried to the mowhay (pronounced mo-ey)
-before it is cried (a mowhay is an inclosure for ricks of corn and
-hay). One of the men then retires to a distance from the others and
-shouts the same formula. It is hung up in the kitchen until
-Christmas-day, when it is given to the best ox in the stalls.</p>
-<p>The harvest-home feast in the neighbourhood of Penzance goes by the
-name of &ldquo;gool-dize,&rdquo; or &ldquo;gool-an-dize.&rdquo; In
-Scilly it is known as the &ldquo;nickly thize.&rdquo; Farmers there at
-that season of the year formerly killed a sheep, and as long as any
-portion of it was left the feast went on.</p>
-<p>Ricks of corn in Cornwall are often made, and left to stand in the
-&ldquo;arish-fields&rdquo; (stubble-fields) where they were cut. These
-are all called &ldquo;arish-mows,&rdquo; but from their different
-shapes they have also the names of &ldquo;brummal-mows&rdquo; and
-&ldquo;pedrack-mows.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Probus and Grace fair is held on the 17th of September, through a
-charter granted by Charles II. after his restoration, to a Mr. Williams
-of that neighbourhood, with whom he had lived for some time during the
-Civil Wars. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb54" href="#pb54" name=
-"pb54">54</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Probus is in East Cornwall, and its church is famed for its
-beautiful tower. Tradition has it that this church was built by Saint
-Probus, but for want of funds he could not add the tower, and in his
-need asked <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Grace to help him.</p>
-<p>She consented, but when the church was consecrated Probus praised
-himself, but made no mention of her. Then a mysterious voice was heard,
-repeating the following distich:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Probus and
-Grace,</p>
-<p class="line">Not the first but the la-ast.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">This town, consequently, has two patron saints.</p>
-<p>I know of no other feasten ceremonies in this month; but here, as
-elsewhere, the children of the poor make up parties &ldquo;to go a
-blackberrying.&rdquo; This fruit, by old people, was said not to be
-good after Michaelmas, kept by them 10th October (old style); after
-that date they told you the devil spat on them, and birds fouled
-them.</p>
-<p>I knew an old lady whose birthday falling on that day she
-religiously kept it by eating for the last time that year
-blackberry-tart with clotted cream.</p>
-<p>This brings me round to the month from which I started. Many of the
-feasts are of course omitted, as no local customs are now connected
-with them. There must be one for nearly every Sunday in the year, and a
-mere record of their names would be most wearisome. I cannot do better,
-therefore, than finish this portion of my work with two quotations. The
-first, from &ldquo;Parochalia,&rdquo; by Mr. T. Q. Couch, <i>Journal
-Royal Institute of Cornwall</i>, 1865, runs thus:&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The patron saint of Lanivet feast is not known; it is marked
-by no particular customs, but is a time for general visiting and
-merry-making, with an occasional wrestling-match. A local verse
-says:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;On the nearest Sunday to the last Sunday in
-A-prel,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1023">Lanivet men fare well.</p>
-<p class="line">On the first Sunday after the first Tuesday in May,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1023">Lanivrey men fare as well as they.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">In some parishes the fatted oxen intended to be eaten
-at these feasts were, the day before they were killed, led through the
-streets, garlanded with flowers and preceded by music. <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb55" href="#pb55" name="pb55">55</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Quotation number two is what Carew wrote in 1569:&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;<span lang="en">The saints&rsquo; feast is kept upon
-dedication-day by every householder of the parish within his own doors,
-each entertayning such forrayne acquaintance as will not fayle when
-their like time cometh about to requite him with the like
-kindness.</span>&rdquo;</p>
-<p>These remarks, and the jingling couplets, could be equally well
-applied to all the unmentioned feasts.</p>
-<div class="figure orn1width"><img src="images/tail1.png" alt=
-"Ornament." width="241" height="75"></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb56" href="#pb56" name=
-"pb56">56</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e349" href="#xd25e349src" name="xd25e349">1</a></span> A very
-general one for poor people in some parts of the county on
-Christmas-eve was pilchards and unpeeled potatoes boiled together in
-one &ldquo;crock.&rdquo;&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e349src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e481" href="#xd25e481src" name="xd25e481">2</a></span> Scat, a
-blow, a slap.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e481src">&uarr;</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch2" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<div class="figure"><img src="images/head2.png" alt=
-"LEGENDS OF PARISHES, ETC." width="559" height="52"></div>
-<h2 class="main">LEGENDS OF PARISHES, ETC.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="xd25e179"><span class="xd25e179init">C</span>ornish people
-possess in a marked degree all the characteristics of the Celts. They
-are imaginative, good speakers and story-tellers, describing persons
-and things in a style racy and idiomatical, often with appropriate
-gestures. Their proverbs are quaint and forcible, they are never at a
-lack for an excuse, and are withal very superstitious. Well-educated
-people are still to be met with in Cornwall who are firm believers in
-apparitions, pixies (fairies, called by the peasantry pisgies), omens,
-and other supernatural agencies. Almost every parish has a legend in
-connection with its patron saint, and haunted houses abound; but of the
-ghosts who inhabit them, unless they differ from those seen elsewhere,
-I shall say but little.</p>
-<p>This county was once the fabled home of a race of giants, who in
-their playful or angry moments were wont to hurl immense rocks at each
-other, which are shown by the guides at this day as proofs of their
-great strength. To illustrate how in the course of time truth and
-fiction get strangely mingled, I will mention the fact that old John of
-Gaunt is said to have been the last of these giants, and to have lived
-in a castle on the top of Carn Brea (a high hill near Redruth). He
-could stride from thence to another neighbouring town, a distance of
-four miles. I do not know if he is supposed to be the one that lies
-buried under this mighty carn, and whose large protruding hand and bony
-fingers time has turned to stone. Here, too, in the dark ages, a
-terrific combat took place between Lucifer and a heavenly <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb57" href="#pb57" name="pb57">57</a>]</span>host,
-which ended in the former&rsquo;s overthrow. A small monument has been
-erected on Carn Brea, to the memory of Lord de Dunstanville; and I once
-heard an old woman, after cleaning a room, say, &ldquo;It was fine
-enough for Lord de Dunstanville.&rdquo; Every child has heard of Jack
-the Giant Killer, who, amongst his other exploits, killed by stratagem
-the one who dwelt at <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Michael&rsquo;s
-Mount:</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;I am the valiant Cornishman</p>
-<p class="line">Who slew the giant Cormoran.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">He did not however confine himself to this
-neighbourhood, for of an ancient earth-work near Looe, known as the
-&ldquo;Giant&rsquo;s Hedge,&rdquo; it is said:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Jack the giant had nothing to do,</p>
-<p class="line">So he made a hedge from Lerrin to Looe.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">But the sayings and doings of these mighty men have
-been told far better than I could tell them in Mr. Halliwell
-Phillipps&rsquo; book, <i>Rambles in West Cornwall by the Footsteps of
-the Giants</i>; Mr. Robert Hunt&rsquo;s <i>Drolls, Traditions, and
-Superstitions of West Cornwall</i>; Mr. Bottrell&rsquo;s <i>Hearthside
-Stories of West Cornwall</i>; and by many other writers.</p>
-<p>Tourists visit West Cornwall to see the Land&rsquo;s End and its
-fine coast scenery, and express themselves disappointed that none of
-the country people in that district know anything of King Arthur. They
-forget that Uther&rsquo;s<a class="noteref" id="xd25e1744src" href=
-"#xd25e1744" name="xd25e1744src">1</a> heir was washed up to
-Merlin&rsquo;s feet by a wave at the base of &ldquo;Tintagel Castle by
-the Cornish sea,&rdquo; which is in the eastern part of the county.
-This castle was built on one of the grandest headlands in Cornwall
-(slate formation).</p>
-<p>The ruins of King Arthur&rsquo;s Castle are most striking. They are
-situated partly on the mainland and partly on a peninsula, separated by
-a ravine, once said to have been spanned by a drawbridge connecting the
-two.</p>
-<p>The ascent of this promontory, owing to the slippery nature of the
-path cut in the friable slate, is far from pleasant; and, as there was
-a stiff breeze blowing when I mounted it, I thought old Norden was
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb58" href="#pb58" name=
-"pb58">58</a>]</span>right when he said: &ldquo;Those should have eyes
-who would scale Tintagel.&rdquo; You are, however, amply repaid for
-your trouble when you get to the top.</p>
-<p>In addition to telling you of the grandeur of the castle in good
-King Arthur&rsquo;s days, the guides show you some rock basins to which
-they have given the absurd names of &ldquo;King Arthur&rsquo;s cups and
-saucers.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Tradition assigns to this king another Cornish castle as a
-hunting-seat, viz.&mdash;the old earth-round of Castle-an-dinas, near
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Columb, from whence it is said he chased
-the wild deer on Tregoss Downs.</p>
-<p>A dreary drive through slate-quarries takes you from Tintagel to
-Camelford. Near that town is Slaughter Bridge, the scene of a great
-battle between King Arthur and his nephew Modred, whom by some writers
-he is said to have killed on the spot; others have it that Arthur died
-here of a wound from a poisoned arrow shot by Modred, and that, after
-receiving his death wound at Camelford, he was conveyed to Tintagel
-Castle, where, surrounded by his knights, he died. All the time he lay
-a-dying supernatural noises were heard in the castle, the sea and winds
-moaned, and their lamentations never ceased until our hero was buried
-at Glastonbury. Then, in the pauses of the solemn tolling of the
-funeral bells, sweet voices came from fairy-land welcoming him there,
-from whence one day he will return and again be king of Cornwall. No
-luck follows a man who kills a Cornish chough (a red legged crow), as,
-after his death, King Arthur was changed into one.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In the parish of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Mabyn, in
-East Cornwall, and on the high road from Bodmin to Camelford, is a
-group of houses (one of them yet a smith&rsquo;s shop), known by the
-name of Longstone. The legend which follows gives the reason of the
-name:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In lack of records I may say: &lsquo;In the days of King
-Arthur there lived in Cornwall a smith. This smith was a keen fellow,
-who made and mended the ploughs and harrows, shod the horses of his
-neighbours, and was generally serviceable. He had great skill in
-farriery, and in the general management of sick cattle. He could also
-extract the stubbornest tooth, even if the jaw resisted, and some
-gyrations around the anvil were required. <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb59" href="#pb59" name="pb59">59</a>]</span></p>
-<p>&ldquo;&#8202;&lsquo;There seems ever to have been ill blood between
-devil and smith, and so it was between the fiend and the
-smith-farrier-dentist of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Mabyn. At night
-there were many and fierce disputes between them in the smithy. The
-smith, as the rustics tell, always got the advantage of his adversary,
-and gave him better than he brought. This success, however, only
-fretted Old Nick, and spurred him on to further encounters. What the
-exact matter of controversy on this particular occasion was is not
-remembered, but it was agreed to settle it by some wager, some trial of
-strength and skill. A two-acred field was near; and the smith
-challenged the devil to the reaping of each his acre in the shortest
-time. The match came off, and the devil was beaten, for the smith had
-beforehand stealthily stuck here and there over his opponent&rsquo;s
-acre some harrow-tines or teeth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&#8202;&lsquo;The two started well, but soon the strong swing
-of the fiend&rsquo;s scythe was brought up frequently by some
-obstruction, and as frequently he required the whetstone. The dexterous
-and agile smith went on smoothly with his acre, and was soon
-unmistakeably gaining. The devil, enraged at his certain discomfiture,
-hurled his whetstone at his rival, and flew off. The whetstone, thrown
-with great violence, after sundry whirls in the air, fell upright into
-the soil at a great depth, and there remained a witness against the
-Evil One for ages. The devil avoided the neighbourhood whilst it stood,
-but in an evil hour the farmer at Treblethick, near, threw it down.
-That night the enemy returned, and has haunted the neighbourhood ever
-since.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&#8202;&lsquo;This monolith was of granite, and consequently
-brought hither from a distance, for the local stone is a friable slate.
-It yielded four large gate-posts, gave spans to a small bridge, and
-left much granite remaining.&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo;&mdash;T. Q. Couch,
-<i>Notes and Queries</i>, April, 1883.</p>
-<p>Upon <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Austell Down is an upright block
-of granite, called &ldquo;the giant&rsquo;s staff, or longstone,&rdquo;
-to which this legend is attached:&mdash;&ldquo;A giant, travelling one
-night over these hills, was overtaken by a storm, which blew off his
-hat. He immediately pursued it; but, being impeded by a staff which he
-carried in his hand, he thrust this into the ground until his hat could
-be secured. After <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb60" href="#pb60"
-name="pb60">60</a>]</span>wandering, however, for some time in the
-dark, without being able to find his hat, he gave over the pursuit and
-returned for the staff; but this also he was unable to discover, and
-both were irrevocably lost. In the morning, when the giant was gone,
-his hat and staff were both found by the country people about a mile
-asunder. The hat was found on White-horse Down, and bore some
-resemblance to a mill-stone, and continued in its place until 1798,
-when, some soldiers having encamped around it, they fancied, it is
-said, as it was a wet season, this giant&rsquo;s hat was the cause of
-the rain, and therefore rolled it over the cliff. The staff, or
-longstone, was discovered in the position in which it remains; it is
-about twelve feet high, and tapering toward the top, and is said to
-have been so fashioned by the giant that he might grasp it with
-ease.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Murray&rsquo;s Guide.</i></p>
-<p>There is another longstone in the parish of <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Cleer,<a class="noteref" id="xd25e1798src" href=
-"#xd25e1798" name="xd25e1798src">2</a> about two miles north of
-Liskeard, which bears an inscription to Doniert (Dungerth), a
-traditional king of Cornwall, who was drowned in 872. In fact, these
-&ldquo;menhirs,&rdquo; supposed to be sepulchral monuments, are to be
-found scattered all over the county.</p>
-<p>The following curious bit of folk-lore appeared in the <i>Daily
-News</i> of March 8th, 1883, communicated by the <abbr title=
-"Reverend">Rev.</abbr> J. Hoskyns Abrahall, Coombe Vicarage, near
-Woodstock:&mdash;&ldquo;A friend of mine, who is vicar of <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Cleer, in East Cornwall, has told me that at least
-one housemaid of his&mdash;I think his servants in general&mdash;very
-anxiously avoided killing a spider, because Parson Jupp, my
-friend&rsquo;s predecessor (whom he succeeded in 1844), was, it was
-believed, somewhere in the vicarage in some spider&mdash;no one knew in
-which of the vicarage spiders.&rdquo; Spiders are often not destroyed
-because of the tradition that one spun a web over Christ in the manger,
-and hid him from Herod.</p>
-<p>There are other superstitions current in Cornwall somewhat similar
-to the above. Maidens who die of broken hearts, after they have been
-deceived by unfaithful lovers, are said to haunt their betrayers as
-white hares. The souls of old sea-captains never <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb61" href="#pb61" name="pb61">61</a>]</span>sleep;
-they are turned into gulls and albatrosses. The knockers (a tribe of
-little people), who live underground in the tin-mines, are the spirits
-of the Jews who crucified our Saviour, and are for that sin compelled
-on Christmas morning to sing carols in his honour. &ldquo;Jew&rdquo; is
-a name also given to a black field-beetle (why, I know not). It exudes
-a reddish froth: country children hold it on their hands and say,
-&ldquo;Jew! Jew! spit blood!&rdquo; &ldquo;A ghost at Pengelly, in the
-parish of Wendron, was compelled by a parson of that village after
-various changes of form to seek refuge in a pigeonhole, where it is
-confined to this day.&rdquo;&mdash;Through <abbr title=
-"Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle.</p>
-<p>After this digression I will return to <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Cleer, and, beginning with its holy well, briefly
-notice a few others. It is situated not far from the church, and was
-once celebrated as a &ldquo;boussening,&rdquo; or ducking-well for the
-cure of mad people. Considerable remains of the baptistery, which
-formerly enclosed it, are still standing, and outside, close by, is an
-old stone cross. Carew says,&mdash;&ldquo;<span lang="en">There were
-many bowssening places in Cornwall for curing mad people, and amongst
-the rest one at Alter Nunne, in the hundred of Trigges, called S.
-Nunne&rsquo;s well, and because the manner of this bowssening is not so
-vnpleasing to heare as it was vneasie to feele, I wil (if you please)
-deliuer you the practise, as I receyued it from the beholders. The
-water running from S. Nunne&rsquo;s well fell into a square and
-close-walled plot, which might be filled at what depth they listed.
-Vpon this wall was the franticke person set to stand, his backe toward
-the poole, and from thence with a sudden blow in the brest, tumbled
-headlong into the pond, where a strong fellowe, provided for the nonce,
-tooke him and tossed him vp and downe, alongst and athwart the water,
-vntill the patient by foregoing his strength had somewhat forgot his
-fury. Then was hee conueyed to the church and certain Masses sung ouer
-him; vpon which handling if his wits returned S. Nunne had the thanks:
-but if there appeared small amendment, he was bowssened againe and
-againe, while there remayned in him any hope of life for
-recouery.</span>&rdquo; The same writer says of Scarlet&rsquo;s
-&ldquo;<span lang="en">well neare vnto Bodmin, howbeit the water should
-seem to be healthfull, if not helpfull: for it retaineth this
-extraordinary quality, that the same is waightier than the ordinary
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb62" href="#pb62" name=
-"pb62">62</a>]</span>of his kind, and will continue the best part of a
-yeere without alteration or sent or taste, only you shall see it
-represent many colours, like the Rain-bowe which (in my conceite)
-argueth a running throu some minerall veine and therewithall a
-possessing of some vertue.</span>&rdquo; I must give one more quotation
-from Carew before I finish with him, about a well at
-Saltash:&mdash;&ldquo;<span lang="en">I had almost forgotten to tell
-you that there is a well in this towne whose water will not boyle
-peason to a seasonable softnes.</span>&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The holy wells in Cornwall are very numerous; the greater part were
-in olden times enclosed in small baptisteries. Luckily the poor people
-believe that to remove any of the stones of the ruins of these chapels
-would be fatal to them and to their children, and for that reason a
-great number yet remain. It is considered unlucky, too, to cart away
-any of the druidical monuments (&ldquo;pieces of ancientcy&rdquo;), and
-many are the stories told of the great misfortunes that have fallen on
-men who have so done. The innocent oxen or horses who drag them away
-are always sure to die, and their master never prosper. Persistent
-ill-luck also follows any one defiling these wells; and a tradition is
-current in one of the &ldquo;West Country&rdquo; parishes, of a
-gentleman, who, after he had washed his dogs, afflicted with the mange,
-in its holy well, fell into such poverty that his sons were obliged to
-work as day labourers. Mr. T. Q. Couch, in <i>Notes and Queries</i>,
-vol. x., gives this legend in connection with <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Nunn&rsquo;s well in Pelynt:&mdash;&ldquo;An old
-farmer once set his eyes upon the granite basin and coveted it; for it
-was not wrong in his eyes to convert the holy font to the base uses of
-the pig&rsquo;s stye; and accordingly he drove his oxen and wain to the
-gateway above for the purpose of removing it. Taking his beasts to the
-entrance of the well, he essayed to drag the trough from its ancient
-bed. For a long time it resisted the efforts of the oxen, but at length
-they succeeded in starting it, and dragged it slowly up the hill-side
-to where the wain was standing. Here, however, it burst away from the
-chains which held it, and, rolling back again to the well, made a sharp
-turn and regained its old position, where it has remained ever since.
-Nor will any one again attempt its removal, seeing that the farmer, who
-was previously well-to-do in the world, <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb63" href="#pb63" name="pb63">63</a>]</span>never prospered from that
-day forward. Some people say, indeed, that retribution overtook him on
-the spot, the oxen falling dead, and the owner being struck lame and
-speechless.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Nunn&rsquo;s well is not the
-&ldquo;boussening&rdquo; well formerly mentioned, but another dedicated
-to the same saint, and is resorted to as a divining and wishing well;
-it is commonly called by the people of that district the
-&ldquo;Piskies&rsquo; well.&rdquo; Pins are thrown into it, not only to
-see by the bubbles which rise on the water whether the wisher will get
-what he desires, but also to propitiate the piskies and to bring the
-thrower good luck. This county has many other divining wells which were
-visited at certain seasons of the year by those anxious to know what
-the future would bring them. Amongst them the Lady of Nant&rsquo;s
-well, in the parish of Colan, was formerly much frequented on Palm
-Sunday, when those who wished to foretell their fate threw into the
-water crosses made of palms. There was once in Gulval parish, near
-Penzance, a well which was reported to have had great repute as a
-divining well. People repaired to it to ask if their friends at a
-distance were well or ill, living or dead. They looked into the water
-and repeated the words:</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Water, water, tell me truly,</p>
-<p class="line">Is the man that I love duly</p>
-<p class="line">On the earth, or under the sod,</p>
-<p class="line">Sick or well? in the name of God.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Should the water bubble up quite clear, the one asked
-for was in good health; if it became puddled, ill; and should it remain
-still, dead. Of the wells of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Roche,
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Maddern (now Madron), and <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Uny, I have spoken in the first part of this
-work.</p>
-<p>The waters from several wells are used for baptismal rites (one near
-Laneast is called the &ldquo;Jordan&rdquo;), and the children baptized
-with water from the wells of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Euny (at
-the foot of Carn Brea, Redruth) and of Ludgvan (Penzance), &amp;c., it
-was asserted could never be hanged with a hempen rope; but this
-prophecy has unfortunately been proved to be false. The water from the
-latter was famed too as an eye-wash, until an evil spirit, banished for
-his misdeeds by <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ludgvan, to the Red Sea,
-spat into it from malice as he passed. The Red Sea is the favourite
-traditional spot here for <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb64" href=
-"#pb64" name="pb64">64</a>]</span>the banishment of wicked spirits, and
-I have been told stories of wicked men whose souls, immediately after
-their death, were carried off to well-known volcanoes.</p>
-<p>Almost all these holy wells were once noted for the curing of
-diseases, but the water from <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Jesus&rsquo; well, in Miniver, was especially famed for curing
-whooping-cough. <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Martin&rsquo;s well, in
-the centre of Liskeard at the back of the market, known as &ldquo;Pipe
-Well,&rdquo; from the four iron pipes through which four springs run
-into it, was formerly not only visited for the healing qualities of its
-chief spring, but for a lucky stone that stood in it. By standing on
-this stone and drinking of the well&rsquo;s water, engaged couples
-would be happy and successful in their married life. It also conferred
-magical powers on any person who touched it. The stone is still there,
-but has now been covered over and has lost its virtue.</p>
-<p>The saints sometimes lived by the side of the holy wells named after
-them, notably <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Agnes (pronounced
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ann), who dyed the pavement of her
-chapel with her own blood. <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Neot in whose
-pool were always three fish on which he fed, and whose numbers never
-grew less.<a class="noteref" id="xd25e1903src" href="#xd25e1903" name=
-"xd25e1903src">3</a> <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Piran, the titular
-saint of tin-miners, who lived 200 years and then died in perfect
-health. Of these three saints many miraculous deeds are related; but
-they would be out of place in this work, and I will end my account of
-the wells by a description of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Keyne&rsquo;s, more widely known outside Cornwall through
-Southey&rsquo;s ballad than any of the others. It is situated in a
-small valley in the parish of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Neot, and
-was in the days of Carew and Norden arched over by four trees, which
-grew so closely together that they seemed but one trunk. Both writers
-say the trees were withy, oak, elm, and ash (by withy I suppose willow
-was meant). They were all blown down by a storm, and about 150 years
-ago, Mr. Rashleigh, of Menabilly, replaced them with two oaks, two
-elms, and one ash. I do not know if they are living, but Mr. J. T.
-Blight in 1858, in his book on <i>Cornish Crosses</i>, speaks of one of
-the oaks being at that time so decayed that it had to be propped. The
-reputed virtue of the water of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Keyne&rsquo;s well is, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb65" href="#pb65"
-name="pb65">65</a>]</span>(as almost all know), that after marriage
-&ldquo;whether husband or wife come first to drink thereof they get the
-mastery thereby.&rdquo;&mdash;Fuller.</p>
-<div lang="en" class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;In name, in shape, in quality,</p>
-<p class="line">This well is very quaint;</p>
-<p class="line">The name, to lot of &lsquo;Kayne&rsquo; befell,</p>
-<p class="line">No ouer&mdash;holy saint.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;The shape, four trees of diuers kinde,</p>
-<p class="line">Withy, oke, elme, and ash,</p>
-<p class="line">Make with their roots an arched roofe,</p>
-<p class="line">Whose floore this spring doth wash.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;The quality, that man or wife,</p>
-<p class="line">Whose chance or choice attaines,</p>
-<p class="line">First of this sacred streame to drinke,</p>
-<p class="line">Thereby the mastry
-gaines.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Carew.</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Southey makes a discomfited husband tell the story,
-who ends thus:</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;I hasten&rsquo;d as soon as the wedding was
-done,</p>
-<p class="line">And left my wife in the porch;</p>
-<p class="line">But i&rsquo;faith she had been wiser than me,</p>
-<p class="line">For she took a bottle to church.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first"><abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Keyne not only thus
-endowed her well, but during her stay at <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Michael&rsquo;s Mount she gave the same virtue to <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Michael&rsquo;s chair. This chair is the remains of
-an old lantern on the south-west angle of the tower, at a height of
-upwards of 250 feet from low water. It is fabled to have been a
-favourite seat of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Michael&rsquo;s.
-Whittaker, in his supplement to Polwhele&rsquo;s <i>History of
-Cornwall</i>, says, &ldquo;It was for such pilgrims as had stronger
-heads and bolder spirits to complete their devotions at the Mount by
-sitting in this <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Michael&rsquo;s chair
-and <i>showing themselves as pilgrims to the country round</i>;&rdquo;
-but it most probably served as a beacon for ships at sea. To get into
-it you must climb on to the parapet, and you sit with your feet
-dangling over a sheer descent of at least seventy feet; but to get out
-of it is much more difficult, as the sitter is obliged to turn round in
-the seat. Notwithstanding this, and the danger of a fall through
-giddiness, which, of course, would be certain death, for there is not
-the slightest protection, I have seen ladies perform the feat.
-Curiously enough Southey has also written a ballad on <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb66" href="#pb66"
-name="pb66">66</a>]</span>Michael&rsquo;s chair, but it is not as
-popular as the one before quoted; it is about &ldquo;Richard Penlake
-and Rebecca his wife,&rdquo; &ldquo;a terrible shrew was she.&rdquo; In
-pursuance of a vow made when Richard &ldquo;fell sick,&rdquo; they went
-on a pilgrimage to the Mount, and whilst he was in the chapel,</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;She left him to pray, and stole away</p>
-<p class="line">To sit in <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Michael&rsquo;s chair.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Up the tower Rebecca ran,</p>
-<p class="line">Round and round and round;</p>
-<p class="line">&rsquo;Twas a giddy sight to stand atop</p>
-<p class="line">And look upon the ground.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;&#8202;&lsquo;A curse on the ringers for
-rocking</p>
-<p class="line">The tower!&rsquo; Rebecca cried,</p>
-<p class="line">As over the church battlements</p>
-<p class="line">She strode with a long stride.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;&#8202;&lsquo;A blessing on <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Michael&rsquo;s chair!&rsquo;</p>
-<p class="line">She said as she sat down:</p>
-<p class="line">Merrily, merrily rung the bells,</p>
-<p class="line">And out Rebecca was thrown.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Tidings to Richard Penlake were brought</p>
-<p class="line">That his good wife was dead;</p>
-<p class="line">&lsquo;Now shall we toll for her poor soul</p>
-<p class="line">The great church bell?&rsquo; they said.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;&#8202;&lsquo;Toll at her burying,&rsquo; quoth
-Richard Penlake,</p>
-<p class="line">&lsquo;Toll at her burying,&rsquo; quoth he;</p>
-<p class="line">&lsquo;But don&rsquo;t disturb the ringers now</p>
-<p class="line">In compliment to me.&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Old writers give the name of &ldquo;Caraclowse in
-clowse&rdquo; to <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Michael&rsquo;s Mount,
-which means the Hoar Rock in the Wood; and that it was at one time
-surrounded by trees is almost certain, as at very low tides in
-Mount&rsquo;s Bay a &ldquo;submarine forest,&rdquo; with roots of large
-trees, may still be clearly seen. At these seasons branches of trees,
-with leaves, nuts, and beetles, have been picked up.</p>
-<p>Old folks often compared an old-fashioned child to <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Michael&rsquo;s Mount, and quaintly said,
-&ldquo;she&rsquo;s a regular little Mount, <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Michael&rsquo;s Mount will never be washed away
-while she&rsquo;s alive.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Folk-lore speaks of a time when Scilly was joined to the mainland,
-which does not seem very improbable when we remember that within the
-last twenty-five years a high road and a field have been washed
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb67" href="#pb67" name=
-"pb67">67</a>]</span>away by the sea between Newlyn and Penzance. An
-old lady, whose memory went back to the beginning of the present
-century, told me that she had often seen boys playing at cricket in
-some fields seaward of Newlyn, of which no vestige in my time
-remained.</p>
-<p>But the Lyonnesse, as this tract of land (containing 140 parish
-churches) between the Land&rsquo;s End and Scilly was called, and
-where, according to the Poet Laureate, King Arthur met his
-death-wound,</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;So all day long the noise of battle
-roll&rsquo;d</p>
-<p class="line">Among the mountains by the winter sea,</p>
-<p class="line">Until King Arthur&rsquo;s Table, man by man,</p>
-<p class="line">Had fallen in Lyonnesse about their lord,</p>
-<p class="line">King Arthur&#8202;&hellip;.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">is reputed to have been suddenly overwhelmed by a
-great flood. Only one man of all the dwellers on it is said to have
-escaped death, an ancestor of the Trevilians (now Trevelyan). He was
-carried on shore by his horse into a cove at Perran. Alarmed by the
-daily inroad of the sea, he had previously removed his wife and family.
-Old fishermen of a past generation used to declare that on clear days
-and moonlight nights they had often seen under the water the roofs of
-churches, houses, &amp;c., of this submerged district.</p>
-<p>Whether the memory of this flood is perpetuated by the old proverb,
-&ldquo;As ancient as the floods of Dava,&rdquo; once commonly current
-in West Cornwall, but which I have not heard for years, I know not, as
-I have never met with any one who could tell me to what floods it
-referred.</p>
-<p>Tradition also speaks of a wealthy city in the north of Cornwall,
-called Langarrow, which for its wickedness was buried in sand, driven
-in by a mighty storm. All that coast as far west as <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Ives is sand, known as &ldquo;Towans,&rdquo; and the
-sand is always encroaching.</p>
-<p>There is a little church now near Padstow, dedicated to <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Enodock, which is often almost covered by the
-shifting drifts. It is in a solitary situation, and service is only
-held there once a year, when a path to it has to be cut through the
-sand. It is said that the clergyman, in order to keep his emoluments
-and fees, has been sometimes obliged to get into it through a window or
-hole in the roof. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb68" href="#pb68"
-name="pb68">68</a>]</span></p>
-<p>About eight miles from Truro is the lost church of Perranzabuloe,
-which for centuries was supposed to have been a myth, but the shifting
-of the sand disclosed it in 1835.</p>
-<p>In Hayle Towans is buried the castle of Tendar, the Pagan chief who
-persecuted the Christians, and in the neighbouring parish of Lelant
-that of King Theodrick, who, after beheading, in Ireland, many saints,
-crossed over to Cornwall on a millstone.</p>
-<p>Many of the Cornish saints are reputed to have come into Cornwall in
-the same way as this king; but <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ia, the
-patron saint of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives, chose a frailer
-vessel. She crossed from Ireland on a leaf.</p>
-<p>The afore-mentioned lost city was most likely a very small place, as
-I asked an old woman three or four years ago, who lived not far from
-the little village of Gwithian, where I could get something I wanted,
-and she told me, &ldquo;In the city.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The bay between this place and <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives
-(<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives Bay) has the reputation of being
-haunted at stormy times before a shipwreck by a lady in white, who
-carries a lantern.</p>
-<p>At Nancledra, a village near <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives,
-was formerly a logan rock, which could only be moved at midnight; and
-children were cured of rickets by being placed on it at that hour. It
-refused to rock for those who were illegitimate.</p>
-<p>Not far from here is Towednack, and there is a legend to the effect
-that the devil would never allow the tower of its church to be
-completed, pulling down at night what had been built up in the day.
-When a person makes an incredible statement he is in West Cornwall told
-&ldquo;To go to Towednack quay-head where they christen calves.&rdquo;
-(No part of this parish touches the sea.)</p>
-<p>Mr. Robert Hunt records a curious test of innocency which, not long
-since, was practised in this parish. &ldquo;A farmer in Towednack
-having been robbed of some property of no great value was resolved,
-nevertheless, to employ a test which he had heard the &lsquo;old
-people&rsquo; resorted to for the purpose of catching the thief. He
-invited all his neighbours into his cottage, and, when they were
-assembled, he placed a cock under the &lsquo;brandice&rsquo; (an iron
-vessel, formerly much employed by the peasantry in baking when this
-process was carried <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb69" href="#pb69"
-name="pb69">69</a>]</span>out on the hearth, the fuel being furze and
-ferns). Every one was directed to touch the brandice with his, or her,
-third finger, and say: &lsquo;In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy
-Ghost, speak.&rsquo; Every one did as they were directed, and no sound
-came from beneath the brandice. The last person was a woman, who
-occasionally laboured for the farmer in his fields. She hung back,
-hoping to pass unobserved amongst the crowd. But her very anxiety made
-her a suspected person. She was forced forward, and most unwillingly
-she touched the brandice, when, before she could utter the words
-prescribed, the cock crew. The woman fell faint on the floor, and when
-she recovered, she confessed herself to be the thief, restored the
-stolen property, and became, it is said, &lsquo;a changed character
-from that day.&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The following was told me by a friend. It took place in a school of
-one of our western parishes about sixty years ago:&mdash;&ldquo;It was
-in the days of quill pens, and the master had lost his penknife. Every
-boy pleaded not guilty. At twelve the master said no boy should leave
-the school for half-an-hour, when he would return and see if they had
-found his knife. The door was locked, and at the appointed time he came
-back with a small, round table, on which he had inverted a
-&lsquo;half-strike&rsquo; (4 gallons) measure. The table was placed in
-the middle of the gangway; the master stood by the side of it, and
-asked if they had found his knife. All said &lsquo;No!&rsquo;
-&lsquo;Well then,&rsquo; answered he, &lsquo;come out slowly one at a
-time and let each touch this measure with the right forefinger, and the
-bantam-cock under it will crow at the thief.&rsquo; The boys went out
-boldly, as they passed touching the tub, but the master missed one whom
-from the first he had suspected. He again locked the door, searched the
-rooms, and there, under a desk, not in his own place, he found the boy
-hiding. He began to cry, confessed the theft, and gave up the
-knife.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Another test of innocency, practised in bygone days, was to kindle a
-fire on one of the table-m&ecirc;n (large flat stones), so common in
-villages in West Cornwall. A stick lit at this was handed to the
-accused, who had to put out the fire by spitting on it. It is
-well-known that fear dries up saliva. It is still supposed in remote
-districts <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb70" href="#pb70" name=
-"pb70">70</a>]</span>that no one can bear witness to a misdemeanour,
-seen through glass.</p>
-<p>I will describe another rough ordeal before I go on to the legends
-of the Land&rsquo;s End district. It is called &ldquo;Riding the
-hatch,&rdquo; or &ldquo;heps&rdquo; (a half-door often seen at small
-country shops). Any man formerly accused of immorality was brought
-before a select number of his fellow parishioners, and by them put to
-sit astride the &ldquo;heps,&rdquo; which was shaken violently
-backwards and forwards: if he fell into the house he was judged
-innocent; but out on the road, guilty. When any one has been brought
-before his superiors and remanded he is still figuratively said
-&ldquo;to have been made to ride the &lsquo;heps.&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo;
-Hands are washed, as by Pontius Pilate, to clear a person from crime,
-and to call any one &ldquo;dirty-fingered&rdquo; is to brand him as a
-thief.</p>
-<p>On a bench-end in Zennor church there is a very singular carving of
-a mermaid. To account for it Zennor folks say that hundreds of years
-ago a beautifully-attired lady, who came and went mysteriously, used
-occasionally to attend their church and sing so divinely that she
-enchanted all who heard her. She came year after year, but never aged
-nor lost her good looks. At last one Sunday, by her charms, she enticed
-a young man, the best singer in the parish, to follow her: he never
-returned, and was heard of no more. A long time after, a vessel lying
-in Pendower cove, into which she sailed one Sunday, cast her anchor,
-and in some way barred the access to a mermaid&rsquo;s dwelling. She
-rose up from the sea, and politely asked the captain to remove it. He
-landed at Zennor, and related his adventure, and those who heard it
-agreed that this must have been the lady who decoyed away the poor
-young man.</p>
-<p>Not far from <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Just is the solitary,
-dreary cairn, known as Cairn Kenidzhek (pronounced Kenidjack), which
-means the &ldquo;hooting cairn,&rdquo; so called from the unearthly
-noises which proceed from it on dark nights. It enjoys a bad reputation
-as the haunt of witches. Close under it lies a barren stretch of
-moorland, the &ldquo;Gump,&rdquo; over it the devil hunts at night poor
-lost souls; he rides on the half-starved horses turned out here to
-graze, and is sure to overtake them at a particular stile. It is often
-the scene of demon fights, when one holds the lanthorn to give the
-others light, and is also a great resort <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb71" href="#pb71" name="pb71">71</a>]</span>of the pixies. Woe to the
-unhappy person who may be there after night-fall: they will lead him
-round and round, and he may be hours before he manages to get out of
-the place away from his tormentors. Here more than once fortunate
-persons have seen &ldquo;the small people&rdquo; too, at their revels,
-and their eyes have been dazzled by the sight of their wonderful
-jewels; but if they have ever managed to secrete a few, behold next
-morning they were nothing but withered leaves, or perhaps
-snail-shells.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">&ldquo;Sennen Cove was much frequented by mermaids.
-This place was also resorted to by a remarkable spirit called the
-Hooper&mdash;from the hooping, or hooting sounds it was accustomed to
-make. In old times, according to tradition, a compact cloud of mist
-often came in from over the sea, when the weather was by no means
-foggy, and rested on the rocks called Cowloc, thence it spread itself
-like a curtain of cloud quite across Sennen Cove. By night a dull light
-was mostly seen amidst the vapour, with sparks ascending as if a fire
-burned within it: at the same time hooping sounds were heard proceeding
-therefrom. People believed the misty cloud shrouded a spirit, which
-came to forewarn them of approaching storms, and that those who
-attempted to put to sea found an invisible force&mdash;seemingly in the
-mist&mdash;to resist them. A reckless fisherman and his son, however,
-disregarding the token, launched their boat and beat through the fog
-with a &ldquo;threshal&rdquo; (flail); they passed the cloud of mist
-which followed them, and neither the men nor the hooper were ever more
-seen in Sennen Cove. This is the only place in the county where any
-tradition of such a guardian spirit is
-preserved.&rdquo;&mdash;Bottrell.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The same author tells a story of a reputed astrologer called
-Dionysius Williams, who lived in Mayon, in Sennen, a century ago. He
-found his furze-rick was diminishing faster than it ought, and
-discovered by his art that some women in Sennen Cove were in the habit
-of taking it away at night. The very next night, when all honest folks
-should be in bed, an old woman from the Cove came as was her wont to
-his rick for a &ldquo;burn&rdquo;<a class="noteref" id="xd25e2154src"
-href="#xd25e2154" name="xd25e2154src">4</a> of furze. She made one of
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb72" href="#pb72" name=
-"pb72">72</a>]</span>no more than the usual size but could not lift it,
-neither could she after she had lightened her &ldquo;burn&rdquo; by
-half. Frightened, she tried to take out the rope and run away, but she
-could neither draw it out nor move herself. Of course Mr. Williams had
-put a spell upon her, and there she had to remain in the cold all
-night. He came out in the morning and released her, giving her, as she
-was poor, the furze. Neither she nor the other women ever troubled him
-again.</p>
-<p>Before proceeding any further, to make an allusion in the next
-legend intelligible, I must say something about Tregeagle (pronounced
-Tregaygle), the Cornish Bluebeard, who was popularly supposed to have
-sold his soul to the devil, that his wishes might be granted for a
-certain number of years; and who, in addition to several other crimes,
-is accused of marrying and murdering many rich heiresses to obtain
-<span class="corr" id="xd25e2161" title="Source: ther">their</span>
-money. One day, just before his death, he was present when one man lent
-a large sum to another without receiving receipt or security for it
-(the money was borrowed for Tregeagle). Soon after Tregeagle&rsquo;s
-death the borrower denied that he had ever had it, and the case was
-brought into Bodmin Court to be tried, when the defendant said,
-&ldquo;If Tregeagle ever saw it I wish to God that Tregeagle may come
-into court and declare it.&rdquo; No sooner were the words spoken than
-Tregeagle appeared, and gave his witness in favour of the plaintiff,
-declaring &ldquo;that he could not speak falsely; but he who had found
-it so easy to raise him would find it difficult to lay him.&rdquo; The
-money was paid, but the wretched man was followed night and day by the
-spirit, and great labour had the parsons and wise men before they could
-finally rid him of his tormentor. There are many versions of this
-transaction. Tregeagle himself is said in another to have received the
-money for an estate of which he was steward, and not to have entered it
-in his books. His ghost was doomed to do many impossible things, such
-as to empty Dosmery pool, near Bodmin Moor, with a limpet shell that
-had a hole in the bottom. This pool had the reputation, too, of being
-bottomless; but it has lately been cut into and drained by the workers
-of the granite quarries. Strange tales are told in that neighbourhood
-of his appearing to <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb73" href="#pb73"
-name="pb73">73</a>]</span>people, and of his dismal howls at not being
-able to fulfil his tasks. Mothers all over Cornwall when their children
-are loudly crying may be often heard to declare &ldquo;that they are
-roaring worse than Tregeagle.&rdquo; &ldquo;A tradition of the
-neighbourhood says that on the shores of this lonely mere (Dosmery
-pool) the ghosts of bad men are ever employed in binding the sand in
-bundles with &lsquo;beams&rsquo; (bands) of the same. These ghosts, or
-some of them, were driven out (they say horsewhipped out) by the parson
-from Launceston.&rdquo;&mdash;<abbr>H. G. T.</abbr> <i>Notes and
-Queries</i>, December, 1850.</p>
-<p>Tregeagle had also to remove the sand from one cove to another,
-where the sea always returned it. It was on one of these expeditions
-that either by accident or design he dropped a sackful at the mouth of
-Loe-pool, near Helston. (When in wet seasons the waters of this pool
-rise to such a height as to obstruct the working of the mills on its
-banks, and heavy seas have silted up the sand at its mouth, the Mayor
-of Helston presents by ancient custom two leather purses containing
-three halfpence each as his dues to the lord of Penrose who owns
-Loe-pool, and asks for permission to cut a passage through the bar to
-the sea). Another of Tregeagle&rsquo;s tasks is to make and carry away
-a truss of sand bound with a rope of sand from Gwenvor (the cove at
-Whitsand Bay) near the Land&rsquo;s End. But his unquiet spirit finds
-no rest, for whilst he is trying to do his never-ending work the devil
-hunts him from place to place, until he hides for refuge in a
-hermit&rsquo;s ruined chapel on <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Roche&rsquo;s rocks (East Cornwall).</p>
-<p>When the sea roars before a storm, people in the Land&rsquo;s End
-district say &ldquo;Tregeagle is calling,&rdquo; and often, too, his
-voice may be heard lamenting around Loe-pool.<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e2179src" href="#xd25e2179" name="xd25e2179src">5</a></p>
-<p>The substance of the following I had from a Penzance man (H. R. C.),
-to whom I must own I am indebted for much information about Cornish
-folk-lore. All his life he has in his business mingled with the
-peasantry of West Cornwall, and, unlike myself, he comes from a long
-line of Cornishmen.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You know Gwenvor Sands, in Whitsand Bay, at the Land&rsquo;s
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb74" href="#pb74" name=
-"pb74">74</a>]</span>End, and have heard of the unresting spirit of
-Tregeagle, by whom that spot is haunted. He foretells storms, and calls
-before the wind reaches home. I have often heard him howling before a
-westerly hurricane in the still of midnight at my house in Penzance, a
-distance of ten miles.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Tradition tells that on these sands, many centuries ago, some
-foreigners landed, and fought a great battle with the inhabitants,
-under King Arthur, on Vellan-drucher Moor. &ldquo;Where Madron, Gulval,
-and Zennor meet, there is a flat stone where Prince Arthur and four
-British kings dined, and the four kings collected the native Cornish
-who fought under them at the battle of
-Vellan-drucher.&rdquo;&mdash;(Bottrell.) This was long before the
-Spaniards (pronounced Spanyers) in 1595 came ashore at the same place
-from a galley &ldquo;high by day&rdquo; (in broad daylight), and burnt
-Vellan-dreath, a mill close by.</p>
-<p>These foreigners are popularly supposed to be red-haired Danes, and
-they stayed so long &ldquo;that the birds built in the rigging of their
-ships.&rdquo; In all the western parishes of Cornwall there has existed
-time out of mind a great antipathy to certain red-haired families, who
-are said to be their descendants, and, much to their disgust, they are
-often hailed as Danes (pronounced Deanes). Indeed this dislike was
-carried so far that few would allow any members of their families to
-intermarry with them. In addition to the usual country gossip in the
-beginning of this century amongst the women of this district whilst
-knitting at their doors (for the Cornish are famous
-&ldquo;knitsters&rdquo;), or sitting round &ldquo;breeding&rdquo;
-(netting) fishing-nets, they had one never-failing topic of
-conversation in their fears that the foreigners would land once more on
-Gwenvor Sands, or at Priest&rsquo;s Cove,<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e2195src" href="#xd25e2195" name="xd25e2195src">6</a> in Pendeen,
-near <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Just. Who these strangers were to
-be they were not at all sure, but they knew that the red-haired Danes
-were to come again, when Vellan-drucher (a water mill-wheel) would once
-more be worked with blood, and the kings for the last time would dine
-around the Garrick Zans (Table M&ecirc;n); and the end of the world
-would come soon after: for had not Merlin so prophesied more than a
-thousand years ago? Garrick Zans is <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb75"
-href="#pb75" name="pb75">75</a>]</span>the old name for a large flat
-stone, the Table M&ecirc;n (pronounced Mayon), at Sennen, near the
-Land&rsquo;s End, and seven mythical Saxon kings are said to have dined
-at it when on a visit to Cornwall, <abbr>A.D.</abbr> 600. &ldquo;Around
-it old folk went nine times daily, from some notion that is was lucky
-and good against witchcraft.&rdquo;&mdash;(Bottrell.)</p>
-<p>Off the Land&rsquo;s End is a very striking rock rising out of the
-sea. It is known as the Irish Lady, from the fact that an Irish vessel
-was once wrecked on it, and out of all on board one poor lady alone
-managed to scramble up to the top; but no boat could get to her, and,
-exhausted by fatigue, she fell into the water, and was drowned. Her
-spirit still haunts the spot. This is most probably a fanciful tale, as
-the rock bears some resemblance to a human figure.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;During a dreadful thunderstorm and hurricane on the 30th
-January, 1648, the day on which King Charles was beheaded, a large
-stone figure of a man, called the &lsquo;Armed Knight,&rsquo; which
-stood in an upright position at the extremity of the Land&rsquo;s End,
-forty fathoms above the level of the sea, was thrown down. On the same
-day a ship riding in <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives Bay, having on
-board the king&rsquo;s wardrobe and other furniture belonging to the
-royal family, bound for France, broke from her moorings, and ran ashore
-on the rocks of Godrevy Island, where all on board, about sixty
-persons, were drowned, except one man and a boy.&rdquo;&mdash;G. S.
-Gilbert&rsquo;s <i>Cornwall</i>.</p>
-<p>The name of Armed Knight has been transferred to another pile of
-rocks off the Land&rsquo;s End. The &ldquo;stone figure&rdquo; thrown
-down was most probably a natural formation, as one of the rocks there
-now bears the fanciful name of Dr. Johnson&rsquo;s Head, from a
-supposed likeness. Other versions of this legend say &ldquo;that the
-Armed Knight was only ninety feet high, with an iron spire on its
-top.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Porthgwarra in olden times was known as Sweethearts&rsquo; Cove from
-the following circumstance: The daughter of a well-to-do farmer loved a
-sailor, who was once one of her father&rsquo;s serving-men. Her
-parents, especially her mother, disapproved of the match; and when the
-young man returned from sea and came to see his sweetheart, he was
-forbidden the house. The lovers however met, and vowed to be true to
-each other, Nancy saying, &ldquo;That she would never marry any other
-man,&rdquo; and William, &ldquo;That, dead or alive, he would
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb76" href="#pb76" name=
-"pb76">76</a>]</span>one day claim her as his bride.&rdquo; He again
-went to sea, and for a long time no tidings came, neither from nor of
-him. Poor Nancy grew melancholy, and spent all her days, and sometimes
-nights, looking out seaward from a spot on the cliff, called then
-Nancy&rsquo;s Garden, now Hella Point. She gradually became quite mad;
-and one night fancied she heard her lover tapping at her bed-room
-window, and calling her to come out to him, saying: &ldquo;Sleepest
-thou, sweetheart? Awaken, and come hither, love. My boat awaits us at
-the cove. Thou must come this night, or never be my bride.&rdquo; She
-dressed, went to the cove, and was never seen again. Tradition says
-that the same night William appeared to his father, told him that he
-had come for his bride, and bade him farewell; and that next day the
-news arrived of his having been drowned at sea. Bottrell gives this
-legend under the title of &ldquo;The Tragedy of Sweet William and Fair
-Nancy.<span class="corr" id="xd25e2223" title=
-"Source: &rsquo;">&rdquo;</span></p>
-<p>Not far from the parish of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Levan is a
-small piece of ground&mdash;&ldquo;Johanna&rsquo;s Garden,&rdquo; which
-is fuller of weeds than of flowers. The owner of it was one Sunday
-morning in her garden gathering greens for her dinner, when she saw
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Levan going by to catch some fish for
-his. He stopped and greeted her, upon which she reproved him for
-fishing on a Sunday, and asked him what he thought would be his end if
-he did so. He tried to convince her that it was not worse than picking
-greens, but she would not listen to reason. At last <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Levan lost patience, and said, &ldquo;From this time
-for ever thou shalt be known, if known at all, as the Foolish Johanna,
-and thy garden shall ever continue to bear, as now, more hemlocks and
-nettles than leeks and lentils. Mark this! to make thy remembrance the
-more accursed for all time to come, if any child of thy name be
-baptised in the waters of Parchapel-well (close at hand) it shall
-become a fool, like thyself, and bad luck follow
-it.&rdquo;&mdash;Bottrell.</p>
-<p>There is a cleft-stone in <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Levan
-churchyard called <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Levan&rsquo;s stone;
-but it is said to have been venerated in the days of King Arthur; and
-Merlin, who once visited these parts with him, uttered this prophecy
-concerning it:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;When, with panniers astride,</p>
-<p class="line">A pack-horse can ride</p>
-<p class="line">Through <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Levan&rsquo;s
-stone,</p>
-<p class="line">The world will be done.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb77" href="#pb77" name=
-"pb77">77</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Unless some earthquake splits it further the world will last
-thousands of years longer.</p>
-<p>On an almost inaccessible granite peak seaward of the pile of rocks
-known as Castle Treryn (pronounced Treen), once the haunt and
-meeting-place of witches, on the summit of which is perched the
-far-famed Cornish logan-rock, is a sharp peak with a hole in it, large
-enough to insert a hand. At the bottom lay an egg-shaped stone,
-traditionally called the key of the castle, which, although easily
-shifted, had for ages defied all attempts at removal. It was said that
-should any one ever succeed in getting it out, Castle Treryn&mdash;in
-fact the whole cairn&mdash;would immediately disappear. It was
-unfortunately knocked out by the men who replaced the logan-rock,
-thrown down by Lieutenant Goldsmith. Its position was often altered by
-heavy seas, and from it the old folk formerly foretold the weather.</p>
-<p>In Buryan parish, named after an Irish saint, a king&rsquo;s
-daughter, who came into Cornwall with some of her companions in the
-fifth century, is the famous circle of Dawns Myin, or the Merry
-Maidens, originally consisting of nineteen upright stones. They are
-nineteen maidens, who for their sin of dancing on a Sunday were all
-turned into stone. Two m&ecirc;nhirs in a neighbouring field are the
-pipers, who at the same time suffered the same fate. Of these and other
-stone circles an old writer says, &ldquo;No man when counting them can
-bring the stones twice the same number.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Not far from Buryan, between Sennen and Penzance, is a very solitary
-weird spot&mdash;a disused Quakers&rsquo; burial-ground. In its lonely
-neighbourhood is sometimes seen by a privileged few, &ldquo;high by
-day,&rdquo; the spirit of a huntsman, followed by his dogs. He is
-dressed in the hunting costume of bygone ages; he suddenly appears (for
-neither his horse&rsquo;s hoofs nor his dogs&rsquo; feet make any
-sound), jumps over an adjacent hedge, and is as suddenly lost to view.
-I do not know if tradition has ever connected this huntsman with Wild
-Harris of Kenegie,<a class="noteref" id="xd25e2266src" href=
-"#xd25e2266" name="xd25e2266src">7</a> who was killed when hunting by a
-fall from his horse&mdash;it was frightened by a white hare, the spirit
-of a deserted maiden, which crossed its path. His ghost, in his
-hunting-dress, appeared <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb78" href=
-"#pb78" name="pb78">78</a>]</span>standing at the door of his house the
-night he was buried&mdash;the funeral, according to an old custom, had
-taken place at midnight. For years after he might be met in the
-vicinity of his home, and he and his boon companions were often heard
-carousing at nights in a summer-house on the bowling-green. Few then
-cared to pass Kenegie after dark, for his was said not to be the only
-spirit that haunted the place. Wild Harris&rsquo;s ghost was finally
-laid to rest by a famous ghost-laying parson, and put as a task to
-count the blades of grass nine times in an enclosure on the top of
-Castle-an-Dinas, an old earth fortification near where he is said to
-have met his death.<a class="noteref" id="xd25e2271src" href=
-"#xd25e2271" name="xd25e2271src">8</a> Ghosts only &ldquo;walk&rdquo;
-(appear) in the parish where their bodies were buried.</p>
-<p>On the opposite side of Buryan to the Quakers&rsquo; burial-ground
-is the parish of Paul (<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Pol-de-Leon). Its
-church was burnt by the Spaniards in 1595. They landed on a rock, said
-to have been named after Merlin&mdash;Merlin&rsquo;s car, and marched
-from Paul to Penzance, which they also fired in several places. I am
-afraid the inhabitants did not make a very bold stand against them; for
-Merlin had prophesied centuries before&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;That they should land on the rock of Merlin,</p>
-<p class="line">Who would burn Paul, Penzance, and Newlyn.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">And this caused them to lose courage, and falsify the
-old proverb:</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Car and Pen, Pol and Tre,</p>
-<p class="line">Would make the devil run away.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Close by the highway, where the Buryan road joins the
-high-road from Paul to Penzance, is a smoothly-cut, conical granite
-stone, popularly supposed to have been placed there in memory of some
-woman who was found murdered at that spot, with nothing on to identify
-her, and with only a thimble and ring in her pocket. It really marks
-the place where an ancient gold ring, three inches and a half in
-diameter, bearing the motto, &ldquo;In hac spe vivo,&rdquo; was
-discovered in 1781. In the same parish, a short walk from this place,
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb79" href="#pb79" name=
-"pb79">79</a>]</span>are some Druidical remains, which have the curious
-name of &ldquo;Kerris roundago.&rdquo; Some stones taken from it to
-repair Penzance pier were fatal to the horses who drew them, although
-they were young and healthy.</p>
-<p>In the adjacent parish of Newlyn, a fishing village, the favourite
-resort of artists, a great deal of gossiping on summer evenings goes on
-around the small wells (here called peeths), whilst the women wait
-patiently for each in turn to fill her earthen pitchers; some of the
-most industrious bring their knitting in their pockets with them.
-Opposite one of these wells, towering over <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Peter&rsquo;s church, is a striking pile of rocks,
-&ldquo;Tolcarn.&rdquo; On the summit are some curious markings in the
-stones, which, when a child, I was told were the devil&rsquo;s
-footprints; but the following legend, which I give on the authority of
-the <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> W. S. Lach-Szyrma, Vicar of
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Peter&rsquo;s, is quite new to
-me:&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The summit of the rock is reticulated with curious veins of
-elvan, about which a quaint Cornish legend relates that the Bucca-boo,
-or storm-god of the old Cornish, once stole the fishermen&rsquo;s net.
-Being pursued by Paul choir, who sang the Creed, he flew to the top of
-Paul hill and thence over the Coombe to Tolcarn, where he turned the
-nets into stone.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We have now reached the town of Penzance, and through its streets
-folks of the last generation often heard rumbling at midnight an
-old-fashioned coach drawn by headless horses; or saw a procession of
-coffins slowly wending its way to the churchyard. It was unlucky to
-meet this, as death was sure soon to follow, and tradition speaks of a
-woman who accidentally struck against one and died in the same night. A
-coach with headless horses and coachman, also just before Christmas,
-went through the streets of Penryn; this coachman had the power of
-spiriting away people who met and stared at him, unless they turned
-their heads and averted the evil by some mystical signs. In Penzance
-town were many haunted houses, but space will only allow of my noticing
-a few. One in Chapel Street (formerly Our Lady&rsquo;s Street) was
-tenanted by the spirit of Mrs. Baines, an eccentric old lady. At the
-back of her house was a very fine orchard well stocked with
-fruit-trees, which <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb80" href="#pb80"
-name="pb80">80</a>]</span>the boys were too fond of visiting. She
-determined at last that her gardener should watch for them, armed with
-an old blunderbuss, charged with peas and small shot. She gave him
-strict orders should he see any one, to say one, two, three, and then
-fire. He watched two nights, but the boys were too cunning for him, and
-still the fruit went. On the third, Mrs. Baines, thinking to catch him
-napping, went herself into the garden and began to shake the apples
-down from one of the trees. Some say that the man recognised his
-mistress, and, vexed at her suspecting him, said one, two, three, as
-quickly as he could utter the words, and fired; others, that he was
-sleeping, and awakened by the noise she made, shot her by mistake,
-exclaiming, &ldquo;I know-ee, you thief, I do; now I&rsquo;ll sarve-ee
-out, I will.&rdquo; Terrified after he had done the deed, he ran off
-into the country and there hid himself for some days. The poor old lady
-was more frightened than hurt, and all the shot were successfully
-extracted by her doctor; but very soon after this adventure she died.
-From this time her house and grounds began to have an evil reputation;
-Mrs. Baines&rsquo;s ghost, dressed in antiquated garb, a quaint lace
-cap on her powdered hair, lace ruffles hanging from her sleeves, and a
-short <i>mode</i> mantle over her shoulders, was often seen walking in
-the gardens or standing under an apple-tree, leaning on the gold-headed
-cane she always carried. Indoors, too, her high-heeled shoes were
-plainly heard night after night tapping on the floors as she paced up
-and down the rooms, which noise was often varied by the whirring of her
-spinning-wheel. For some time the house was unoccupied, now it is
-divided into two, and the ghost has been laid to rest. But long after
-Mrs. Baines ceased to appear her wheel was heard. At last it was
-discovered that some leather, which had been nailed around a door to
-keep out draughts, was loose in places, and that the whistling of the
-wind through this made the peculiar sound. Mr. Bottrell says
-&ldquo;that her spirit was laid by a parson, whose name he thinks was
-Singleton, and he succeeded in getting her away to the Western Green
-(west of Penzance), which was then spread over many acres of land,
-where the waves now roll.<a class="noteref" id="xd25e2316src" href=
-"#xd25e2316" name="xd25e2316src">9</a> Here this powerful <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb81" href="#pb81" name="pb81">81</a>]</span>parson
-single-handed bound her to spin from the banks, ropes of sand for the
-term of a thousand years, unless she, before that time, spun a
-sufficiently long and strong one to reach from <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Michael&rsquo;s Mount to <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Clement&rsquo;s Isle (across the bay).&rdquo; About
-a stone&rsquo;s throw from Mrs. Baines&rsquo;s house, on an eminence
-above Quay street, stood in her days Penzance Chapel of Ease (for
-Penzance was then in Madron parish), called our Lady&rsquo;s or
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Mary&rsquo;s Chapel. On the same site
-was built, in 1835, the present parish church of <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Mary&rsquo;s. Here, in the memory of a few who still
-survive, a gentleman in the early part of this century did penance, and
-afterwards walked from thence through the streets to his house, wrapped
-in a sheet, with a lighted taper in his hand. It was usual then, as
-now, for the Mayor and Corporation of Penzance, with the mace-bearers
-and constables, to go once a month in state to church. Before the
-reading of the first lesson the mace-bearers left, and visited the
-public-houses, in order to see that they were shut during service time.
-When the sermon began they came back and returned to their seats in
-order to be in readiness to escort the Mayor home. Quay street was once
-the most fashionable part of Penzance, but the large houses are now
-divided into smaller tenements; in some of them bits of finely-moulded
-ceilings, &amp;c., still exist. One of the houses reputed to have been
-haunted was torn down in 1813, when the skeleton of a man was found
-built into a wall. It was, of course, put down to be the sailor&rsquo;s
-whose spirit was so often seen there, and who (tradition said) had been
-murdered in that house for the sake of his money. It was well known
-that he had brought back great riches from foreign parts. There is a
-myth that Sir Walter Raleigh landed at Penzance Quay when he returned
-from Virginia, and on it smoked the first tobacco ever seen in England,
-but for this statement I believe there is not the slightest foundation.
-Several western ports, both in Devon and Cornwall, make the same
-boast.</p>
-<p>It is a fact, however, that the news of Nelson&rsquo;s death was
-first heard here. It was brought into the port by two fishermen, who
-had it from the crew of a passing vessel. A small company of strolling
-actors were playing that night at the little theatre then standing over
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb82" href="#pb82" name=
-"pb82">82</a>]</span>some stables in Chapel street, and the play was
-stopped for a few moments whilst one of the actors told the
-audience.</p>
-<p>Another haunted house, at the opposite side of Penzance, is
-celebrated in a poem called &ldquo;The Petition of an Old Uninhabited
-House,&rdquo; written and published in 1811, by the <abbr title=
-"Reverend">Rev.</abbr> C. V. Le Grice, who was then Vicar of Madron. He
-was a friend of Charles Lamb, who mentions him in his &ldquo;Essay on
-Christ&rsquo;s Hospital.&rdquo; About this house a lady once told me a
-strange story, that I will relate. Forty years ago, she, a perfect
-stranger to the place, never having been in Penzance before, came to it
-with her husband and her first child, for she was then a young wife. As
-they meant to settle in the town, they went to this hotel, where they
-intended staying until they could get a suitable house. On the evening
-of their arrival, her husband having gone out, she sat alone before the
-fire nursing her child, when she suddenly saw a little old man, in a
-very old-fashioned dress, come into the room. He sat down in a chair
-near her, looked steadfastly into the fire, and, after some time,
-without saying a word, he rose and left. On her husband&rsquo;s return,
-she told him of her queer visitor. The next morning they made enquiries
-about him, and found that the hotel had been built on the site of the
-old uninhabited house; that nearly the whole of it had been destroyed,
-but a few of the best rooms remained; and that they were in a haunted
-chamber. She declared that she could never sleep there another night,
-and, temporarily, they engaged some furnished lodgings. These old rooms
-are now pulled down and billiard and other rooms cover the place where
-they stood.</p>
-<p>Outside the boundary-stone, west of Penzance, stands, in its own
-grounds, a house to which additions have been made by many succeeding
-generations. Tradition, of course, gave it a ghost. With the other
-members of my family I lived there for several years, but none of us
-ever saw it. I am bound, however, to state that we never slept in the
-haunted chamber. For a short period it was occupied by a groom, who one
-morning came to me with a very long face, and said he dared not sleep
-there any more, for some mysterious being came night after night, and
-pulled all the bed-clothes off him; rather than do so, he would sleep
-in the harness-room. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb83" href="#pb83"
-name="pb83">83</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Still further west of Penzance is a much larger house, to which,
-like the former, many additions have been made. And up its avenue,
-after dark, a carriage may be often heard slowly making its way until
-it reaches the hall-door, where it stops. In this house, about sixty
-years ago, lived, in very great style, a gentleman, who was a regular
-autocrat, and of him one of his old servants related to me this
-anecdote, which is curious as an illustration of the manners of those
-times. When in his employ, he gave an answer to some question, which
-afterwards his master discovered to be an untruth. The next Sunday he
-made him, as the congregation came out, stand at Madron church door, by
-a tombstone covered with loaves of bread. Of these, he had to give one
-to each poor person that passed, and say, in an audible tone, &ldquo;I,
-William &mdash;&mdash;, last week told my master a lie.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mr. G. B. Millett, in his <i>Penzance Past and Present</i>, gives a
-tale well known in this district, about the drinking habits of our
-ancestors, which, as I am now on the subject of manners, I will
-quote.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A particular gentleman, not far from Penzance, loved good
-liquor, and one evening had gathered some of his jovial companions
-together, determined to make a night of it. His wife, having had some
-experience of such gatherings before, with wise precaution, saw as much
-wine taken out of the cellar as she thought would be good for her
-husband and his friends. Then, safely locking the strong oak door, she
-put the key in her pocket, and announced her intention of spending the
-evening with some lady friends. The hours were passing pleasantly away,
-and, with a smile of inward satisfaction, she was congratulating
-herself upon the success of her forethought, when a heavy stumbling
-noise was heard upon the stairs, and shortly afterwards two burly
-footmen staggered into the room, groaning under the weight of a
-ponderous cellar door, with its posts and lintel, which had been sent
-by their master for the mistress to unlock.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The manor of Conerton, which at one time nearly included the whole
-of West Penwith, had many privileges in Penzance. Before the days of
-county courts the lord held a monthly court here for <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb84" href="#pb84" name="pb84">84</a>]</span>the
-trial of small cases not criminal. Its prison, a wretched place
-(visited by Howard), no longer exists, but people were confined there
-early in this century&mdash;sometimes for long periods. I was once
-shown a beautiful patchwork quilt made by a poor woman, who had been
-imprisoned for debt.</p>
-<p>Until within the last fifty years every butcher in Penzance market
-had to pay to the bailiff of this manor at Christmas a marrow-bone or a
-shilling. The first butcher who refused to pay it also defied one of
-the bye-laws of the market that compelled them to wear white sleeves
-over their blue blouses. He was brought before the magistrates, and
-declared &ldquo;that he would be incarcerated before he would do
-it.&rdquo; The following is a favourite story handed down amongst the
-butchers from father to son. A solicitor in Penzance had a very large
-dog that was in the habit of coming into their market and stealing
-joints of meat from the stalls. One day one of them went to the lawyer,
-and said,&mdash;&ldquo;Please sir, could I sue the owner of a dog for a
-leg of mutton stolen from my stall?&rdquo; &ldquo;Certainly, my good
-man.&rdquo; &ldquo;Then, please sir, the dog is yours, and the price of
-the mutton is <abbr title="4 shilling 6 pence">4<i>s.</i>
-6<i>d.</i></abbr>&rdquo; The money was paid, and the man was going away
-in triumph, when he was called back by these words: &ldquo;Stay a
-moment, my good man, a lawyer&rsquo;s consultation is <abbr title=
-"6 shilling 8 pence">6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i></abbr>, you owe me the
-difference:&rdquo; which sum the discomfited butcher had to pay.</p>
-<p>Every stream in Cornwall however small is called a river (pronounced
-revvur). One flows into the sea west of Penzance, between it and
-Newlyn, known as Laregan, and another at the east in Gulval parish, as
-Ponsandane river. There is an old rhyme about them that runs thus:</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;When Ponsandane calls to Laregan river,</p>
-<p class="line">There will be fine weather.</p>
-<p class="line">But we may look for rain</p>
-<p class="line">When Laregan calls to Ponsandane.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Years ago there was a marsh between Penzance and
-Newlyn, now covered by the sea, known to the old people as the
-&ldquo;Clodgy;&rdquo; when the sea moaned there they said,
-&ldquo;Clodgy is calling for rain.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb85" href="#pb85" name="pb85">85</a>]</span>Sometimes at the present
-day it is &ldquo;Bucca&rdquo; is calling, Bucca being the nickname in
-Penzance for the inhabitants of Newlyn.</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Penzance boys up in a tree,</p>
-<p class="line">Looking as wisht (weak, downcast) as wisht can be;</p>
-<p class="line">Newlyn &lsquo;Buccas,&rsquo; strong as oak,</p>
-<p class="line">Knocking them down at every poke.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">The weather at Mount&rsquo;s Bay is also foretold by
-the look of the Lizard land, which lies south:</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;When the Lizard is clear, rain is
-near.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">The marsh on Marazion Green still exists, and not many
-years ago no one cared to cross it after nightfall, especially on
-horseback, for at a certain spot close by the marsh a white lady was
-sure to arise from the ground, jump on the rider&rsquo;s saddle, and,
-like the &ldquo;White Lady of Avenel,&rdquo; ride with him
-pillion-fashion as far as the Red river<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e2410src" href="#xd25e2410" name="xd25e2410src">10</a> that runs
-into the sea just below the smelting-works at Chyandour, a suburb of
-Penzance. The last person who saw her was a tailor of this town, who
-died in 1840. He was commonly called &ldquo;Buck Billy,&rdquo; from his
-wearing till the day of his death a pigtail, a buff waistcoat, and a
-blue coat with yellow buttons.</p>
-<p>Marazion, or Market-jew, which latter is a corruption of its old
-Cornish name, Marghaisewe, meaning a Thursday&rsquo;s market, is a
-small town exactly opposite <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Michael&rsquo;s Mount. Until its present church was built its mayor sat
-in a very high seat with his back against a window. This is the origin
-of the Cornish proverb: &ldquo;In your own light, like the mayor of
-Market-jew.&rdquo; This mayor is jokingly said to have three
-privileges. The first is, &ldquo;That he may sit in his own
-light;&rdquo; the second, &ldquo;Next to the parson;&rdquo; and the
-third, &ldquo;If he see a pig in a gutter he may turn it out and take
-its place.&rdquo;<a class="noteref" id="xd25e2418src" href="#xd25e2418"
-name="xd25e2418src">11</a></p>
-<p>In the churchyard of the neighbouring parish of <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Hilary is a monument to the <abbr title=
-"Reverend">Rev.</abbr> John Penneck, <abbr title=
-"Master of Arts">M.A.</abbr>, who, in the early part of the last
-century, was Chancellor of Exeter Cathedral. His ghost is very
-eccentric, sometimes getting into a passion, and on these occasions
-raising a great storm of wind. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb86"
-href="#pb86" name="pb86">86</a>]</span></p>
-<p>In the parish of Breage, near the sea, about four miles from
-Marazion, are the ruins of Pengersick Castle, of which only some
-fragments of walls and a square tower now stand. Some of the upper
-rooms in the latter have fallen in, and they are all in a state of
-decay. The lower have oak-panels curiously carved and painted, but time
-has almost effaced the designs. The most perfect is one representing
-&ldquo;Perseverance,&rdquo; under which are the following lines:</p>
-<div lang="en" class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;What thing is harder than the rock?</p>
-<p class="line">What softer is than water cleere?</p>
-<p class="line">Yet wyll the same, with often droppe,</p>
-<p class="line">The hard rock perce as doth a spere.</p>
-<p class="line">Even so, nothing so hard to attayne,</p>
-<p class="line">But may be hadde, with labour and payne.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">So many are the legends told of the former inhabitants
-of Pengersick, that it would be almost impossible at this date to
-decide which is the original. These ruins stand on the site of a much
-older castle, and in it dwelt, far back in the dark ages, a very wicked
-man, who, when he was fighting in foreign parts, forgetting his wife at
-home, courted a king&rsquo;s daughter, who gave him a magic sword,
-which ensured in every battle the victory to its owner. He deceived and
-left her; but she, with her son in her arms, followed him to his home
-by the Mount. There she met him, and upbraided him with his cruelty,
-and in a fit of passion he threw them both into the sea. The lady was
-drowned, and after her death she was changed into a white hare, which
-continually haunted the old lord; but her boy was picked up alive by a
-passing ship. The lord&rsquo;s wife afterwards died, and he married
-again a woman as bad as himself, reputed to be a witch, who was very
-cruel to her step-son, who lived with his father at the castle. One
-night there was a great storm in Mount&rsquo;s Bay, and the young man
-went down to the shore to see if there were any vessels in distress,
-and spied on the beach an almost exhausted sailor, who had been washed
-in by the waves, and whom he bade his servants carry to his home, and
-put into his own bed. When he revived, all were struck by the
-marvellous resemblance to the young heir; and they conceived a great
-affection for each other. Together they went to Marazion <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb87" href="#pb87" name="pb87">87</a>]</span>to see
-if they could find the vessel from whose deck the stranger had fallen
-into the sea. It was safe in harbour, and the captain, whom the sailor
-had always thought to be his father, told him then for the first time,
-&ldquo;How, when he was an infant, he had rescued him from drowning
-where last night he had nearly lost his life.&rdquo; Thus they were
-discovered to be brothers, and a day or two after, when out hunting,
-guided by the white hare, they accidentally came upon the miraculous
-sword that had disappeared when his mother was drowned. Then these two
-brothers sailed away from Cornwall, and dwelt in peace in the land of a
-strange princess; where the Cornishman studied, under a celebrated
-master, astrology and all other occult sciences. After some time the
-old lord of Pengersick met his death in this wise: As he was riding out
-one fine morning, the white hare suddenly sprang up in front of his
-horse and startled it, so that it ran madly with its rider into the
-sea, where both were swallowed up. When this news was brought to him,
-the Cornishman bade his brother an affectionate farewell, and, with his
-wife, a learned princess, went back to Pengersick, where they lived
-happily for several generations, for amongst many other wonderful
-things, the young lord had discovered an elixir of life which, had they
-so wished, would have kept them alive to the present day. (<i>See</i>
-Bottrell.)</p>
-<p>In addition to being well versed in occult lore, Pengersick&rsquo;s
-wife was a fine musician; she could with her harp charm and subdue evil
-spirits, and compel the fish in Mount&rsquo;s Bay, also the mermaids
-who then dwelt there, to come out of the sea.</p>
-<p>Another account of the old lord&rsquo;s death says that he and a
-party of his friends were dining in his yacht around a silver table
-when she went down, and all on board perished. This happened off Cudden
-Point, which juts into the sea just opposite Pengersick. Children
-living there formerly used to go down to the beach at low water to try
-and find this silver table. (A ship laden with bullion is reported to
-have been lost here in the time of Queen Elizabeth.) &ldquo;The present
-castle,&rdquo; one tradition says, &ldquo;was built in the reign of
-Henry VIII. by a merchant who had acquired immense wealth beyond the
-seas, and who loaded an ass with <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb88"
-href="#pb88" name="pb88">88</a>]</span>gold, and broke its back. He
-sold the castle to a Mr. Milliton, who, having slain a man, shut
-himself up in it to escape punishment.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Another legend says that Sir William Milliton built it, and, soon
-after its completion, married a very rich but extremely ugly and
-shrewish woman, of whom he tried by various ways to rid himself but in
-vain. One day, after a desperate quarrel, he begged her forgiveness,
-and asked her, in proof of having pardoned him, to sup with him that
-evening in a room overlooking the sea. She agreed; and at the
-conclusion of the feast they pledged each other in goblets of rich
-wine. Then Sir William&rsquo;s looks altered, and, in a fierce voice,
-he said, &ldquo;Woman, now prepare for death! You have but a short time
-to live, as the wine that you have just drunk was poisoned.&rdquo;
-&ldquo;Then we die together,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;for I had my
-suspicions, and mixed the contents of the goblets.&rdquo; Up to this
-time the moon, which was at its full, had been shining brightly through
-the open windows, for it was a warm summer night, when suddenly a
-frightful storm of thunder and lightning arose, the winds lashed the
-waves to fury, and the moon was darkened. The servants, alarmed by
-this, and the unearthly fiendish yells that came from the banqueting
-hall, rushed upstairs, and there found the bodies of their master and
-mistress dead on the floor; and through the open window they saw, by
-the light of the moon which for a moment shone through a rift in the
-clouds, their souls borne away on the wings of a demon in the shape of
-a bird.</p>
-<p>The original name of Breage parish was Pembro; but <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Breaca, hearing that the inhabitants were at a loss
-to raise the money for a peal of bells, offered to extricate them from
-their difficulty on condition that they should call the parish after
-her. The condition was accepted, the bells were hung, and the parish
-henceforth was known as that of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Breage.&mdash;Through <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle.</p>
-<p><abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Germoe (Geronicus) an Irish king, who
-was converted to Christianity in the fifth century, is said to have
-been the foster-son of Breaca (or Breage), with whom he crossed over
-into Cornwall where they settled. Two churches in adjoining parishes
-are dedicated to them; <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Germoe is reputed
-to have been the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb89" href="#pb89" name=
-"pb89">89</a>]</span>founder of his, and there is a curious structure
-at the north-east of the churchyard, known as <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Germoe&rsquo;s chair or King Germoe&rsquo;s
-throne.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There is more than one story attached to this chair. One is
-to the effect that the saint sat in the central chair with two
-assessors, one on either side of him; another legend is that the
-priests rested in the chair; whilst a third is that pilgrims to the
-tomb of the saint also rested therein. Be that as it may, however, it
-is possible that this is a shrine, and that the body of <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Germoe rests underneath
-it.&rdquo;&mdash;<abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> W. A. Osborne,
-<i>Transactions Penzance Natural History Society, 1886, 1887</i>.</p>
-<p>At Great Work Mine (Huel Vor) near by, a narrow level (not far down)
-is still thought to have been made by Christian slaves, when the first
-church at Germoe was built.</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Germoe, little Germoe lies under a hill,</p>
-<p class="line">When I&rsquo;m in Germoe I count myself well;</p>
-<p class="line">True love&rsquo;s in Germoe, in Breage I&rsquo;ve got
-none,</p>
-<p class="line">When I&rsquo;m in Germoe I count myself at
-home.&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first xd25e769">Through <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S.
-Rundle.</p>
-<p>All Cornishmen at one time were supposed to be
-&ldquo;wreckers,&rdquo; and from the peninsular-shape of their county
-came the proverb, &ldquo;&rsquo;Tis a bad wind that blows no good to
-Cornwall.&rdquo; But the dwellers in Breage and Germoe must in olden
-times, from the following distich, have been held in worse repute than
-their neighbours:</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;God keep us from rocks and shelving sands,</p>
-<p class="line">And save us from Breage and Germoe men&rsquo;s
-hands.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">The most noted and daring Cornish smuggler of the last
-century, Coppinger, a Dane, lived on the north coast, and of him a
-legendary catalogue of dreadful tales is told, all to be found in the
-<abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> R. S. Hawker&rsquo;s book, the
-<i>Footprints of Former Men in Far Cornwall</i>. He lays the scene of
-his exploits in the neighbourhood of Hartland Bay, my informant near
-Newquay. He swam ashore here in the prime of life, in the middle of a
-frightful storm, from a foreign-rigged <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb90" href="#pb90" name="pb90">90</a>]</span>vessel that was seen in
-the offing, and of which nothing more was ever heard or known. Wrapped
-in a cloak, that tradition says he tore from off the shoulders of an
-old woman who was on the beach, he jumped up behind a farmer&rsquo;s
-daughter, who had ridden down to see the wreck, and was by her taken to
-her father&rsquo;s house, where he was fed, clothed, and most
-hospitably received. He was a fine, handsome, well-built man, and gave
-himself out to be most highly connected in his own country. He soon won
-the young woman&rsquo;s affections, and at her father&rsquo;s death,
-which took place not long after, he easily induced her to marry him;
-but it was far from a happy union. Luckily they had but one
-child&mdash;a deaf and dumb idiot, who had inherited his father&rsquo;s
-cruel disposition, and delighted in torturing all living things. It is
-even said that he cunningly killed one of his young playmates.
-Coppinger, after his marriage, organized a band of smugglers, and made
-himself their captain; and quickly through his misdeeds earned the
-title of cruel Coppinger. One legend relates that he once led a Revenue
-cutter into a dangerous cove, of which he alone knew the soundings, and
-that he and his crew came out of it in safety, but the other vessel
-with all on board perished. Mr. Hawker calls Coppinger&rsquo;s ship the
-&ldquo;Black Prince,&rdquo; and says he had it built for himself in
-Denmark, and that men who had made themselves in any way obnoxious to
-him on land were carried on board her, and compelled by fearful oaths
-to enrol themselves in her crew.</p>
-<p>In 1835 an old man of the age of ninety-seven related to this writer
-that when a youth he had been so abducted, and after two years&rsquo;
-service he had been ransomed by his friends with a large sum.
-&ldquo;And all,&rdquo; said the old man, very simply, &ldquo;because I
-happened to see one man kill another, and they thought I should mention
-it.&rdquo; The same author gives him a wonderfully fleet horse, which
-no one but Coppinger could master, and says that on its back he made
-more than one hairbreadth escape. He has also a marvellous account of
-his end, in which he disappears as he came, in a vessel which he
-boarded in a storm of thunder, lightning, and hail. As soon as he was
-in her, &ldquo;she was out of sight in <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb91" href="#pb91" name="pb91">91</a>]</span>a moment, like a spectre
-or a ghost.&rdquo; For this he quotes the following verse:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Will you hear of the cruel Coppinger?</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">He came from a foreign kind;</p>
-<p class="line">He was brought to us from the salt water,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">He was carried away by the wind.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">The one thing certain about him is, that at one time
-he amassed money enough by smuggling to buy a small freehold estate
-near the sea, the title-deeds of which, signed with his name, still
-exist. But in his old age, I have been told, he was reduced to poverty,
-and subsisted on charity.</p>
-<p>That in those bygone days smuggling was thought no sin every one
-knows. And who has not heard the oft-quoted apocryphal anecdote of the
-Cornish clergyman, who&mdash;when he was in the middle of his sermon
-and some one opened the church door and shouted in, &ldquo;A wreck! a
-wreck!&rdquo;&mdash;begged his parishioners to wait whilst he took off
-his gown that they might all start fair.</p>
-<p>The following is, however, a genuine letter of the last century from
-a vicar in the eastern part of the county to a noted smuggler of that
-district:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Martin Rowe, you very well know,</p>
-<p class="line">That Cubert&rsquo;s vicar loves good liquor,</p>
-<p class="line">One bottle&rsquo;s all, upon my soul.</p>
-<p class="line">You&rsquo;ll do right to come to-night;</p>
-<p class="line">My wife&rsquo;s the banker, she&rsquo;ll pay for the
-anker.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">To the same jovial vicar is credited this grace, given
-to his hostess&rsquo; horror at her table after he had dined out
-several days in succession, and had rabbits offered him, a dish he
-detested:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Of rabbits young and rabbits old,</p>
-<p class="line">Of rabbits hot and rabbits cold,</p>
-<p class="line">Of rabbits tender, rabbits tough,</p>
-<p class="line">I thank the Lord we&rsquo;ve had enough.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Inland from Breage is the small hamlet of
-Leed&rsquo;s-town (called after the Duke of Leeds, who has property in
-Cornwall). It is the seat of the following short
-story:&mdash;&ldquo;The Leed&rsquo;s-town ghost runs up and down stairs
-in a house during the night, and then sits in a corner of the room
-weeping and sleeking her hair. It <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb92"
-href="#pb92" name="pb92">92</a>]</span>is the ghost of a young woman
-who was engaged to be married to a man who refused to become her
-husband until she gave him certain deeds kept in a box in the above
-room. As soon as the deeds were in his possession, he realised the
-property and escaped to America, leaving the luckless girl to bemoan
-her loss. She went mad: night and day she was searching for her deeds;
-sometimes she would sit and wail in the spot where the box had been. At
-length she died: her spirit, however, had no rest, and still constantly
-returns to keep alive the memory of man&rsquo;s
-perfidy.&rdquo;&mdash;Through <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S.
-Rundle.</p>
-<p>Close to Leed&rsquo;s-town, at the foot of Godolphin-hill, is the
-old house, or hall, of Godolphin. The basement-floor of the original
-house alone remains: it consists of a long fa&ccedil;ade supported by
-pillars of white granite, the interior containing many objects of
-interest well worth a visit. Opposite the inhabited part of the house
-is the King&rsquo;s room, opening on the King&rsquo;s garden. (The
-title of King&rsquo;s room was given to it from the legend that Charles
-II. once slept there.) You could leave it by five ways; as there were
-three doors, one exit through the floor, and another through the roof.
-Godolphin is held by a very curious tenure, said to have originated in
-a bet between the representatives of the Godolphin and <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Aubyn families on a snail race. As the Godolphin
-snail was being beaten, its owner pricked it with a pin to make it go
-faster, but it drew in its horns and refused to move, consequently the
-other won. The following is the ceremony which takes place every
-Candlemas. Before sunrise a person, appointed as reeve by the
-<abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Aubyn
-Molesworth <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Aubyn, the lord of the manor
-of Lamburn, in the parish of Perranzabuloe (near Truro), knocks at the
-ancient outer door of the quadrangle, and repeats this demand
-thrice:&mdash;&ldquo;Oyez! Oyez! Oyez! Here come I the reeve of the
-manor of Lamburn, to demand my lord&rsquo;s dues, eight groats and a
-penny in money, a loaf, a cheese, a collar of brawn, and a jack of the
-best ale in the house. God save the Queen and the lord of the
-manor.&rdquo; It is said at the outer door of the quadrangle, at the
-inner door, and for the third and last time at the table in the kitchen
-(which is one of the oldest <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb93" href=
-"#pb93" name="pb93">93</a>]</span>and not the least interesting rooms).
-The above high lordship is paid by the Duke of Leeds to the
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Aubyn family, to whom should they fail
-an heir the estate reverts. There is another curious tenure in this
-part of Cornwall, which as I am on the subject I will, before
-proceeding further, quote. &ldquo;The parsonage of <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Grade, with a small portion of land, including an
-orchard, is held of the manor of Erisey by the following tenure, viz.,
-that on Easter-day, yearly, the parson provide a dinner for the master
-and mistress of Erisey house, and their man and maid, with a pan of
-milk for a greyhound bitch.&rdquo;&mdash;Lake, <i>Helston and
-Lizard</i>.</p>
-<p>The old manor-house of Erisey is in Ruan Major (near the Lizard),
-and of one of the family the following story is told:&mdash;&ldquo;He
-was dancing with other ladies and gentlemen at Whitehall before James
-I., and, through the violent motion and action of his body in the
-middle of the dance, had his cap slip from his head and fall to the
-ground; but he instantly with his foot tossed it on his head again, and
-proceeded without let or hindrance with his part in that dance, to the
-admiration of all who saw it, which gave occasion to King James to
-enquire who that active gentleman was, and being told that his name was
-Erisey, he forthwith replied, &lsquo;I like the gentleman very well,
-but not his name of Heresey!&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo; The rector of Ruan
-Minor by ancient usage and prescription (which is always admitted)
-claims a right of sending a horse into a certain field in the parish of
-Landewednack, whenever it is cropped with corn, and taking away as many
-sheaves as the horse can carry away on its back.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;At Jew&rsquo;s Lane Hill, near Godolphin, a Jew is said to
-have hung himself on a tree still pointed out, and was buried beneath
-the road. His ghost appears in the shape of a bull and a fiery chariot.
-This superstition has been known for generations.&rdquo;&mdash;M. H.,
-through <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle.</p>
-<div id="xd25e2613" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Cornwall Stone.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">&ldquo;I remember this stone a rough cube about three
-feet in height; it stood by the wayside forty or fifty years ago about
-a quarter of a mile from the old Godolphin mansion near the coast,
-where <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb94" href="#pb94" name=
-"pb94">94</a>]</span>the nobility and gentry of the county were wont
-periodically to assemble to hear the news from Court. The servants who
-waited on their masters at the banquet diligently listened to the
-conversation, and afterwards spread the information thus collected
-among the crowd assembled for the purpose around Cornwall
-stone.&rdquo;&mdash;G. F. W., <i>Western Antiquary, 1881</i>.</p>
-<p>An old writer on the Scilly Isles mentions a rock on Bryher, one of
-the smallest of the islands, where the neighbours were wont to collect
-to hear and repeat the news. He calls it the News Rock.</p>
-<p>Between Helston and the Lizard lies the parish of <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Keverne; unlike the other parishes of Cornwall it
-contains no mines. To account for this it is said that <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Keverne cursed it when he lived there, for the want
-of respect shown him by its inhabitants. Hence the proverb &ldquo;No
-metal will run within the sound of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Keverne&rsquo;s bells.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Just, from the Land&rsquo;s End
-district, once paid a visit to <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Keverne,
-who entertained him for several days to the best of his power. After
-his departure his host missed some valuable relics, and determined to
-go in pursuit of his late guest, and try, if possible, to get them from
-him. As he was passing over Crousadown, about two miles from
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Keverne church, he pocketed three large
-stones, each weighing about a quarter of a ton, to use if <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Just should offer any resistance. He overtook him at
-a short distance from Breage and taxed him with the theft, which was
-indignantly denied. From words the saints came to blows, and
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Keverne flung his stones with such
-effect that <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Just ran off, throwing down
-the relics as he ran. These stones lay for centuries where they fell,
-about four hundred yards from Pengersick Lane, as when taken away by
-day, they were in bygone times always brought back at night.</p>
-<p>Going along the coast from Breage to the Lizard the solitary church
-of Gunwalloe is passed, built so close to the sea that the waves wash
-its graveyard walls. It is said to have been erected as a
-thank-offering by some man who escaped drowning when shipwrecked.
-&ldquo;In the sandbanks near it (or, as others say, at <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb95" href="#pb95" name="pb95">95</a>]</span>Kennack
-cove), the notorious buccaneer Avery is reported to have buried several
-chests of treasure previously to his leaving England on the voyage from
-which he never returned. So strongly did this opinion prevail that Mr.
-John Knill, collector of the Customs at <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Ives, procured about the year 1770 a grant of treasure trove, and
-expended some money in a fruitless search.&rdquo;&mdash;<abbr title=
-"Reverend">Rev.</abbr> C. A. Johns, <i>Week at the Lizard</i>.</p>
-<p>Near by is Mullion parish, of which the celebrated ghost-layer, the
-<abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> Thomas Flavel, who died in 1682, was
-the vicar, and the following quaint lines to his memory may still be
-read in the chancel of his church:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Earth take thine earth, my sin let Satan
-havet,</p>
-<p class="line">The world my goods, my soul my God who gavet;</p>
-<p class="line">For from these four, Earth, Satan, World, and God,</p>
-<p class="line">My flesh, my sin, my goods, my soul I had.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Of him the <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> C. A.
-Johns writes:&mdash;&ldquo;This Thomas Flavel, during his life,
-attained great celebrity for his skill in the questionable art of
-laying ghosts. His fame still lingers in the memories of the more
-superstitious of the inhabitants through the following ridiculous
-stories. On one occasion when he had gone to church his servant-girl
-opened a book in his study, whereupon a host of spirits sprang up all
-round her. Her master observed this, though then occupied at church,
-closed his book, and dismissed the congregation. On his return home he
-took up the book with which his servant had been meddling, and read
-backwards the passage which she had been reading, at the same time
-laying about him lustily with his walking-cane, whereupon all the
-spirits took their departure, but not before they had pinched the
-servant-girl black and blue. His celebrity, it seems, was not confined
-to his own parish, for he was once called on to lay a very troublesome
-ghost in an adjoining parish. As he demanded the large fee of five
-guineas for his services, two of the persons interested resolved to
-assure themselves, by the evidence of their own eyes, that the ceremony
-was duly performed. They accordingly, without apprising one another of
-their intention, secreted themselves behind two graves in the
-churchyard a short time before the hour named for <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb96" href="#pb96" name="pb96">96</a>]</span>the
-absurd rites. In due time the ghost-layer entered it with a book in one
-hand and a horsewhip in the other. On the first smack of the whip the
-watchers raised their heads simultaneously, caught a glimpse of each
-other, and were both so terrified that they scampered off in opposite
-directions, leaving the operator to finish his business as he might. So
-popular are superstitions of this kind, and so long do they linger,
-that to the present day a spot is pointed out on the downs, named
-&lsquo;Hervan Gutter,&rsquo; where Thomas Flavel&rsquo;s own ghost was
-laid by a clergyman, of whom he said before his death, &lsquo;When he
-comes I must go.&rsquo; In olden days there were several of these
-ghost-laying clergymen in Cornwall, of whom, before going on with the
-legends of the parishes, I will mention three known in folk-lore. In
-the parish of Ladock, on the east side of Truro, dwelt rather more than
-a century ago the famed ghost-layer, the <abbr title=
-"Reverend">Rev.</abbr> Mr. Woods, who, when walking, usually carried an
-ebony stick with a silver head, on which was engraved a pentacle, and
-on a broad silver ring below planetary signs and mystical figures. Of
-him Mr. Bottrell tells many thrilling tales; I will only give the
-substance of one. Mr. Woods was usually a match for most demons, whom
-he would change into animals and thrash with his whip; but one more
-cunning than the rest defied him, by taking the shape of an unknown
-coal-black bird, and perching on the church tower, from whence during
-divine service he made all sorts of queer noises, disturbing the
-congregation, and inciting the irreverent to laughter. He was too high
-up to be exorcised or reached with the whip. At last the clergyman, at
-his wit&rsquo;s end, remembered that the Evil One could not endure the
-sight of innocent children, and he sent his clerk round to all the
-mothers of his parish who had unchristened children, asking them to
-bring them to church on the next Sunday to have the rite performed. As
-he was a great favourite with his people all the mothers, and they were
-eight, readily agreed to come. But as twelve is the mystical number he
-invited four other mothers whose children had recently been baptised,
-to come as well, and bring their children and sponsors with them. The
-eight children were christened, and the parson walked out of church
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb97" href="#pb97" name=
-"pb97">97</a>]</span>followed by the twelve mothers with their infants
-in their arms. The clerk arranged them in lines five deep, the mothers
-in front, opposite the belfry door. Mr. Woods directed each to pass her
-child from one to the other of its sponsors, and then hand it to him
-that he might hold it up for the demon to see; but for some time the
-cunning bird hid himself behind a pinnacle, and nothing would induce
-him to look, until one of the children, growing tired, began to cry,
-and all the others chimed in, screaming in chorus at the top of their
-voices. Then the demon hopped down from his perch and peered over the
-parapet to try and find out what could be the matter. The sight of the
-twelve children had such an effect upon him that he too gave an
-unearthly yell and flew away never to re-appear. The church bells were
-soon after put in order, and it is well known that no evil spirit ever
-ventures within sound of their ringing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;One of the three Jagos, who were Vicars of Wendron, was much
-renowned for his powers of necromancy. He was in the habit of taking
-people to <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Wendron Cross, where a man
-called Tucker was buried, and asking them whether they had a mind to
-see Tucker man; he would make him rise from the dead as a mark of
-delicate attention to them.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Cornubiana</i>,
-<abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle, <i>Penzance Natural
-History Society</i>, 1885&ndash;1886.</p>
-<p>I will close this list of worthies by a short notice of Parson
-Dodge, a vicar of Talland, a village on the south coast of Cornwall,
-and then give an encounter of the famous Nonconformist divine, John
-Wesley, with some spirits whom he vanquished at <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Agnes on the north. The church of Talland is not in
-the centre of the parish, but near the sea; a legend accounts for its
-position thus: It was begun at a spot called Pulpit, but each night a
-voice was heard saying:</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;If you will my wish fulfil,</p>
-<p class="line">Build the church on Talland hill;&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">and the stones put up by day were removed. (Tales
-similar to this are told of many Cornish churches. The work of removal
-is sometimes carried on by the devil; at Altarnon he was accompanied
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb98" href="#pb98" name=
-"pb98">98</a>]</span>by a hare and a deer.) Of this church, about a
-hundred and fifty years ago, the <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr>
-Richard Dodge was vicar. He had such command over the spirit-world that
-he could raise and lay ghosts at his will, and by a nod of his head
-banish them to the Red Sea. His parishioners looked up to him with
-great awe, and were afraid of meeting him at midnight, as he was sure
-then, whip in hand, to be pursuing and driving away the demons, that in
-all kinds of shapes were to be seen hovering around him. Amongst his
-other eccentricities he was fond of frequenting his churchyard at the
-dead of night. Parson Dodge&rsquo;s fame was not confined to his own
-immediate district, and one day he received a letter from a
-fellow-clergyman, the <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> Grylls, rector
-of Lanreath, asking his assistance in exorcising a man habited in
-black, who drove a sable coach, drawn by headless horses, across
-Black-a-down (a neighbouring moor), as this apparition, when they
-happened to meet it, frightened his people almost out of their wits. He
-acceded to this request, and late at night the two clergymen rode to
-the spot, where they waited for some time, but seeing nothing decided
-to separate and return to their respective homes. Mr. Dodge, however,
-had not gone very far when his horse obstinately refused to proceed a
-step further in a homeward direction: this he interpreted to be a sign
-from heaven which he must obey, and giving it the rein he allowed it to
-go as it willed. It wheeled round and went back at a great pace to the
-moor. Here through the gloom he saw standing the black coach with the
-headless horses: its driver had dismounted, and the <abbr title=
-"Reverend">Rev.</abbr> Grylls lay in a swoon at his feet. Mr. Dodge was
-terribly alarmed, but managed to keep his presence of mind, and began
-to recite a prayer: before he could finish it the driver
-said&mdash;&ldquo;Dodge is come! I must be gone!&rdquo; jumped on to
-his seat and disappeared for ever. Mr. Grylls&rsquo; parishioners now
-arrived in search of their rector; they knew there must be something
-amiss, for his horse, startled by the horrible spectres, had thrown its
-rider and galloped off, never stopping until it reached its stable (his
-friend&rsquo;s, through fright, had also been, until the apparition
-vanished, almost unmanageable). They found him senseless, supported
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb99" href="#pb99" name=
-"pb99">99</a>]</span>in Mr. Dodge&rsquo;s arms; but he soon revived,
-and they took him home, although it was some days before his reason
-recovered from the shock. A much fuller account of this may be found in
-the <i>History of Polperro</i>, by Mr. T. Q. Couch. It has also been
-published by Mr. Robert Hunt in his <i>Popular Romances of the West of
-England</i>. The <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> R. S. Hawker, in
-his <i>Footprints of Former Men in Far Cornwall</i>, gives some very
-interesting extracts from the &ldquo;Diurnal&rdquo; of one Parson
-Rudall, of Launceston, who in 1665, with the sanction of his Bishop,
-laid the Botathen ghost&mdash;the spirit of a young woman by name
-Dorothy Dinglet, who could not rest in her grave&mdash;&ldquo;Unquiet
-because of a certain sin.&rdquo; It is a very well-known fact that the
-<abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> John Wesley was a firm believer in
-supernatural agencies; he compiled a book of ghost-stories, that was
-lent to me when I was about ten years old by a kind but ignorant woman,
-the reading of which caused me many sleepless nights. &ldquo;On one
-occasion Wesley could, when at <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Agnes,
-find no place to pass the night save a house which had the reputation
-of being haunted. However, he was not deterred; he entered and went to
-bed. But he could not rest, for there was a terrible tumult below; the
-sound of carriages was heard, the noise of feet, and fearful oaths. At
-length he could bear it no longer; he descended, and then found the
-large hall filled with guests. They greeted him with loud welcome, and
-begged him to be seated. He consented, saying, however, that he must
-say grace first. This remark was hailed with roars of laughter. Nothing
-daunted he began&mdash;&ldquo;Jesus, the Name high over all.&rdquo; He
-did not finish; in a moment the lights were extinguished, he was alone,
-and from that time the house was no more haunted.&mdash;Through
-<abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle.</p>
-<p>Clergymen in Cornwall are still supposed to be able to drive out
-evil spirits. A poor, half-crazed woman, yet living in Madron parish,
-near Penzance, went about ten years since to the house of a clergyman
-then residing there, and asked him to walk around her, reading some
-passages from the Bible, to exorcise the ghost of her dead sister, who
-had entered into her, she said, and tormented her in the shape of a
-small fly, which continually buzzed in <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb100" href="#pb100" name="pb100">100</a>]</span>her ear. Once before
-the Board of Guardians she talked sensibly for some time, then suddenly
-stopped and exclaimed, shaking her head: &ldquo;Be quiet, you brute!
-don&rsquo;t you see I am talking to the gentlemen?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>We must now, after this long digression, return to Mullion. Between
-it and the Lizard is a fine headland, the Rill, and on its summit are a
-number of loose, rough stones, known as the Apron String, which the
-country people say were brought here by an evil spirit, who intended to
-build with them a bridge across to France for the convenience of
-smugglers. He was hastening along with his load, which he carried in
-his apron, when one of its strings broke, and in despair he gave up the
-idea. On the opposite side of the Lizard, at the mouth of Helford
-river, stands the church of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Anthony in
-Meneage; like that of Gunwalloe it is little above the level of the
-sea, and is, also according to tradition, a votive offering. Some
-people of high rank, crossing over from Normandy to England, were
-caught in a storm, and in their peril vowed to <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Anthony that they would build a church in his honour
-if he would bring them safe into harbour. The saint heard their
-prayers, and the church was erected on the spot where they landed.
-Helford river, in Carew&rsquo;s days, was the haunt of pirates, and of
-it he says: &ldquo;<span lang="en">Falmouth&rsquo;s ower neere
-neighbourhood lesseneth his vse and darkeneth his reputation, as
-quitting it onely to the worst sort of Seafarers, I mean Pirats, whose
-guilty breasts with an eye in their backs, looke warily how they may
-goe out, ere they will aduenture to enter, and this at unfortified
-Hailford cannot be controlled, in which regard it not vnproperly
-brooketh his common term of Helford and the nickname of
-Stealford.</span>&rdquo;</p>
-<p>On the subject of pirates a friend writes:&mdash;&ldquo;The popular
-play of &lsquo;The Pirates of Penzance&rsquo; had not its origin in
-that town, but in the little fishing village of Penberth, near the
-Land&rsquo;s End; but that, alas! is in its &lsquo;custom port.&rsquo;
-The captain of the pirate vessel, and all his ship&rsquo;s crew, were
-wrestlers. They would go out to the small Spanish, Dutch, and other
-merchant ships, and would ask for provisions, or tender assistance, and
-on making sure that <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb101" href="#pb101"
-name="pb101">101</a>]</span>the ship was unarmed they would overpower
-the sailors and plunder it. This was before the time when the Trinity
-Corporation had begun its work on our Cornish coast.</p>
-<p>From Helford we will proceed to Penryn&mdash;the scene of
-Lillo&rsquo;s play, &ldquo;Fatal Curiosity.&rdquo; The legend on which
-it is founded is as follows: A gentleman who had rashly squandered his
-own and his wife&rsquo;s fortune, sent their only son early into the
-world to seek his. During his absence his parents were reduced to
-penury; but he prospered, returned home, and sought them out. He did
-not at first disclose to them who he was, intending to do so later on,
-but begged to be allowed to rest in their house, and whilst he was
-sleeping asked his mother to take charge of a casket for him. Her
-curiosity impelled her to open it, and her avarice was so inflamed at
-the sight of the rich jewels it contained that she incited her husband
-by prayers and reproaches to murder the poor young man. After the fatal
-deed was done, the unhappy pair discovered him to be their son.</p>
-<p>It has been said that a party of Spaniards landed at Penryn in 1565,
-intending to plunder the town, but were alarmed by the sound of a drum
-beaten by some strolling players, and made a hasty retreat.</p>
-<p>Before the year 1600 there were only a few houses where Falmouth now
-stands, called Pennycomequick, which name tradition declares was given
-it from the following: A woman, who had been a servant to a Mr.
-Pendarves, left his employ, and went there to reside, where, I suppose,
-she kept an ale-house, as the story says that he ordered her to brew a
-cask of ale, and on a certain day he and some friends would come and
-drink it. The ale was brewed; but in the meantime a Dutch vessel put
-into the creek, and she sold it all to the sailors. When her former
-master and his friends arrived at the appointed time, he was of course
-very angry. Her excuse was that the &ldquo;penny comed so quick&rdquo;
-that she could not refuse it. The name really means the head of the
-valley of the creek.</p>
-<p>There is a pyramidal monument at the south end of Falmouth erected
-by one of the Killigrews to the memory of Sir Walter <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb102" href="#pb102" name=
-"pb102">102</a>]</span>Raleigh, who had been entertained by an ancestor
-at their family-seat of Arwenack, when there was only one other house
-in the place. There is a red stain on it, &ldquo;A blood-mark,&rdquo;
-the old people said, &ldquo;that would not wash out, splashed there
-from the body of a man employed in making it, who fell from its top and
-was killed.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>On the coast just outside the town is Gyllanvaes, or William&rsquo;s
-Grave, which is pointed out as the place where King Henry I.&rsquo;s
-son, who was drowned on his passage from Normandy to England, was
-buried.</p>
-<p>On the opposite side of Falmouth harbour, where <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Anthony&rsquo;s church now stands, was formerly the
-priory of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Mary de Vale, and King Henry
-VIII. is reported to have landed here in 1537, and told the prior that
-it would soon be destroyed, and he with all his brethren turned out. It
-was; but the prior left his curse behind him, and the first holder of
-the lands lost all his family by untimely deaths, and he himself
-committed suicide.</p>
-<p>Of all the creeks up the Fal from Falmouth to Truro, most marvellous
-tales of smugglers and their daring deeds are told; and of King
-Harry&rsquo;s passage, where a ferry-boat crosses the river, this
-legend: That it is called after bluff King Hal, who forded it with his
-queen (sometimes Katherine of Arragon) on his back. To have
-accomplished this feat he must have been taller than the sons of Anak,
-for in the middle the water is several fathoms deep.</p>
-<p>At the head of one of these creeks is Veryan parish. And there is a
-tradition that should its church clock strike on the Sunday morning
-during the singing of the hymn before the sermon, or before the Collect
-against Perils at Evening Prayer (which does not often happen), there
-will be a death in the parish before the next Sunday.</p>
-<p>On a hill near Veryan is a barrow, in which Gerennius, a mythical
-king of Cornwall, was said to have been buried many centuries ago, with
-his crown on his head, lying in his golden boat with silver oars. It
-was opened in 1855, when nothing but a kistvaen (a rude stone chest)
-containing his ashes was found. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb103"
-href="#pb103" name="pb103">103</a>]</span>His palace of Dingerein was
-in the neighbouring village of Gerrans. A subterranean passage, now
-known as Mermaid&rsquo;s Hole, one day discovered when ploughing a
-field, was supposed to have led from it to the sea. Treasures of great
-value are reputed to be hidden under all the Cornish menhirs and
-barrows. Carew tells of a gentleman who was persuaded that by digging
-under a menhir near Fowey he would get great riches. &ldquo;<span lang=
-"en">Wherefore, in a faire moone-shine night, thither with certaine
-good fellowes hee hyeth to dig it up. A working they fall, their labour
-shortneth, their hope increaseth, a pot of gold is the least of their
-expectation. But see the chance. In midst of their toyling the skie
-gathereth clouds, the moonelight is overcast with darknesse, downe fals
-a mightie showre, up riseth a blustering tempest, the thunder cracketh,
-the lightning flasheth. In conclusion, our money-seekers washed instead
-of loden, or loden with water instead of yellow earth, and more afraid
-than hurt, are forced to abandon their enterprise and seeke shelter of
-the next house they could get into.</span>&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Malpas (pronounced Mopus) ferry was, nearly a century ago, kept by a
-woman called &ldquo;Jenny Mopus,&rdquo; who was quite a character.
-&ldquo;Wemmin and pigs&rdquo; she used to declare were the worst things
-to ferry across.</p>
-<p>The water bounds of the borough of Truro are renewed every six
-years, and the following curious ceremony takes place: On reaching the
-limits of their jurisdiction, the mayor, town clerk, members of
-corporation, &amp;c., go on shore, when a writ for the sum of
-<abbr title="999 pounds 19 shilling 11&frac34; pence">999<i>l.</i>
-19<i>s.</i> 11&frac34;<i>d.</i></abbr> is produced against a person
-present, selected beforehand. He is arrested by the bailiff of the
-borough, on which two of the party offer themselves as bail, and the
-prisoner is liberated. Not far from Perranworthal is one of the most
-celebrated Cornish Tol-m&ecirc;n, M&ecirc;n-an-tol, or holed stones.
-This is an immense egg-shaped mass of granite, perched on a dreary hill
-nearly 700 feet above the sea, and is thought to weigh 750 tons. It is
-generally known as the Cornish Pebble, and is supported on the points
-of two other stones leaving a hollow space beneath. In this it differs
-from other M&ecirc;n-an-tol which <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb104"
-href="#pb104" name="pb104">104</a>]</span>have the orifice in the
-centre of the stone (hence their name). There are many in the county.
-The one at Madron is sometimes called the Crick Stone. It gets this
-name because in days not very long ago people afflicted with
-rheumatism, sciatica, &amp;c., in May, and at certain other seasons of
-the year, crawled on all fours nine times around these M&ecirc;n-an-tol
-from east to west, and, if thin enough, squeezed themselves through the
-aperture. This was then thought such a sovereign remedy for these
-diseases that parents brought their weak-backed children and carried
-them around. To work the charm properly there must always be two
-people, one of each sex, who stand one on each side of the stone. The
-child, if a male, must first be passed from the woman to the man; if a
-girl, from the man to the woman, and always from the left of the one to
-the right of the other. Some sort of divination, too, was formerly
-practised on these M&ecirc;n-an-tol by pins laid cross-ways on the
-top.</p>
-<p>In the parish of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Dennis the church is
-dedicated to that saint. And when <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Dennis
-had his head cut off at Paris, blood, a legend says, fell on the stones
-of this churchyard; a similar occurrence often afterwards foretold
-other calamities.<a class="noteref" id="xd25e2834src" href="#xd25e2834"
-name="xd25e2834src">12</a> The exact centre of the county is reputed to
-be a hole in a field at Probus, a neighbouring parish.</p>
-<p>At Boconnoc, near Lostwithiel, not long ago stood the stump of an
-old oak, in which, in 1644, when Charles I. made this seat his
-head-quarters, the royal standard was fixed. It bore variegated leaves.
-According to tradition, they changed colour when an attempt was made to
-assassinate the king whilst he was receiving the sacrament under its
-branches. The ball passed through the tree, and a hole in its trunk was
-formerly pointed out in confirmation of the story.</p>
-<p>Heath, in his <i>Description of Cornwall</i>, 1750, speaks of two
-other trees of the same kind to be seen in this county. &ldquo;In
-Lanhadron Park,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;there grows an oak that bears
-leaves speckled with white, as another, called Painter&rsquo;s Oak,
-grows in the hundred of East. Some are of opinion that divers ancient
-families of <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb105" href="#pb105" name=
-"pb105">105</a>]</span>England are preadmonished by oaks bearing
-strange leaves.&rdquo; A turtle-dove is said to be seen by the Bassetts
-of Tehidy, in Camborne, before death, and to another Cornish family a
-white bird appears.</p>
-<p>The church of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Neot, in the parish of
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Neot, is celebrated for its
-beautifully-painted glass. One of the windows contains many legends of
-this saint, but they have all been too fully described by other writers
-to require a lengthy notice from me. <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Neot is the reputed brother of King Alfred, and lived some hundreds of
-years before the present church dedicated to him was erected. But
-folk-lore has it that it was built at night entirely by his own hands,
-and that he drew from a neighbouring quarry, by the help of reindeer,
-all the stones he used in the building. He is described as a man of
-short stature, and tradition also says that after the church was
-finished he found that he was not tall enough to reach the keyhole of
-the door, and could not therefore unlock it. To remedy this defect he
-put a stone opposite (still pointed out), from which, when he stood on
-it, he could throw the key into the lock with unerring precision. About
-a mile to the west of it, is an elevated spot with a square
-entrenchment; an ancient granite cross stands at one corner. There is a
-story attached to it which runs thus:&mdash;The crows in this
-neighbourhood were in his time so numerous that the farmers could not,
-fearing the mischief they might do in their absence, leave their fields
-and young crops to attend <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Neot&rsquo;s
-discourses. He, on hearing of it, determined to put a stop both to the
-excuse and the thieving habits of the birds, and one day ordered them
-all to enter this enclosure, from whence they could not stir until he
-gave the signal; upon which they all immediately flew away and returned
-no more.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The church of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Mawgan, in
-Kerrier, was formerly at Carminowe, at the end of the parish. It was
-removed thence to its present site on account of the ghoulish
-propensities of the giants, who used to dig up the dead from their
-graves. The inhabitants tried in vain to destroy them by making deep
-pits, and covering them over with <span class="corr" id="xd25e2865"
-title="Source: &ldquo;">&lsquo;</span>sprouse<span class="corr" id=
-"xd25e2868" title="Source: &rdquo;">&rsquo;</span> (light hay or grass)
-so that <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb106" href="#pb106" name=
-"pb106">106</a>]</span>the unwary giants, walking over them as on firm
-ground, might fall into them and be killed. As this project failed,
-they were reluctantly compelled to remove the church to its present
-place, beyond the reach of their troublesome
-neighbours.&rdquo;&mdash;<abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle,
-<i>Penzance Natural History Society</i>, 1885&ndash;1886.</p>
-<p>The fine old mansion of Cottrell, situated on the River Tamar, was
-built in the reign of Henry VII.; it belongs to the Earl of Mount
-Edgcumbe, and is full of quaint treasures, many of the rooms and the
-furniture they contain dating from the time of Queen Elizabeth. But the
-only part that concerns us is a little chapel in the woods perched on a
-rock overhanging the river, of which this legend is told. It was
-erected by Sir Richard Edgcumbe, who was a partizan to Henry, Duke of
-Richmond, the rival of Richard III. A party of soldiers were sent to
-take him prisoner, but he managed to elude them and escaped into the
-woods, where his pursuers were so close upon his heels that he would
-certainly have been captured had not his cap, as he was climbing down
-this rock, fallen off his head and floated on the stream. On seeing it
-the men, thinking that Sir Richard had in despair drowned himself, gave
-up the chase. He shortly after crossed over to Brittany, where he
-stayed until the news came of the defeat and death of the king, when he
-returned home, and, in gratitude for his miraculous escape, caused this
-chapel to be built.</p>
-<p>Dupath Well, not far from Cottrell, was, according to tradition, the
-scene of a desperate duel between two Saxons, called by one authority
-Colan and Gotlieb, who were both suitors for the hand of the fair lady
-Gither; but the <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> R. S. Hawker, who
-has written a ballad on part of the legend, gives the name of Siward to
-the younger and favoured one who killed his rival, but who himself in
-the combat received a wound from which he soon after died. The same
-author has also put into verse the well-known story of Bottreaux bells.
-Bottreaux is the parish church of Boscastle, a corruption of Bottreaux
-castle, and its tower is, and always has been, silent. When it was
-built the inhabitants, who had long been jealous of the beautiful peal
-at Tintagel, a neighbouring <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb107" href=
-"#pb107" name="pb107">107</a>]</span>village, aided by the Lord of
-Bottreaux, raised enough money to buy a set for themselves, cast by a
-famous London founder. But when the ship that brought them was nearly
-in port the sound of Tintagel bells was in the calm evening borne
-across the water. The pilot, a native of that parish, hearing them,
-piously crossed himself, and thanked God that he should soon be safe on
-shore. On this the captain grew very wroth, and said, &ldquo;Thank the
-ship and the canvas at sea, thank God on shore.&rdquo;
-&ldquo;No!&rdquo; meekly replied the pilot, &ldquo;we should thank God
-at sea as well as on land.&rdquo; At this the captain grew still more
-angry, swore and blasphemed, and with an oath exclaimed, &ldquo;Not so,
-thank yourself and a fair wind.&rdquo; Upon which a violent storm
-suddenly arose, the ship became unmanageable, struck on a rock, and
-went down. All on board, with the exception of the pilot, were drowned.
-Above the roar of the winds and waves the eager watchers from the
-shore, who were waiting for the arrival of the vessel with her precious
-freight, could hear the solemn tolling of their bells. And still before
-a gale their warning chimes sound from their ocean bed, but woe to the
-unhappy ship&rsquo;s crew that hears them, for wreck, misfortunes, and
-deaths are sure to follow. The following proverb would seem to infer
-that Boscastle, as well as no bells, has no market: &ldquo;All play and
-no play, like Boscastle Market, which begins at twelve o&rsquo;clock
-and ends at noon.&rdquo; Mevagissey church, on the opposite coast, has
-neither tower nor bells, and there is a standing joke against its
-people that they sold their bells to pay the cost of pulling down the
-tower.</p>
-<p>Gorran men, who live in an adjoining parish, seem in former days to
-have been rivals to the famous &ldquo;Wise men of Gotham,&rdquo; from
-the absurd deeds attributed to them, such as &ldquo;Trying to throw the
-moon over the cliffs,&rdquo; &ldquo;Building a hedge to keep in the
-moonlight,&rdquo; &amp;c. The inhabitants of more than one parish in
-Cornwall are said &ldquo;to have built a hedge to keep in the
-&lsquo;guckaw&rsquo; (cuckoo).&rdquo; In fact, of nearly all the
-parishes in the county some joke is current in the neighbouring
-villages.</p>
-<p>Not far from Boscastle is the beautiful waterfall of <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Nighton&rsquo;s Kieve, and close by are the ruins of
-a cottage, once the habitation <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb108"
-href="#pb108" name="pb108">108</a>]</span>of two ladies, who took
-possession of it at night. They evidently had seen better days, but
-their names and from whence they came remain a mystery, as from the
-date of their arrival they held no communication with the outer world.
-They kept no servant, and from the villagers bought for themselves the
-necessaries of life, asking but few questions, and not answering any.
-At first they took long solitary walks in the most secluded spots of
-the district; when met they were rarely conversing, and never spoke to
-a stranger. These walks were gradually discontinued, and one day a
-rumour spread through the village that one of the poor ladies was dead.
-Tradition says that the neighbours found the other weeping silent tears
-by the side of the corpse. After the funeral the survivor daily grew
-more infirm and but rarely left the house, and one morning soon after,
-no smoke issuing from the chimneys of the cottage, the villagers peeped
-in through the uncurtained windows and saw her sitting dead in her
-chair. The friends were buried in one grave, and their secret died with
-them.</p>
-<p>In Wellcombe church, near Morwenstow, against the font in the north
-wall is a door called the &ldquo;devil&rsquo;s door,&rdquo; opened at
-baptisms at the Renunciation, that the devil, which is then supposed to
-come out of the child, may be able to get away.</p>
-<p>Trecarrel, in East Cornwall, formerly belonged to the Trecarrels,
-the last of whom built Launceston church. A singular story has been
-handed down from the sixth century of the birth and death of his only
-son. His father is described as having been very learned in philosophy,
-astrology, astronomy, and other sciences; and it is said that, having
-surveyed the planetary orbs just as his child was about to be brought
-into the world, he perceived that the time was unfavourable to its
-birth, and foreboded a speedy and accidental death to the child.
-Overcome with these gloomy ideas he hastened to the house, and
-requested the midwife to delay the birth (if it were possible) for one
-hour; but nature, conspiring with fate on the downfall of his house,
-turned a deaf ear to his entreaties, and a son was born, to the great
-joy of all present except to him who was the most interested in the
-event. The child, however, grew up in a very promising way, until a
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb109" href="#pb109" name=
-"pb109">109</a>]</span>servant-maid, having placed him to stand near a
-bowl of water in order to wash him, chanced to have forgotten the
-towel, and having stepped into another room to procure one, on her
-return found the boy dead, having fallen into the water with his head
-foremost: and in consequence of this unfortunate event the father spent
-a large part of his large property in charitable purposes, and in
-building and repairing churches in the county of Cornwall.&mdash;J. C.
-Gilbert.</p>
-<p>A story of a similar nature is related of one of the Arundells, of
-whom it had been foretold &ldquo;that he should die in the
-sands.&rdquo; To prevent this he left his house of Efford, near
-Stratton, and took up his abode at Trerice, another of his estates,
-about three-and-a-half miles from Newquay. But the Earl of Oxford,
-having surprised and taken <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Michael&rsquo;s Mount, Sir John Arundell, who was then sheriff of
-Cornwall, marched there to besiege and retake it for the king, Edward
-IV. Here his fate overtook him, for in a skirmish on Marazion sands he
-lost his life, and was buried in the chapel at the Mount. A funeral
-procession goes through Stratton before the death of the Bathes of
-Kilkhampton.</p>
-<p>Between Stratton and the village of Marham, about half-a-mile from
-the former town, in the orchard of Binamy farm-house, is an old
-quadrangular moat, all that remains to show where stood the castle of
-the Blanchminsters, an old family now, I believe, extinct in this
-neighbourhood. Of one of them, who lived in the reign of Edward I. and
-went with him on a crusade, folk-lore still tells some strange
-but&mdash;through the lapse of time&mdash;vague tales. His name was
-Ranulph de Blanchminster, corrupted by the country people into old
-Blowmanger, and it is said that after he had been absent for two or
-three years in the Holy Land, his wife, I suppose thinking that he was
-dead, married another baron. On his return he shut himself up alone in
-his castle, with the drawbridge generally raised to keep off intruders.
-No one was with him when he died; but after his death a will was found
-leaving the greater part of his property for the benefit of the poor of
-the parish of Stratton. His effigy may be seen in the church, in the
-habit of a Crusader, grasping a sword, with his <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb110" href="#pb110" name="pb110">110</a>]</span>feet
-resting on the back of a lion. Through his interest Stratton had the
-charter of its market. His spirit haunts Binamy grounds (avoided after
-dark by the superstitious) in the form of a hare, which always starts
-out of the moat and manages to elude the dogs.</p>
-<p>Of the doings of the famous Grenvilles of Stow,&mdash;Sir Beville,
-the brave Royalist leader, who lost his life at the battle of Lansdowne
-in 1643,&mdash;Admiral Sir Richard, immortalized by Tennyson in his
-ballad &ldquo;The Revenge,&rdquo;&mdash;and of his son, Sir John, who
-served under Sir Walter Raleigh and died at sea,&mdash;I shall say
-nothing, these noted men belonging more to history than folk-lore.</p>
-<p>Under the same head, too, may be classed the Cornish female
-Whittington, Thomasine Bonaventure, of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Mary Wike (now Week <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Mary), who lived in
-the fourteenth century; the daughter of a labourer, she herself was a
-shepherdess. A London merchant, when travelling in Cornwall, lost
-himself on our moors, and accidentally met her with her sheep. He asked
-of her the way, and was so much struck by her good looks and
-intelligence that he begged her from her parents and took her back with
-him to be a servant to his wife. In her new situation she conducted
-herself with so much propriety that on his wife&rsquo;s death he
-courted and married her. Soon after he himself died, and left her a
-wealthy widow. Her next marriage was to a much richer man, named Henry
-Gall. Widowed a second time, and again inheriting her husband&rsquo;s
-money, she took for her third and last husband Sir John Percival, Lord
-Mayor of London. Him, too, she outlived, and after his death returned
-to her native village, where she employed her great riches in works of
-charity. Amongst her other good deeds she founded and endowed a chantry
-there, together with a free school, and lodgings for masters, scholars,
-and officers.</p>
-<p>The <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> R. S. Hawker, in his book
-before-quoted, has a legend which he calls &ldquo;The first Cornish
-Mole. A Morality.&rdquo; I, however, suspect it to be a pure invention
-of this author; but as it is very pretty, I will give the substance of
-it. Alice of the Coombe was a very beautiful, but proud and vain,
-damsel; the only child of <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb111" href=
-"#pb111" name="pb111">111</a>]</span>her widowed mother, with whom she
-dwelt at Morwenstow. It chanced one day that they, with all the
-neighbouring gentry, had been bidden to a grand banquet at Stow; and,
-as she had set her love on the great and noble Sir Beville Grenville,
-its owner, Alice, to win his affections, dressed herself in her richest
-robe&mdash;&ldquo;a woven velvet, glossy and soft&rdquo;&mdash;and put
-on her fairest jewellery. Her mother, when she saw her thus attired,
-struck by her exceeding grace and beauty, said, &ldquo;Often shall I
-pray to-night that the Grenville heart may yield. Aye, thy victory
-shall be my prayer.&rdquo; The haughty maiden replied, &ldquo;With the
-eyes I now see in that glass, and with this vesture, meet for a queen,
-I lack no trusting prayer.&rdquo; At this a sudden cry was heard, and
-the damsel disappeared from their sight for ever. Shortly after, the
-Coombe gardener discovered in the garden a small, unknown hillock, and
-on top of it shone a ring, which was recognized as the one the lady
-wore on the day she vanished. A close examination showed that an old
-Cornish couplet was now traced on it, which the parish priest
-interpreted to mean&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;The earth must hide</p>
-<p class="line">Both eyes with pride.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">As he uttered these words a low cry was heard at his
-feet, and there &ldquo;They beheld, O wondrous and strange! a small
-dark creature, clothed in a soft velvet skin, in texture and in hue
-like the robe of Lady Alice, and they saw as it groped into the earth
-that it moved along without eyes in everlasting night.&rdquo;
-&ldquo;She, herself had become</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">THE FIRST MOLE</p>
-<p class="line">OF THE HILLOCKS OF CORNWALL.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Before finishing this section of my work I must say a
-few words about the Islands of Scilly and their legends. The
-<abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> H. J. Whitfield, <abbr title=
-"Master of Arts">M.A.</abbr>, in 1852, published a book on this
-subject, but his legends are for the most part purely fictitious, and
-its title, <i>Scilly and its Legends</i>, a little misleading.</p>
-<p>The Scilly Isles, just off the Land&rsquo;s End, are very numerous,
-but only five are inhabited; some are mere rocks in the sea, and,
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb112" href="#pb112" name=
-"pb112">112</a>]</span>counting those, they are said to be a hundred
-and fifty. The largest is <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Mary&rsquo;s,
-and the dwellers on it are apt to look with contempt on the inhabitants
-of the other islands (the Off Islands). The word Scilly is sometimes
-derived from Sull&egrave;h, rocks dedicated to the sun, and sometimes
-from Sillyas, a conger. This fish is very plentiful on these coasts,
-and a ridiculous rhyme says that Scilly fare consists of&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Scads and &lsquo;tates, scads and
-&rsquo;tates,</p>
-<p class="line">Scads, and &rsquo;tates, and conger,</p>
-<p class="line">And those who can&rsquo;t eat scads and
-&rsquo;tates&mdash;</p>
-<p class="line">Oh, they must die of hunger.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Occasionally the saying runs: &ldquo;Oh! the
-Scillonians live on fish and &rsquo;taties every day, and conger-pie
-for Sundays.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In the beginning of this century, before steam-boats were invented,
-when communication between Scilly and Penzance (the mainland) depended
-upon wind and weather, in winter its people were often reduced to great
-straits for want of provisions, which gave rise to the proverb,
-&ldquo;There is always a feast or a fast in Scilly.&rdquo; This is,
-however, now far from being the truth, and it is one of the most
-prosperous parts of Great Britain; its inhabitants, as a rule, are well
-educated, they are noted for their courteous manners; and for its
-beautiful scenery Scilly is well worth a visit. The dialect of its
-poorer people, as also the tones of their voices (each island has its
-peculiarity), differ from those of the same class in West Cornwall.
-Their pronunciation rather resembles the Irish. <i>Thread</i> with them
-is <i>tread</i>, the <i>th</i> at the beginning of words being rarely
-sounded, <i>pint</i> is <i>point</i>, and <i>point pint</i>.</p>
-<p>Irreverent people declare that when Ireland was made some little
-bits of earth fell from the shovel and formed Scilly. Certain it is
-that when <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Patrick drove out all venomous
-reptiles from the former place he did the same kind service to the
-latter. The island of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Agnes was
-particularly favoured, for until recently there was not a rat on it,
-they were introduced from a wrecked vessel.</p>
-<p>Small as <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Mary&rsquo;s is (about three
-miles long and nine around) it boasts of two capitals; the modern one
-dates from the time of <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb113" href=
-"#pb113" name="pb113">113</a>]</span>Queen Elizabeth, and is called
-Hugh Town; before that Old Town was the principal village. At the east
-of Old Town Bay is Tolman Point (a corruption, I suppose, of T&ocirc;l
-M&ecirc;n, the holed stone). Of it an old legend says when Scilly was
-under the monks of Tavistock, and Old Town the only port of
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Mary&rsquo;s, that they drew a chain
-from &ldquo;Tollman head&rdquo; across the entrance, and levied a toll
-from all who embarked and landed there, not excepting the fishermen. It
-was abolished by Richard Plantagenet, who, coming disguised to the
-port, was not recognized by the friar in charge, who demanded from him
-his dues. Upon which Earl Richard, in a fit of passion, struck him dead
-at his feet. According to Leland, &ldquo;<span lang="en">Inniscan
-longid to Tavestock, and there was a poor celle of monkes of Tavestock.
-Sum caulle this Trescau.</span>&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There was a settlement of Benedictine monks here long before the
-Norman Conquest; their cell was dedicated to <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Nicholas. <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Nicholas,
-as well as <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Peter, is the patron saint of
-fishermen; the former also takes school-boys under his protection.
-Fragments of Tresco Abbey which was then founded still exist. It was
-independent until the reign of Edward I., when it was joined to
-Tavistock. The same monarch, Edward I., made Ranulph de White Monastery
-(supposed to be Ranulph de Blankminster, or Randolph de
-Blancheminster), according to an old archive, constable of these
-islands, with the castle of Ennor, in Old Town, on his &ldquo;Paying
-yearly, at the feast of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Michael the
-Archangel, 300 birds, called puffins, or <abbr title=
-"6 shilling 8 pence">6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i></abbr>&rdquo; Traces of
-these monastic visitors are to be found in a pile of rocks at
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Mary&rsquo;s, called Carn Friars (a farm
-near by bears the same name), and one of the most highly cultivated and
-sheltered spots, where a few trees grow, is known as Holy Vale.
-Whitfield places a nunnery there, and says Holy Vale takes <span class=
-"corr" id="xd25e3041" title="Source: it">its</span> name from a
-miraculous rosebush that grew in it, and that &ldquo;One of its flowers
-was deemed to have the power, if worn, to preserve its bearer from
-mortal sin,&rdquo; but no other authority mentions it.</p>
-<p>Giants, of course, frequently played a great part in the history of
-Scilly. Buzza&rsquo;s Hill, just beyond Hugh Town (<abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Mary&rsquo;s), <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb114"
-href="#pb114" name="pb114">114</a>]</span>commemorates a giant of the
-name of Bosow, who made his home on its summit (now crowned by a
-Spanish windmill), and from whom the family of Bosow were descended.
-One of the finest promontories on the same island is Giant&rsquo;s
-Castle&mdash;Troutbeck says, built by the Danes. Here, too, is
-Giant&rsquo;s Chair, where the Arch Druid used in former days to sit
-and watch the sun rise. Druidical remains are scattered all over the
-different islands, and the many &ldquo;barrows&rdquo; are known as
-&ldquo;giants&rsquo; graves.&rdquo; &ldquo;In the old abbey gardens at
-Tresco is a curious stone, about four feet long, two feet wide, and six
-inches in thickness, in an upright position. Near the top are two
-holes, one above the other (one being somewhat larger than the other),
-through which a man might pass his hand. It is supposed to be an old
-Druidical betrothal or wishing-stone, and used before the monks built
-the abbey at Tresco. Young people, engaged to be married, would pass
-their hands through the holes, and, joining them together, would so
-plight their troth. As a wishing-stone, or to break a spell, a ring
-would be passed through the holes with some
-incantations.&rdquo;&mdash;J. C. Tonkin&rsquo;s <i>Guide to the Isles
-of Scilly</i>.</p>
-<p>The finest headland on <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Mary&rsquo;s
-is Peninnis, and some of the sheltered nooks under its rocks have
-rather curious names. One of them is known as Sleep&rsquo;s Abode (or
-Parlour), and close by is Pitt&rsquo;s Parlour, which commands a lovely
-view; it is so called after a Mr. Pitt, who, when on a visit to Scilly,
-spent his summer evenings there with a chosen party of friends. An old
-lady, a native of Scilly, long since dead, told me that tradition said
-Mr. Pitt came to Scilly in consequence of a bet he made with a
-gentleman (I believe the then governor of the islands), who, when in
-London, spoke in the highest terms of the morality of its women, and
-offered to lay a heavy wager that not a single courtesan could be found
-there. Mr. Pitt took up the bet, travelled down to Scilly, and for a
-long time seemed likely to lose it; but at last, by a large bribe, he
-overcame the virtue of one very poor woman, and, in gratitude, allowed
-her a small pension until her death.</p>
-<p>At the foot of Peninnis is Piper&rsquo;s Hole (in which there is a
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb115" href="#pb115" name=
-"pb115">115</a>]</span>pool of fresh water). This is said to be the
-entrance of a subterranean passage leading to the island of Tresco,
-where another Piper&rsquo;s Hole is shown as the exit. Old people told
-marvellous tales of rash people venturing in so far that they never
-returned, but died in it overcome by fatigue&mdash;the passage being
-too narrow for them to turn. Also of dogs who disappeared in the hole
-at <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Mary&rsquo;s, and after many days
-crept out from the one in Tresco, very emaciated, and almost hairless.
-The <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> J. W. North, in his <i>Week in
-the Isles of Scilly</i>, has an interesting account of Piper&rsquo;s
-Hole at Tresco.</p>
-<p>Half-way down Giant&rsquo;s Castle, the steep carn before mentioned
-on <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Mary&rsquo;s, lies a very
-inaccessible cave known as Tom Butt&rsquo;s Bed, from the fact that a
-boy of that name hid himself there in Queen Anne&rsquo;s time three
-days and three nights out of sight of the press-gang.</p>
-<p>The wreck of Sir Cloudesley Shovel in 1707, upon Gilston Rock, in
-Porth Hellick Bay, near Old Town, is of course a matter of history.
-Very many traditions have, however, gathered around this sad event,
-related by many authors. I must briefly retell them, as no book of this
-kind would be complete without them.</p>
-<p>The admiral, accompanied by the whole of his fleet, was returning
-home from Toulon, after the capture of Gibraltar, in his ship the
-<i>Association</i>. When they were off Scilly, on October 22nd, 1707,
-the weather became thick and dirty, and orders were given &ldquo;to
-lie-to.&rdquo; This was in the afternoon. Later on, about six, Sir
-Cloudesley again made sail, but two hours after his ship showed signals
-of distress, which were answered from several of the others. In two
-minutes she struck on the Gilston Rock, sank immediately, and all on
-board perished. The <i>Eagle</i> and the <i>Romney</i> with their crews
-shared the same fate; the <i>Firebrand</i> also was lost, but her
-captain with most of her men were saved. &ldquo;The other men-of-war
-with difficulty escaped by having timely notice.&rdquo; In this storm
-between fifteen hundred and two thousand people were drowned in one
-night.</p>
-<p>A day or two before this took place, one man, a native of
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb116" href="#pb116" name=
-"pb116">116</a>]</span>Scilly, is said to have persistently warned the
-officer of the watch on board the <i>Association</i> that unless their
-ship&rsquo;s course was altered she, with all the fleet, would soon be
-on the Scilly rocks amongst the breakers. These warnings so exasperated
-the officer that he repeated them to his admiral, and he, vexed that a
-common sailor should think that he knew better than his superiors how
-to navigate a vessel, summarily ordered him to be hanged at the
-yard-arm for inciting the others to insubordination and mutiny. The man
-before his execution begged, as a great favour, that the chaplain
-should be allowed to read him one of the Psalms. His request was
-granted, and he chose the 109th, repeating after the reader in a loud
-voice all the curses it contains. And with his last breath he
-prophesied that the admiral, with those who saw him hanged, would find
-a watery grave. Up to that time the weather had been fair, but as soon
-as his body had been committed to the sea it changed, the wind began to
-blow, and his shipmates were horrified to see the corpse out of its
-winding-sheet, face up, following in their wake, and even before their
-vessel struck they gave themselves up for lost men. Some say that Sir
-Cloudesley&rsquo;s body came ashore on a hatch, on which he had
-endeavoured to save himself, with his favourite little dog dead by his
-side. Others, that after the wreck it was cast naked on Porth Hellick
-beach, where it was discovered by a soldier, who took off his ring
-which he still wore, and buried him in the sands.</p>
-<p>Another account, on the authority of Robert, second Lord Romney, Sir
-Cloudesley Shovel&rsquo;s grandson, runs thus:&mdash;&ldquo;There is
-one circumstance relating to Sir Cloudesley Shovel&rsquo;s death that
-is known to very few persons, namely, he was <i>not</i> drowned, having
-got to shore, where, by the confession of an ancient woman, he was put
-to death. This, many years after, when on her death-bed, she revealed
-to the minister of the parish, declaring she could not die in peace
-until she had made this confession, as she was led to commit this
-horrid deed for the sake of plunder. She acknowledged having, among
-other things, an emerald ring in her possession, which she had been
-afraid to sell lest it should <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb117"
-href="#pb117" name="pb117">117</a>]</span>lead to a discovery. This
-ring, which she delivered to the minister, was by him given to James,
-Earl of Berkeley, at his particular request, Sir Cloudesley Shovel and
-himself having lived on the strictest footing of friendship.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In the place and manner of his burial all traditions agree. Where he
-lay is still pointed out&mdash;a bare spot surrounded by green grass.
-And the Scillonians will tell you that, because he so obstinately
-refused to hear a warning, and wantonly threw away so many lives, God,
-to keep alive the memory of this great wickedness, permits nothing to
-grow on his grave.</p>
-<p>Another legend has it that the man who gave the warning escaped
-death, as the storm suddenly arose whilst the Psalm was being read,
-before the order for his execution could be carried out, and that he
-was the only person on board the <i>Association</i> who was not
-drowned.</p>
-<p>When Lady Cloudesley Shovel heard of the wreck, she asked that a
-search might be made for her husband&rsquo;s body. A soldier showed a
-ring which he had in his possession, which was immediately recognised
-as Sir Cloudesley Shovel&rsquo;s. The body was dug up and identified by
-the marks of his wounds. The ring was forwarded to his wife, and she,
-in gratitude for the soldier&rsquo;s kindness in giving her husband a
-decent burial, rewarded him with a pension for life. Sir
-Cloudesley&rsquo;s body was embalmed, first taken to Plymouth by sea,
-where for some time it lay in state, and finally to London, where it
-was interred in Westminster Abbey.</p>
-<p>The abbey at Tresco, formerly under the jurisdiction of the monks of
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Nicholas<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3122src" href="#xd25e3122" name="xd25e3122src">13</a> at
-Tavistock, has been already mentioned. The abbey house, built on its
-site, is the seat of Mr. Dorrien Smith (the Proprietor, as the
-Scillonians call him). The gardens that surround it are very beautiful,
-and famed for the tropical plants that here grow out of doors. There is
-an anecdote related of one of the inhabitants of Tresco, who, when
-asked what they did for firewood in a spot where no trees grew,
-answered, &ldquo;We kindle <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb118" href=
-"#pb118" name="pb118">118</a>]</span>our fires from the loppings of our
-geranium hedges.&rdquo; Tresco, like <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Levan, at the Land&rsquo;s End, was in bygone days the favourite haunt
-of witches. A poor man there walking out at nightfall had the
-misfortune to meet with a party of them taking a moonlight ride on
-their broomsticks. A relation of his was one of the number, and she
-warned him, in a stentorian voice, that if he ever mentioned what he
-had accidentally seen, he should bear the marks of their wrath until
-his dying day. For a long time the secret weighed heavily upon him, and
-at last he could not refrain from telling his wife. The witches, in
-revenge, turned his black hair white in a single night.</p>
-<p>The <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> H. G. Whitfield, in his
-<i>Legends of Scilly</i>, gives some marvellous tales of the family of
-&ldquo;Dick the Wicked.&rdquo; They were all hardened wreckers, who
-generations ago lived on this island, and who also had the gift of
-second sight. Dick himself, according to this writer, when ill and
-unrepentant, was, by Satanic agency, taken out of his bed and borne,
-wrapt in a long loose coat, which he was in the habit of wearing, some
-considerable distance from his house. Here his friends discovered him
-on the following morning.</p>
-<p>On this island stands Cromwell&rsquo;s castle, built during his
-Protectorate. Old people thought that he in person visited it. The
-large china tankard, out of which he was said to have drunk his
-breakfast-beer, still exists. On a hill above are the ruins of
-Charles&rsquo;s castle. Scilly always remained loyal and true to the
-unfortunate monarch, and this verse of a ballad told me by a Scillonian
-was not written of one of them:</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;In Cromwell&rsquo;s days I was for him,</p>
-<p class="line">But now, my boys, I&rsquo;m for the king;</p>
-<p class="line">For I can turn, boys, with the tide,</p>
-<p class="line">And wear my coat on the strongest side.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first"><abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Warna, who presided
-over wrecks, was the patron saint of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Agnes, another of the principal islands. She crossed over here from
-Ireland in a wicker-boat covered with hides, and landed at <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Warna&rsquo;s bay. Like many other saints she had
-her holy-well; and often the superstitious inhabitants of <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Agnes (five <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb119"
-href="#pb119" name="pb119">119</a>]</span>families in all), who enjoyed
-the reputation of being the most daring and unscrupulous amongst the
-Scilly wreckers of those days, threw crooked pins into it, and daily
-invoked and prayed her to send them &ldquo;a rich wreck.&rdquo; There
-was no church on it then, and its people rarely visited the other
-islands. But it chanced one fine morning the entire population started
-in their boats for the church of Ennor, in <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Mary Old Town, as two of them wished to be married.
-After the ceremony was over the clergyman in the presence of most of
-his parishioners, who had assembled to witness it (between whom and the
-men of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Agnes there was always a bitter
-feud), rebuked them for their lawless deeds. They, angry at being put
-to shame before their enemies, answered with many profane and mocking
-words, and were with difficulty restrained from coming to blows. So
-incensed were they that they took no notice of the signs which heralded
-a coming storm, and hastily got on board their boats to return to their
-own home, which none of them were ever destined to reach, as it broke
-with great fury when they were about half-way across. When close to
-land and the rowers were straining every nerve to get there, one wave
-larger than the rest broke over them, and every soul found a watery
-grave. This was of course said to be a judgment on them for their
-wicked ways. (Leland briefly chronicles it.) From that time
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Warna&rsquo;s well was neglected; there
-was no one left the day after twelfth-day, as had been the custom, to
-clean it out and return her thanks for her bounty: it gradually got
-filled with stones, and at the present day is little more than a
-hole.</p>
-<p>There is a curious labyrinth on this island called
-&ldquo;Troy-town,&rdquo; which it is popularly supposed to represent;
-but all intricate places in Cornwall are so denominated, and I have
-even heard nurses say to children when they were surrounded by a litter
-of toys that they looked as if they were in Troy-town.</p>
-<p>A peculiar mode of punishment was formerly practised in Scilly. The
-offenders were placed in a chair called a &ldquo;ducking chair,&rdquo;
-and publicly at <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Mary&rsquo;s quay-head
-&ldquo;ducked&rdquo; in the salt water. <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb120" href="#pb120" name="pb120">120</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e1744" href="#xd25e1744src" name="xd25e1744">1</a></span> Uther is
-still used as a Christian name in Cornwall.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow"
-href="#xd25e1744src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e1798" href="#xd25e1798src" name="xd25e1798">2</a></span> The
-Cornish manner of pronouncing the name of <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Clare.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e1798src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e1903" href="#xd25e1903src" name="xd25e1903">3</a></span> Supposed
-to have been shads, vulgarly here called &ldquo;Chuck-cheldern,&rdquo;
-from the number of bones in them.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e1903src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e2154" href="#xd25e2154src" name="xd25e2154">4</a></span> Burn, a,
-load, a burden.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e2154src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e2179" href="#xd25e2179src" name="xd25e2179">5</a></span> A fuller
-account of Tregeagle and his wonderful doings may be found in
-Bottrell&rsquo;s <i>Traditions, West Cornwall</i>.&nbsp;<a class=
-"fnarrow" href="#xd25e2179src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e2195" href="#xd25e2195src" name="xd25e2195">6</a></span> A
-monastery existed there, and in 1883 portions of the building were
-still standing.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e2195src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e2266" href="#xd25e2266src" name="xd25e2266">7</a></span> A
-gentleman&rsquo;s seat in the parish of Gulval, near
-Penzance.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e2266src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e2271" href="#xd25e2271src" name="xd25e2271">8</a></span> There is
-a small enclosure near the castle, where several members of the family
-of Hosking were interred, owing to a quarrel that Mr. Hosking had with
-the vicar of Ludgvan over some tithes. The last funeral took place in
-1823. On one of the stones is inscribed, &ldquo;It is virtue alone that
-consecrates this ground,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Custom is the idol of
-fools.&rdquo;&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e2271src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e2316" href="#xd25e2316src" name="xd25e2316">9</a></span> The
-Penzance Promenade is built on part of it. In my childhood it was said
-to be one of the resorts of &ldquo;Spring-heeled Jack,&rdquo; of whom I
-then lived in mortal dread.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e2316src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e2410" href="#xd25e2410src" name="xd25e2410">10</a></span> A small
-stream coloured by running through tin mining works.&nbsp;<a class=
-"fnarrow" href="#xd25e2410src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e2418" href="#xd25e2418src" name="xd25e2418">11</a></span>
-Marazion is no longer a Corporate town.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e2418src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e2834" href="#xd25e2834src" name="xd25e2834">12</a></span> Dennis
-is a very common Cornish surname.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e2834src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3122" href="#xd25e3122src" name="xd25e3122">13</a></span>
-&ldquo;Old Monk&rdquo; is a term of contempt in Cornwall, applied to
-old or young men. &ldquo;I saw the old monk coming down the
-garden&rdquo; (a youth of twenty).&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e3122src">&uarr;</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch3" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<div class="figure"><img src="images/head2.png" alt="FAIRIES." width=
-"559" height="52"></div>
-<h2 class="main">FAIRIES.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="xd25e3186"><span class="xd25e3186init">T</span>he fairies of
-Cornwall may be divided into four classes, the Small People, the Pixies
-(pronounced Piskies or or Pisgies), the Spriggans, and the Knockers.
-The first are harmless <span class="corr" id="xd25e3188" title=
-"Source: elfiish">elfish</span> little beings known all over England,
-whose revels on fine summer nights have often been described by those
-favoured individuals who have accidentally had the privilege of seeing
-them. As a rule they, however, wish to think themselves invisible, and
-in this county it is considered unlucky to call them by the name of
-fairies. The stories told about them by our old folk differed but
-slightly from those related elsewhere. There was the well-known cow
-that gave the finest yield of milk, and retained it all the year round
-when others of the herd ran dry, but always ceased the flow at a
-certain time, and if efforts were made to draw more from her, kicked
-over the the milking-pail. The milkmaid discovered that the cow
-belonged to the small people, by reason of her wearing in her hat a
-bunch of flowers having in it a four-leaved clover, which rendered them
-visible, when she saw them climbing up the cow&rsquo;s legs and sucking
-at her teats. The greedy mistress, when the maid told her of this
-discovery, contrary to advice, washed the poor animal all over with
-salt water, which fairies particularly dislike (as well as the smell of
-fish and grease), in order to drive them away. Of course she succeeded
-in her object, and by so doing brought <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb121" href="#pb121" name="pb121">121</a>]</span>nothing but ill-luck
-for ever after on herself and family. When unmolested, fairies bring
-good fortune to places they frequent; but they are spiteful if
-interfered with, and delight in vexing and thwarting people who meddle
-with them. It is well known &ldquo;that they can&rsquo;t abear those
-whom they can&rsquo;t abide.&rdquo; Then there were the tales of
-persons spirited away to fairyland, to wait upon the small
-people&rsquo;s children and perform various little domestic offices,
-where the time has passed so pleasantly that they have forgotten all
-about their homes and relations, until by doing a forbidden thing they
-have incurred their master&rsquo;s anger. They were then punished by
-being thrown into a deep sleep, and on awakening found themselves on
-some moor close to their native villages. These unhappy creatures
-never, after their return, settled down to work, but roamed about
-aimlessly doing nothing, hoping and longing one day to be allowed to go
-back to the place from whence they had been banished. They had first
-put themselves into the fairies&rsquo; power by eating or drinking
-something on the sly, when they had surprised them at one of their
-moonlight frolics; or by accepting a gift of fruit from the hands of
-one of these little beings. There are also two or three legends of
-curious women, who by underhand dealings have got hold of a mysterious
-box of green ointment belonging to the fairies, which, rubbed on the
-eyes, gave them the power of seeing them by daylight, when they look
-old, withered, and grey, and hate to be spied upon by mortals. These
-women are always interrupted when they have put the ointment on one eye
-before they have time to anoint both, and by an inadvertent speech they
-invariably betray their ill-gotten knowledge. They cannot resist making
-an exclamation when they see a fairy pilfering or up to some
-mischievous trick. Neither can they keep the secret of the side on
-which they see, and they are quickly made to pay the penalty of their
-misdeeds by a well-directed blow from the elf&rsquo;s fist, which
-deprives them of the sight of that eye for ever. All these old
-wives&rsquo; tales are fully related by Mr. Bottrell in his three
-series of <i>Traditions, &amp;c., of West Cornwall</i>.</p>
-<p>Fairies haunt the ancient monuments of this county, and are supposed
-to be the beings who bring ill-luck on the destroyers of <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb122" href="#pb122" name=
-"pb122">122</a>]</span>them. &ldquo;Not long ago a woman of Moushal (a
-village near Penzance) told me that troops of small people, not more
-than a foot-and-a-half high, used, on moonlight nights, to come out of
-a hole in the cliff, opening on to the beach, Newlyn side of the
-village, and but a short distance from it. The little people were
-always dressed very smart, and if anyone came near them would scamper
-away into the hole. Mothers often told their children that if they went
-under cliffs by night the small people would carry them away into
-&lsquo;Dicky Danjy&rsquo;s
-hole.&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo;&mdash;Bottrell.</p>
-<p>These small people are said to have been half-witted people who had
-committed no mortal sin, but who, when they died, were not good enough
-to go to Heaven. They are always thought, in some state, to have lived
-before.</p>
-<p>The small people go about in parties, but pisky in his habits, at
-least in West Cornwall, is a solitary little being. I gather however,
-from Mr. T. Q. Couch&rsquo;s <i>History of Polperro</i> that in the
-eastern part of the county the name of Pisky is applied
-indiscriminately to both tribes. He says two only of them are known by
-name, and quotes the following rhyme:</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Jack o&rsquo; the lantern! Joan the wad,</p>
-<p class="line">Who tickled the maid and made her mad;</p>
-<p class="line">Light me home, the weather&rsquo;s bad.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Here in the west he is a ragged merry little fellow
-(to laugh like a pisky is a common Cornish simile), interesting himself
-in human affairs, threshing the farmer&rsquo;s corn at nights, or doing
-other work, and pinching the maidservants when they leave a house dirty
-at bed-time. Margery Daw, in our version of the nursery-song, meets
-with punishment at his hands for her misdoings&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;See saw, Margery Daw,</p>
-<p class="line">Sold her bed and lay upon straw;</p>
-<p class="line">Sold her bed and lay upon hay,</p>
-<p class="line">And pisky came and carried her away.</p>
-<p class="line">For wasn&rsquo;t she a dirty slut</p>
-<p class="line">To sell her bed and lie in the dirt?&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Should the happy possessor of one of these
-industrious, unpaid fairy servants (who never object to taking food
-left for them by friends) express his thanks aloud, thus showing that
-he sees him, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb123" href="#pb123" name=
-"pb123">123</a>]</span>or try to reward him for his services by giving
-him a new suit of clothes, he leaves the house never to return, and in
-the latter case may be heard to say:</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Pisky fine, pisky gay!</p>
-<p class="line">Pisky now will fly away.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Or in another version:</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Pisky new coat, and pisky new hood,</p>
-<p class="line">Pisky now will do no more
-good.&rdquo;&mdash;(T.Q.C.)</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Mr. Cornish, the Town Clerk of Penzance, mentioned at
-an antiquarian meeting recently held in that town, &ldquo;that there
-was a brownie still existing in it; that a gentleman, whose opinion he
-would take on many matters, had told him that he had often seen it
-sitting quietly by the fireside.&rdquo; When mischievously inclined
-pisky often leads benighted people a sad dance; like Will of the Wisp,
-he takes them over hedges and ditches, and sometimes round and round
-the same field, from which they in vain try to find their way home
-(although they can always see the path close at hand), until they sit
-down and turn their stockings the wrong side out, as an old lady, born
-in the last century, whom I well knew, once told me she had done. To
-turn a pocket inside out has the same effect. But to quote the words of
-a late witty Cornish doctor, &ldquo;Pisky led is often whiskey
-led.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mr. T. Q. Couch in his before-mentioned book has two or three
-amusing stories of their merry pranks. One is called &ldquo;A Voyage
-with the Piskies.&rdquo; A Polperro lad meeting them one night as he
-was going on an errand heard them say in chorus, &ldquo;I&rsquo;m for
-Portallow Green&rdquo; (a place in the neighbourhood). Repeating the
-cry after them, &ldquo;quick as thought he found himself there
-surrounded by a throng of laughing piskies.&rdquo; The next place they
-visited was Seaton Beach, between Polperro and Plymouth; the third and
-last cry was &ldquo;I&rsquo;m for the King of France&rsquo;s
-cellar.&rdquo; Again he decided on joining them, dropped the bundle he
-was carrying on the sands, and &ldquo;immediately found himself in a
-spacious cellar, engaged with his mysterious companions in tasting the
-richest wines.&rdquo; Afterwards they strolled through the palace,
-where in a room he saw all the preparations made for a feast,
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb124" href="#pb124" name=
-"pb124">124</a>]</span>and could not resist the temptation of pocketing
-one of the rich silver goblets from the table. The signal for their
-return was soon given, and once more he found himself on Seaton Beach,
-where he had just time to pick up his bundle before he was whisked
-home. All these voyages were made in the short space of five minutes.
-When on his return he told his adventures they were listened to with
-incredulity until he produced the goblet, which proved the truth of his
-tale. After having been kept for generations this trophy has
-disappeared. &ldquo;These little creatures seem sometimes,&rdquo; Mr.
-Couch says, &ldquo;to have delighted in mischief for its own sake. Old
-Robin Hicks, who formerly lived in a house at &lsquo;Quay Head&rsquo;
-(Polperro), has more than once, on stormy winter nights, been alarmed
-at his supper by a voice sharp and shrill&mdash;&lsquo;Robin! Robin!
-your boat is adrift.&rsquo; Loud was the laughter and the
-<i>tacking</i> of hands (clapping) when they succeeded in luring Robin
-as far as the quay, where the boat was lying safely at its
-moorings.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Another of his legends is about a fisherman of his district, John
-Taprail, long since dead, who was, on a frosty night, aroused from his
-sleep by a voice which called to him that his boat was in danger. He
-went down to the beach to find that some person had played a practical
-joke on him. As he was returning he saw a group of piskies sitting in a
-semicircle under a much larger boat belonging to one of his neighbours.
-They were dividing a heap of money between them by throwing a piece of
-gold alternately into each of the hats which lay before them. John was
-covetous, and forgot that piskies hate to be spied upon; so he crept up
-and pushed his hat slily in with the others. When the pile was getting
-low he tried to get off with his booty without their detecting the
-fraud. He had got some distance before the cheat was discovered; then
-they pursued him in such hot haste that he only escaped with his
-treasure by leaving his coat-tails in their hands. &ldquo;The
-pisky&rsquo;s midwife&rdquo; is common,&mdash;a mortal who has been
-decoyed into fairyland discovers it by accidentally rubbing her eye
-with a bit of soap whilst washing the baby. Like those who have stolen
-and applied the green ointment, she <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb125" href="#pb125" name="pb125">125</a>]</span>loses the sight of it
-by a blow from an angry pisky&rsquo;s fist. She meets and recognizes
-the father at a fair where, as usual, he is pilfering, and foolishly
-asks after the welfare of mother and child. But all these stories in
-West Cornwall would be told of the &ldquo;small people,&rdquo; as well
-as the well-known &ldquo;Colman Grey&rdquo; (of course the name
-varies), which relates how a farmer one day found a poor, half-starved
-looking bantling, sitting alone in the middle of a field, whom he took
-home and fed until he grew quite strong and lively. A short time after
-a shrill voice was suddenly heard calling thrice upon &ldquo;Colman
-Grey.&rdquo; Upon which the imp cried &ldquo;Ho! ho! ho! my daddy is
-come!&rdquo; flew through the keyhole, and was never heard of after.
-Unbaptised children were, in this county at the beginning of the
-century, said to turn, when they died, into piskies; they gradually
-went through many transformations at each change, getting smaller until
-at last they became &ldquo;Meryons&rdquo;<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3259src" href="#xd25e3259" name="xd25e3259src">1</a> (ants) and
-finally disappeared. Another tradition is that they were Druids, who,
-because they would not believe in Christ, were for their sins condemned
-to change first into piskies; gradually getting smaller, they too, as
-ants, at last are lost. It is on account of these legends considered
-unlucky to destroy an ant&rsquo;s nest, and a piece of tin put into one
-could, in bygone days, through pisky power be transmuted into silver,
-provided that it was inserted at some varying lucky moment about the
-time of the new moon.</p>
-<p>Moths were formerly believed in Cornwall to be departed souls, and
-are still, in some districts, called piskies.</p>
-<p>There is also a green bug which infests bramble-bushes in the late
-autumn that bears the same name, and one of the reasons assigned for
-blackberries not being good after Michaelmas is that pisky spoils them
-then. Pisky is in some places invoked for luck at the swarming of
-bees.</p>
-<p>It was once a common custom in East Cornwall, when houses were
-built, to leave holes in the walls by which these little beings could
-enter; to stop them up would drive away good luck. And in <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb126" href="#pb126" name="pb126">126</a>]</span>West
-Cornwall knobs of lead, known as pisky&rsquo;s paws or pisky feet, were
-placed at intervals on the roofs of farm-houses to prevent the piskies
-from dancing on them and turning the milk sour in the dairies.</p>
-<p>Country people in East Cornwall sometimes put a prayer book under a
-child&rsquo;s pillow as a charm to keep away piskies. I am told that a
-poor woman, near Launceston, was fully persuaded that one of her
-children was taken away and a pisky substituted, the disaster being
-caused by the absence of a prayer book on one particular
-night.&mdash;<abbr>H. G. T.</abbr>, <i>Notes and Queries</i>, December,
-1850.</p>
-<p>Small round stones, known as &ldquo;Pisky Grinding Stones,&rdquo;
-are occasionally found in Cornwall; they are most probably parts of old
-spindles.</p>
-<p>If piskies are kind and helpful little beings, spriggans or sprites
-are spiteful creatures, never doing a good turn for anyone. It is they
-who carry off poor babies from their mothers, when they have been
-obliged to leave them for a few hours alone, putting their own ugly,
-peevish brats in their cradles, who never thrive under the
-foster-mother&rsquo;s care, in spite of all the trouble they may bestow
-upon them. Mr. Bottrell tells the story of a spriggan, a married man
-with a family, who took the place of a poor woman&rsquo;s child one
-evening when she was at work in the harvest field. For although an
-innocent baby held in the arms is thought in Cornwall to protect the
-holder from mischief caused by ghosts and witches, it has no power over
-these creatures, who are not supposed to have souls. The scene of this
-legend was under Chapel Carn Brea, on the old road from Penzance to
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Just in Penwith. The mother, Jenny
-Trayer by name, was first alarmed on her return one night from her work
-in the harvest field by not finding her child in its cradle, but in a
-corner of the kitchen where in olden days the wood and furze for the
-then general open fires were kept. She was however too tired to take
-much notice, and went to bed, and slept soundly until the morning. From
-that time forth she had no peace; the child was never satisfied but
-when eating or drinking, or when she had it dandling in her arms. The
-poor woman consulted her neighbours in turn as to what she should
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb127" href="#pb127" name=
-"pb127">127</a>]</span>do with the changeling (as one and all agreed
-that it was). One recommended her to dip it on the three first
-Wednesdays in May in Chapel Uny Well,<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3290src" href="#xd25e3290" name="xd25e3290src">2</a> which advice
-was twice faithfully carried out in the prescribed manner. The third
-Wednesday was very wet and windy, but Jenny determined to persevere in
-this treatment of her ugly bantling, and holding the brat (who seemed
-to enjoy the storm) firmly on her shoulders, she trudged off. When they
-got about half-way, a shrill voice from behind some rocks was heard to
-say,</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Tredrill! Tredrill!</p>
-<p class="line">Thy wife and children greet thee well.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Not seeing anyone, the woman was of course alarmed,
-and her fright increased when the imp made answer in a similar
-voice,</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;What care I for wife or child,</p>
-<p class="line">When I ride on Dowdy&rsquo;s back to the Chapel
-Well,</p>
-<p class="line">And have got pap my fill?&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">After this adventure, she took the advice of another
-neighbour, who told her the best way to get rid of the spriggan and
-have her own child returned was &ldquo;to put the small body upon the
-ashes&rsquo; pile, and beat it well with a broom; then lay it naked
-under a church stile; there leave it and keep out of sight and hearing
-till the turn of night; when nine times out of ten the thing will be
-taken away and the stolen child returned.&rdquo; This was finally done;
-all the women of the village after it had been put upon a convenient
-pile &ldquo;belabouring it with their brooms,&rdquo; upon which it
-naturally set up a frightful roar. After dark it was laid under the
-stile, and there next morning the woman &ldquo;found her own
-&lsquo;dear cheeld&rsquo; sleeping on some dry straw,&rdquo; most
-beautifully clean and wrapped in a piece of chintz. &ldquo;Jenny nursed
-her recovered child with great care, but there was always something
-queer about it, as there always is about one that has been in the
-fairies&rsquo; power&mdash;if only for a few days.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There are many other tales of changelings, but they resemble each
-other so much that they are not worth relating. In the one <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb128" href="#pb128" name=
-"pb128">128</a>]</span>before quoted from Mr. Bottrell he gives a third
-charm for getting a child restored, as follows: &ldquo;Make by night a
-smoky fire, with green ferns and dry. When the chimney and house are
-full of smoke as one can bear, throw the changeling on the hearthstone;
-go out of the house, turn three times round; when one enters, the right
-child will be restored.&rdquo; Spriggans, too, guard the vast treasures
-that are supposed to be buried beneath our immense carns and in our
-cliff castles. No matter if the work be carried on by night or by day,
-they are sure to punish the rash person who ventures to dig in hopes of
-securing them. When he has got some way down, he finds himself
-surrounded by hundreds of ugly beings, in some cases almost as tall as
-he, who scare the unhappy man until he loses all control over himself,
-throws down his tools, and rushes off as fast as he can <span class=
-"corr" id="xd25e3317" title="Source: possiby">possibly</span> go. The
-fright often makes him so ill that he has to lie for days in bed.
-Should he ever summon up courage to return to the spot, he will find
-the pit refilled, and no traces to show that the ground had been
-disturbed.</p>
-<p>Knockers (pronounced knackers) are mine fairies, popularly supposed
-to be (as related elsewhere) the souls of the Jews who crucified
-Christ, sent by the Romans to work as slaves in the tin mines. In proof
-of this, they are said never to have been heard at work on Saturdays,
-nor other Jewish festivals. They are compelled to sing carols at
-Christmas time. Small pieces of smelted tin found in old smelting-works
-are known as &ldquo;Jews&rsquo; bowels.&rdquo; These fairies haunt none
-but the richest tin mines, and many are reputed to have been discovered
-by their singing and knocking underground; and miners think when they
-hear them that it is a sign of good luck, because when following their
-noises they often chance on lodes of good ore. When a miner goes into
-an &ldquo;old level&rdquo; and sees a bright light, it is a sure sign
-that he will find tin there. Knockers like spriggans are very ugly
-beings, and, if you do not treat them in a friendly spirit, very
-vindictive. &ldquo;As stiff as Barker&rsquo;s knee&rdquo; is a common
-saying in Cornwall; he having in some way angered the knockers, either
-by speaking of them disrespectfully or by not leaving (as was formerly
-the custom) a bit of his dinner on the ground for them (for good luck),
-they <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb129" href="#pb129" name=
-"pb129">129</a>]</span>in revenge threw all their tools in his lap,
-which lamed him for the rest of his life. Mr. Bottrell tells a similar
-story of a man named Tom Trevorrow, who when he was working underground
-heard the knockers just before him, and roughly told them &ldquo;to be
-quiet and go.&rdquo; Upon which, a shower of stones fell suddenly
-around him, and gave him a dreadful fright. He seems however to have
-quickly got over it, and soon after, when eating his dinner, a number
-of squeaking voices sang,</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Tom Trevorrow! Tom Trevorrow!</p>
-<p class="line">Leave some of thy &lsquo;fuggan&rsquo;<a class=
-"noteref" id="xd25e3329src" href="#xd25e3329" name="xd25e3329src">3</a>
-for bucca,</p>
-<p class="line">Or bad luck to thee to-morrow!&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">But Tom took no notice and ate up every crumb, upon
-which the knockers changed their song to</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Tommy Trevorrow! Tommy Trevorrow!</p>
-<p class="line">We&rsquo;ll send thee bad luck to-morrow;</p>
-<p class="line">Thou old curmudgeon, to eat all thy fuggan,</p>
-<p class="line">And not leave a &lsquo;didjan&rsquo;<a class="noteref"
-id="xd25e3345src" href="#xd25e3345" name="xd25e3345src">4</a> for
-bucca<span class="corr" id="xd25e3348" title=
-"Not in source">.</span>&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">After this such persistent ill-luck followed him that
-he was obliged to leave the mine.</p>
-<p>Bucca is the name of a spirit that in Cornwall it was once thought
-necessary to propitiate. Fishermen left a fish on the sands for bucca,
-and in the harvest a piece of bread at lunch-time was thrown over the
-left shoulder, and a few drops of beer spilled on the ground for him,
-to ensure good luck. Bucca, or bucca-boo, was, until very lately (and I
-expect in some places still is) the terror of children, who were often
-when crying told &ldquo;that if they did not stop he would come and
-carry them off.&rdquo; It was also the name of a ghost; but now-a-days
-to call a person a &ldquo;great bucca&rdquo; simply implies that you
-think him a fool. There were two buccas&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;&#8202;&lsquo;Bucca Gwidden,&rsquo; the white,
-or good spirit,</p>
-<p class="line">&lsquo;Bucca Dhu,&rsquo; the black, malevolent
-one.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb130" href="#pb130" name=
-"pb130">130</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3259" href="#xd25e3259src" name="xd25e3259">1</a></span> The word
-Meryons is also used in Cornwall as a term of endearment,
-&ldquo;<span lang="en">She&rsquo;s faather&rsquo;s little
-Meryon.</span>&rdquo;&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e3259src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3290" href="#xd25e3290src" name="xd25e3290">2</a></span> See
-<i>ante</i>, &ldquo;Cornish Feasts and Feasten
-Customs.&rdquo;&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e3290src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3329" href="#xd25e3329src" name="xd25e3329">3</a></span> Fuggan,
-a cake made of flour and raisins often eaten by miners for
-dinner.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e3329src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3345" href="#xd25e3345src" name="xd25e3345">4</a></span> Didjan,
-a tiny bit.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e3345src">&uarr;</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch4" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<div class="figure"><img src="images/head3.png" alt="SUPERSTITIONS:"
-width="570" height="61"></div>
-<h2 class="main">SUPERSTITIONS:</h2>
-<h2 class="sub"><span class="sc">Miners&rsquo;, Sailors<span class=
-"corr" id="xd25e3368" title="Source: ,&rsquo;">&rsquo;,</span>
-Farmers<span class="corr" id="xd25e3371" title=
-"Source: .&rsquo;">&rsquo;.</span></span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="xd25e3373"><span class="xd25e3373init">A</span>lthough
-Cornish miners, or &ldquo;tinners&rdquo; as they are generally called,
-are a very intelligent, and since the days of Wesley a religious body
-of men, many of their old-world beliefs still linger. To this day it is
-considered unlucky to make the form of a cross on the sides of a mine,
-and when underground you may on no account whistle for fear of vexing
-the knockers and bringing ill-luck, but you may sing or even
-swear<a class="noteref" id="xd25e3375src" href="#xd25e3375" name=
-"xd25e3375src">1</a> without producing any bad effect. Down one
-mine-shaft a black goat is often seen to descend, but is never met
-below; in another mine a white rabbit forebodes an accident.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The occurrence of a black cat in the lowest depths of a mine
-will warn the older miners off that level until the cat is
-exterminated.&rdquo;&mdash;Thomas Cornish, <i>Western Antiquary,
-October, 1887</i>.</p>
-<p>A hand clasping the ladder and coming down with, or after a miner,
-foretells misfortune or death. This superstition prevails, also, in the
-slate quarries of the eastern part of the county.</p>
-<p>The miners in the slate quarries of Delabole have a tradition that
-the right hand of a miner, who committed suicide, is sometimes seen
-following them down the ladders, grasping the rings as they let them
-go, holding a miner&rsquo;s light between the thumb and finger. It
-forebodes ill to the seer.&mdash;Esm&egrave; Stuart. See
-&ldquo;Tamsin&rsquo;s Choice,&rdquo; <i>Longman</i>, June, 1883.
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb131" href="#pb131" name=
-"pb131">131</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Miners, too, had some superstition in regard to snails, known in
-Cornwall as &ldquo;bullhorns;&rdquo; for if they met one on their way
-to work they always dropped a bit of their dinner or some grease from
-their lanthorn before him for good-luck.</p>
-<p>Miraculous dreams are related; warnings to some miners, which have
-prevented on particular days their going down below with their
-comrades, when serious accidents have happened and several have lost
-their lives. Rich lodes, too, have been discovered through the dreams
-of fortunate women, who have been shown in them where their male
-relatives should dig for the hidden treasure.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&#8202;&lsquo;Dowsing&rsquo; (divining with the rod) is of
-course believed in here as elsewhere, and some men are known as noted
-&lsquo;dowsers.&rsquo; A forked twig of hazel (also called a
-&lsquo;dowser&rsquo;) is used by our Cornish miners to discover a vein
-of ore; it is held loosely in the hand, the point towards the
-&lsquo;dowser&rsquo;s&rsquo; breast, and it is said to turn round when
-the holder is standing over metal.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Miners still observe some quaint old customs; a horse-shoe is
-sometimes placed on a convenient part of the machinery, which each, as
-he goes down to his day&rsquo;s work, touches four times to ensure
-good-luck. These must be &ldquo;Tributers&rdquo; (pronounced
-trib-ut-ers), who work on &ldquo;trib-ut,&rdquo; when a percentage is
-paid on ores raised; in contradistinction to &ldquo;Tut-workers,&rdquo;
-who are paid by the job.</p>
-<p>A miner, going underground with shoes on, will drive all the mineral
-out of the mine.&mdash;<i>Cornubiana</i>, <abbr title=
-"Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle.</p>
-<p>In 1886, at <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Just in Penwith two men
-of Wheal Drea had their hats burnt one Monday morning, after the birth
-of their first children.</p>
-<p>Three hundred fathoms below the ground at Cook&rsquo;s Kitchen mine,
-near Camborne, swarms of flies may be heard buzzing, called by the men,
-for some unknown reason, &ldquo;Mother Margarets.&rdquo; From being
-bred in the dark, they have a great dislike to light.</p>
-<p>Swallows in olden times were thought to spend the winter in deep,
-old disused Cornish tin-works; also in the sheltered nooks of its
-cliffs and cairns. It is the custom here to jump on seeing the first in
-spring. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb132" href="#pb132" name=
-"pb132">132</a>]</span></p>
-<p>A water-wagtail, in Cornwall a &ldquo;tinner,&rdquo; perching on a
-window-sill, is the sign of a visit from a stranger.</p>
-<p>Carew says&mdash;&ldquo;<span lang="en">The Cornish tynners hold a
-strong imagination, that in the withdrawing of Noah&rsquo;s floud to
-the sea the same took his course from east to west, violently breaking
-vp, and forcibly carrying with it the earth, trees, and rocks, which
-lay anything loosely neere the vpper face of the ground. To confirme
-the likelihood of which supposed truth, they doe many times digge vp
-whole and huge timber-trees, which they conceiue at that deluge to haue
-been ouerturned and whelmed.</span>&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Miners frequently in conversation make use of technical proverbs,
-such as &ldquo;Capel rides a good horse.&rdquo; Capel is schorl, and
-indicates the presence of tin. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a wise man that knows
-tin&rdquo; alludes to the various forms it takes. To an old tune they
-sing the words&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s to the devil, with his wooden spade
-and shovel,</p>
-<p class="line">Digging tin by the bushel, with his tail cocked
-up.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">And on the signboard of a public-house in West
-Cornwall a few years ago (and probably still) might be read&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Come all good Cornish boys<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3437src" href="#xd25e3437" name="xd25e3437src">2</a> walk in,</p>
-<p class="line">Here&rsquo;s brandy, rum, and shrub, and gin;</p>
-<p class="line">You can&rsquo;t do less than drink success</p>
-<p class="line">To copper, fish, and tin.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Miners believe that mundic (iron pyrites) being
-applied to a wound immediately cures it; of which they are so sure that
-they use no other remedy than washing it in the water that runs through
-the mundic ore.&mdash;<i>A Complete History of Cornwall, 1730.</i></p>
-<p>It is an easy transition from mines to fish, the next staple
-industry of Cornwall, and to the superstitions of its fishermen and
-sailors. Fish is a word in West Cornwall applied more particularly to
-pilchards (pelchurs). They frequent our coasts in autumn.</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;When the corn is in the shock,</p>
-<p class="line">Then the fish are on the rock.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">And if on a close foggy day in that season you ask the
-question,&mdash;&ldquo;Do you think it will rain?&rdquo; the answer
-often is&mdash;&ldquo;No! it is <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb133"
-href="#pb133" name="pb133">133</a>]</span>only het (heat) and
-pelchurs,&rdquo; that sort of weather being favourable for catching
-them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A good year for fleas is a good year for fish,&rdquo; the
-proverb says; and when eating a pilchard the flesh must be always taken
-off the bone from the tail to the head. To eat them from head to tail
-is unlucky, and would soon drive the fish from the shore. There are
-many other wise sayings about pilchards; but I will only give one more
-couplet, which declares that&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;They are food, money, and light,</p>
-<p class="line">All in one night.&rdquo;<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3470src" href="#xd25e3470" name="xd25e3470src">3</a></p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Should pilchards when in bulk<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3474src" href="#xd25e3474" name="xd25e3474src">4</a> make a
-squeaking noise, they are crying for more, and another shoal will
-quickly be in the bay.</p>
-<p>Fishermen dread going near the spot where vessels have been wrecked,
-as the voices of the drowned often call to them there, especially
-before a storm. Sometimes their dead comrades call them by their names,
-and then they know for certain that they will soon die; and often when
-drowning the ghosts of their friends appear to them. They are seen by
-them sometimes taking the form of animals.</p>
-<p>Mr. Bottrell speaks of a farmer&rsquo;s wife who was warned of her
-son&rsquo;s death by the milk in the pans ranged round her dairy being
-agitated like the sea waves in a storm. There is a legend common to
-many districts of a wrecker who rushed into the sea and perished, after
-a voice had been heard to call thrice, &ldquo;The hour is come, but not
-the man.&rdquo; He was carried off by the devil in a phantom ship seen
-in the offing. But ships haunted with seamen&rsquo;s ghosts are rarely
-lost, as the spirits give the sailors warning of storms and other
-dangers.</p>
-<p>In a churchyard near the Land&rsquo;s End is the grave of a drowned
-captain, covered by a flat tombstone; proceeding from it formerly the
-sound of a ghostly bell was often heard to strike four and eight bells.
-The tale goes that when his vessel struck on some rocks close to the
-shore, the captain saw all his men safely off <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb134" href="#pb134" name="pb134">134</a>]</span>in
-their boat, but refused himself to leave the ship, and went down in her
-exactly at midnight, as he was striking the time. His body was
-recovered, and given decent burial, but his poor soul had no rest. An
-unbelieving sailor once went out of curiosity to try if he could hear
-this bell; he did, and soon after sailed on a voyage from which he
-never returned.</p>
-<p>Spectre ships are seen before wrecks; they are generally shrouded in
-mist; but the crew of one was said to consist of two men, a woman, and
-a dog. These ships vanish at some well-known point. Jack Harry&rsquo;s
-lights, too, herald a storm; they are so called from the man who first
-saw them. These appear on a phantom vessel resembling the one that will
-be lost.</p>
-<p>On boarding a derelict, should a live cat or other animal be found,
-it is thrown into the sea and drowned, under the idea that if any
-living thing is in her, the finders can claim nothing from the owners.
-In fact she is not a derelict.</p>
-<p>The apparition of a lady carrying a lanthorn always on one part of
-the Cornish coast<a class="noteref" id="xd25e3491src" href="#xd25e3491"
-name="xd25e3491src">5</a> foretells a storm and shipwrecks. She is
-supposed to be searching for her child who was drowned, whilst she was
-saved, because she was afraid to trust it out of her arms. For the
-legends of &ldquo;The Lady of the Vow&rdquo; and &ldquo;The Hooper or
-Hooter of Sennen Cove,&rdquo; see <i>ante</i>, p. 71.<a class="noteref"
-id="xd25e3499src" href="#xd25e3499" name="xd25e3499src">6</a> Mermaids
-are still believed in, and it is very bad to offend them, for by their
-spite harbours have been filled up with sand. They, however, kindly
-take idiot children under their protection. The lucky finder of one of
-their combs or glasses has the power (as long as it remains in his
-possession) of charming away diseases.</p>
-<p>Boats are said to come to a sudden standstill when over the spot
-where lies the body of a drowned man, for whom search is being made.
-The body is supposed to rise when drowned, on the seventh, eighth, or
-ninth day. Sailors regard many things as bad omens, such &ldquo;as a
-loaf of bread turned upside-down on a table.&rdquo; (This will bring
-some ship to distress.) They will not begin a voyage <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb135" href="#pb135" name="pb135">135</a>]</span>on
-Childermas-day, nor allow a piece of spar-stone (quartz) to be carried
-on board a vessel: that would ensure her striking on a rock. Of course,
-they neither whistle when there, nor speak of hares, two most unlucky
-things; and should they meet one of these animals on their way to the
-place of embarkation they think it far wiser to turn back home, and put
-off sailing for a tide. Hares (as already noticed) play a great part in
-Cornish folk-lore. The following amusing story I had from a
-friend:&mdash;&ldquo;Jimmy Treglown, a noted poacher living in a
-village of West Cornwall, became converted at a revival meeting; he was
-tempted on his way to class-meeting one Sunday morning soon after by
-the devil in the form of a beautiful hare. Jimmy said, &lsquo;There
-thee art, my dear; but I waan&rsquo;t tooch thee on a Sunday&mdash;nor
-yet on a weeky day, for that matter.&rsquo; He went briskly on his way
-for a few paces, and then, like Lot&rsquo;s wife, he was tempted to
-look behind him. Alas! in Jimmy&rsquo;s own words, &lsquo;There she was
-in her seat, looking lovely. I tooked up a stone, and dabbed at her.
-Away she runned, and fare-ee well, religion. Mine runned away with her.
-I went home, and never went to class no more.<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3507src" href="#xd25e3507" name="xd25e3507src">7</a> You see it
-was the devil, and &lsquo;simmen to me&rsquo; (seeming) I heard
-&rsquo;un laugh and say, &lsquo;Ah! ah! Jimmy, boy, I had thee on the
-hip then. Thee must confess thee&rsquo;st had a fair fall.&rsquo; So I
-gave in, and never went nigh the &lsquo;people&rsquo; (Wesleyans) no
-more. Nobody should fire at hares of this sort, except with a silver
-bullet; they often appear as white, but the devil knowed I
-couldn&rsquo;t be fooled with a white &rsquo;un.&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo;
-Nothing is too ridiculous to be told of hares. Another old man from
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Just (still living) once recited this
-anecdote in our kitchen, and from his grave manner evidently expected
-it to be believed:&mdash;&ldquo;I was out walking (he said) one Sunday
-morning, when I saw a hare in a field which I longed to have; so I
-shied a bit of &lsquo;codgy wax&rsquo; (cobbler&rsquo;s wax), the only
-thing I had in my pocket, at &rsquo;un, when he ran away. What was my
-surprise on getting over a stile to see two hares in the next field
-face to face, the &lsquo;codgy wax&rsquo; had stuck to the nose of the
-first, and he in his fright had runned <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb136" href="#pb136" name="pb136">136</a>]</span>against the other,
-and was holden &rsquo;un fast, too. So I quietly broke the necks of
-both, and carried em home.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The grapes are sour&rdquo; is in Cornwall often changed to
-&ldquo;Lev-un go! he&rsquo;s dry eaten after all,&rdquo; as the old man
-said when he couldn&rsquo;t catch the hare.</p>
-<p>Sailors and fishermen have naturally many weather proverbs, of which
-I will give a few:&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A north wind is a broom for the Channel.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A Saturday&rsquo;s moon is a sailor&rsquo;s curse.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A Saturday&rsquo;s and Sunday&rsquo;s moon<br>
-Comes once in seven years too soon.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Between twelve and two you&rsquo;ll see what the day will
-do.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A southerly wind with a fog bring an easterly wind in
-&lsquo;snog&rsquo; (with certainty).&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Friday&rsquo;s noon is Sunday&rsquo;s doom.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Friday and the week are never alike.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s never a Saturday in the year<br>
-But what the sun it doth appear,&rdquo; etc.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Weather dogs&rdquo; are pillars of light coloured like the
-rainbow, which appear on the horizon generally over the sea in
-unsettled weather, and always foretell storms. The inland dwellers of
-Cornwall have also their wise sayings on this subject. Rooks darting
-around a rookery, sparrows twittering, donkeys braying, are signs of
-rain. Cats running wildly about a house are said to bring storms on
-their tails. Some of their omens are simply ludicrous, such as
-&ldquo;We may look for wet when a cat, in washing its face, puts its
-paw over its ear,&rdquo; or when &ldquo;hurlers&rdquo; (small sparks)
-play about the bars of a grate. A cock crowing on a stone is a sign of
-fine weather; on the doorstep, of a stranger. But here it is well known
-&ldquo;That fools are weather-wise,&rdquo; and &ldquo;That those that
-are weather-wise are rarely otherwise.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In West Cornwall, not very long ago farmers, before they began to
-break up a grass field or plough for sowing, always turned the faces of
-the cattle attached to the plough towards the west and solemnly said,
-&ldquo;In the name of God let us begin,&rdquo; and then with the
-sun&rsquo;s course proceeded on their work. Everything in this
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb137" href="#pb137" name=
-"pb137">137</a>]</span>county, even down to such a small thing as
-taking the cream off the milk-pans set round the dairy, must for luck
-be done from left to right. Invalids, on going out for the first time
-after an illness, must walk with, not against, the sun, for fear of a
-relapse.</p>
-<p>Farmers here are taught that if they wish to thrive they must
-&ldquo;rise with the craw (crow), go to bed with the yow (ewe),&rdquo;
-not be &ldquo;like Solomon the wise, who was loth to go to bed and loth
-to rise,&rdquo; for does not &ldquo;the master&rsquo;s eye make the
-mare fat?&rdquo; &ldquo;A February spring,&rdquo; according to one
-proverb, &ldquo;is not worth a pin,&rdquo; and another says &ldquo;a
-dry east wind raises the spring.&rdquo; Sayings current in other
-counties, such as &ldquo;a peck of March dust is worth a king&rsquo;s
-ransom,&rdquo; are also quoted, but those I shall not give. There
-should be as many frosty mornings in May as in March, for &ldquo;a hot
-May makes a fat church-hay.&rdquo; A wet June makes a dry September.
-&ldquo;Cornwall will stand a shower every day, and two for
-Sundays.&rdquo; There is always a black month before Christmas. The
-farmer too is told&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;A rainbow in the morn, put your hook in the
-corn;</p>
-<p class="line">A rainbow in the eve, put your hook in the
-sheave.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">In Cornwall, as well as in Devon, there is an old
-prophecy quoted to the effect, that &ldquo;in the latter days there
-will be no difference between summer and winter, save in the length of
-the days and the greenness of the leaf.&rdquo; It is erroneously
-asserted to be in the Bible.&mdash;<i>Cornubiana</i>, <abbr title=
-"Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle, <i>Transactions Penzance Natural
-History Society, etc.</i>, 1885&ndash;1886.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Countrymen in Cornwall, if the breeze fail whilst they are
-winnowing, whistle to the spriggan, or air spirit, to bring it
-back.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Comparative Folk-lore, Cornhill</i>, 1876.</p>
-<p>A swarm of bees in May is worth a &ldquo;yow&rdquo; (ewe) and lamb
-same day. It is considered lucky in these parts for a stray swarm to
-settle near your house; and if you throw a handkerchief over it you may
-claim it as your own. To sell them is unlucky; but you may have an
-understanding with a purchaser that he will give you <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb138" href="#pb138" name="pb138">138</a>]</span>an
-equivalent for your bees. The inside of hives should be rubbed with
-&ldquo;scawnsy buds&rdquo; (elderflowers) to prevent a new swarm from
-leaving them. Honey should be always taken from the hive on
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Bartholomew&rsquo;s Day, he being the
-patron saint of bees. Of course all the principal events happening in
-the families to whom they belonged, in this as in other counties, were
-formerly whispered to them, that the bees might not think themselves
-neglected, and leave the place in anger. At a recent meeting of the
-Penzance Natural History and Antiquarian Society a gentleman mentioned
-that when a boy he had seen thirty hives belonging to Mr. Joshua Fox,
-of Tregedna, tied up in crape (an universal practice) because of a
-death in the Fox family. Another at the same time said that when, some
-years since, the landlady of the &ldquo;First and Last&rdquo; Inn, at
-the Land&rsquo;s End, died, the bird-cages and flower-pots were also
-tied with crape, to prevent the birds and plants from dying. When
-withering, because this has not been done, if the plants be remembered
-in time and crape put on the pots, they may revive. Enquiring a short
-time ago what had become of a fine maiden-hair fern that we had had for
-years, I was told &ldquo;that we had neglected to put it into mourning
-when a near relative of our&rsquo;s had died, or to tell it of his
-death; and therefore it had gradually pined away.&rdquo; After a death,
-pictures, but especially portraits of the deceased, are also supposed
-to fade. Snails as well as bees are thought here to bring luck, for
-&ldquo;the house is blest where snails do rest.&rdquo; Children on
-meeting them in their path, for some reason stamp their feet and
-say,</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Snail! snail! come out of your hole,</p>
-<p class="line">Or I will beat you black as a coal.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Another Cornish farmers&rsquo; superstition is that
-&ldquo;ducks won&rsquo;t lay until they have drunk &lsquo;Lide&rsquo;
-(March) water;&rdquo; and the wife of one in 1880 declared &ldquo;that
-if a goose saw a Lent lily (daffodil) before hatching its goslings it
-would, when they came forth, destroy them.&rdquo; Some witty thieves,
-many years ago, having stolen twelve geese from a clergyman in the
-eastern part of the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb139" href="#pb139"
-name="pb139">139</a>]</span>county, tied twelve pennies and this
-doggerel around the gander&rsquo;s neck&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Parson Peard, be not afeard,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Nor take it much in anger,</p>
-<p class="line">We&rsquo;ve bought your geese at a penny a-piece,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">And left the money with the
-gander.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Hens must never be put to sit on an even number of
-eggs, eleven or thirteen are lucky numbers; Basilisks are hatched from
-cock&rsquo;s eggs.</p>
-<p>When cocks crow children are told that they say,</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Cock-a-doodle-doo!</p>
-<p class="line">Grammer&rsquo;s lost her shoe,</p>
-<p class="line">Down by the barley moo (mow),</p>
-<p class="line">And what will grammer do,</p>
-<p class="line">Cock-a-doodle-doo.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Moles in this county are known as &ldquo;wants,&rdquo;
-and once in the Land&rsquo;s End district I overtook an old man and
-asked him what had made so many hillocks in a field through which we
-were passing. His answer was, &ldquo;What you rich people never have in
-your houses, &lsquo;wants.&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>To this day in Cornwall, when anything unforeseen happens to our
-small farmers, or they have the misfortune to lose by sickness some of
-their stock, they still think that they are &ldquo;ill-wished,&rdquo;
-and start off (often on long journeys) to consult a
-&ldquo;pellar,&rdquo; or wise man, sometimes called &ldquo;a white
-witch&rdquo; (which term is here used indiscriminately for persons of
-both sexes). The following I had from a dairy-man I know, who about
-twelve years ago quarrelled with a domestic servant, a woman living in
-a neighbouring house. Soon after, from some reason, two or three of his
-cows died; he was quite sure, he told me, that she had
-&ldquo;overlooked&rdquo; and &ldquo;ill-wished&rdquo; him. To ease his
-mind he had consulted a &ldquo;pellar&rdquo; about the matter, who had
-described her accurately to him, and, for payment, removed the
-&ldquo;spell&rdquo; (I do not know what rites were used), telling him
-to look at his watch and note the hour, as he would find, when he
-returned home, that a cow he had left sick would have begun at that
-moment to recover (which he says it did). <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb140" href="#pb140" name="pb140">140</a>]</span>The
-&ldquo;pellar&rdquo; also added, &ldquo;The woman who has
-&lsquo;ill-wished&rsquo; you will be swaddled in fire and lapped in
-water;&rdquo; and by a strange coincidence she emigrated soon after,
-and was lost in the ill-fated <i>Cospatrick</i>, that was burnt at
-sea.</p>
-<p>Water from a font is often stolen to sprinkle
-&ldquo;ill-wished&rdquo; persons or things.</p>
-<p>The two next examples were communicated to me by a friend:
-&ldquo;Some twenty-six years ago a farmer in a neighbouring village
-(West Cornwall) sustained during one season continual losses from his
-cows dying of indigestion, known as &lsquo;loss of cud,&rsquo;
-&lsquo;hoven-blown,&rsquo; etc. After consulting an old farrier called
-Armstrong he was induced to go to a &lsquo;pellar&rsquo; in Exeter. His
-orders were to go home, and, on nearing his farm, he would see an old
-woman in a field hoeing turnips, and that she was the party who had
-cast the &lsquo;evil eye&rsquo; on him. When he saw her he was to lay
-hold of her and accuse her of the crime, then tear off some of her
-dress, take it to his farm, and burn it with some of the hair from the
-tails of his surviving stock. These directions were fully carried out,
-and his bad health (caused by worry) improved, and he lost no more
-cows. A spotted clover that grew luxuriantly that summer was no doubt
-the cause of the swelling.&rdquo; &ldquo;Another farmer in the same
-village eighteen years since lost all his feeding cattle from
-pleuro-pneumonia; believing them to be &lsquo;ill-wished&rsquo; by a
-woman, he also consulted the Exeter &lsquo;pellar.&rsquo; He brought
-home some bottles of elixir, potent against magic, and made an image of
-dough, pierced it from the nape of the neck downward, in the line of
-the spine, with a very large blanket-pin. In order to make the agonies
-of the woman with the &lsquo;evil eye&rsquo; excruciating in the last
-degree, dough and pin were then burnt in a fire of hazel and ash. The
-cure failed, as anyone acquainted with the disease might have
-forecast.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Besides those remedies already mentioned for curing cattle, you may
-employ these:&mdash;&ldquo;Take some blood from the sick animal by
-wounding him; let the blood fall on some straw carefully held to the
-place&mdash;not a drop must be lost; burn the straw; when the
-ill-wisher will be irresistibly drawn to the spot; then by violence you
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb141" href="#pb141" name=
-"pb141">141</a>]</span>can compel him to take off the spell.&rdquo; Or,
-&ldquo;Bleed one animal to death to save the whole herd.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A local newspaper, in 1883 (<i>Cornishman</i>), gives the
-following:&mdash;&ldquo;Superstitions die hard.&mdash;A horse died the
-other day on a farm in the neighbourhood of <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Ives. Its carcase was dragged on a Sunday away up to
-the granite rock basins and weather-worn bosses of Trecoben hill, and
-there burnt, in order to drive away the evil spell, or ill-wishing,
-which afflicted the farm where the animal belonged.&rdquo; I, a few
-years since, saw a dying cat taken out of a house on a mat, by two
-servants, that it might not die inside and bring ill-luck. &ldquo;In
-1865 a farmer in Portreath sacrificed a calf, by burning, for the
-purpose of removing a disease which had long followed his horses and
-cows.&rdquo; And in another case a farmer burnt a living lamb, to save,
-as he said, &ldquo;his flock from spells which had been cast on
-them.&rdquo;&mdash;Robert Hunt.</p>
-<p>The <i>Cornishman</i>, in another paragraph, says:&mdash;&ldquo;Our
-Summercourt (East Cornwall) correspondent witnessed an amusing affair
-on Thursday morning (April, 1883). Seeing a crowd in the street, he
-asked the reason, and found that a young lady was about to perform the
-feat of <i>throwing a pig&rsquo;s nose over a house for good luck</i>!
-This is how it was done. The lady took the nose of a pig, that was
-killed the day before, in her right hand, stood with her back to the
-house, and threw the nose over her head, and over the house, into the
-back garden. Had she failed in the attempt her luck was supposed to be
-bad.&rdquo; &ldquo;Whet your knife on Sunday, you&rsquo;ll skin on
-Monday,&rdquo; is a very old Perranuthnoe and <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Hilary (West Cornwall) superstition, so that,
-however blunt your knife may be, you must use it as it is, lest by
-sharpening it you bring ill-luck on the farmer, and he lose a sheep or
-bullock.<a id="xd25e3646" name="xd25e3646"></a> Mr. T. Q. Couch,
-<i><abbr title="Western Antiquary">W. Antiquary</abbr></i>, 1883, says
-of one, &ldquo;He is an old-fashioned man, and, amongst his other
-&lsquo;whiddles&rsquo; (whims), keeps a goat amongst his cattle for the
-sake of keeping his cows from slipping their calves.&rdquo; Branches of
-care (mountain ash) were, in the east of the county, hung over the
-cattle in their stalls to prevent their being &ldquo;ill-wished,&rdquo;
-also carried in the pocket as a cure and prevention of rheumatism.
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb142" href="#pb142" name=
-"pb142">142</a>]</span>&ldquo;Rheumatism will attack the man who
-carries a walking stick made of holly.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Cornubiana</i>,
-<abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle.</p>
-<p>The belief in witchcraft in West Cornwall is much more general than
-most people imagine. Several cases have lately come under my own
-notice; one, that of a man-servant in our employ who broke a
-blood-vessel, and for a long time was so ill that his life was
-despaired of. He was most carefully attended by a Penzance physician,
-who came to see him three times a day. But directly that his strength
-began to return he asked permission to go to Redruth to consult a
-&ldquo;pellar,&rdquo; as he was quite sure that he had been
-&ldquo;overlooked&rdquo; and &ldquo;ill-wished.&rdquo; An old Penzance
-man, afflicted with rheumatism, who gained his living by selling fruit
-in the streets, fancied himself ill-wished. He went to Helston to see a
-&ldquo;wiseman&rdquo; residing there, to whom he paid
-seven-and-sixpence, with a further promise of five pounds on the
-removal of the &ldquo;spell.&rdquo; As he was too poor to pay this
-himself a brother agreed to do it for him, but somehow failed to
-perform his contract. Now the poor old man thinks that the
-pellar&rsquo;s ill-wishes are added to his former pains.</p>
-<p>The &ldquo;pellars&rdquo; wore formerly magical rings, with a blue
-stone in them, said to have been formed by snakes breathing on
-hazel-twigs. Our country-people often searched for these stones.</p>
-<div class="figure orn2width"><img src="images/tail2.png" alt=
-"Ornament." width="209" height="61"></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb143" href="#pb143" name=
-"pb143">143</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3375" href="#xd25e3375src" name="xd25e3375">1</a></span> Some say
-you must neither whistle nor swear, but you may sing and
-laugh.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e3375src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3437" href="#xd25e3437src" name="xd25e3437">2</a></span> All men
-are boys in Cornwall.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e3437src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3470" href="#xd25e3470src" name="xd25e3470">3</a></span>
-Train-oil is expressed from them.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e3470src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3474" href="#xd25e3474src" name="xd25e3474">4</a></span> To
-&ldquo;bulk&rdquo; pilchards is to place them, after they have been
-rubbed with salt, in large regular heaps, alternately heads and
-tails.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e3474src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3491" href="#xd25e3491src" name="xd25e3491">5</a></span>
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e3491src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3499" href="#xd25e3499src" name="xd25e3499">6</a></span> And
-&ldquo;Cornish Feasts and Customs.&rdquo;&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e3499src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e3507" href="#xd25e3507src" name="xd25e3507">7</a></span> The
-illiterate Cornish often double their negatives: &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t
-know, not I;&rdquo; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll never do it, no, never no
-more.&rdquo;&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e3507src">&uarr;</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch5" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<div class="figure"><img src="images/head4.png" alt="CHARMS, Etc."
-width="578" height="73"></div>
-<h2 class="main">CHARMS, <span class="sc">Etc.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="xd25e3675"><span class="xd25e3675init">M</span>any are the
-charms against ill-wishing worn by the ignorant. I will quote some
-mentioned by Mr. Bottrell: &ldquo;A strip of parchment inscribed with
-the following words forming a four-sided acrostic:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="table">
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft cellTop">S</td>
-<td class="cellTop">A</td>
-<td class="cellTop">T</td>
-<td class="cellTop">O</td>
-<td class="cellRight cellTop">R</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">A</td>
-<td>R</td>
-<td>E</td>
-<td>P</td>
-<td class="cellRight">O</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">T</td>
-<td>E</td>
-<td>N</td>
-<td>E</td>
-<td class="cellRight">T</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">O</td>
-<td>P</td>
-<td>E</td>
-<td>R</td>
-<td class="cellRight">A</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft cellBottom">R</td>
-<td class="cellBottom">O</td>
-<td class="cellBottom">T</td>
-<td class="cellBottom">A</td>
-<td class="cellRight cellBottom">S</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-<p>&ldquo;At the time of an old lady&rsquo;s decease, a little while
-ago, on her breast was found a small silk bag containing several
-charms, among others a piece of parchment, about three inches square,
-having written on one side of it &lsquo;Nalgah&rsquo; (in capital
-letters); under this is a pen-and-ink drawing something like a bird
-with two pairs of wings, a pair extended and another folded beneath
-them. The creature appears to be hovering and at the same time brooding
-on a large egg, sustained by one of its legs, whilst it holds a smaller
-egg at the extremity of its other leg, which is outstretched and long.
-Its head, round and small, is unlike that of a bird. From the rudeness
-of the sketch and its faded state it is difficult to trace all the
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb144" href="#pb144" name=
-"pb144">144</a>]</span>outlines. Under this singular figure is the word
-&lsquo;Tetragrammaton&rsquo; (in capitals); on the reverse in large
-letters&mdash;</p>
-<ul>
-<li>&lsquo;Jehovah.&rsquo;</li>
-<li>&lsquo;Jah, Eloim.&rsquo;</li>
-<li>&lsquo;Shadday.&rsquo;</li>
-<li>&lsquo;Adonay.&rsquo;</li>
-<li>&lsquo;Have mercy on a poor woman.&rsquo;</li>
-</ul>
-<p>&ldquo;A pellar of great repute in the neighbourhood tells me that
-this is inscribed with two charms, that Nalgah is the figure only. The
-Abracadabra is also supplied, the letters arranged in the usual way.
-Another potent spell is the rude draft of the planetary signs for the
-Sun, Jupiter, and Venus, followed by a cross, pentagram, and a figure
-formed by a perpendicular line and a divergent one at each side of it
-united at the bottom. Under them is written, &lsquo;Whosoever beareth
-these tokens will be fortunate, and need fear no evil.&rsquo; The
-charms are folded in a paper on which is usually written, &lsquo;By the
-help of the Lord these will do thee good,&rsquo; and inclosed in a
-little bag to be worn on the breast.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>People in good health visited these pellars every spring to get
-their charms renewed, and bed-ridden people who kept theirs under their
-&ldquo;pillow-beres&rdquo; were then visited by the pellar for the same
-purpose. &ldquo;Of amulets mention must be made of certain small
-crystal balls called &lsquo;kinning stones,&rsquo; held in high esteem
-for cure of ailments of the eye. I examined one of these &lsquo;kinning
-stones&rsquo; recently, which had been lent to a person with a bad eye,
-who on recovering from his ailment had returned it to the owner. It
-proved to be a translucent, blueish-white globular crystal, about
-one-and-a-quarter inch in diameter; in texture, horny rather than
-vitreous; apparently not made of glass, but perhaps of rock crystal;
-pierced by a hole containing a boot lace for suspension; having
-stri&aelig; running through the substance of the crystal perpendicular
-to the hole. It had been for many generations in possession of the
-family of the owner, who valued it very highly, <span class="corr" id=
-"xd25e3754" title="Source: &ldquo;">&lsquo;</span>but was willing to
-lend it to anyone to do good.<span class="corr" id="xd25e3757" title=
-"Source: &rdquo;">&rsquo;</span> This kind of amulet is worn around the
-neck, the bad eye being struck with the crystal every morning. There
-are other &lsquo;kinning stones&rsquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb145" href="#pb145" name="pb145">145</a>]</span>within reach, but
-examples are not common; their virtues are familiar to the people, and
-instances are to be met with among the country folk, whose recovery
-from a &lsquo;kinning&rsquo; in the eye (&lsquo;kennel,&rsquo; West
-Cornwall) is attributed solely to the use of these
-charms.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Notes on the Neighbourhood of Brown Willy</i>
-(North Cornwall), <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> A. H. Malan,
-<abbr title="Master of Arts">M.A.</abbr></p>
-<p>In every small Cornish village in olden times (and the race is not
-yet extinct) lived a charmer or &ldquo;white witch.&rdquo; Their powers
-were not quite as great as those of a pellar, but they were thoroughly
-believed in, and consulted on every occasion for every complaint. They
-were not only able to cure diseases, but they could, when offended,
-&ldquo;overlook&rdquo; and ill-wish the offender, bringing ill-luck on
-him, and also on his family and farm-stock. The seventh son of the
-seventh son, or seventh daughter of the seventh daughter, were born
-with this gift of charming, and made the most noted pellars; but anyone
-might become a witch who touched a Logan rock nine times at midnight.
-These Logan rocks are mentioned elsewhere as being in Cornwall their
-favourite resorts, and to them they went, it is said, riding on ragwort
-stems, instead of the traditional broomsticks.</p>
-<p>Or, he might, says another authority, use the following charm:
-&ldquo;Go to the chancel of a church to sacrament, hide away the bread
-from the hands of the priest, at midnight carry it around the church
-from south to north, crossing east three times. The third time a big
-toad, open-mouthed, will be met, put the bread in it; as soon as
-swallowed he will breathe three times upon the man, and from that time
-he will become a witch. Known by five black spots diagonally placed
-under the tongue.&rdquo; There is also a strange glare in the eye of a
-person who can &ldquo;overlook,&rdquo; and the eyelids are always
-red.</p>
-<p>Witches could in this country change themselves into toads, as well
-as hares. Mr. Robert Hunt relates the story of one who met her death in
-that form, and Mr. T. Q. Couch tells the tale of a sailor who was a
-&ldquo;witch,&rdquo; who received several injuries whilst in the shape
-of that animal. When a very small child, having a &ldquo;kennel&rdquo;
-(an ulcer) on my eye, I was unknown to my parents taken <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb146" href="#pb146" name="pb146">146</a>]</span>by
-an old servant to a Penzance &ldquo;charmer,&rdquo; who then made a
-great deal of money by her profession. All I can remember about it is,
-that she breathed on it, made some curious passes with her hands and
-muttered some incantation.</p>
-<p>About twelve years ago, a woman who lived in the &ldquo;west
-country&rdquo; (Land&rsquo;s End district) as well as being a
-&ldquo;white witch was a famous knitster,&rdquo; and we amongst others
-frequently gave her work. When she brought it back she was treated by
-our maids, who lived in great fear of her &ldquo;ill-wishing&rdquo;
-them, to the best our kitchen could afford; and many were the
-marvellous stories she told me of her power to staunch blood, etc.,
-when doctors failed. It was not necessary for her to see the person;
-she could cure them sitting by her fireside if they were miles away.
-Witches are also consulted about the recovery of stolen property,
-which, by casting their spells over the thief, it is still supposed
-they can compel him to return.</p>
-<p>A part of Launceston Castle is locally known as Witch&rsquo;s Tower,
-from the tradition that one was burnt at its foot; no grass grows on
-the spot. Another is said to have met with the same fate on a flat
-stone close to <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Austell market-house.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Charms are still in use by the simple-minded for thrush,
-warts, and various complaints; also for the cure of cattle, when some
-evil disposed person has &lsquo;turned a figure upon (<i>i.e.</i>
-bewitched) them;&rsquo; and white witches&mdash;those who avert the
-evil eye&mdash;have not yet ceased out of the
-land.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Notes on the Neighbourhood of Brown Willy</i>
-(North Cornwall), <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> A. H. Malan,
-<abbr title="Master of Arts">M.A.</abbr></p>
-<p>I will give some of their charms culled from various sources, and
-remedies for diseases still used in Cornwall:&mdash;Take three burning
-sticks from the hearth of the &ldquo;overlooker,&rdquo; make the
-patient cross over them three times and then extinguish with water.
-Place nine bramble-leaves in a basin of &ldquo;Holy Well&rsquo;s water,
-pass each leaf over and from the diseased part, repeating three times
-to each leaf. Three virgins came from the east, one brought fire, the
-others brought frost. Out fire! In frost! In the name of the Father,
-Son, and Holy Ghost.&rdquo; Or take a stick of burning furze from the
-hearth, pass over and above the diseased part, repeating the above
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb147" href="#pb147" name=
-"pb147">147</a>]</span>nine times. If you can succeed by any means in
-drawing blood from the &ldquo;ill-wisher&rdquo; you are certain to
-break and remove the spell. Stick pins into an apple or potatoe, carry
-it in your pocket, and as it shrivels the &ldquo;ill-wisher&rdquo; will
-feel an ache from every pin, but this I fancy does not do the person
-&ldquo;overlooked&rdquo; any good. Another authority says, &ldquo;Stick
-pins into a bullock&rsquo;s heart, when the &lsquo;ill-wisher&rsquo;
-will feel a stab for every one put in, and in self-defence take off the
-curse.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A friend writes, &ldquo;An old man called Uncle Will Jelbart, who
-had been with the Duke of Kent in America, and also a very long time in
-the Peninsular, about forty years ago lived in West Cornwall; he had a
-small pension, and in addition made a good income by charming warts,
-wildfire (erysipelas), cataracts, etc. He used to spit three times and
-breathe three times on the part affected, muttering, &lsquo;In the name
-of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost I bid thee begone.&rsquo; For
-cataract he pricked the small white &lsquo;dew-snail&rsquo; (slug),
-found about four a.m., with a hawthorn spine, and let a drop fall into
-the eye; and in the case of skin diseases occasionally supplemented the
-charm with an ointment made of the juice extracted from house-leeks and
-&lsquo;raw-cream;&rsquo; he sometimes changed the words and repeated
-those which with slight variations are known all over
-Cornwall&mdash;&lsquo;Three virgins,&rsquo; etc.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The crowfoot locally known as the &lsquo;kenning herb&rsquo;
-is in some districts used in incantations for curing
-&lsquo;kennings&rsquo; or &lsquo;kennels&rsquo; (ulcers in the
-eye).</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&lsquo;Three ladies (or virgins) come from the
-east:</p>
-<p class="line">One with fire and two with frost;</p>
-<p class="line">Out with thee, fire, and in with thee, frost:</p>
-<p class="line">In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy
-Ghost.&rsquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first"><span class="corr" id="xd25e3820" title=
-"Not in source">&ldquo;</span>This is often said nine times over a
-scald. In prose it begins thus: &lsquo;As I passed over the river
-Jordan, I met with Christ. He said, What aileth thee? Oh Lord, my flesh
-doth burn. The Lord said unto me, Two angels,&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo;
-etc.</p>
-<p>A lady once told me that about forty years ago she was taken to a
-&ldquo;charmer,&rdquo; who stood in a Cornish market-place on fixed
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb148" href="#pb148" name=
-"pb148">148</a>]</span>days, to have her warts cured. The remedies for
-this childish complaint are very numerous. I once had my forehead
-rubbed with a piece of stolen beef, which was then buried in a garden,
-to send them away, the idea being that as the beef decayed the warts
-would fall off or dwindle gradually. There are two or three other ways
-of getting rid of them of a similar kind. Touch each wart with a new
-pin, enclose them in a bottle, either bury them in a newly-made grave
-of the opposite sex, or at four cross-roads; as the pins rust, the
-warts will disappear. Or, touch them with a knot made in a piece of
-string (there should be as many knots as there are warts), bury it;
-when the rope decays so will the warts. The two next are selfish
-remedies. Touch each wart with a pebble, put the stones in a bag, throw
-them away, and the finder will get them and they will leave you. Or, in
-coming out of church, wish them on some part of another person&rsquo;s
-body (or on a tree); they will go from you and appear on him, or on the
-spot named. One method employed by professional &ldquo;charmers&rdquo;
-is to take two pieces of charred stick from a fire, form them into a
-cross and place them on the warts, and repeat one of the formul&aelig;
-above quoted. Yet another is to wash the hands in the moon&rsquo;s rays
-focussed in a dry metal basin, saying,</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;I wash my hands in this thy dish,</p>
-<p class="line">Oh man in the moon, do grant my wish,</p>
-<p class="line">And come and take away this.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">The moon too is invoked for the curing of corns.
-&ldquo;Corns down here! No corns up there!&rdquo; is repeated nine
-times. The fore-finger pointing first to the ground and then to the
-sky.</p>
-<p>When pricked by a thorn, use one of the following charms:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Christ was of a virgin born:</p>
-<p class="line">And he was pricked by a thorn,</p>
-<p class="line">And it did never &lsquo;bell&rsquo; (fester),</p>
-<p class="line">And I trust in Jesus this never will.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Or,</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Christ was crowned with thorns,</p>
-<p class="line">The thorns did bleed but did not rot,</p>
-<p class="line">No more shall thy&mdash;(mentioning the part
-affected):</p>
-<p class="line">In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy
-Ghost.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb149" href="#pb149" name=
-"pb149">149</a>]</span></p>
-<p>In prose: &ldquo;When Christ was upon the middle earth the Jews
-pricked him, his blood sprung up into heaven, his flesh never rotted
-nor &lsquo;fustered,&rsquo; no more I hope will not thine. In the
-name,&rdquo; etc.&mdash;From Mr. T. Q. Couch, who gives two others very
-similar.</p>
-<div id="xd25e3862" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">For Tetters.</span></h3>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Tetter, tetter, thou hast nine sisters,</p>
-<p class="line">God bless thee, flesh, and preserve thee, bone;</p>
-<p class="line">Perish thou, tetter, and be thou gone:</p>
-<p class="line">In the name,&rdquo; etc.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Tetter, tetter, thou hast eight sisters,&rdquo;
-etc.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">This charm is thus continued until it comes to the
-last, which is,&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Tetter, tetter, thou hast no sister,&rdquo;
-etc.&mdash;Bottrell.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e3884" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Toothache.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">In prose and verse slightly varied, common in all
-parts of the county,&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Christ passed by his brother&rsquo;s door,</p>
-<p class="line">Saw Peter his brother lying on the floor;</p>
-<p class="line">What aileth thee, brother?&mdash;</p>
-<p class="line">Pain in thy teeth?</p>
-<p class="line">Thy teeth shall pain thee no more:</p>
-<p class="line">In the name of,&rdquo; etc.</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">This is to be worn in a bag around the neck. Mr. T. Q.
-Couch gives this charm in prose. It begins thus: &ldquo;Peter sat at
-the gate of the Temple, and Christ said unto him, What aileth
-thee?&rdquo; etc. Another remedy against toothache is, always in the
-morning to begin dressing by putting the stocking on the left
-foot.&mdash;Through <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle.</p>
-<p>A knuckle-bone is often carried in the pocket as a cure and
-preventive of cramp. I once saw an old woman turn out her pocket;
-amongst its contents, as well as the knuckle-bone, was the tip of an
-ox-tongue kept for good luck.</p>
-<p>Slippers on going to bed are, when taken off, for the same complaint
-often placed under the bed with the soles upwards, or on their heels
-against the post of the bed with their toes up. The <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb150" href="#pb150" name=
-"pb150">150</a>]</span>following is from Mr. T. Q. Couch: &ldquo;The
-cramp is keenless, Mary was sinless when she bore Jesus: let the cramp
-go away in the name of Jesus.&rdquo; All the charms published by the
-above-named author in his <i>History of Polperro</i> were taken from a
-manuscript book, which belonged to a white witch.</p>
-<p>When a foot has &ldquo;gone to sleep&rdquo; I have often seen people
-wet their forefingers in their mouths, stoop and draw the form of a
-cross on it. This is said to be an infallible remedy. Mr. Robert Hunt
-has a rather similar cure for hiccough: &ldquo;Wet the forefinger of
-the right hand with spittle, and cross the front of the left shoe (or
-boot) three times, repeating the Lord&rsquo;s Prayer backwards.&rdquo;
-The most popular cure with children is a heaping spoonful of moist
-sugar. A sovereign remedy for hiccough and almost every complaint is a
-small piece of a stale Good Friday bun grated into a glass of cold
-water. This bun is hung up in the kitchen from one year to the other.
-Bread baked on this day never gets mouldy.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e3919" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">For a Strain.</span></h3>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Christ rode over the bridge,</p>
-<p class="line">Christ rode under the bridge;</p>
-<p class="line">Vein to vein, strain to strain,</p>
-<p class="line">I hope God will take it back again.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e3932" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">For Ague.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">When our Saviour saw the cross, whereon he was to be
-crucified, his body did shake. The Jews said, &ldquo;Hast thou an
-ague?&rdquo; Our Saviour said, &ldquo;He that keepeth this in mind,
-thought, or writing, shall neither be troubled with ague or
-fever.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e3938" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">For Wildfire</span>
-(Erysipelas).</h3>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Christ, he walketh over the land,</p>
-<p class="line">Carried the wildfire in his hand,</p>
-<p class="line">He rebuked the fire, and bid it stand;</p>
-<p class="line">Stand, wildfire, stand (three times repeated):</p>
-<p class="line">In the name of,&rdquo; etc.&mdash;T. Q. Couch.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Mr. Robert Hunt gives in his book on <i>Old
-Cornwall</i> a Latin charm for the staunching of blood. I find,
-however, on making inquiries that it is not the one generally used,
-which is as follows: <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb151" href="#pb151"
-name="pb151">151</a>]</span></p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Christ was born in Bethlehem,</p>
-<p class="line">Baptised in the river Jordan;</p>
-<p class="line">There he digged a well,</p>
-<p class="line">And turned the water against the hill,</p>
-<p class="line">So shall thy blood stand still:</p>
-<p class="line">In the name,&rdquo; etc.</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">There are other versions all much alike. A prose one
-runs thus: &ldquo;Baptised in the river Jordan when the water was wild,
-the water was good, the water stood, so shall thy blood. In the
-name,&rdquo; etc.&mdash;T. Q. C.</p>
-<p>The <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle says a charmer once
-told him the charm for staunching blood consisted in saying a verse
-from the Psalms; but she could not read, and he was inclined to believe
-the form was, &ldquo;Jesus came to the river Jordan, and said,
-&lsquo;Stand,&rsquo; and it stood; and so I bid thee, blood, stand. In
-the name,&rdquo; etc. For bleeding at the nose, a door-key is often
-placed against the back. Cuts are plugged with cobwebs, flue from a
-man&rsquo;s hat, tobacco leaves, and occasionally filled with salt.</p>
-<p>Club-moss is considered good for eye diseases. On the third day of
-the moon, when the thin crescent is seen for the first time, show it
-the knife with which the moss for the charm is to be cut, and
-repeat,</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;As Christ healed the issue of blood,</p>
-<p class="line">So I bid thee begone:</p>
-<p class="line">In the name of,&rdquo; etc.</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Mr. Robert Hunt says,</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Do thou cut what thou cuttest for
-good!&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">&ldquo;At sun-down, having carefully washed the hands,
-the club-moss is to be cut kneeling. It is to be carefully wrapped in a
-white cloth, and subsequently boiled in water taken from the spring
-nearest its place of growth. This may be used as a fomentation. Or the
-club-moss made into an ointment with butter made from the milk of a new
-cow.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A &ldquo;stye&rdquo; on the eye is often stroked nine times with a
-cat&rsquo;s tail; with a wedding ring taken from a dead woman&rsquo;s,
-or a silver one <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb152" href="#pb152"
-name="pb152">152</a>]</span>from a drowned man&rsquo;s, hand. The
-belief in the efficacy of a dead hand in curing diseases in Cornwall is
-marvellous. I, in a short paper read at an Antiquarian meeting, gave
-this instance, related to me by a medical man about ten years ago (now
-dead). A day or two after, a number of other cases in proof of my
-statement appeared, to my surprise, in our local papers, which, as well
-as my own, I will transcribe. &ldquo;Once I attended a poor
-woman&rsquo;s child for an obstinate case of sore eyes. One day when
-leaving the house the mother said to me, &lsquo;Is there nothing more,
-doctor, I can do for my little girl?&rsquo; I jokingly answered,
-&lsquo;Nothing, unless you care to stroke them with a dead man&rsquo;s
-hand.&rsquo; About a week after I met the woman in the streets, who
-stopped me, and said, &lsquo;My child&rsquo;s eyes are getting better
-at last, doctor.&rsquo; I expressed myself pleased that the ointment I
-had given her was doing good. To my astonishment, she replied,
-&lsquo;Oh, it is not that, we never used it; we took your advice about
-the dead man&rsquo;s hand.&rsquo; Until she recalled it to my memory, I
-had quite forgotten my foolish speech.&rdquo; &ldquo;I am one of those
-who can bear testimony to the fact of a cure having been effected by
-the means above-named. I was born with a disfigurement on my upper lip.
-My mother felt a great anxiety about this, so my nurse proposed that a
-dead man&rsquo;s hand should be passed seven times over my lip. I was
-taken to the house of one Robin Gendall, Causewayhead, Penzance, who at
-that time was lying dead, and his hand was passed over my lip in the
-manner named. By slow degrees my friends had the satisfaction of seeing
-that the charm had taken effect.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Octogenarian.</i></p>
-<p>&ldquo;I may add my testimony to Miss Courtney&rsquo;s remarks as to
-the belief in Cornwall in the virtue of the touch of a diseased part by
-a dead man&rsquo;s hand. A case came under my knowledge at Penzance of
-a child who had from birth a peculiar tuberous formation at the
-junction of the nose with the forehead, which the medical men would not
-cut for fear of severing veins. The child was taken by her mother to a
-friend&rsquo;s house, in which were lying the remains of a young man
-who had just died from consumption. The deceased&rsquo;s hand was
-passed over the malformation seven times, and it soon began to grow
-smaller and smaller.&rdquo; &ldquo;I <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb153" href="#pb153" name="pb153">153</a>]</span>have myself seen the
-child since Miss Courtney read her paper (November, 1881), and, though
-the mark is still apparent, I am assured it is surely, if slowly,
-disappearing. A relation of mine also tells me that, like Miss
-Courtney, she was taken to the Penzance witch for the purpose of having
-a &lsquo;stye&rsquo; removed from one of her eyes by
-charming.&rdquo;&mdash;Tramp.</p>
-<p>I was told of many other cases&mdash;one by another surgeon; but it
-would be useless to repeat them. I will end with one I have taken from
-<i>Notes and Queries</i>, December, 1859:&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A lady, who was staying lately at Penzance, attended a
-funeral, and noticed that whilst the clergyman was reading the burial
-service a woman forced her way through the pall-bearers to the edge of
-the grave. When he came to the passage, &lsquo;Earth to earth, ashes to
-ashes, dust to dust,&rsquo; she dropped a white cloth upon the coffin,
-closed her eyes, and apparently said a prayer. On making inquiries as
-to the cause of this proceeding, this lady found that a superstition
-exists amongst the peasantry in that part, that if a person with a sore
-be taken secretly to a corpse, the dead hand passed over the sore
-place, and the bandage afterwards be dropped upon the coffin during the
-reading of the burial service, a perfect cure will be the result. This
-woman had a child with a bad leg, and she had followed this
-superstition with a firm belief in its efficacy. The peasants, also, to
-the present day wear charms, believing they will protect them from
-sickness and other evils. The wife of the clergyman of the parish was
-very charitable in attending the sick and dispensing medicines, and one
-day a woman brought her a child having sore eyes to have them charmed,
-having more faith in that remedy than in medicines. She was greatly
-surprised to find that medicines only were given to
-her.&rdquo;&mdash;E. R.</p>
-<p>There is no virtue in the dead hand of a near relation. A curious
-old troth plight was formerly practised in Cornwall: The couple broke a
-wedding ring taken from the finger of a corpse, and each kept one half.
-The editor of a local paper (<i>Cornishman</i>) once obtained a piece
-of rope, with which a man was hanged, for a poor woman who had walked
-fourteen miles to Bodmin in the hopes of getting it, that she might
-effect the cure of her sore eyes. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb154"
-href="#pb154" name="pb154">154</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle writes that
-&ldquo;a Cornish surgeon recommended a charmer as being more
-efficacious than himself in curing shingles. According to the same
-authority, a liquid composed of bramble and butter-dock leaves is
-poured on the place, whilst a light stick is waved over the decoction
-by the charmer, who repeats an incantation.&rdquo; It is popularly
-supposed in Cornwall that should shingles meet around your waist, you
-would die. The cures and charms against epilepsy are also very
-numerous, and very generally used here. Thirty pence are collected at
-the church door by the person afflicted, from one of the opposite sex,
-changed for sacrament money (silver), and made into a ring to be worn
-day and night. Very lately, at <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Just-in-Penwith, a young woman begged from young men pennies to buy a
-silver ring, a remedy which she believed would cure her fits. Another
-charm, which it requires a person of strong nerves to perform, is to
-walk thrice round a church at midnight, then enter and stand before the
-altar. In connection with this rite the <abbr title=
-"Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle relates the following:&mdash;&ldquo;At
-Crowan (a village in West Cornwall), an epileptic subject entered the
-church at midnight. As he was groping his way through the pitchy dark,
-his heart suddenly leaped, and almost stood still. He uttered shriek
-upon shriek, for his hand had grasped a man&rsquo;s head. He thought it
-was the head of the famous Sir John <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Aubyn. He was removed in a fainting state, and it was then discovered
-that he had seized the head of the sexton, who had come in to see that
-nothing was done to frighten the man. The unfortunate fellow never
-recovered from the shock, but died in a lunatic asylum.&rdquo; &ldquo;A
-middle-aged Camborne man was subject to violent fits until two years
-ago, when some one told him to kill a toad, put one of its legs in a
-bag, and wear it suspended by a string around his neck. He did so, and
-has never had a fit since.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Cornishman</i>, December,
-1881.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In Cornwall a black cock is buried on the spot where the
-person is first attacked by epilepsy&rdquo; (to avert a similar
-attack).&mdash;<i>Comparative Folk-Lore, Cornhill</i>, 1876.</p>
-<p>For other charms see Addenda, <i>A Bundle of Charms</i>, by the
-<abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> A. H. Malan, <abbr title=
-"Master of Arts">M.A.</abbr> <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb155" href=
-"#pb155" name="pb155">155</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Toads are also worn as charms for other diseases in this
-county:&mdash;&ldquo;On the 27th July, 1875, I was lodging with a very
-intelligent grazier and horse-dealer, at Tintagel, Cornwall, when he
-was knocked down by a very serious attack of quinsey, to which he had
-been subject for many years. He pulled through the crisis; and on being
-sufficiently recovered he betook himself to a &lsquo;wise woman&rsquo;
-at Camelford. She prescribed for him as follows:&mdash;&lsquo;Get a
-live toad, fasten a string around its throat, and hang it up till the
-body drops from the head; then tie the string around your own neck, and
-never take it off, night or day, till your fiftieth birthday.
-You&rsquo;ll never have quinsey again.&rsquo; When I left Tintagel, I
-understood that my landlord, greatly relieved in mind, had already
-commenced the operation.&rdquo;&mdash;Augustus Jessop, D.D.</p>
-<p>When a kettle won&rsquo;t boil, instead of the old adage, &ldquo;A
-watched pot never boils,&rdquo; Cornish people say, &ldquo;There is a
-toad or a frog in it.&rdquo; It is here considered lucky for a toad to
-come into the house.</p>
-<p>This charm for yellow jaundice I culled from the <i>Western
-Antiquary</i>. &ldquo;I was walking in a village churchyard near the
-town of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Austell (I think in the autumn
-of 1839), when I saw a woman approach an open grave. She stood by the
-side of it and appeared to be muttering some words. She then drew out
-from under her cloak a good-size baked meal-cake, threw it into the
-grave and then left the place. Upon inquiry I found the cake was
-composed of oatmeal mixed with dog&rsquo;s urine, baked, and thrown
-into the grave as a charm for the yellow jaundice. This cure was at
-that time commonly believed in by the peasantry of the
-neighbourhood.&rdquo;&mdash;Joseph Cartwright, March, 1883.</p>
-<p>Snakes avoid and dread ash-trees; a branch will keep them away. Our
-peasantry believe however much you may try to kill quickly an adder or
-snake, it will never die before sunset. Mr. Robert Hunt says,
-&ldquo;When an adder is seen, a circle is to be rapidly drawn around it
-and the sign of the cross made within it, whilst the first two verses
-of the 68th Psalm are repeated.&rdquo; This is to destroy it; there are
-also charms to be said for curing their bites, when they are
-apostrophised &ldquo;under <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb156" href=
-"#pb156" name="pb156">156</a>]</span>the ashen leaf.&rdquo; The
-following old charm is to make them destroy themselves, by twisting
-themselves up to nothing:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Underneath this &lsquo;hazelen
-mot&rsquo;<a class="noteref" id="xd25e4075src" href="#xd25e4075" name=
-"xd25e4075src">1</a></p>
-<p class="line">There&rsquo;s a &lsquo;braggaty&rsquo;<a class=
-"noteref" id="xd25e4080src" href="#xd25e4080" name="xd25e4080src">2</a>
-worm, with a speckled throat,</p>
-<p class="line">Now! nine &lsquo;double&rsquo;<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4085src" href="#xd25e4085" name="xd25e4085src">3</a> hath he.</p>
-<p class="line">Now from nine double, to eight double,</p>
-<p class="line">From eight double, to seven double,</p>
-<p class="line">From seven double, to six double,</p>
-<p class="line">From six double, to five double,</p>
-<p class="line">From five double, to four double,</p>
-<p class="line">From four double, to three double,</p>
-<p class="line">From three double, to two double,</p>
-<p class="line">From two double, to one double,</p>
-<p class="line">Now! no double hath he.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">The words of charms must be muttered (they lose their
-efficacy if recited aloud), and the charmer must never communicate them
-to one of the same sex, for that transfers the power of charming to the
-other person. Of superstitious rites practised for the cure of
-whooping-cough, etc., I will speak a little further on. Cornishmen in
-the last century from their cradles to their graves might have been
-guided in their actions by old women&rsquo;s &ldquo;widdles&rdquo;
-(superstitions), some as already shown are still foolishly followed;
-but I hope that few people are silly enough at the present day to leave
-their babies&rsquo; heads a twelvemonth unwashed, under the mistaken
-notion that it would be unlucky to do it.</p>
-<p>I have often and very recently seen the creases in the palms of
-children&rsquo;s hands filled with dirt; to clean them before they were
-a year old would take away riches&mdash;they would live and die poor.
-Their nails, too, for the same period should be bitten, not cut, for
-that would make them thieves. Hair at no age must be cut at the waning
-of the moon, that would prevent its growing luxuriantly; locks shorn
-off must be always burnt, it is unlucky to throw them away; then birds
-might use them in their nests and weave them in so firmly that there
-would be a difficulty in your rising at the last day. Children&rsquo;s
-first teeth are burnt to prevent dog&rsquo;s or <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb157" href="#pb157" name=
-"pb157">157</a>]</span>&ldquo;snaggles&rdquo; irregular teeth coming in
-their stead. Coral necklaces are worn to ensure easy teething; the
-beads are said to change their colour when the wearer is ill.
-&ldquo;All locks are unlocked to favour easy birth (or
-death).&rdquo;&mdash;A. H. Bickford, M.D., Camborne, 1883. Cornishmen
-in the West are said to be born with tails; they drop off when the
-Tamar is crossed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A popular notion amongst old folks is, that when a boy is
-born on the waning moon the next birth will be a girl, and vice
-vers&acirc;. They also say that when a birth takes place on the growing
-of the moon, the next child will be of the same sex.&rdquo; A child
-born in the interval between the old and new moons is fated to die
-young, and babies with blue veins across their noses do not live to see
-twenty-one. A cake called a groaning cake is made in some houses in
-Cornwall after the birth of a child, of which every caller is expected
-to partake. The mother often carries &ldquo;a groaning cake&rdquo; when
-she is going to be &ldquo;upraised&rdquo; (churched); this she gives to
-the first person she meets on her way.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Kimbly&rdquo; is the name of an offering, generally a piece
-of bread or cake, still given in some rural districts of this county to
-the first person met when going to a wedding or a christening. It is
-sometimes presented to anyone who brings the news of a a birth to an
-interested party. Two young men, I knew about thirty years ago, were
-taking a walk in West Cornwall; crossing over a bridge they met a
-procession carrying a baby to the parish church, where the child was to
-be baptised. Unaware of this curious custom, they were very much
-surprised at having a piece of cake put into their hands. A magistrate
-wrote to the <i>Western Morning News</i>, in January, 1884, saying,
-that on his way to his petty sessions he had had one of these
-christening cakes thrust into his hand, but unluckily he did not state
-in what parish this happened. This called forth several letters on the
-subject, parts of which I will quote.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;About thirty years ago at the christening of a brother (in
-the Meneage district, Helston), and when the family party were ready
-for the walk to the afternoon service in Cury church, I well recollect
-seeing the old nurse wrap in a pure white sheet of paper what she
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb158" href="#pb158" name=
-"pb158">158</a>]</span>called the &lsquo;cheeld&rsquo;s
-fuggan.&rsquo;<a class="noteref" id="xd25e4124src" href="#xd25e4124"
-name="xd25e4124src">4</a> This was a cake with plenty of currants and
-saffron, about the size of a modern tea-plate. It was to be given to
-the first person met on returning, after the child was christened. It
-happened that, as most of the parishioners were at the service, no one
-was met until near home, almost a mile from the church, when a tipsy
-village carpenter rambled around a corner, right against our party, and
-received the cake. Regrets were expressed that the
-&lsquo;cheeld&rsquo;s fuggan&rsquo; should have fallen to the lot of
-this notoriously evil liver, and my idea was that it was a bad omen.
-However as my brother has always been a veritable Rechabite, enjoys
-good health, a contented mind, and enough of this world&rsquo;s goods
-to satisfy every moderate want, no evil can thus far be traced to the
-mischance.&rdquo;&mdash;J. C., <i>Western Morning News</i>.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&#8202;&lsquo;Kimbly&rsquo; in East Cornwall is the name of a
-thing, commonly a piece of bread, which is given under peculiar
-circumstances at weddings and christenings. When the parties set out
-from the house to go to church, or on their business, one person is
-sent before them with this selected piece of bread in his or her hand
-(a woman is commonly preferred for this office), and the piece is given
-to the first individual that is met. I interpret it to have some
-reference to the idea of the evil eye and its influence, which might
-fall on the married persons or on the child, which is sought to be
-averted by this unexpected gift. It is also observed in births, in
-order that by this gift envy may be turned away from the infant or
-happy parents. This &lsquo;kimbly&rsquo; is commonly given to the
-person bringing the first news to those interested in the
-birth.&rdquo;&mdash;T. Q. Couch, <i>Western Morning News</i>.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I witnessed this custom very frequently at Looe, in
-South-east Cornwall, from fifty to sixty-five years ago. I believe it
-is correct to say that this gift was there a small cake, made for the
-occasion, and termed the &lsquo;christening-crib,&rsquo; a crib of
-bread or cake being a provincialism for a bit of bread,&rdquo;
-etc.&mdash;William Pengelly, <i>Western Morning News</i>.</p>
-<p>Children, when they leave small bits of meat, etc., on their plates,
-are in Cornwall often told &ldquo;to eat up their cribs.&rdquo;
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb159" href="#pb159" name=
-"pb159">159</a>]</span></p>
-<p>&ldquo;On the afternoons of Good Friday, little girls of Carharrack,
-in the parish of Gwennap (West Cornwall), take their dolls to a stream
-at the foot of Carnmarth, and there christen them. Occasionally a young
-man will take upon himself the office of minister, and will sprinkle
-and name the dolls.&rdquo;&mdash;Charles James, Gwennap.</p>
-<p>The <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle, Vicar of
-Godolphin, says, &ldquo;That once he was sent for to baptise a child,
-around whose neck hung a little bag, which the mother said contained a
-bit of a donkey&rsquo;s ear, and that this charm had cured the child of
-a most distressing cough.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In some parts of Cornwall it is considered a sure sign of
-being sweethearts if a young man and woman &lsquo;stand witness
-together,&rsquo; <i>i.e.</i> become godfather and godmother of the same
-child.&rdquo;&mdash;T. C. But not in all, for I remember once hearing
-in Penzance a couple refuse to do so, saying that it was unlucky.
-&ldquo;First at the font, never at the altar.&rdquo; When I was young,
-old nurses often breathed in babies&rsquo; mouths to cure the thrush,
-thrice repeating the second verse of the Eighth Psalm, &ldquo;Out of
-the mouths of babes and sucklings,&rdquo; etc. &ldquo;May children and
-&lsquo;chets&rsquo; (kittens) never thrive,&rdquo; and it is unlucky to
-&ldquo;tuck&rdquo; (short coat) children in that month.</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Tuck babies in May,</p>
-<p class="line">You&rsquo;ll tuck them away.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">It is of course considered an unfortunate month for
-marriages. Neither should babies &ldquo;be tucked&rdquo; on a week day,
-but on a Sunday, which day should also be chosen for leaving off any
-article of clothing; as then you will have the prayers of every
-congregation for you, and are sure not to catch cold. A friend lately
-sent me the following charm of one year&rsquo;s duration which prevents
-your feeling or taking a cold. &ldquo;Eat a large apple at Hallow-een
-under an apple-tree just before midnight; no other garment than a
-bed-sheet should be worn. A kill or cure remedy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>An empty cradle should never be rocked unless you wish to have a
-large family, for&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Rock the cradle empty</p>
-<p class="line">You&rsquo;ll rock the babies plenty.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb160" href="#pb160" name=
-"pb160">160</a>]</span></p>
-<p><abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle says, &ldquo;It is
-unlucky to rock an empty cradle, as the child will
-die.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Cornubiana.</i></p>
-<p>The jingles which follow are often repeated by Cornish nurse-maids
-with appropriate actions to amuse their little charges. First, touching
-each part of the face as mentioned with the forefinger,</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Brow brender,<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4183src" href="#xd25e4183" name="xd25e4183src">5</a></p>
-<p class="line">Eye winker,</p>
-<p class="line">Nose dropper,</p>
-<p class="line">Mouth eater,</p>
-<p class="line">Chin chopper,</p>
-<p class="line">Tickle-tickle.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Second&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Tap a tap shoe,<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4202src" href="#xd25e4202" name="xd25e4202src">6</a> that would I
-do,</p>
-<p class="line">If I had but a little more leather.</p>
-<p class="line">We&rsquo;ll sit in the sun till the leather doth
-come,</p>
-<p class="line">Then we&rsquo;ll tap them both together.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Here the two little feet are struck lightly one
-against the other.</p>
-<p>Several letters have lately appeared in the <i>Western Morning
-News</i>, giving different versions of the old rhymes&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,</p>
-<p class="line">Pray bless the bed that I &lsquo;lay&rsquo; on,</p>
-<p class="line">Four corners to my bed,</p>
-<p class="line">Four angels there are spread,</p>
-<p class="line">Two &lsquo;to&rsquo; foot and two &lsquo;to&rsquo;
-head,</p>
-<p class="line">And six will carry me when I&rsquo;m dead.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Although attributed by the correspondents to Cornwall,
-I have always understood that they were known all over England.</p>
-<p>Children with rickets were taken by their parents on the three first
-Sundays in May to be dipped at sunrise in one of the numerous Cornish
-holy wells, and then put to sleep in the sun, with sixpence under their
-heads. Small pieces torn from their clothes were left on the bushes to
-propitiate the pixies. For the same disease they were passed nine times
-through a M&ecirc;n-an-tol (holed stone). A man stood on one side, and
-a woman on the other, of the stone. The child was passed with the sun
-from east to west, and from right to left; a boy from the woman to the
-man, a girl <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb161" href="#pb161" name=
-"pb161">161</a>]</span>from the man to the woman. This order is always,
-in these charms, strictly observed. As lately as 1883, in the village
-of Sancred, West Cornwall, a little girl, suffering from
-whooping-cough, was passed from a man to a woman nine times under a
-donkey&rsquo;s belly; a little boy standing the while at the
-donkey&rsquo;s head feeding it with &ldquo;cribs&rdquo; of wheaten
-bread. My informant did not know if on this occasion any incantation
-was repeated. Another family, he tells me, some years back were in the
-same neighbourhood cured of the whooping-cough by donkey&rsquo;s hair,
-which was dried on the baking iron of the open hearth, reduced to
-powder, and administered to them. There are very various ways of doing
-this, one is between thin slices of bread and butter. Some authorities
-say the latter ingredients must belong to a couple called John and
-Joan. Mr. Robert Hunt gives a charm which in a measure combines the two
-above-mentioned. &ldquo;The child must be passed naked nine times over
-the back and under the belly of a female donkey. Three spoonfuls of
-milk drawn from the teats of the animal, three hairs cut from its back,
-and three from its belly, are to stand in the milk three hours, and to
-be given in three doses repeated on three mornings.&rdquo; Mr. Hunt
-also says, &ldquo;There were some doggerel lines connected with the
-ceremony which have escaped my memory, and I have endeavoured in vain
-to find anyone remembering them. They were to the effect that as Christ
-placed the cross on the ass&rsquo;s back when he rode into Jerusalem
-and so rendered the animal holy, if the child touched where Jesus sat
-it should cough no more.&rdquo; I will quote another of Mr.
-Hunt&rsquo;s charms. &ldquo;Gather nine spar-stones (quartz) from a
-running stream, taking care not to interrupt the free passage of the
-water in doing so. Then dip a quart of water from the stream, which
-must be taken in the direction in which the stream runs&mdash;by no
-means must the vessel be dipped against the stream. Then make the nine
-stones red-hot, and throw them into the quart of water. Bottle the
-prepared water, and give the afflicted child a wine-glass of this water
-for nine mornings.&rdquo; Other remedies are to cross the child over
-running water nine times, or under a bramble bough bent into the ground
-(this latter and through a cleft ash are also tried for hernia). Some
-nurses take children, with whooping-cough, <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb162" href="#pb162" name="pb162">162</a>]</span>out
-for a walk, in hopes of meeting a man on a white or piebald horse.
-Should they be fortunate enough to do so, they ask the rider how they
-can cure the patient: his advice is always implicitly followed.</p>
-<p>Children with dirty habits are often told that a &ldquo;mousey
-pasty&rdquo; shall be cooked for their dinners.</p>
-<p>Cornish children are warned by their nurses not to grimace, lest,
-whilst so doing, the wind should change and their faces always remain
-contorted. There is another form in which this warning is often given:
-&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t make mock of a &lsquo;magum&rsquo; (May-game), for
-you may be struck comical yourself one day.&rdquo; &ldquo;Magum&rdquo;
-in most cases means a facetious person, one who is full of merry
-pranks; and the expressions, &ldquo;He&rsquo;s a reg&rsquo;lar
-magum,&rdquo; or &ldquo;He&rsquo;s full of his magums,&rdquo; are often
-heard. But the idea intended to be conveyed in the first saying is that
-it is wrong to make fun of a person suffering from an infirmity, which
-may at any time afflict the jeerer. The puritanical notion of Sunday
-lingers in the belief in Cornwall that it is unlucky to use a scissors
-on that day, even to cut your nails; you must</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Cut them on Monday, before your fast you
-break,</p>
-<p class="line">And you&rsquo;ll have a present in less than a
-week.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Children here are pleased to see &ldquo;gifts&rdquo;
-(white spots) on their thumb-nails, as</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Gifts on the thumb are sure to come,</p>
-<p class="line">But gifts on the finger are sure to linger.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Occasionally white spots on the five fingers are named
-as follows: &ldquo;A gift, a friend, a foe, a true lover, a journey to
-go.&rdquo; Should the little ones, when picking flowers, sting
-themselves with nettles, they are of course in this locality, as
-elsewhere in England, taught to rub the spot with dock-leaves,
-repeating the words, &ldquo;In dock, out nettle;&rdquo; but they are
-often told in addition to wet the place affected with their spittle,
-and make a cross over it with their thumb-nails, pressed down as
-heavily as possible. School-boys and school-girls often years ago
-practised a cruel jest on their more innocent companions. They induced
-them to pick a nettle by <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb163" href=
-"#pb163" name="pb163">163</a>]</span>saying &ldquo;Nettles won&rsquo;t
-sting this month.&rdquo; When the children were stung and complained,
-the retort was, &ldquo;I never said they would not sting you.&rdquo;
-The blue scabious in Cornwall is never plucked. It is called the
-devil&rsquo;s bit, and the superstition is handed down from one
-generation of children to another that, should they transgress and do
-so, the devil will appear to them in their dreams at night. But anyone
-who wishes to dream of the devil should pin four ivy-leaves to the
-corners of his pillow. Flowers plucked from churchyards bring ill-luck,
-and even visitations from spirits on the plucker. Wrens and robins are
-sacred in the eyes of Cornish boys, for</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Hurt a robin or a wran,</p>
-<p class="line">Never prosper, boy nor man.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">A groom who had, when a lad, shot a robin and held it
-in one of his hands told me that it shook ever after. But they always
-chase and try to kill the first butterfly of the season; and, should
-they succeed, they will overcome their enemies&mdash;I suppose, in
-football, etc.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;To hear the first cuckoo of spring on the right ear is lucky,
-on the left unlucky; as many times as it repeats its notes will the
-number of years be before the hearer is married. The cuckoo
-song&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&lsquo;In April, come he will,</p>
-<p class="line">In May, he sings all day,</p>
-<p class="line">In June, he alters his tune,</p>
-<p class="line">In July, he prepares to fly,</p>
-<p class="line">Come August, go he must&rsquo;&mdash;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">is known all over the county, with additions and
-slight variations, such as&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&lsquo;In March, he sits upon his perch,</p>
-<p class="line">In Aperel, he tunes his bell.&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first xd25e769">&mdash;South-east Cornwall, W. Pengelly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A bat in Cornwall is called an &lsquo;airy-mouse;&rsquo;
-village boys address it as it flits over their heads in the following
-rhymes&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&lsquo;Airy-mouse, airy-mouse! fly over my head,</p>
-<p class="line">And you shall have a crust of bread,</p>
-<p class="line">And when I brew, or when I bake,</p>
-<p class="line">You shall have a piece of my wedding
-cake.&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first xd25e769">&mdash;Polperro, T. Q. Couch. <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb164" href="#pb164" name="pb164">164</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Sometimes in West Cornwall they say&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Bit-bat! bit-bat! come under my hat.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Earwigs they hold in detestation, as they believe
-that, should they get into their ears, they will cause madness. There
-is a legend popular amongst them which relates that a poor man was once
-driven frantic by a very queer sensation in his head. At last, not
-being able to bear it any longer, he went into a meat-market, laid it
-down upon a block, and asked a butcher to chop it off. Whilst in this
-recumbent position an earwig crept out of his ear, and the pain
-instantly ceased. Our school-boys have other fallacies, such as, the
-pain caused by a &ldquo;custice,&rdquo; <i>i.e.</i> a stroke across the
-palm of the hand with a cane, may be neutralised by placing two hairs
-on it crossways. Also that the wound made by a nail can be kept from
-festering by wrapping the nail in a piece of fat bacon to prevent its
-rusting.</p>
-<p>School-girls&rsquo; superstitions are more sentimental, and often
-connected with wishing. If, when talking together, one accidentally
-makes a rhyme, she wishes; and, should she be asked a question before
-she speaks again, to which she can answer Yes, she thinks that she is
-sure to get it. When an eyelash falls out its owner puts it on the tip
-of her nose, wishes and blows at it; should she blow it off, she will
-have her wish. Should she by chance hear a dog dreaming, she stands up,
-puts a foot on each side of it, and then wishes. Years ago one gravely
-told me that if I wanted to know a dog&rsquo;s dreams I must throw a
-pocket-handkerchief over it when sleeping and keep it there until it
-awoke; then, before getting into bed, put it under my pillow, and I
-should have the same dream. Dreams in Cornwall are always said to go by
-contraries. &ldquo;If you dream of the dead you will hear tell of the
-living,&rdquo; etc. To dream anyone is kissing you is a sign of deceit.
-&ldquo;Of fruit out of season, trouble without reason.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;A Friday&rsquo;s dream on Saturdays told</p>
-<p class="line">Is sure to come true, be it ever so old.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">To see if a friend loves her, a Cornish girl pulls out
-a hair from her friend&rsquo;s head, and then tries to suspend it by
-the root from the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb165" href="#pb165"
-name="pb165">165</a>]</span>palm of her own hand. If this can be done
-the test is successful. When a little older there are many ways in
-which our maidens &ldquo;try for their sweethearts.&rdquo; A few of the
-rules prescribed for these rites, which have been handed down from
-generation to generation, may be worth transcribing. &ldquo;Draw a
-bracken fern, cut it at the bottom of the stalk; there you will find
-your lover&rsquo;s initials.&rdquo; Take an apple-pip between the
-forefinger and the thumb, flip it into the air, saying, &ldquo;North,
-south, east, west, tell me where my love doth rest,&rdquo; and watch
-the direction in which it falls. Go into the fields at the time of the
-new moon and pluck a piece of herb yarrow; put it when going to bed
-under your pillow, saying&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Good night, fair yarrow,</p>
-<p class="line">Thrice good night to thee;</p>
-<p class="line">I hope before to-morrow&rsquo;s dawn</p>
-<p class="line">My true love I shall see.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">If you are to be married your sweetheart will appear
-to you in your dreams.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Look out of your bed-room window on <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Valentine&rsquo;s morn, note the first man you see,
-and you will marry the same, or one of the name.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>To lose your apron or your garter shows that your lover is thinking
-of you. Three candles burning at the same time is the sign of a
-wedding; and the girl who is nearest to the door, the cupboard, and the
-shortest candle, will be married first. When two people accidentally
-say the same thing at the same time the one who finishes first will be
-married first. There are a great number of omens similar to these last,
-equally stupid, and not worthy of notice.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Friday is a cross day for marriage,&rdquo; and &ldquo;If you
-marry in Lent you&rsquo;ll live to repent.&rdquo; Should you in
-marrying</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Change the name, and not the letter,</p>
-<p class="line">You&rsquo;ll change for the worse, and not for the
-better.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">but it is lucky if your initials form a word.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The young men of a place, when they know that a person is
-paying attention to a girl or woman, seize hold of him, place him
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb166" href="#pb166" name=
-"pb166">166</a>]</span>in a wheelbarrow, in which they wheel him up and
-down until they are tired, when they upset him on the nearest pile or
-in a pond. This is called riding in the &lsquo;one-wheel coach;&rsquo;
-and to say that a man has ridden in the &lsquo;one-wheel coach&rsquo;
-is tantamount to the expression that he has
-&lsquo;gone-a-courting.&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo;&mdash;<abbr title=
-"Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle, <i>Transactions Penzance Natural
-History Society, etc., 1885&ndash;1886</i>.</p>
-<p>When a younger sister marries first the elder is said to dance in
-the &ldquo;bruss&rdquo; (short twigs of heath or furze), from an old
-custom of dancing without shoes on the furze prickles which get
-detached from the stalk. Only old maids can rear a myrtle, and they
-will not blossom when trained against houses where there are none. It
-is considered extremely unlucky here to break or lose your
-wedding-ring, also for a wedding-cake to crack after baking. A lady
-told me of one made for a couple she knew, which fell to pieces when
-taken out of the oven. Before the wedding-day came the bride had
-sickened of some disorder, was dead, and buried. A hole in a loaf, too,
-foretells a separation in a family; and to turn one upside down on a
-table wrecks a vessel. &ldquo;If a hare cross the path of a wedding
-party, the bride or bridegroom will die within seven
-years.&rdquo;&mdash;<abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle,
-<i>Cornubiana</i>.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A young woman who has been three times a bridesmaid will
-never be a bride.&rdquo; &ldquo;It was an old custom, religiously
-observed until lately in Zennor and adjacent parishes on the north
-coast of Cornwall, to waylay a married couple on their wedding night
-and flog them to bed with cords, sheep-spans, or anything handy for the
-purpose, believing that this rough treatment would ensure them
-happiness and the &lsquo;heritage and gift that cometh of the
-Lord,&rsquo; of a numerous family. At more modish weddings the guests
-merely entered the bridal chamber, and threw stockings in which stones
-or something to make weight were placed, at the bride and bridegroom in
-bed. The first one hit of the happy pair betokened the sex of their
-first-born.&rdquo;&mdash;Bottrell.</p>
-<p>Should there be a great discrepancy between the ages of the bride
-and bridegroom, or the marriage of a couple in any way be a matter of
-notoriety, they are in West Cornwall on their wedding night often
-treated to a &ldquo;shallal,&rdquo; a serenade on tin-kettles, pans,
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb167" href="#pb167" name=
-"pb167">167</a>]</span>marrow-bones, &amp;c. Any great noise in this
-part of the county is described as being &ldquo;a reg&rsquo;lar
-shallal.&rdquo; In olden times (in fact the custom is not quite
-discontinued at the present day, for I heard a whisper of one having
-taken place in a small fishing-village two years ago) married people
-accused of immorality were in Cornwall punished by a
-&ldquo;riding.&rdquo; I will give the description of one by Mr. T. Q.
-Couch.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A cart was got, donkeys were harnessed in, and a pair
-personating the guilty or suspected were driven through the streets,
-attended by a train of men and boys. At Polperro (East Cornwall) the
-attendants acted as trumpeters; the bullocks&rsquo; horns used by the
-fishermen at sea for fog or night signals were always available for the
-purpose. The mummers were very cautious, by careful disguise in dress
-or voice, and avoiding of anything directly libellous in their rather
-ribald dialogue, to keep themselves out of the clutches of the law. I
-remember one <i>riding</i> when an old rusty cannon of the smuggling
-period was waked up from its long quiet for service for the occasion,
-and bursting, led to the mutilation of several and the death of
-one.&rdquo; On the borders of Devon and in that county this ceremony
-was known as a &ldquo;mock-hunt.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A lock of hair hanging down over the forehead is in Cornwall called
-&ldquo;a widow&rsquo;s lock;&rdquo; (and children are still here told
-when it falls down &ldquo;to shed their hair back out of their
-eyes.&rdquo;) A foolish warning says,</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Go thro&rsquo; a gate when there&rsquo;s a stile
-hard by,</p>
-<p class="line">You&rsquo;ll be a widow before you die.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">The sudden appearance of rats or mice in Cornish
-houses is said to be a certain forerunner of sickness and death. Many
-curious tales are told in confirmation of this superstition; one I
-particularly remember was in connection with a young man who was killed
-on the West Cornwall Railway. After the accident, they vanished as
-quickly as they came. It is also considered to be very unlucky for a
-bird to perch on the window-sill of a sick person&rsquo;s room,
-farewell then to all chances of recovery; and strange birds coming into
-a house (especially a robin through the <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb168" href="#pb168" name="pb168">168</a>]</span>back door) foretell
-the death of some one in it, or connected with the family. I was once
-where a little child lay dying, a small brown bird sang on the
-window-sill, the nurse told me that it was waiting to carry away the
-child&rsquo;s soul. &ldquo;But when a flea bites a sick person he is
-sure not to be dangerously ill, as it is well known that they never
-bite those who have had their death-stroke.&rdquo; The superstitions
-that you cannot die easily on pillows stuffed with wild birds&rsquo;
-feathers, and that life goes out with the tide, are as current here as
-in other places. Death in Cornwall is often spoken of as &ldquo;going
-round land,&rdquo; and &ldquo;gone dead&rdquo; is a common idiom. A
-threat to kill is occasionally conveyed in the words &ldquo;I will give
-you your quietus.&rdquo; In some cases it is supposed that life may be
-restored after death if when the breath stops the body be violently
-shaken. When a member of a family dies, his death it is said will bring
-two others with it,<a class="noteref" id="xd25e4393src" href=
-"#xd25e4393" name="xd25e4393src">7</a> from the idea that one
-misfortune never comes alone. A Cornish country vicarage was lately
-startled by the tolling at an unwonted hour of the church bell. On
-sending to ascertain the cause of the disturbance an &ldquo;old
-inhabitant was found in the belfry, who had been engaged in the absence
-or illness of the usual sexton to dig the grave. He said in explanation
-that in his time it was always usual for the gravedigger to toll the
-bell three times before breaking the consecrated
-ground.&rdquo;&mdash;<abbr>J. H. C.</abbr>, <i>Notes and Queries</i>,
-5th series, vol. ii., August, 1874.</p>
-<p>A corpse should never be carried to church by a new road, and should
-a hearse stop on its way to the churchyard there will soon be another
-death in the house. Singing funerals, or as they are called in Cornwall
-buryings (pronounced &ldquo;berrins&rdquo;), were once almost universal
-(and one may still occasionally be met). The mourners and friends
-following the coffin sang as they walked through the streets or lanes
-their favourite hymns, often to most elaborate tunes.</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;To shaw our sperrits lev-us petch<a class=
-"noteref" id="xd25e4408src" href="#xd25e4408" name=
-"xd25e4408src">8</a></p>
-<p class="line">The laast new berrin tune.&rdquo;&mdash;Tregellas.</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb169" href="#pb169" name=
-"pb169">169</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Few people in old days were buried on the north side of a church.
-Flowers and shrubs planted in Cornish churchyards are never plucked,
-from the fear that the spirits of the departed will at night visit the
-desecrator. Should an urn found in a &ldquo;barrow&rdquo; be taken into
-a house, the person whose ashes it contained will haunt it; it must be
-broken up and the pieces hidden. Cross-roads, the former burying-place
-of suicides, are after nightfall avoided, such spots being haunted; but
-if you have courage to go there at midnight and wish, you will get your
-wish.</p>
-<p>With a few general superstitions I shall bring this part to an end.
-It is unlucky in Cornwall to see the new moon first over the left
-shoulder, or through a window, especially if the day should happen to
-be a Friday. To ensure good luck on your first sight of her, you should
-curtsey, spit on your money and turn it in your pocket. (A man well
-paid for any chance job early in the day calls it here &ldquo;a
-hansel,&rdquo; and spits on the money for good luck.) If you
-particularly desire anything, look at the new moon and wish before you
-speak. You may also wish when you see a falling star, and if you can
-succeed in framing it before it disappears your wish will be granted.
-Seeing the new moon in the old moon&rsquo;s arms is a sign of a change
-in the weather, so is a star passing over it. The change will be for
-the worse if the moon goes over the star. &ldquo;Herbs for drying must
-be gathered at full moon; winter fruit picked and stored at full moon,
-not to lose its plumpness. Timber should be felled on the bating of the
-moon, because the sap is then down, and the wood will be more
-durable.&rdquo;&mdash;Bottrell.</p>
-<p>Card-table Superstitions:&mdash;&ldquo;Good luck in cards, bad luck
-in a husband (or wife).&rdquo; &ldquo;A shuffling cut is good for the
-dealer.&rdquo; &ldquo;1 2 3 4 played in succession kiss the
-dealer.&rdquo; To cut an honour for the trump card is unlucky, for
-&ldquo;When quality opens the door there is poverty behind;&rdquo; but
-&ldquo;Good luck lurks under a black deuce&rdquo; (it should be touched
-by the cutter).</p>
-<p>Superstitions connected with the body:&mdash;A twitching in the
-eyelid is lucky; but you must not say when it comes nor when it
-goes.</p>
-<p>Right eye itching, a sign of laughter; but left over right,
-you&rsquo;ll cry before night. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb170"
-href="#pb170" name="pb170">170</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Right cheek burning, some one praising you; left one, abusing (a
-knot tied in the apron-string will cause the slanderer to bite his or
-her tongue); but left or right are both good at night. &ldquo;If the
-cheek burns, someone is talking scandal of you. I have often heard the
-lines spoken:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">Right cheek! left cheek! why do you burn?</p>
-<p class="line">Cursed be she that doth me any harm;</p>
-<p class="line">If she be a maid, let her be staid;</p>
-<p class="line">If she be a widow<span class="corr" id="xd25e4436"
-title="Not in source">,</span> long let her mourn;</p>
-<p class="line">But if it be my own true love&mdash;burn, cheek,
-burn!&rdquo;&mdash;T. Q. Couch.</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Nose itching, you will be kissed, cursed, or vexed; or
-shake hands with a fool.</p>
-<p>Right hand itching, someone will pay or give you money; but the left
-you will be the payer. In regard to the former,</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;If you rub it on wood,</p>
-<p class="line">It will be sure to come good.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Sneeze on Sunday morning fasting,</p>
-<p class="line">Enjoy your true love for everlasting.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class="first">On every other morning it is lucky to sneeze once
-before breakfast; but not twice.</p>
-<p>Fire Superstitions:&mdash;A difficulty in kindling the fire in the
-mornings is a sign of anger; burning only on one side, of a separation
-in the family (some say of a wedding). A flake of smut on the bar of
-the grate shows that a stranger is coming to the house. Should the fire
-be burning brightly, he will bring good news; but if the contrary, bad.
-If after you poke the fire it burns up brightly, your sweetheart is in
-a good temper; but should it not improve he is in a bad one. A coal
-popping out of the fire is either a cradle or coffin, or a purse. It is
-allowed to cool and then examined to find out the shape; if pronounced
-to be a purse, it is shaken close to the ear, when should it jingle it
-is said to contain money. I once saw this done in a school by its
-mistress. It is unlucky to put a bellows on a table.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ladies&rsquo; trees,&rdquo; small branches of dried seaweed,
-are sometimes hung up in chimneys to protect houses from fire; or a
-Passover biscuit suspended by a string from a nail in the wall.
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb171" href="#pb171" name=
-"pb171">171</a>]</span></p>
-<p>A bright spark on a candle foretells a letter, but if pointed out it
-never arrives.</p>
-<p>There are so many unlucky omens in Cornwall that to believe in them
-all would make life miserable, and to enumerate them would fill a
-volume. The major part of them too are silly and not worth
-transcribing; three or four of them as examples will, I am quite sure,
-amply suffice. &ldquo;A work begun on Friday is never ended.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;If you sing afore bite,</p>
-<p class="line">You&rsquo;ll cry before night.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">&ldquo;It is unlucky to sing carols before
-Christmas;&rdquo; or before the first &ldquo;arish mow<a class=
-"noteref" id="xd25e4475src" href="#xd25e4475" name=
-"xd25e4475src">9</a>&rdquo; is made. Also, &ldquo;To scat<a class=
-"noteref" id="xd25e4478src" href="#xd25e4478" name=
-"xd25e4478src">10</a> hands before Christmas,&rdquo; <i>i.e.</i>, beat
-them for warmth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It is unlucky to pour out water or any other liquor
-back-handed.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It is unlucky to lend, or say thank you for a pin.&rdquo;
-And</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;If you see a pin, and pass it by,</p>
-<p class="line">You&rsquo;ll want a pin before you die.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">&ldquo;It is unlucky to mend your clothes on you, for
-then you will never grow rich.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It is unlucky to wear a hole in the bottom of a shoe, for</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;A hole in the sole,</p>
-<p class="line">You&rsquo;ll live to spend whole.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Servants who come to their places after noon never
-stay, etc., etc.</p>
-<div class="figure orn4width"><img src="images/tail4.png" alt=
-"Ornament." width="167" height="34"></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb172" href="#pb172" name=
-"pb172">172</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4075" href="#xd25e4075src" name="xd25e4075">1</a></span> Hazelen
-mot&mdash;root of a hazel tree.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e4075src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4080" href="#xd25e4080src" name="xd25e4080">2</a></span>
-Braggaty&mdash;spotted.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e4080src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4085" href="#xd25e4085src" name="xd25e4085">3</a></span>
-Double&mdash;a ring.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e4085src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4124" href="#xd25e4124src" name="xd25e4124">4</a></span> Fuggan,
-a flat cake.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e4124src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4183" href="#xd25e4183src" name="xd25e4183">5</a></span> Brend,
-to knit the brows.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e4183src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4202" href="#xd25e4202src" name="xd25e4202">6</a></span> Tap a
-shoe, to sole.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e4202src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4393" href="#xd25e4393src" name="xd25e4393">7</a></span> A
-similar superstition prevails about breakages, and a servant who has
-had the misfortune to break a valuable piece of china will sometimes
-smash a common basin or tea-cup to arrest the ill-luck.&nbsp;<a class=
-"fnarrow" href="#xd25e4393src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4408" href="#xd25e4408src" name="xd25e4408">8</a></span>
-&ldquo;Pitch a tune,&rdquo; to give the keynote.&nbsp;<a class=
-"fnarrow" href="#xd25e4408src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4475" href="#xd25e4475src" name="xd25e4475">9</a></span>
-&ldquo;Arish mow,&rdquo; a rick of corn made in the field where it was
-cut.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e4475src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e4478" href="#xd25e4478src" name="xd25e4478">10</a></span> Scat,
-to slap.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e4478src">&uarr;</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch6" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<div class="figure"><img src="images/head5.png" alt="CORNISH GAMES."
-width="577" height="58"></div>
-<h2 class="main">CORNISH GAMES.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="xd25e3675"><span class="xd25e3675init">M</span>any old games
-worth recording are still played by Cornish children, out of doors in
-summer, indoors in winter, and at their numerous school-treats. To
-those common elsewhere, other names in Cornwall are often given, and
-different words sung. Some well known thirty-five years ago, now (1890)
-live only in the memory of those who were children then, or linger in a
-very fragmentary state in some remote country districts. Such as</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Here come three dukes a-riding.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">To play this the children were divided into two
-parties. In the first were only the three dukes; in the second the
-other players, who stood in a long line, linked hand in hand, facing
-them,&mdash;the mother in the middle, with her daughters ranged
-according to size on each side of her. One duke was chosen as
-spokesman, and he began the following dialogue, which was sung; the
-party singing advanced and retreated, whilst the others stood
-still:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Here &lsquo;comes&rsquo; three dukes a-riding,
-a-riding&mdash;</p>
-<p class="line">Here &lsquo;comes&rsquo; three dukes a-riding, to court
-your daughter Jane.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;My daughter Jane is yet too young</p>
-<p class="line">To bear your silly, flattering tongue.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Be she young or be she old,</p>
-<p class="line">She for her beauty must and shall be sold.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb173" href="#pb173" name=
-"pb173">173</a>]</span></p>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;So fare thee well, my lady gay,</p>
-<p class="line">We&rsquo;ll take our horse and ride away,</p>
-<p class="line">And call again another day.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Come back! come back! you Spanish knight,</p>
-<p class="line">And clean your spurs, they are not bright.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;My spurs are bright as <span class="corr" id=
-"xd25e4552" title="Source: &ldquo;">&lsquo;</span>rickety
-rock<span class="corr" id="xd25e4555" title=
-"Source: &rdquo;">&rsquo;</span> (and richly wrought),</p>
-<p class="line">And in this town they were not bought,</p>
-<p class="line">And in this town they shan&rsquo;t be sold,</p>
-<p class="line">Neither for silver, copper, nor gold.</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">So fare thee well,&rdquo; etc.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Come back! come back! you Spanish Jack (or
-coxcomb).&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Spanish Jack (or coxcomb) is not my name,</p>
-<p class="line">I&rsquo;ll stamp my foot (<i>stamps</i>) and say the
-same.</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">So fare thee well,&rdquo; etc.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Come back! come back! you Spanish knight,</p>
-<p class="line">And choose the fairest in your sight.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class="first">The dukes retired, consulted together, and then
-selected one, singing&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;This is the fairest I can see,</p>
-<p class="line">So pray young damsel walk with me.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">When all the daughters had been taken away, they were
-brought back to their mother in the same order, the dukes
-chanting:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve brought your daughter, safe and
-sound,</p>
-<p class="line">And in her pocket a thousand pound,</p>
-<p class="line">And on her finger a gay gold ring,</p>
-<p class="line">We hope you won&rsquo;t refuse to take her
-in.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll take her in with all my heart,</p>
-<p class="line">For she and &lsquo;me&rsquo; were loth to
-part.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class="first">The <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle,
-vicar of Godolphin, near Helston, saw some children lately in his
-neighbourhood playing a portion of this game, when to &ldquo;Here comes
-three dukes a-riding&rdquo; they added&mdash;&ldquo;My rancy, dancy
-dukes.&rdquo; Mr. Halliwell Phillips, in his <i>Nursery Rhymes and
-Tales of England</i>, has published three versions of it, but the game
-as played in Cornwall has some additional couplets. <span class=
-"pagenum">[<a id="pb174" href="#pb174" name="pb174">174</a>]</span></p>
-<div id="xd25e4617" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Pray, pretty Miss.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">For this&mdash;quite, I think, a thing of the
-past&mdash;the children (a boy and girl alternately) formed a ring. One
-stood in the middle holding a white handkerchief by two of its corners:
-if a boy he would single out one of the girls, dance backwards and
-forwards opposite to her, and sing&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Pray, pretty Miss, will you come out?</p>
-<p class="line">Will you come out? will you come out?</p>
-<p class="line">Pray, pretty Miss, will you come out,</p>
-<p class="line">To help me in my dancing?&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">If the answer were &ldquo;No!&rdquo; spoken with
-averted head over the left shoulder, the rhyme ran&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Then you are a naughty Miss!</p>
-<p class="line">Then you are a naughty Miss!</p>
-<p class="line">Then you are a naughty Miss!</p>
-<p class="line">Won&rsquo;t help me in my dancing.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Occasionally three or four in turn refused. When the
-request was granted the words were changed to&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Now you are a good Miss!</p>
-<p class="line">Now you are a good Miss!</p>
-<p class="line">Now you are a good Miss!</p>
-<p class="line">To help me in my dancing.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">The handkerchief was then carefully spread on the
-floor; the couple knelt on it and kissed: the child formerly in the
-middle joined the ring, and the other took his place, or if he
-preferred it, remained in the centre; in that case the children clasped
-hands and sang together&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Pray, pretty Miss (or Sir),&rdquo; etc.</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">The last to enter the ring had always the privilege of
-selecting the next partner.</p>
-<p>In all these childish games, to prevent disputes, and decide who
-shall be middleman, hide first, etc., one or other of the following
-formul&aelig; is always recited by the eldest of the party,
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb175" href="#pb175" name=
-"pb175">175</a>]</span>who as he repeats the words points with his
-forefinger at each player in succession until he comes to the end of
-the rhyme. The person then indicated goes out:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div lang="und" class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Vizzery, vazzery, vozery-vem,</p>
-<p class="line">Tizzery, tazzery, tozery-tem,</p>
-<p class="line">Hiram, jiram, cockrem, spirem,</p>
-<p class="line">Poplar, rollin, gem.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;There stands a pretty maid in a black cap,</p>
-<p class="line">If you want a pretty maid in a black cap,</p>
-<p class="line">Please to take
-&lsquo;she.&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo;&mdash;(East Cornwall).</p>
-</div>
-<div lang="und" class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Ene, mene, mona, mi,</p>
-<p class="line">Pasca, lara, bona (or bora), bi,</p>
-<p class="line">Elke, belke, boh!&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Eggs, butter, cheese, bread,</p>
-<p class="line">Stick, stack, stone, dead!&rdquo;&mdash;(West
-Cornwall).</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class="first">To this latter there are several nonsensical modern
-editions.</p>
-<p>A game with a jingle somewhat like the first is played by children
-at Newlyn West, near Penzance, called&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Vesey, vasey, vum.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">One child is blindfolded, the others hide something,
-and shout&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Vesey, vasey, vum,</p>
-<p class="line">Buck-a-boo has come!</p>
-<p class="line">Find if you can and take it home,</p>
-<p class="line">Vesey, vasey, vum!&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">A search is then made for the hidden object: when
-found the finder in his turn is blindfolded.</p>
-<p>After this digression I will give all the other forgotten games
-before describing those still played.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e4718" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main">&ldquo;<span class="sc">Friskee, friskee, I was, and I
-was.</span>&rdquo;</h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Known elsewhere as &ldquo;Now we dance looby, looby,
-looby.&rdquo; To play it the children formed a ring and danced around,
-singing&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Friskee, friskee, I was, and I was</p>
-<p class="line">A drinking of small beer.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb176" href="#pb176" name=
-"pb176">176</a>]</span></p>
-<p>They then stopped suddenly and said, &ldquo;Right arms in!&rdquo;
-(all were extended towards the centre of the circle); &ldquo;Right arms
-out!&rdquo; (all wheeled round with arms outstretched in the contrary
-direction); &ldquo;Shake yourselves a little and little and turn
-yourselves about.&rdquo; The circle was reformed,
-&ldquo;Friskee,&rdquo; etc., was repeated, and the game went on until
-all the different parts of the body had been named.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e4734" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main">&ldquo;<span class="sc">Fool, fool, come to
-School.</span>&rdquo;</h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">All the children in this game, except one who left the
-room, called themselves by the name of some bird, beast or fish. The
-child outside was brought in, and one chosen as schoolmaster
-said&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Fool! fool! come to school,</p>
-<p class="line">And find me out the &mdash;&mdash;:&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">giving the assumed name of one of the players. If the
-fool fixed on the right person, he stayed in and the other went out,
-which of course involved re-naming; but if he made a mistake they all
-cried out&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Fool! fool! go back to school,</p>
-<p class="line">And learn your letters better.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">He retired, pretended to knock his head against the
-door, and returned, when he was again asked in the same words to name
-some other player.</p>
-<p>Some of the games were much rougher, such as &ldquo;Pig in the
-middle and can&rsquo;t get out,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Solomon had a great
-dog.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>For the first, one of the children stood in the centre, whilst the
-others danced around him in a circle, saying, &ldquo;Pig in the middle
-and can&rsquo;t get out.&rdquo; He replied, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve lost my
-key but I will get out,&rdquo; and threw the whole weight of his body
-suddenly on the clasped hands of a couple to try and unlock them. When
-he had succeeded he changed the words to, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve broken your
-locks, and I have got out.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>One of the pair whose hands he had opened took his place, and he
-joined the ring. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb177" href="#pb177"
-name="pb177">177</a>]</span></p>
-<p>For the second, the players knelt in a line; the one at the head, in
-a very solemn tone, chanted, &ldquo;Solomon had a great dog;&rdquo; the
-others answered in the same way, &ldquo;Just so&rdquo; (this was always
-the refrain). Then the first speaker made two or three more ridiculous
-speeches, ending with, &ldquo;And at last this great dog died, and fell
-down,&rdquo; giving at the same time a violent lurch against his next
-neighbour, who, not expecting it, fell against his, and so on to the
-end of the line.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e4765" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main">&ldquo;<span class="sc">Scat</span>&rdquo; (Cornish
-for &ldquo;slap&rdquo;).</h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">A paper-knife, or thin slip of wood, was placed by one
-player on his open palm. Another took it up quickly, and tried to
-&ldquo;scat&rdquo; his opponent&rsquo;s hand before he could draw it
-away. Sometimes a feint of taking the paper-knife was made three or
-four times before it was really done. When the &ldquo;scat&rdquo; was
-given, the &ldquo;scatter&rdquo; in his turn rested the knife on his
-palm.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e4773" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Hole in the Wall.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">A person, who did not know the trick, was blindfolded,
-another stood in the corner of the room with his mouth open. The
-forefinger of the blindfolded player was carefully guided around the
-walls of the room to find the hole, until at last it was put into the
-open mouth, when it was sharply bitten.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e4779" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Malaga, Malaga Raisins</span> (a
-forfeit game).</h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The players sat in a circle. One acquainted with the
-trick took a poker in his right hand, made some eccentric movements
-with it, passed it to his left, and gave it to his next neighbour on
-that side, saying, &ldquo;Malaga, Malaga raisins, very good raisins I
-vow,&rdquo; and told him to do the same. Should he fail to pass it from
-right to left, when he in his turn gave it to his neighbour, without
-being told where the mistake lay he was made to pay a forfeit.
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb178" href="#pb178" name=
-"pb178">178</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e4787" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">She Said, and She Said.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">This required a confederate, who left the room. The
-other in the secret asked a person inside to whisper to him whom she
-(or he) loved, then called in his companion, and the following dialogue
-was carried on:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;She said, and she said!</p>
-<p class="line">And what did she say?&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;She said that she loved.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;And whom did she love?</p>
-<p class="line">Suppose she said she loved &mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;No! she never said that, whatever she
-said.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class="first">An indefinite number of names were mentioned before
-the right one. When that came, to the surprise of the whisperer, the
-answer was&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Yes! she said that.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">The secret was very simple, the name of a widow or
-widower was always given before that whispered.</p>
-<p>The two next are played everywhere, but the words I believe are
-peculiar to Cornwall.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e4819" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Drop the Handkerchief.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">This is much too common to require a description. I
-will therefore only give the doggerel, which is recited by the holder
-of the handkerchief as he walks around the ring:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;I sent a letter to my love,</p>
-<p class="line">I carried water in my glove,</p>
-<p class="line">And by the way I dropped it.</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">I did so! I did so!</p>
-<p class="line">I had a little dog that said &lsquo;Bow!
-wow!&rsquo;</p>
-<p class="line">I had a little cat that said &lsquo;Meow!
-meow!&rsquo;</p>
-<p class="line">Shan&rsquo;t bite you, shan&rsquo;t bite you,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Shall bite you.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Throws the handkerchief, and chases the girl.
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb179" href="#pb179" name=
-"pb179">179</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e4845" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">How Many Miles to
-Babylon?</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">To this game, known elsewhere as &ldquo;Thread the
-Needle,&rdquo; the following lines are chanted:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;How many miles to Babylon?</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Three score and ten.</p>
-<p class="line">Can I get there by candle-light?</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Yes! if your legs are long and straight.</p>
-<p class="line">Then open your gates as high as the sky,</p>
-<p class="line">And let King George and all his troops pass
-by.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e4864" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Rules of Contrary.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Four children hold a handkerchief by the four corners,
-one moves a finger over it saying, as fast as possible&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Here I go round the rules of contrary,</p>
-<p class="line">Hopping about like a little canary,</p>
-<p class="line">When I say &lsquo;Hold fast&rsquo; leave go;</p>
-<p class="line">When I say &lsquo;Leave go&rsquo; hold fast.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Any player making a mistake pays a forfeit.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e4881" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Lady Queen Anne.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">A very pretty version of this old English game is
-often played at juvenile parties in Cornwall.</p>
-<p>One child is chosen to remain in the room, whilst the others go
-outside and consult together as to whom shall hold the ball (some small
-thing). They then troop in, with their hands either hidden under the
-skirts of their dresses, or clasped in such a way that Lady Queen Anne,
-by looking at them, cannot tell which has it; all repeating&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Here come we to Lady Queen Anne,</p>
-<p class="line">With a pair of white gloves to cover our hand;</p>
-<p class="line">As white as a lily, as fair as the rose,</p>
-<p class="line">But not so fair as you may suppose.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line"><i>L. Q. A.</i> &ldquo;Turn, ladies, turn!&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">(<i>Whirl round.</i>) &ldquo;The more we turn the more
-we may,</p>
-<p class="line">Queen Anne was born on Midsummer day.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line"><i>L. Q. A.</i> &ldquo;The king sent me three letters,
-I never read them all,</p>
-<p class="line">So pray, Miss &mdash;&mdash;, deliver the
-ball.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb180" href="#pb180" name=
-"pb180">180</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Should she have guessed correctly, all the party <span class="corr"
-id="xd25e4922" title="Source: courtesy">curtsey</span>, and
-say&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;The ball is yours and not ours,</p>
-<p class="line">You must go to the garden and gather the
-flowers.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">And the child who had the ball takes the queen&rsquo;s
-seat, whilst she retires with the others; but should she have made a
-mistake, the same party go out again, saying as they <span class="corr"
-id="xd25e4932" title="Source: courtesy">curtsey</span>&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;The ball is yours and not ours,</p>
-<p class="line">(<i>Repeat</i>) We,&rdquo; etc.</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Mr. Halliwell Phillips, in his book before quoted, has
-shorter versions of this, with different rhymes.</p>
-<hr class="tb">
-<p>Another game which has descended from generation to generation
-is&mdash;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e4949" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Old Witch.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The children chose from their party an old witch (who
-is supposed to hide herself) and a mother. The other players are the
-daughters, and are called by the names of the week. The mother says
-that she is going to market, and will bring home for each the thing
-that she most wishes for. Upon this they all name something. Then,
-after telling them upon no account to allow anyone to come into the
-house, she gives her children in charge of her eldest daughter Sunday,
-and goes away. In a moment, the witch makes her appearance, and asks to
-borrow some trifle.</p>
-<p>Sunday at first refuses, but, after a short parley, goes into the
-next room to fetch the required article. In her absence the witch
-steals the youngest of the children (Saturday), and runs off with her.
-Sunday, on her return, seeing that the witch has left, thinks there
-must be something wrong, and counts the children, saying,
-&ldquo;Monday, Tuesday,&rdquo; etc., until she comes to Saturday, who
-is missing. She then pretends to cry, wrings her hands, and sobs
-out&mdash;&ldquo;Mother will beat me when she comes home.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>On the mother&rsquo;s return, she, too, counts the children, and,
-finding Saturday gone, asks Sunday where she is. Sunday answers,
-&ldquo;Oh, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb181" href="#pb181" name=
-"pb181">181</a>]</span>mother! an old witch called, and asked to borrow
-&mdash;&mdash;, and, whilst I was fetching it, she ran off with
-Saturday.&rdquo; The mother scolds and beats her, tells her to be more
-careful in the future, and again sets off for the market. This is
-repeated until all the children but Sunday have been stolen. Then the
-mother and Sunday, hand in hand, go off to search for them. They meet
-the old witch, who has them all crouching down in a line behind
-her.</p>
-<p><i>Mother.</i> Have you seen my children?</p>
-<p><i>O. W.</i> Yes! I think, by Eastgate.</p>
-<p>The mother and Sunday retire, as if to go there, but, not finding
-them, again return to the witch, who this time sends them to Westgate,
-then to Southgate and Northgate. At last one of the children pops her
-head up over the witch&rsquo;s shoulder, and cries out, &ldquo;Here we
-are, mother.&rdquo; Then follows this dialogue:&mdash;</p>
-<p><i>M.</i> I see my children, may I go in?</p>
-<p><i>O. W.</i> No! your boots are too dirty.</p>
-<p><i>M.</i> I will take them off.</p>
-<p><i>O. W.</i> Your stockings are too dirty.</p>
-<p><i>M.</i> I will take them off.</p>
-<p><i>O.</i> W. Your feet are too dirty.</p>
-<p><i>M.</i> I will cut them off.</p>
-<p><i>O. W.</i> Then the blood will stream over the floor.</p>
-<p>The mother at this loses patience, and pushes her way in, the witch
-trying in vain to keep her out. She, with all her children, then chase
-the witch until they catch her; when they pretend to bind her hand and
-foot, put her on a pile, and burn her, the children fanning the
-imaginary flames with their pinafores. Sometimes the dialogue after
-&ldquo;Here we are, mother,&rdquo; is omitted, and the witch is at once
-chased.</p>
-<p>Mr. Halliwell Phillips calls this the &ldquo;Game of the
-Gipsy,&rdquo; and gives some rhymes to which it is played, but I have
-never heard them in this county.</p>
-<p>The next, a game quite unknown to me, I took down from the lips of a
-little girl in West Cornwall, in 1882, who told me it was a great
-favourite with her and her playmates. <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
-"pb182" href="#pb182" name="pb182">182</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5012" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Ghost at the Well.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">One of the party is chosen for ghost (if dressed in
-white so much the better); she hides in a corner; the other children
-are a mother and daughters. The eldest daughter says:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mother, mother, please give me a piece of bread and
-butter.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><i>M.</i> Let me (or &ldquo;leave me&rdquo;) look at your hands,
-child. Why, they are very dirty.</p>
-<p><i>E. D.</i> I will go to the well and wash them.</p>
-<p>She goes to the corner, the ghost peeps up, and she rushes back,
-crying out&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mother! mother! I have seen a ghost.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><i>M.</i> Nonsense, child! it was only your father&rsquo;s
-nightshirt I have washed and hung out to dry. Go again.</p>
-<p>The child goes, and the same thing happens. She returns,
-saying&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, mother! I have seen a ghost.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><i>M.</i> Nonsense, child! we will take a candle, and all go
-together to search for it. The mother picks up a twig for a candle, and
-they set off. When they come near to the ghost, she appears from her
-hiding-place, mother and children rush away in different directions;
-the ghost chases them until she has caught one, who in her turn becomes
-ghost.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5044" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Mother, Mother, may I go out to
-Play?</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">I thought this game was a thing of the past, but I
-came on some children playing it in the streets of Penzance, in 1883.
-It may be played by any number, and, as in the two former games, one is
-chosen for mother. This is the dialogue:</p>
-<p><i>C.</i> Mother, mother, may I (or we) go out to play?</p>
-<p><i>M.</i> No, child! no, child! not for the day.</p>
-<p><i>C.</i> Why, mother? why, mother? I won&rsquo;t stay long.</p>
-<p><i>M.</i> Make three pretty courtesies, and away! begone!</p>
-<p><i>C.</i> One for mammy, one for daddy, one for Uncle John.</p>
-<p>The child, as she mentions the names, spreads out the skirts of her
-dress and courtesies, after which she retires to a little distance, and
-then returns. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb183" href="#pb183" name=
-"pb183">183</a>]</span></p>
-<p><i>M.</i> Where, child! where, child! have you been all the day?</p>
-<p><i>C.</i> Up to granny&rsquo;s.</p>
-<p><i>M.</i> What have you been doing there?</p>
-<p>The answer to this is often &ldquo;Washing dolls&rsquo;
-clothes,&rdquo; but anything may be mentioned.</p>
-<p><i>M.</i> What did she give you?</p>
-<p>The reply is again left to the child&rsquo;s fancy.</p>
-<p><i>M.</i> Where&rsquo;s my share?</p>
-<p><i>C.</i> The cat ate it. What&rsquo;s in that box, mother?</p>
-<p><i>M.</i> Twopence, my child.</p>
-<p><i>C.</i> What for, mother?</p>
-<p><i>M.</i> To buy a stick to beat you, and a rope to hang you, my
-child.</p>
-<p>The child at this tries to snatch at the box, the mother chases her
-until she has caught her (when there are several children, until she
-has caught one), she then pretends to beat her, and puts her hands
-around her neck as if she were going to hang her.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5116" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Here I sit on a cold green
-Bank.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The children form a ring around one of the party, who
-sits in the middle, and says:</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Here I sit on a cold green bank,</p>
-<p class="line">On a cold and frosty morning.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Then those in the circle dance round her, singing:</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll send a young man (or woman) to take
-you away,</p>
-<p class="line">To take you away, to take you away;</p>
-<p class="line">We&rsquo;ll send a young man to take you away,</p>
-<p class="line">On a cold and frosty morning.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line"><i>Child.</i> &ldquo;Pray tell me what his name shall
-be?&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Or,</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Pray, whom will you send to take me
-away?&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line"><i>Circle.</i> &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll send Mr.
-&mdash;&mdash; to take you away.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class="first">This is repeated three times with the refrain,
-&ldquo;On a cold,&rdquo; etc. after which the dancing and singing
-cease, and the child is asked, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb184"
-href="#pb184" name="pb184">184</a>]</span>&ldquo;Sugar, sweet, or
-vinegar, sour?&rdquo; Her answer is always taken in a contrary sense,
-and sung, as before, three times, whilst the children circle round. The
-one in the middle then rises to her feet. The boy (or girl) named
-advances and kisses her, they change places, and the game begins
-again.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5159" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Joggle along.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">This is a very favourite open-air game. To play it
-there must be an uneven number. He (or she) stands in the middle,
-whilst the others, arm in arm, circle around him singing:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Come all ye young men, with your wicked
-ways,</p>
-<p class="line">Sow all your wild oats in your youthful days,</p>
-<p class="line">That we may live happy, that we may live happy,</p>
-<p class="line">That we may live happy when we grow old.</p>
-<p class="line">The day is far spent, the night&rsquo;s coming on,</p>
-<p class="line">Give us your arm, and we&rsquo;ll &lsquo;joggle
-along.&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="line xd25e586">That we may live happy, etc., etc.</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">At the words &ldquo;joggle along,&rdquo; they all drop
-the arm of the person they are leading, and try to catch the arm of the
-player in front of them, whilst the <span class="corr" id="xd25e5182"
-title="Source: midle">middle</span> man tries at the same time to get a
-partner. Should he succeed, the player left without one takes his
-place. (<i>Repeat.</i>)</p>
-<p>I am indebted to the <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle,
-vicar of Godolphin, for another set of words to this game, which he
-calls&mdash;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5193" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">The Jolly Miller</span>,</h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">And, under this title, a lady, two years since, saw
-some children playing it at <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Ives, in
-Cornwall.</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;There was a jolly miller, lived by himself,</p>
-<p class="line">By grinding corn he got his wealth;</p>
-<p class="line">One hand in the upper, the other in the bag,</p>
-<p class="line">As the wheel went round, they all called
-&lsquo;Grab.&rsquo;&#8202;&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">In this county &ldquo;Tom Tiddler&rsquo;s
-Ground&rdquo; is known as &ldquo;Mollish&rsquo;s Land,&rdquo;
-&ldquo;Cat and Mouse&rdquo; as &ldquo;The Duffan Ring,&rdquo; and
-&ldquo;Blind Man&rsquo;s Buff&rdquo; as &ldquo;Blind
-Buck-a-Davy.&rdquo; To this last the following words are repeated,
-which I have never seen in print. One of the players takes the blind
-person by the shoulders, and says: <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb185"
-href="#pb185" name="pb185">185</a>]</span></p>
-<p>&ldquo;How many horses has your father got in his
-stables?&rdquo;</p>
-<p><i>A.</i> Three.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What colour are they?&rdquo;</p>
-<p><i>A.</i> Red, white, and grey.</p>
-<p>(<i>Whirling him round.</i>) &ldquo;Then turn about, and twist
-about, and catch whom you may.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>To make barley bread (in other districts, &ldquo;Cockley
-bread&rdquo;) this rhyme is used in West Cornwall:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Mother has called, mother has said,</p>
-<p class="line">&lsquo;Make haste home, and make barley
-bread.&rsquo;</p>
-<p class="line">Up with your heels, down with your head,</p>
-<p class="line">That is the way to make barley bread.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5243" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Bobby Bingo.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Of this, which is a very common game at school-treats
-in some parts of West Cornwall, I have only lately, through the
-kindness of the <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle, succeeded
-in getting a description. He saw some children, in 1884, playing it in
-his parish (Godolphin, Helston). A ring is formed, into the middle of
-which goes a child holding a stick, the others with joined hands run
-round in a circle, singing&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;There was a farmer had a dog,</p>
-<p class="line">His name was Bobby Bingo;</p>
-<p class="line">B. I. N. G. O.,</p>
-<p class="line">His name was Bobby Bingo.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">When they have finished singing they cease running,
-whilst the one in the centre pointing with his stick asks them in turn
-to spell Bingo. If they all spell it correctly they again move round
-singing; but, should either of them make a mistake, he or she has to
-take the place of the middle man.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5263" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Weigh the Butter, weigh the
-Cheese</span>,</h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">is rather dangerous, and now but rarely played. Two
-children stand back to back with their arms locked. One stoops as low
-as he can, supporting the other on his back, and says, &ldquo;Weigh the
-butter;&rdquo; he rises, and the second stoops in his turn with
-&ldquo;Weigh <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb186" href="#pb186" name=
-"pb186">186</a>]</span>the cheese.&rdquo; The first repeats with
-&ldquo;Weigh the old woman;&rdquo; and it ends by the second, with
-&ldquo;Down to her knees.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5272" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Libbety, libbety,
-libbety-lat.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">A game of a very different character, which pleases
-young children. The child stands before a hassock, and as if he were
-going up-stairs puts on it first his right and then his left foot,
-gradually quickening his steps, keeping time to the words:&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Libbety, libbety, libbety-lat,</p>
-<p class="line">Who can do this? and who can do that?</p>
-<p class="line">And who can do anything better than that?&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">This ends the games in which children of both sexes
-join. I must next give those exclusively for boys. I will begin by a
-very old one:</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5287" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Ship Sail</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">is a game usually played with marbles; one boy puts
-his hand into his trousers pocket and takes out as many marbles as he
-feels inclined; he closes his fingers over them, and holds out his hand
-with the palm down to the opposite player, saying, &ldquo;Ship sail,
-sail fast. How many men on board?&rdquo; A guess is made by his
-opponent; if less, he has to give as many marbles as will make up the
-true number; if more, as many as he said over. But should the guess be
-correct he takes them, and then in his turn says &ldquo;Ship
-sail,&rdquo; etc.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5293" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Buck shee, buck</span>,</h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">is another game of chance, and is generally played by
-three boys in the following way. One stands with his back to a wall,
-the second stoops down with his head against the stomach of the first
-boy, &ldquo;forming a back,&rdquo; the third jumps on it, and holds up
-his hand with the fingers distended, saying&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Buck shee, buck, shee buck,</p>
-<p class="line">How many fingers do I hold up?&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">Should the stooper guess correctly, they all change
-places and the jumper forms the back. Another and not such a rough way
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb187" href="#pb187" name=
-"pb187">187</a>]</span>of playing this game is for the guesser to stand
-with his face towards a wall, keeping his eyes shut.</p>
-<p>Leap-frog is known in Cornwall as &ldquo;Leap the long-mare,&rdquo;
-and there is a curious variation of it called&mdash;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5311" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Accroshay.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">A cap or small article is placed on the back of the
-stooping boy by each in turn as he jumps over him. The first as he
-jumps says &ldquo;Accroshay,&rdquo; the second &ldquo;Ashotay,&rdquo;
-the third &ldquo;Assheflay,&rdquo; and the last &ldquo;Lament, lament,
-Leleeman&rsquo;s (or Leleena&rsquo;s) war.&rdquo; The boy who in
-jumping knocks off either of the things has to take the place of the
-stooper.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5318" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Buckey-how.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">For this the boys divide into sides; one &ldquo;stops
-at home,&rdquo; the other goes off to a certain distance agreed on
-beforehand and shouts &ldquo;Buckey-how.&rdquo; The boys &ldquo;at
-home&rdquo; then give chase, and, when they succeed in catching an
-adversary, they bring him home and there he stays until all on his side
-are caught, when they in turn become the chasers.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5324" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Cutters and Trucklers
-(Smugglers).</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">A remembrance of the old smuggling days. The boys
-divide into two parties; the &ldquo;trucklers&rdquo; try to reach some
-given point before the cutter catches them.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5330" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Marble Playing</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">is a favourite recreation with the young fishermen in
-West Cornwall; &ldquo;Pits&rdquo; and &ldquo;Towns&rdquo; are the
-common games. Boys who hit their nails are looked on with great
-contempt, and are said &ldquo;to fire Kibby.&rdquo; When two are
-partners and one in playing accidentally hits the other&rsquo;s marble,
-he cries out &ldquo;no custance,&rdquo; meaning that he has a right to
-put back the marble struck; should he fail to do so, it would be
-considered out of the game. To steal marbles is &ldquo;to
-strakey.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb188" href="#pb188"
-name="pb188">188</a>]</span></p>
-<p>To make ducks and drakes with a stone on the water is in Cornwall
-called &ldquo;Tic-Tac-Mollard.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5339" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Cock-haw.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">This game is, I believe, known in other counties as
-&ldquo;Cob-nut,&rdquo; but in Cornwall the boys give the name of
-&ldquo;Victor-nut&rdquo; to the fruit of the common hazel, and play it
-to the words:</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Cock-haw! First blaw! Up hat! Down cap!
-Victor!&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">The nut that cracks another is called a &ldquo;cock
-battler.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Children under the title of &ldquo;Cock battler&rdquo; often in
-country walks play a variation of Cock-haw with the &ldquo;Hoary
-plantain,&rdquo; which they hold by the tough stem about two inches
-from the head; each in turn tries to knock off the head of his
-opponent&rsquo;s flower.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5352" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Winky-eye.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">A rural game, played in the spring. An egg taken from
-a bird&rsquo;s nest is placed on the ground, at some distance
-off&mdash;the number of paces having been previously fixed.
-Blindfolded, one after the other, the players attempt with a stick to
-hit and break it.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5358" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Uppa, Uppa Holye</span> (pronounced
-oopa, oopa holly).</h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">When the writer was a boy, the following were the
-words used in the boys&rsquo; game of fox-hunting. When the hounds (the
-boys) were &ldquo;at fault&rdquo; the leader cried&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Uppa, uppa holye,</p>
-<p class="line">If you don&rsquo;t speak</p>
-<p class="line">My dogs shan&rsquo;t folly.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first xd25e769">(East Cornwall. F. W. P. Jago, <abbr title=
-"Bachelor of Medicine">M.B.</abbr>, Plymouth.)</p>
-<p>Boys here, as probably elsewhere, are very fond of hitting each
-other and then running away, shouting&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Last blaw, never graw,</p>
-<p class="line">For seven years to come.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb189" href="#pb189" name=
-"pb189">189</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The old Cornish game of &ldquo;Hurling&rdquo; I have already
-described under the head of &ldquo;Feasten Customs.&rdquo; Cricket,
-football, and lawn tennis are of course played in Cornwall.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5387" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Tom Toddy</span>,</h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">an old drinking game, now I expect known to but few.
-Each person in succession has to drink a glass of beer or spirits, on
-the top of which a piece of lighted candle has been put, whilst the
-others sing&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Tom Toddy es come hoam, come hoam,</p>
-<p class="line">Tom Toddy es come hoam,</p>
-<p class="line">Weth es eyes burnt, and his nawse burnt,</p>
-<p class="line">And es eye-lids burnt also.</p>
-<p class="line">Tom Toddy es,&rdquo; etc.</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first xd25e769"><i>Specimens of Cornish Provincial
-Dialect.</i>&mdash;Uncle Jan Trenoodle.</p>
-<p>Of the old dance &ldquo;Letterpooch,&rdquo; the name only is
-remembered.</p>
-<div class="figure orn3width"><img src="images/tail3.png" alt=
-"Ornament." width="241" height="74"></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb190" href="#pb190" name=
-"pb190">190</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch7" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<div class="figure"><img src="images/head6.png" alt="BALLADS, Etc."
-width="558" height="66"></div>
-<h2 class="main">BALLADS, <span class="sc">Etc.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="xd25e5421"><span class="xd25e5421init">T</span>here are a few
-well-known old Cornish ballads, which have already been printed and
-reprinted; my apology for again introducing them here, must be, that a
-work of this kind would not be complete without them. &ldquo;John
-Dory,&rdquo; &ldquo;An old ballad on a Duke of Cornwall&rsquo;s
-Daughter,&rdquo; &ldquo;The Stout Cripple of Cornwall,&rdquo; and
-&ldquo;The Baarley Mow,&rdquo; may all be found in <i>Specimens of
-Cornish Provincial Dialect</i>, by Uncle Jan Trenoodle (Sandys);
-&ldquo;Tweedily, Tweedily, Twee,&rdquo;&mdash;Through <abbr title=
-"Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Rundle, in <i>Transactions Penzance Natural
-History and Antiquarian Society, 1887&ndash;88</i>; &ldquo;Ye sexes
-give ear to my fancy,&rdquo; T. Q. Couch, Polperro, Cornwall; and
-&ldquo;A fox went forth one moonshining night,&rdquo; Edward Pole, in
-<i>Notes and Queries, 1854</i>; &ldquo;The Long Hundred,&rdquo; a song
-of Numbers, W. Pengelly, <i>Notes and Queries, 1873</i>; &ldquo;When
-shall we be married?&rdquo; which I heard many years ago in Scilly, and
-of which I only remember three verses, I have never seen in print.</p>
-<p>The <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S. Baring Gould, <abbr title=
-"Master of Arts">M.A.</abbr>, is now making a collection of the
-&ldquo;Traditional Ballads and Songs of the West of England.&rdquo;
-Part I. has been published; it contains &ldquo;Sweet
-Nightingale,&rdquo; said to be a favourite with the miners of Cornwall
-and Devon; this must be in North Cornwall, as the nightingale is
-unknown in the western part of the county, scared away, according to
-the country-folk, &ldquo;by the sweet singing of its men and
-women.&rdquo; And &ldquo;The Hunting of Arscott of Tetcot,&rdquo; of
-which as it has been recast, I will only transcribe the first four
-lines. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb191" href="#pb191" name=
-"pb191">191</a>]</span></p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;In the month of November, in the year fifty-two
-(1652),</p>
-<p class="line">Three jolly fox-hunters, all sons of the blue,</p>
-<p class="line">Came o&rsquo;er from Pencarrow, not fearing a wet
-coat,</p>
-<p class="line">To have some diversion, with Arscott of Tetcot,&rdquo;
-etc.</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">&ldquo;Trelawny&rdquo; was for many years supposed to
-be a genuine old Cornish ballad, and as such was accepted and admired
-by several well-known literary men; but it was written by the late
-<abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> R. Hawker, Vicar of Morwenstowe;
-only the lines&mdash;</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;And shall Trelawny die?</p>
-<p class="line">Here&rsquo;s twenty thousand Cornishmen,</p>
-<p class="line">Will know the reason why!&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">being ancient.</p>
-<div id="xd25e5471" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">John Dory.</span></h3>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">As it fell on a holy day,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">And upon a holytide a:</p>
-<p class="line">John Dory brought him an ambling nag,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">To Paris for to ride a.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">And when John Dory to Paris was come,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">A little before the gate a;</p>
-<p class="line">John Dory was fitted, the porter was witted,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">To let him in thereat a.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">The first man that John Dory did meet,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Was good King John of France a;</p>
-<p class="line">John Dory could well of his courtesie,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">But fell down in a trance a.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">A pardon, a pardon, my liege and my king,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">For my merry men and for me a:</p>
-<p class="line">And all the churls in merry England</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">I&rsquo;ll bring them bound to thee a.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">And Nichol was then a Cornish man</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">A little beside Bohyde a;</p>
-<p class="line">He manned him forth a goodly bark,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">With fifty good oars of a side a.</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb192" href="#pb192" name=
-"pb192">192</a>]</span></p>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Run up, my boy, into the main top,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">And look what thou can&rsquo;st spy a;</p>
-<p class="line">Who, ho! who, ho! a good ship do I see,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">I trow it be John Dory a.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">They hoist their sails both top and top,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">The mizen and all was tried a,</p>
-<p class="line">And every man stood to his lot,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Whatever should betide a.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">The roaring cannons then were plied,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">And dub-a-dub went the drum a:</p>
-<p class="line">The braying trumpets loud they cried,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">To courage both all and some a.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">The grappling hooks were brought at length,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">The brown bill and the sword a;</p>
-<p class="line">John Dory at length, for all his strength,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Was clapt fast under board a.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">This song is mentioned by Carew in his <i>Survey of
-Cornwall</i>; in it he says&mdash;&ldquo;the prowesse of one
-<i>Nicholas</i>, sonne to a widdow neere Foy is deskanted upon.&rdquo;
-(He was one of the &ldquo;Fowey gallants.&rdquo;)</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5566" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">An Old Ballad</span>,</h3>
-<h3 class="main">ON A DUKE OF CORNWALL&rsquo;S DAUGHTER;</h3>
-<h3 class="sub">WHO AFTER HER MARRIAGE TO A KING OF ALBION, WAS
-DIVORCED FOR THE SAKE OF A FAVOURITE MISTRESS; AND HER EXEMPLARY
-REVENGE ON THEM BOTH.</h3>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line"><span class="sc">When</span> Humber in his wrathful
-rage</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">King Albanact in field had slain,</p>
-<p class="line">Whose bloody broils for to assuage,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">King Locrin then applied his pain;</p>
-<p class="line">And with a host of Britons stout,</p>
-<p class="line">At length he found king Humber out:</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb193" href="#pb193" name=
-"pb193">193</a>]</span></p>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">At vantage great he met him then,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">And with his host beset him so,</p>
-<p class="line">That he destroyed his warlike men,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">And Humber&rsquo;s power did overthrow;</p>
-<p class="line">And Humber, which for fear did fly,</p>
-<p class="line">Leapt into a river desp&rsquo;rately;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">And being drowned in the deep,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">He left a lady there alive,</p>
-<p class="line">Which sadly did lament and weep,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">For fear they should her life deprive.</p>
-<p class="line">But by her face that was so fair,</p>
-<p class="line">The king was caught in Cupid&rsquo;s snare:</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">He took this lady to his love,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Who secretly did keep it still;</p>
-<p class="line">So that the queen did quickly prove,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">The king did bear her most good will:</p>
-<p class="line">Which though by wedlock late begun,</p>
-<p class="line">He had by her a gallant son.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Queen Guendolin was griev&rsquo;d in mind,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">To see the king was alter&rsquo;d so:</p>
-<p class="line">At length the cause she chanc&rsquo;d to find,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Which brought her to much bitter woe.</p>
-<p class="line">For Estrild was his joy (God wot),</p>
-<p class="line">By whom a daughter he begot.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">The Duke of Cornwall being dead,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">The father of that gallant queen:</p>
-<p class="line">The king with lust being overlaid,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">His lawful wife he cast off clean:</p>
-<p class="line">Who with her dear and tender son,</p>
-<p class="line">For succour did to Cornwall run.</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb194" href="#pb194" name=
-"pb194">194</a>]</span></p>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Then Locrin crowned Estrild bright,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">And made of her his lawful wife:</p>
-<p class="line">With her which was his heart&rsquo;s delight,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">He sweetly thought to lead his life.</p>
-<p class="line">Thus Guendolin, as one forlorn,</p>
-<p class="line">Did hold her wretched life in scorn.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">But when the Cornish men did know</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">The great abuse she did endure,</p>
-<p class="line">With her a number great did go,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Which she by prayer did procure.</p>
-<p class="line">In battle then they march&rsquo;d along,</p>
-<p class="line">For to redress this grievous wrong.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">And near a river called Store,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">The king with all his host she met;</p>
-<p class="line">Where both the armies fought full sore,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">But yet the queen the field did get:</p>
-<p class="line">Yet ere they did the conquest gain,</p>
-<p class="line">The king was with an arrow slain.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Then Guendolin did take in hand,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Until her son was come to age,</p>
-<p class="line">The government of all the land;</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">But first her fury to assuage,</p>
-<p class="line">She did command her soldiers wild,</p>
-<p class="line">To drown both Estrild and her child.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Incontinent then they did bring</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Fair Estrild to the river-side,</p>
-<p class="line">And Sabrine, daughter to a king,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Whom Guendolin could not abide;</p>
-<p class="line">Who being bound together fast,</p>
-<p class="line">Into the river they were cast:</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb195" href="#pb195" name=
-"pb195">195</a>]</span></p>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">And ever since that running stream</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Wherein the ladies drowned were,</p>
-<p class="line">Is called Severn through the realm,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Because that Sabrine died there.</p>
-<p class="line">Thus those that did to lewdness bend,</p>
-<p class="line">Were brought unto a woful end.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5738" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Ye Sexes give ear.</span></h3>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line"><span class="sc">Ye</span> sexes give ear to my
-fancy;</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">In the praise of good women I sing.</p>
-<p class="line">It is not of Doll, Kate, nor Nancy,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">The mate of a clown nor a king.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Old Adam when he was created,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Was lord of the universe round;</p>
-<p class="line">But his happiness was not completed,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Until that a helpmate was found.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">He had all things for food that was wanting,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Which give us content in this life;</p>
-<p class="line">He had horses and foxes for hunting,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Which many love more than a wife.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">He&rsquo;d a garden so planted by nature,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">As man can&rsquo;t produce in this life;</p>
-<p class="line">But yet the all-wise great Creator</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Saw still that he wanted a wife.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Old Adam was laid in a slumber,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">And there he lost part of his side;</p>
-<p class="line">And when he awoke, in great wonder</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">He beheld his most beautiful bride.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">With transport he gazed all on her,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">His happiness then was complete;</p>
-<p class="line">And he blessed the bountiful Donor,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Who on him bestowed a mate.</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb196" href="#pb196" name=
-"pb196">196</a>]</span></p>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">She was not took out of his head,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">To reign or to triumph o&rsquo;er man:</p>
-<p class="line">She was not took out of his feet,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">By man to be trampled upon.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">But she was took out of his side,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">His equal and partner to be:</p>
-<p class="line">Though they are united in one,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Still the man is the top of the tree.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Then let not the fair be despised</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">By man, as she&rsquo;s part of himself;</p>
-<p class="line">For a woman by Adam was prized</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">More than the whole world with its pelf.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Then man without woman&rsquo;s a beggar,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Tho&rsquo; of the whole world he&rsquo;s
-possessed;</p>
-<p class="line">And a beggar that has a good woman,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">With more than the world he is blest.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5836" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">A Fox went forth.</span></h3>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">A fox went forth one moonshining night,</p>
-<p class="line">And he prayed to the moon to give him good light,</p>
-<p class="line">For he&rsquo;d many miles to trot that night,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Before he got home to his den O,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">His den O, his den O.</p>
-<p class="line">For he&rsquo;d many miles to trot that night,</p>
-<p class="line">Before he got home to his den O.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">And when he came unto a wood,</p>
-<p class="line">As on his hinder legs he stood,</p>
-<p class="line">A little bit of goose will do me good,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Before I get home to my den O.</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">My den O, my den O.</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb197" href="#pb197" name=
-"pb197">197</a>]</span></p>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">So off he set to a farmer&rsquo;s yard,</p>
-<p class="line">The ducks and the geese were all of them scared;</p>
-<p class="line">The best of you all shall grease my beard,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Before I get home to my den O.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">He seized the great goose by the neck</p>
-<p class="line">And flung it all across his back,</p>
-<p class="line">The young ones cried out, quack, quack, quack,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">And the fox went home to his den O.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Old mother Slipper-slopper jumped out of bed,</p>
-<p class="line">She open&rsquo;d the window and popp&rsquo;d out her
-head,&mdash;</p>
-<p class="line">John! John! John! the great goose is dead.</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">And the fox has gone home to his den O.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">So John went up unto a hill,</p>
-<p class="line">And blew his horn both loud and shrill;</p>
-<p class="line">Says the fox This is very pretty music, still</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">I&rsquo;d rather be safe in my den O.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">But when he came unto the den,</p>
-<p class="line">Where he had young ones, nine and ten,</p>
-<p class="line">Crying out, Daddy Fox, you must go there again,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">For we think its a lucky town O.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">The fox and his wife they had such a strife,</p>
-<p class="line">They never ate a better goose in all their life;</p>
-<p class="line">They tore it abroad, without fork or knife,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">And the little ones pick&rsquo;d the bones
-O.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5923" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Tweedily, Tweedily, Twee</span>
-(North Cornwall).</h3>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line"><span class="sc">There</span> was an old couple and
-they were poor;</p>
-<p class="line">They lived in a house that had but one door,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Tweedily, tweedily, twee.</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb198" href="#pb198" name=
-"pb198">198</a>]</span></p>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Now this old man went far from home,</p>
-<p class="line">And left his old wife to stay at home,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Tweedily, tweedily, twee.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Now this old man came home at last,</p>
-<p class="line">And found his door and windows fast,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Tweedily, tweedily, twee.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Ah, I&rsquo;ve bin sick whilst you&rsquo;ve gone,</p>
-<p class="line">If you&rsquo;d bin in the garden you could&rsquo;ve
-heard me groan.</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Tweedily, tweedily, twee.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">An I&rsquo;m sorry for that, cries he;</p>
-<p class="line">An I&rsquo;m sorry for that, cries he;</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Tweedily, tweedily, twee.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Then pluck me an apple from yonder tree,</p>
-<p class="line">That will I willingly do, cries he;</p>
-<p class="line">That will I willingly do, cries he;</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Tweedily, tweedily, twee.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Pop goes the ladder, and down goes he,</p>
-<p class="line">An that&rsquo;s cleverly done, cries she;</p>
-<p class="line">An that&rsquo;s cleverly done, cries she;</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Tweedily, tweedily, twee.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e5985" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">When shall we be Married?</span></h3>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line"><span class="sc">When</span> shall we be married,
-Willy, my pretty lad?</p>
-<p class="line">To-morrow if you think it fit.</p>
-<p class="line">Not before to-morrow, Willy, my pretty lad?</p>
-<p class="line">Would you have me be married to-night?</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">I should think the girl was mad.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">What shall we have for dinner, Willy, my pretty
-lad?</p>
-<p class="line">Roast beef and plum pudding if you think it fit.</p>
-<p class="line">Shan&rsquo;t we have anything else, Willy, my pretty
-lad?</p>
-<p class="line">Would you have me to spend all my money?</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">I should think the girl was mad.</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb199" href="#pb199" name=
-"pb199">199</a>]</span></p>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Who shall we have to dinner, Willy, my pretty lad?</p>
-<p class="line">Father and mother, if you think it fit.</p>
-<p class="line">Shan&rsquo;t we have anyone else, Willy, my pretty
-lad?</p>
-<p class="line">Would you have me ask the king and queen?</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">I should think the girl was mad.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e6026" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Sweet Nightingale.</span></h3>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">My sweetheart, come along,</p>
-<p class="line">Don&rsquo;t you hear the fond song,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">The sweet notes of the nightingale flow?</p>
-<p class="line">Don&rsquo;t you hear the fond tale</p>
-<p class="line">Of the sweet nightingale,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">As she sings in the valley below?</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Pretty Betty, don&rsquo;t fail,</p>
-<p class="line">For I&rsquo;ll carry your pail</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Safe home to your cot as we go;</p>
-<p class="line">You shall hear the fond tale</p>
-<p class="line">Of a sweet nightingale,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">As she sings in the valley below.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Pray let me alone,</p>
-<p class="line">I have hands of my own,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Along with you, Sir, I&rsquo;ll not go,</p>
-<p class="line">To hear the fond tale</p>
-<p class="line">Of the sweet nightingale,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">As she sings in the valley below.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Pray sit yourself down</p>
-<p class="line">With me on the ground,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">On this bank where the primroses grow;</p>
-<p class="line">You shall hear the fond tale</p>
-<p class="line">Of the sweet nightingale,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">As she sings in the valley below.</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb200" href="#pb200" name=
-"pb200">200</a>]</span></p>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">The couple agreed,</p>
-<p class="line">And were married with speed,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">And soon to the church did they go;</p>
-<p class="line">No more is she afraid</p>
-<p class="line">For to walk in the shade,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1242">Nor sit in those valleys below.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e6097" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">The Stout Cripple of
-Cornwall.</span></h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">WHEREIN IS SHEWED HIS DISSOLUTE LIFE AND DESERVED
-DEATH.</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Of a stout cripple that kept the high-way,</p>
-<p class="line">And begg&rsquo;d for his living all time of the
-day,</p>
-<p class="line">A story I&rsquo;ll tell you that pleasant shall be,</p>
-<p class="line">The Cripple of Cornwall surnamed was he.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">He crept on his hands and his knees up and down,</p>
-<p class="line">In a torn jacket and a ragged torn gown,</p>
-<p class="line">For he had never a leg to the knee;</p>
-<p class="line">The Cripple of Cornwall surnamed was he.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">He was of a stomach courageous and stout,</p>
-<p class="line">For he had no cause to complain of the gout;</p>
-<p class="line">To go upon stilts most cunning was he,</p>
-<p class="line">With a staff on his neck most gallant to see.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Yea, no good fellowship would he forsake,</p>
-<p class="line">Were it in secret a horse for to take;</p>
-<p class="line">His stool he kept close in a hollow tree,</p>
-<p class="line">That stood from the city a mile, two, or three.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Thus all the day long he begg&rsquo;d for relief,</p>
-<p class="line">And all the night long he played the false thief;</p>
-<p class="line">For seven years together this custom kept he,</p>
-<p class="line">And no man knew him such a person to be.</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb201" href="#pb201" name=
-"pb201">201</a>]</span></p>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">There were few graziers went on the way,</p>
-<p class="line">But unto the Cripple for passage did pay,</p>
-<p class="line">And every brave merchant that he did descry,</p>
-<p class="line">He emptied their purses ere they did pass by.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">The noble Lord Courtney, both gallant and bold,</p>
-<p class="line">Rode forth with great plenty of silver and gold,</p>
-<p class="line">At Exeter there a purchase to pay,</p>
-<p class="line">But that the false Cripple the journey did stay.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">For why, the false Cripple heard tidings of late,</p>
-<p class="line">As he sat for alms at the nobleman&rsquo;s gate;</p>
-<p class="line">This is, quoth the Cripple, a booty for me,</p>
-<p class="line">And I&rsquo;ll follow it closely as closely may be.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Then to his companions the matter he mov&rsquo;d,</p>
-<p class="line">Which their false actions before had prov&rsquo;d;</p>
-<p class="line">They make themselves ready, and deeply they swear</p>
-<p class="line">The money&rsquo;s their own before they come there.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Upon his two stilts the Cripple did mount,</p>
-<p class="line">To have the best share it was his full account,</p>
-<p class="line">All clothed in canvass down to the ground,</p>
-<p class="line">He took up his place his mates with him round.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Then came the Lord Courtney with half-a-score men,</p>
-<p class="line">Yet little suspecting these thieves in their den,</p>
-<p class="line">And they perceiving them come to their hand,</p>
-<p class="line">In a dark evening bid them to stand.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Deliver thy purse, quoth the Cripple, with speed,</p>
-<p class="line">We be good fellows and therefore have need,</p>
-<p class="line">Not so, quoth Lord Courtney, but this I&rsquo;ll tell
-ye,</p>
-<p class="line">Win it and wear it, else get none of me.</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb202" href="#pb202" name=
-"pb202">202</a>]</span></p>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">With that the Lord Courtney stood in his defence,</p>
-<p class="line">And so did his servants, but, ere they went hence,</p>
-<p class="line">Two of the true men were slain in this fight,</p>
-<p class="line">And four of the thieves were put to the flight.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">And while for their safeguard they run thus away,</p>
-<p class="line">The jolly bold Cripple did hold them in play,</p>
-<p class="line">And with his pike-staff he wounded them so,</p>
-<p class="line">As they were unable to run or to go.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">With fighting the Lord Courtney was out of breath,</p>
-<p class="line">And most of his servants were wounded to death,</p>
-<p class="line">Then came other horsemen riding so fast,</p>
-<p class="line">The Cripple was forced to fly at the last.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">And over a river that run there beside,</p>
-<p class="line">Which was very deep, and eighteen foot wide,</p>
-<p class="line">With his long staff and his stilts leaped he,</p>
-<p class="line">And shifted himself in an old hollow tree;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Then throughout the city was hue and cry made,</p>
-<p class="line">To have these thieves apprehended and staid;</p>
-<p class="line">The Cripple he creeps on his hands and his knees,</p>
-<p class="line">And in the high-way great passing he sees.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">And as they came riding he begging doth say,</p>
-<p class="line">O give me one penny, good masters, I pray,</p>
-<p class="line">And thus unto Exeter creeps he along,</p>
-<p class="line">No man suspecting that he had done wrong.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Anon the Lord Courtney he spies in the street,</p>
-<p class="line">He comes unto him and kisses his feet,</p>
-<p class="line">God save your honor and keep you from ill,</p>
-<p class="line">And from the hands of your enemies still.</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb203" href="#pb203" name=
-"pb203">203</a>]</span></p>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Amen, quoth Lord Courtney, and therewith threw down</p>
-<p class="line">Unto the poor Cripple an English crown,</p>
-<p class="line">Away went the Cripple, and thus he did think,</p>
-<p class="line">Five hundred pounds more will make me to drink.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">In vain that hue and cry it was made,</p>
-<p class="line">They found none of them though the country was
-laid,</p>
-<p class="line">But this grieved the Cripple night and day,</p>
-<p class="line">That he so unluckily missed of his play.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Nine hundred pounds this Cripple had got</p>
-<p class="line">By begging and thieving, so good was his lot;</p>
-<p class="line">A thousand pound he would make it, he said,</p>
-<p class="line">And then he would give over his trade.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">But as he striv&rsquo;d his mind to fulfil,</p>
-<p class="line">In following his actions so lewd and so ill,</p>
-<p class="line">At last he was taken the law to suffice,</p>
-<p class="line">Condemned and hanged at Exeter &lsquo;size.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Which made all men amazed to see</p>
-<p class="line">That such an impudent cripple as he</p>
-<p class="line">Should venture himself such actions as they,</p>
-<p class="line">To rob in such sort upon the high-way.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e6325" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">The Baarley Mow</span> (a harvest
-song).</h3>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Here&rsquo;s a health to the baarley mow, my braave
-boys,</p>
-<p class="line">Here&rsquo;s a health to the baarley mow.</p>
-<p class="line">We&rsquo;ll drenk et out of the jolly brown boul,</p>
-<p class="line">Here&rsquo;s a health to the baarley mow.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line"><i>Chorus.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">Here&rsquo;s a health to the baarley mow, my braave
-boys,</p>
-<p class="line">Here&rsquo;s a health to the baarley mow.</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb204" href="#pb204" name=
-"pb204">204</a>]</span></p>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">We&rsquo;ll drenk et out of the nepperkin,<a class=
-"noteref" id="xd25e6354src" href="#xd25e6354" name="xd25e6354src">1</a>
-boys,</p>
-<p class="line">Here&rsquo;s a health to the baarley mow.</p>
-<p class="line">The nepperkin, and the jolly brown boul.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line"><i>Chorus.</i>&mdash;Here&rsquo;s a health, etc.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">We&rsquo;ll drenk et out of the quaarter pint,
-boys,</p>
-<p class="line">Here&rsquo;s a health to the baarley mow.</p>
-<p class="line">The quaarter pint, nepperkin, and the jolly brown
-boul.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line"><i>Chorus.</i>&mdash;Here&rsquo;s a health, etc.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">This goes on through very many verses until all the
-different parts of liquid measure are exhausted; the three last verses
-are&mdash;</p>
-<div lang="en" class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">We&rsquo;ll drenk et out of the well, my braave
-boys,</p>
-<p class="line">Here&rsquo;s a health to the baarley mow.</p>
-<p class="line">The well, the hoosghead,<a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e6388src" href="#xd25e6388" name="xd25e6388src">2</a> the haalf
-hoosghead, ainker,<a class="noteref" id="xd25e6391src" href=
-"#xd25e6391" name="xd25e6391src">3</a></p>
-<p class="line xd25e1023">the haalf ainker, gallon, the pottle, the
-quaart, the</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1023">pint, the haalf a pint, quaarter pint,
-nepperkin,</p>
-<p class="line xd25e1023">and the jolly brown boul.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line"><i>Chorus.</i>&mdash;Here&rsquo;s a health, etc.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">We&rsquo;ll drenk et out of the rever, my boys,</p>
-<p class="line">Here&rsquo;s a health to the baarley mow.</p>
-<p class="line">The rever, the well, etc.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line"><i>Chorus.</i>&mdash;Here&rsquo;s a health, etc.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">We&rsquo;ll drenk et out of the ocean, my boys,</p>
-<p class="line">Here&rsquo;s a health to the baarley mow.</p>
-<p class="line">The ocean, the rever, the well, etc.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line"><i>Chorus.</i>&mdash;Here&rsquo;s a health, etc.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class="first">&ldquo;At Looe, in East Cornwall, it was usual forty
-years ago, and probably it is still, for labourers to sing &lsquo;The
-Long Hundred&rsquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb205" href="#pb205"
-name="pb205">205</a>]</span>(a song of numbers), when throwing ballast
-with shovels from a sand barge into a ship. The object was said to be
-threefold; &lsquo;to keep time (<i>i.e.</i> work simultaneously), to
-prevent anyone from shirking his share of work, and to cheer themselves
-for the labour,&rsquo; which was by no means light. A shovelful of
-ballast was delivered by every man with each line of the song, which
-ran thus:&mdash;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e6436" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">The Long Hundred.</span></h3>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&lsquo;There goes one.</p>
-<p class="line">One there is gone.</p>
-<p class="line">Oh, rare one!</p>
-<p class="line">And many more to come</p>
-<p class="line">To make up the sum</p>
-<p class="line">Of the hundred so long.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="lg">
-<p class="line">&lsquo;There goes,&rsquo; etc. on to twenty.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">&ldquo;The song, it will be seen, consisted of twenty
-six-line stanzas; hence when it was completed, each man had thrown on
-board one hundred and twenty, <i>i.e.</i> &lsquo;a long hundred,&rsquo;
-shovelfuls of ballast. After a pause both the song and the ballasting
-were resumed, and so on to the end.&rdquo;&mdash;W. Pengelly.</p>
-<p>There are a great many jingling local rhymes and modern dialect
-poems not worth recording; I will only quote two of the
-first:&mdash;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e6464" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Elicompane.</span></h3>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;What is your name?&mdash;Elicompane.</p>
-<p class="line">Who gave you that name?&mdash;My master and dame.</p>
-<p class="line">How long will you keep it?&mdash;As long as I like
-it.</p>
-<p class="line">How long will that be?&mdash;As long as <i>me</i> and
-my master agree.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Polwhele calls a tomtit &ldquo;Elicompane;&rdquo; and
-says &ldquo;There is a vulgar tradition that it is a bird by day and a
-toad by night.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="xd25e6482" class="div2 section"><span class=
-"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main"><span class="sc">Uncle Jan Dory.</span></h3>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell &lsquo;ee a story &lsquo;bout
-Uncle Jan Dory,</p>
-<p class="line">Who lived by the side of a well,</p>
-<p class="line">He went to a &lsquo;plomp&rsquo; (pump), and got
-himself drunk,</p>
-<p class="line">And under the table he fell.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The Cornish peasantry of the last century were very
-fond of riddles, but most of them will not bear repetition; they are
-(as <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb206" href="#pb206" name=
-"pb206">206</a>]</span>well as many of their sayings and rhymes) much
-too broad for the taste of this generation, and would only be tolerated
-in the days when &ldquo;a spade was called a spade.&rdquo; There are
-two exceptions that I know worth transcribing; one has already appeared
-with its answer, through the <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> S.
-Rundle, in <i>Transactions Penzance Natural History and Antiquarian
-Society, 1885&ndash;86</i>.</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;Riddle me! riddle me right!</p>
-<p class="line">Guess where I was to last Saturday night.</p>
-<p class="line">Up in the old ivy tree,</p>
-<p class="line">Two old foxes under me,</p>
-<p class="line">Digging a grave to bury me.</p>
-<p class="line">First I heard the wind blow,</p>
-<p class="line">Then I heard the cock crow,</p>
-<p class="line">Then I saw the chin-champ chawing up his bridle,</p>
-<p class="line">Then I saw the work-man working <i>hisself</i>
-idle.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first"><i>Answer.</i>&mdash;A young woman made an appointment
-to meet her sweetheart; arriving first at the place, she climbed into
-an ivy-covered tree to await his coming. He came in company with
-another man, and not seeing her &ldquo;the two old foxes&rdquo; began
-to dig a grave, in which from her hiding-place she heard that after
-murdering they intended putting her. The &ldquo;chin-champ&rdquo; was
-the horse on which they rode away, when they failed to discover her.
-&ldquo;Working hisself idle,&rdquo; is working in vain.</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;As I went over London bridge</p>
-<p class="line">Upon a cloudy day,</p>
-<p class="line">I met a fellow, clothed in yellow,</p>
-<p class="line">I took him up and sucked his blood,</p>
-<p class="line">And threw his skin away.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">What was he? <i>Answer.</i>&mdash;An orange.</p>
-<p>With a nonsensical acrostic on the word <i>Finis</i>, well known in
-the beginning of this century, I must end this (I fear) long, rambling
-work.</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">&ldquo;F&mdash;for Francis,</p>
-<p class="line">I&mdash;for Jancis,</p>
-<p class="line">N&mdash;for Nich&rsquo;las Bony;</p>
-<p class="line">I&mdash;for John the water-man,</p>
-<p class="line">S&mdash;for Sally Stony.&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first signed"><span class="sc">M. A. Courtney.</span>
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb207" href="#pb207" name=
-"pb207">207</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e6354" href="#xd25e6354src" name="xd25e6354">1</a></span> A
-gill.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e6354src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e6388" href="#xd25e6388src" name="xd25e6388">2</a></span> Cornish
-for hogshead.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href=
-"#xd25e6388src">&uarr;</a></p>
-<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
-"xd25e6391" href="#xd25e6391src" name="xd25e6391">3</a></span>
-Anker.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd25e6391src">&uarr;</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="back">
-<div id="addenda" class="div1 addenda"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main">ADDENDA.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first"><span class="sc">Helston Borough Bounds</span>,
-<i>page</i> 20.&mdash;At the close of this ceremony eleven dozen buns
-are thrown amongst the crowd to be scrambled for. One is always
-reserved for the Mayor.</p>
-<p><span class="sc">Wells</span>, <i>page</i> 65.&mdash;Some wells in
-Cornwall (not holy) were famed for their wonderful virtues: I will
-mention two. The water of the first, which was west of Penzance, was
-esteemed a sovereign cure for sore eyes. People from far and near
-visited it, and even carried away the water in bottles. It was,
-however, best if possible to walk to the well before breakfast, and
-there bathe the eyes. The second was at Castle Ch&ucirc;n, between
-Penzance and <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Just; its water endowed the
-drinkers with perpetual youth. Both have dried up within the last fifty
-years.</p>
-<p><span class="sc">Ghosts</span>, <i>page</i> 99.&mdash;The following
-quaint story was told me by a girl whose grandmother was the friend
-mentioned.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">In the last century there lived in Trezelah (a hamlet
-in the parish of Gulval, near Penzance), a widow who had been deprived
-of her rights. Walking one day in the fields near her home she saw a
-strange spotted dog who <span class="corr" id="xd25e6599" title=
-"Source: semed">seemed</span> to know her; she met it a second time,
-and decided when she next went out to take a friend with her. Again she
-saw it (her friend did not), and said &ldquo;In the Name of the Lord,
-speak to me.&rdquo; It changed into her husband, who told her to be
-ready at a certain time, when he would fetch her. Soon after, her
-friend being in the house, the woman, who was giving her children their
-supper, said &ldquo;The time is come, I must be gone;&rdquo; she then
-put on her sun-bonnet and went out. She was away about an hour, when
-she suddenly appeared with a great noise, as if someone had hurled her
-in through the door. Her story was that her husband had taken her up in
-his arms and carried her over the tree-tops as far as Ludgvan Church,
-where he deposited her on the Church-stile, from whence she saw a great
-many spirits, some good and some bad. The latter wanted her to join
-them, but her husband bade her remain where she was. What they told her
-was never known; but by their aid she got back her rights. Then her
-husband bore her home again by the way they had come; but before he
-parted from her said &ldquo;I must take something from you; either your
-eyesight, or your hearing.&rdquo; She preferred losing the latter, and
-from that hour could never hear a word. One of her shoes that in her
-flight through the air had caught on a tree-top, seven years after was
-placed on her window-sill.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb208" href="#pb208" name=
-"pb208">208</a>]</span></p>
-<p><span class="sc">Farmers&rsquo; Superstitions</span>, <i>page</i>
-141.&mdash;&ldquo;If you can throw fire over a witch you will break the
-spell.&rdquo; &ldquo;Bleeding a white hen on a millstone prevents
-danger from the mill; for they say a mill will have blood every seven
-years.&rdquo;</p>
-<p><span class="sc">Charms</span>, <i>page</i> 144.&mdash;&ldquo;Some
-were provided with little bags of earth, teeth, or bones taken from a
-grave.&rdquo; &ldquo;Most of the very religious folks had a verse of
-scripture, concluded with the comfortable assurance that by the help of
-the Lord the white witch hopes to do them
-good.&rdquo;&mdash;Bottrell.</p>
-<p><span class="sc">Epilepsy</span>, <i>page</i> 154.&mdash;Another
-authority says that the thirty pence collected by thirty young men at
-the Church door is deposited for a half-crown, from which the centre is
-cut. The flat ring left is worn by the epileptic person day and
-night.<a id="xd25e6625" name="xd25e6625"></a>&mdash;Through
-<abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> A. H. Malan, <abbr title=
-"Master of Arts">M.A.</abbr></p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">&ldquo;The Bundle of Charms,&rdquo; <abbr title=
-"Reverend">Rev.</abbr> A. H. Malan, M. A., is unavoidably omitted.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p><span class="sc">Burning the Witch</span>, <i>page</i>
-180.&mdash;Still played. A pole about five feet long is placed with its
-ends resting on low stools, or bottles. On this a person sits
-lengthways with crossed <span class="corr" id="xd25e6647" title=
-"Source: ancles">ankles</span>. He (or she) holds in his hand a long
-stick with a slit at one end, into which the paper effigy of the witch
-is stuck. This must be burnt at a candle placed on the floor at a short
-distance from the sitter; he must not support himself in any way, nor
-leave his perch.</p>
-<div class="figure trailerwidth"><img src="images/trailer.jpg" alt=
-"ENDE." width="279" height="150">
-<p class="figureHead">ENDE.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 imprint"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first xd25e157">BEARE AND SON, PRINTERS, PENZANCE.
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="xd25e6657" href="#xd25e6657" name=
-"xd25e6657">v</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="vi" class="div1 index"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
-"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
-<div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main"><i>INDEX.</i></h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Accroshay, game, <a href="#pb187" class=
-"pageref">187</a>.</p>
-<p>Advent, Sunday, <a href="#pb5" class="pageref">5</a>;<br>
-Monday, custom of, <a href="#pb14" class="pageref">14</a>.</p>
-<p>A fox went forth, ballad, <a href="#pb196" class=
-"pageref">196</a>.</p>
-<p>Agnes, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, well of, <a href="#pb64"
-class="pageref">64</a>;<br>
-Scilly, <a href="#pb118" class="pageref">118</a>;<br>
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Warna&rsquo;s well at, <a href="#pb119"
-class="pageref">119</a>;<br>
-Troy-town, <i>ib.</i></p>
-<p>Ague, charm for, <a href="#pb150" class="pageref">150</a>.</p>
-<p>Allan, apples, <a href="#pb2" class="pageref">2</a>;<br>
-Allantide custom, <a href="#pb3" class="pageref">3</a>;<br>
-All Hallow&rsquo;s day, divinations, <i>ib.</i></p>
-<p>Altarnon, legend of, <a href="#pb97" class="pageref">97</a>.</p>
-<p>Alter Nunne, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, well of, <a href=
-"#pb61" class="pageref">61</a>.</p>
-<p>Anthony, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> (in Meneage), church of,
-<a href="#pb100" class="pageref">100</a>.</p>
-<p>Apple orchards, blessing of, <a href="#pb9" class=
-"pageref">9</a>.</p>
-<p>Arthur, King, birth of, <a href="#pb57" class="pageref">57</a>;<br>
-castles of, <i>ib.</i>;<br>
-legends of, <a href="#pb58" class="pageref">58</a>.</p>
-<p>Arundell, legend of, <a href="#pb109" class="pageref">109</a>.</p>
-<p>Austell, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, wishing well, <a href=
-"#pb19" class="pageref">19</a>;<br>
-Longstone, legend of, <a href="#pb58" class="pageref">58</a>;<br>
-superstition at, <a href="#pb155" class="pageref">155</a>.</p>
-<p>Avery, buccaneer, <a href="#pb95" class="pageref">95</a>.</p>
-<p>Baarley mow, harvest song, <a href="#pb203" class=
-"pageref">203</a>.</p>
-<p>Bad leg, charm for, <a href="#pb153" class="pageref">153</a>.</p>
-<p>Bassetts, legend of, <a href="#pb105" class="pageref">105</a>.</p>
-<p>Bat and ball, game of, <a href="#pb12" class="pageref">12</a>.</p>
-<p>Bathes of Kilkhampton, legend of, <a href="#pb109" class=
-"pageref">109</a>.</p>
-<p>Bees, superstitions about, <a href="#pb137" class=
-"pageref">137</a>.</p>
-<p>Birds, <a href="#pb14" class="pageref">14</a>, <a href="#pb60"
-class="pageref">60</a>, <a href="#pb131" class="pageref">131</a>,
-<a href="#pb138" class="pageref">138</a>, <a href="#pb163" class=
-"pageref">163</a>, <a href="#pb167" class="pageref">167</a>, <a href=
-"#pb205" class="pageref">205</a>.</p>
-<p>Blanchminsters, of Stratton, <a href="#pb109" class=
-"pageref">109</a>, <a href="#pb113" class="pageref">113</a>.</p>
-<p>Blazey, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, feast of, <a href="#pb19"
-class="pageref">19</a>.</p>
-<p>Blind-buck-a-davy, game of, <a href="#pb184" class=
-"pageref">184</a>.</p>
-<p>Board-em, card game, <a href="#pb17" class="pageref">17</a>.</p>
-<p>Boconnoc, oak at, <a href="#pb104" class="pageref">104</a>.</p>
-<p>Bobby Bingo, game of, <a href="#pb185" class="pageref">185</a>.</p>
-<p>Bodmin Riding, <a href="#pb46" class="pageref">46</a>.</p>
-<p>Body, superstitions about, <a href="#pb169" class=
-"pageref">169</a>.</p>
-<p>Bonfires, <a href="#pb40" class="pageref">40</a>, <a href="#pb44"
-class="pageref">44</a>.</p>
-<p>Bottreaux (Boscastle), legend of bells, <a href="#pb106" class=
-"pageref">106</a>;<br>
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Nighton&rsquo;s Kieve, near, <a href=
-"#pb107" class="pageref">107</a>.</p>
-<p>Breage, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, Pengersick castle in,
-<a href="#pb86" class="pageref">86</a> to <a href="#pb88" class=
-"pageref">88</a>;<br>
-bells of, <a href="#pb88" class="pageref">88</a>;<br>
-wreckers, <a href="#pb89" class="pageref">89</a>.</p>
-<p>Brownie, <a href="#pb123" class="pageref">123</a>.</p>
-<p>Bucca (a spirit), <a href="#pb79" class="pageref">79</a>, <a href=
-"#pb85" class="pageref">85</a>, <a href="#pb129" class=
-"pageref">129</a>.</p>
-<p>Buck-shee-buck, game of, <a href="#pb186" class=
-"pageref">186</a>;<br>
-Buckey-how, <a href="#pb187" class="pageref">187</a>.</p>
-<p>Bull-baiting, <a href="#pb5" class="pageref">5</a>.</p>
-<p>Buryan, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, legend of, <a href="#pb77"
-class="pageref">77</a>;<br>
-Dawns Myin, in, <i>ib.</i></p>
-<p>Buzza&rsquo;s hill (Scilly), legend of, <a href="#pb113" class=
-"pageref">113</a>.</p>
-<p>Camelford, battle near, <a href="#pb58" class="pageref">58</a>;<br>
-wise woman at, <a href="#pb155" class="pageref">155</a>.</p>
-<p>Camborne, feast of, <a href="#pb5" class="pageref">5</a>;<br>
-game at, <a href="#pb18" class="pageref">18</a>;<br>
-Bassetts of Tehidy, near, <a href="#pb105" class="pageref">105</a>;<br>
-superstition at, <a href="#pb154" class="pageref">154</a>.</p>
-<p>Card, games, <a href="#pb17" class="pageref">17</a>;<br>
-table superstitions, <a href="#pb169" class="pageref">169</a>.</p>
-<p>Cam Brea, legend of, <a href="#pb56" class="pageref">56</a>.</p>
-<p>Castles, An-dinas, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Columb, <a href=
-"#pb58" class="pageref">58</a>;<br>
-near Penzance, <a href="#pb78" class="pageref">78</a>;<br>
-Treryn, <a href="#pb77" class="pageref">77</a>;<br>
-Pengersick, <a href="#pb86" class="pageref">86</a>;<br>
-Cromwell&rsquo;s (Scilly), <a href="#pb118" class=
-"pageref">118</a>;<br>
-Ch&ucirc;n, Addenda.</p>
-<p>Charles, King, <a href="#pb118" class="pageref">118</a>.</p>
-<p>Charms, <a href="#pb3" class="pageref">3</a>, <a href="#pb16" class=
-"pageref">16</a>, <a href="#pb25" class="pageref">25</a>, <a href=
-"#pb42" class="pageref">42</a>, <a href="#pb68" class="pageref">68</a>,
-<a href="#pb127" class="pageref">127</a>, <a href="#pb139" class=
-"pageref">139</a>;<br>
-various, <a href="#pb143" class="pageref">143</a> to <a href="#pb171"
-class="pageref">171</a>, Addenda.</p>
-<p>Chewidden Thursday, <a href="#pb6" class="pageref">6</a>.</p>
-<p>Children, superstitions about, <a href="#pb156" class=
-"pageref">156</a>;<br>
-christening, <a href="#pb157" class="pageref">157</a>;<br>
-May children, <a href="#pb159" class="pageref">159</a>;<br>
-rhymes, <a href="#pb160" class="pageref">160</a>;<br>
-diseases, charms against, <i>ib.</i>;<br>
-superstitions, <a href="#pb162" class="pageref">162</a>.</p>
-<p>Childermas day, <a href="#pb14" class="pageref">14</a>.</p>
-<p>Church, ales, <a href="#pb38" class="pageref">38</a>, <a href=
-"#pb46" class="pageref">46</a>;<br>
-yard superstitions, <a href="#pb168" class="pageref">168</a>.</p>
-<p>Christmas customs, <a href="#pb6" class="pageref">6</a>, <a href=
-"#pb19" class="pageref">19</a>.</p>
-<p>Cleer, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, legend of, <a href="#pb21"
-class="pageref">21</a>;<br>
-Longstone, <a href="#pb60" class="pageref">60</a>;<br>
-Holy well, <a href="#pb61" class="pageref">61</a>.</p>
-<p>Cock-fighting, <a href="#pb23" class="pageref">23</a>;<br>
-cock-haw, game of, <a href="#pb188" class="pageref">188</a>.</p>
-<p>Columb, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, custom at, <a href="#pb21"
-class="pageref">21</a>;<br>
-Shrove Tuesday, <a href="#pb23" class="pageref">23</a>;<br>
-King Arthur, <a href="#pb58" class="pageref">58</a>.</p>
-<p>Col-perra, <a href="#pb22" class="pageref">22</a>.</p>
-<p>Conerton, manor of, <a href="#pb83" class="pageref">83</a>.</p>
-<p>Constantine, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, feast of, <a href=
-"#pb25" class="pageref">25</a>;<br>
-tenure at, <a href="#pb26" class="pageref">26</a>.</p>
-<p>Coppinger, wrecker, <a href="#pb89" class="pageref">89</a>.</p>
-<p>Cornish pies, <a href="#pb8" class="pageref">8</a>, <a href="#pb26"
-class="pageref">26</a>.</p>
-<p>Corns, charm for, <a href="#pb148" class="pageref">148</a>.</p>
-<p>Cornwall, stone, <a href="#pb93" class="pageref">93</a>;<br>
-on a Duke&rsquo;s daughter (ballad), <a href="#pb192" class=
-"pageref">192</a>;<br>
-Stout Cripple of, <a href="#pb200" class="pageref">200</a>.</p>
-<p>Cottrell house, legend of, <a href="#pb106" class=
-"pageref">106</a>;<br>
-Dupath well, near, <i>ib.</i></p>
-<p>Cramp, charm for, <a href="#pb149" class="pageref">149</a>.</p>
-<p>Crowan, taking-day, <a href="#pb48" class="pageref">48</a>;<br>
-superstition at, <a href="#pb154" class="pageref">154</a>.</p>
-<p>Cubert, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, Holy well, <a href="#pb3"
-class="pageref">3</a>.</p>
-<p>Curls (carols), <a href="#pb7" class="pageref">7</a>.</p>
-<p>Cutters and Trucklers, game of, <a href="#pb187" class=
-"pageref">187</a>.</p>
-<p>Danes, <a href="#pb74" class="pageref">74</a>.</p>
-<p>Dawns Myin (Merry Maidens), <a href="#pb77" class=
-"pageref">77</a>.</p>
-<p>Dead man&rsquo;s hand (charms with), <a href="#pb152" class=
-"pageref">152</a>. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="xd25e7333" href=
-"#xd25e7333" name="xd25e7333">vi</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Delabole, superstition at, <a href="#pb130" class=
-"pageref">130</a>.</p>
-<p>Dennis, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, Church of, <a href="#pb104"
-class="pageref">104</a>.</p>
-<p>Dipping day, <a href="#pb29" class="pageref">29</a>.</p>
-<p>Dodge, <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> Richard, ghost-layer,
-<a href="#pb97" class="pageref">97</a>.</p>
-<p>Dorothy Dinglet, legend of, <a href="#pb99" class=
-"pageref">99</a>.</p>
-<p>Dowsing (divining with the rod), <a href="#pb131" class=
-"pageref">131</a>.</p>
-<p>Dreams, <a href="#pb163" class="pageref">163</a>, <a href="#pb164"
-class="pageref">164</a>.</p>
-<p>Drop the handkerchief, <a href="#pb178" class="pageref">178</a>.</p>
-<p>Ducking chair, <a href="#pb119" class="pageref">119</a>.</p>
-<p>Duffy and the Devil, <a href="#pb10" class="pageref">10</a>.</p>
-<p>Earwigs, superstitions about, <a href="#pb164" class=
-"pageref">164</a>.</p>
-<p>Easter customs, <a href="#pb26" class="pageref">26</a>.</p>
-<p>Elicompane, rhyme, <a href="#pb205" class="pageref">205</a>.</p>
-<p>Ene, mene, etc., game formula, <a href="#pb175" class=
-"pageref">175</a>.</p>
-<p>Ennor Church, <a href="#pb119" class="pageref">119</a>.</p>
-<p>Enodock, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, Church of, <a href="#pb67"
-class="pageref">67</a>.</p>
-<p>Epilepsy, charms against, <a href="#pb154" class="pageref">154</a>,
-Addenda.</p>
-<p>Epiphany customs, <a href="#pb15" class="pageref">15</a>.</p>
-<p>Erisey, legend of, <a href="#pb93" class="pageref">93</a>.</p>
-<p>Eye diseases, charms for, kinning stones, <a href="#pb144" class=
-"pageref">144</a>;<br>
-kenning herb, <a href="#pb147" class="pageref">147</a>;<br>
-club-moss, <a href="#pb151" class="pageref">151</a>;<br>
-cat&rsquo;s tail, <i>ib<span class="corr" id="xd25e7463" title=
-"Source: ,">.</span></i>;<br>
-wedding ring, <i>ib.</i>;<br>
-dead man&rsquo;s hand, <a href="#pb152" class="pageref">152</a>;<br>
-rope, <a href="#pb153" class="pageref">153</a>;<br>
-well&rsquo;s water, Addenda.</p>
-<p>Fairies, <a href="#pb120" class="pageref">120</a>.</p>
-<p>Falmouth, Christmas custom at, <a href="#pb6" class=
-"pageref">6</a>;<br>
-whist, <a href="#pb17" class="pageref">17</a>;<br>
-legends of, <a href="#pb101" class="pageref">101</a>;<br>
-river Fal, <a href="#pb102" class="pageref">102</a>.</p>
-<p>Fire-works, <a href="#pb40" class="pageref">40</a>, <a href="#pb43"
-class="pageref">43</a>, <a href="#pb46" class="pageref">46</a>;<br>
-superstitions, <a href="#pb170" class="pageref">170</a>.</p>
-<p>Fishermen&rsquo;s superstitions, <a href="#pb132" class=
-"pageref">132</a>.</p>
-<p>Flavel, <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> Thomas, ghost-layer,
-<a href="#pb95" class="pageref">95</a>.</p>
-<p>Flora-day, <a href="#pb34" class="pageref">34</a>.</p>
-<p>Fools&rsquo;-day, <a href="#pb27" class="pageref">27</a>;<br>
-Fool, fool, etc., game, <a href="#pb176" class="pageref">176</a>.</p>
-<p>Friday in Lide, <a href="#pb24" class="pageref">24</a>.</p>
-<p>Friskee, game of, <a href="#pb175" class="pageref">175</a>.</p>
-<p>Games, <a href="#pb4" class="pageref">4</a>, <a href="#pb17" class=
-"pageref">17</a>, <a href="#pb20" class="pageref">20</a>, <a href=
-"#pb172" class="pageref">172</a>.</p>
-<p>Garrick Zans, <a href="#pb74" class="pageref">74</a>.</p>
-<p>George, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, play of, <a href="#pb10"
-class="pageref">10</a>.</p>
-<p>Gerennius, legend of, <a href="#pb102" class="pageref">102</a>.</p>
-<p>Germans, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, May-day at, <a href="#pb37"
-class="pageref">37</a>.</p>
-<p>Germoe, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, chair of, <a href="#pb88"
-class="pageref">88</a>;<br>
-mine near <a href="#pb89" class="pageref">89</a>;<br>
-wreckers, <i>ib.</i></p>
-<p>Ghost-layers, <a href="#pb95" class="pageref">95</a>.</p>
-<p>Ghosts, <a href="#pb60" class="pageref">60</a>, <a href="#pb68"
-class="pageref">68</a>, <a href="#pb76" class="pageref">76</a>,
-<a href="#pb77" class="pageref">77</a>, <a href="#pb79" class=
-"pageref">79</a>, <a href="#pb82" class="pageref">82</a>, <a href=
-"#pb85" class="pageref">85</a>, <a href="#pb91" class="pageref">91</a>,
-<a href="#pb93" class="pageref">93</a>, Addenda.</p>
-<p>Ghost at the well, game, <a href="#pb182" class=
-"pageref">182</a>.</p>
-<p>Giglet fair, <a href="#pb14" class="pageref">14</a>.</p>
-<p>Godolphin house, tenure of, <a href="#pb92" class=
-"pageref">92</a>.</p>
-<p>Going a gooding, <a href="#pb6" class="pageref">6</a>.</p>
-<p>Good Friday, <a href="#pb25" class="pageref">25</a>, <a href=
-"#pb150" class="pageref">150</a>, <a href="#pb159" class=
-"pageref">159</a>.</p>
-<p>Goose or geese dancers, <a href="#pb10" class="pageref">10</a>.</p>
-<p>Gorran, wise men of, <a href="#pb107" class="pageref">107</a>.</p>
-<p>Grace, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, rhyme of, <a href="#pb54"
-class="pageref">54</a>.</p>
-<p>Grade, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, tenure, <a href="#pb93"
-class="pageref">93</a>.</p>
-<p>Grenville, Sir Beville, <a href="#pb110" class=
-"pageref">110</a>.</p>
-<p>Groaning cake, <a href="#pb157" class="pageref">157</a>.</p>
-<p>Grylls, <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr>, ghost-layer, <a href=
-"#pb98" class="pageref">98</a>.</p>
-<p>Gunpowder plot, <a href="#pb4" class="pageref">4</a>.</p>
-<p>Gunwalloe, Church of, <a href="#pb94" class="pageref">94</a>.</p>
-<p>Gwennap pit, <a href="#pb38" class="pageref">38</a>;<br>
-parish customs at, <a href="#pb159" class="pageref">159</a>.</p>
-<p>Gwenvor, legend of, <a href="#pb73" class="pageref">73</a>.</p>
-<p>Hal-an-tow, <a href="#pb34" class="pageref">34</a>.</p>
-<p>Halgaver Moor, carnival at, <a href="#pb47" class=
-"pageref">47</a>.</p>
-<p>Hallowe&rsquo;en superstitions, <a href="#pb3" class=
-"pageref">3</a>, <a href="#pb159" class="pageref">159</a>.</p>
-<p>Hall Monday, <a href="#pb21" class="pageref">21</a>.</p>
-<p>Hares, superstitions about, <a href="#pb60" class="pageref">60</a>,
-<a href="#pb77" class="pageref">77</a>, <a href="#pb87" class=
-"pageref">87</a>, <a href="#pb110" class="pageref">110</a>, <a href=
-"#pb135" class="pageref">135</a>.</p>
-<p>Harlyn, customs at, <a href="#pb25" class="pageref">25</a>.</p>
-<p>Harvest customs, <a href="#pb52" class="pageref">52</a>.</p>
-<p>Hayle, May-day at, <a href="#pb29" class="pageref">29</a>.</p>
-<p>Helford, Good Friday at, <a href="#pb25" class="pageref">25</a>;<br>
-river of, <a href="#pb100" class="pageref">100</a>.</p>
-<p>Helston, hurling at, <a href="#pb20" class="pageref">20</a>;<br>
-Flora-day, <a href="#pb34" class="pageref">34</a>;<br>
-Loe-pool, near, <a href="#pb73" class="pageref">73</a>;<br>
-Meneage district, superstitions at, <a href="#pb157" class=
-"pageref">157</a>;<br>
-town bounds, Addenda.</p>
-<p>Hiccough, cure of, <a href="#pb150" class="pageref">150</a>.</p>
-<p>Hobby-horse day, <a href="#pb30" class="pageref">30</a>.</p>
-<p>Hole in the wall, game of, <a href="#pb177" class=
-"pageref">177</a>.</p>
-<p>Holy Thursday, <a href="#pb25" class="pageref">25</a>.</p>
-<p>Holy wells, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Cuthbert, <a href="#pb3"
-class="pageref">3</a>;<br>
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Austell, <a href="#pb19" class=
-"pageref">19</a>;<br>
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Maddern, <a href="#pb32" class=
-"pageref">32</a>;<br>
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Uny, <a href="#pb33" class=
-"pageref">33</a>, <a href="#pb127" class="pageref">127</a>;<br>
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Cleer, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Nunne, Scarlet, <a href="#pb61" class="pageref">61</a>;<br>
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Nunn, <a href="#pb62" class=
-"pageref">62</a>;<br>
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Jesus, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Martin, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Agnes, <abbr title=
-"Saint">St.</abbr> Neot, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Piran,
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Keyne, <a href="#pb64" class=
-"pageref">64</a>;<br>
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Warna, <a href="#pb118" class=
-"pageref">118</a>; Addenda.</p>
-<p>How many miles to Babylon? game of, <a href="#pb179" class=
-"pageref">179</a>.</p>
-<p>Hurling, game of, <a href="#pb20" class="pageref">20</a>, <a href=
-"#pb25" class="pageref">25</a>.</p>
-<p>Ill-wishing, <a href="#pb139" class="pageref">139</a>;<br>
-charms against, <a href="#pb140" class="pageref">140</a>, Addenda.</p>
-<p>Ives, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, fair-mo, <a href="#pb5" class=
-"pageref">5</a>;<br>
-Christmas day, <a href="#pb11" class="pageref">11</a>;<br>
-hurling, <a href="#pb20" class="pageref">20</a>;<br>
-Knillian-games, <a href="#pb48" class="pageref">48</a>;<br>
-legends of, <a href="#pb68" class="pageref">68</a>, <a href="#pb75"
-class="pageref">75</a>.</p>
-<p>Jack&rsquo;s alive, game of, <a href="#pb16" class=
-"pageref">16</a>;<br>
-the giant killer, <a href="#pb57" class="pageref">57</a>;<br>
-Harry&rsquo;s lights, <a href="#pb134" class="pageref">134</a>;<br>
-o&rsquo;-Lent, <a href="#pb24" class="pageref">24</a>.</p>
-<p>Jago, <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr>, ghost-layer, <a href=
-"#pb97" class="pageref">97</a>.</p>
-<p>James&rsquo; day, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, <a href="#pb48"
-class="pageref">48</a>.</p>
-<p>Jaundice, charm for, <a href="#pb155" class="pageref">155</a>.</p>
-<p>John, Dory, ballad, <a href="#pb191" class="pageref">191</a>;<br>
-of Gaunt, <a href="#pb56" class="pageref">56</a>;<br>
-John&rsquo;s day, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, customs, <a href=
-"#pb39" class="pageref">39</a>;<br>
-fires, <a href="#pb40" class="pageref">40</a>;<br>
-fairs, <a href="#pb41" class="pageref">41</a>;<br>
-superstitions, <a href="#pb42" class="pageref">42</a>.</p>
-<p>Jolly miller, game of, <a href="#pb184" class="pageref">184</a>.</p>
-<p>Just, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, in Penwith, feast, <a href=
-"#pb3" class="pageref">3</a>;<br>
-legend of, <a href="#pb9" class="pageref">9</a>;<br>
-cairn at, <a href="#pb70" class="pageref">70</a>;<br>
-cove near, <a href="#pb74" class="pageref">74</a>;<br>
-legend of, and <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Keverne, <a href="#pb94"
-class="pageref">94</a>;<br>
-custom at, <a href="#pb131" class="pageref">131</a>;<br>
-superstition at, <a href="#pb154" class="pageref">154</a>.</p>
-<p>Kenegie, legend of, <a href="#pb77" class="pageref">77</a>.</p>
-<p>Keverne, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, legend of, <a href="#pb94"
-class="pageref">94</a>. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="xd25e8146" href=
-"#xd25e8146" name="xd25e8146">vii</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Keyne, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, well of, <a href="#pb64"
-class="pageref">64</a>;<br>
-chair of, <a href="#pb66" class="pageref">66</a>.</p>
-<p>Kimbly (an offering), <a href="#pb157" class="pageref">157</a>.</p>
-<p>King Arthur, legends of, <a href="#pb57" class="pageref">57</a>,
-<a href="#pb74" class="pageref">74</a>.</p>
-<p>Kinning stones, <a href="#pb144" class="pageref">144</a>;<br>
-kenning or kinning herb, <a href="#pb147" class="pageref">147</a>.</p>
-<p>Knockers, legends of, <a href="#pb8" class="pageref">8</a>, <a href=
-"#pb61" class="pageref">61</a>, <a href="#pb120" class=
-"pageref">120</a>, <a href="#pb128" class="pageref">128</a>.</p>
-<p>Knillian games, <a href="#pb48" class="pageref">48</a>.</p>
-<p>Kook, game of, <a href="#pb4" class="pageref">4</a>.</p>
-<p>Lady Queen Anne, game of, <a href="#pb179" class=
-"pageref">179</a>.</p>
-<p>Land&rsquo;s End, rocks at, <a href="#pb75" class=
-"pageref">75</a>;<br>
-legend of, <a href="#pb133" class="pageref">133</a>.</p>
-<p>Landewednack, Shrove Tuesday at, <a href="#pb22" class=
-"pageref">22</a>.</p>
-<p>Landrake, May-day at, <a href="#pb29" class="pageref">29</a>.</p>
-<p>Langarrow, tradition of, <a href="#pb67" class="pageref">67</a>.</p>
-<p>Lanhadron Park, oak at, <a href="#pb104" class=
-"pageref">104</a>.</p>
-<p>Lanivet, Lanivrey, feasts of, <a href="#pb54" class=
-"pageref">54</a>.</p>
-<p>Launceston, superstition at, <a href="#pb34" class=
-"pageref">34</a>;<br>
-witch&rsquo;s tower, <a href="#pb146" class="pageref">146</a>.</p>
-<p>Leed&rsquo;s-town, ghost at, <a href="#pb91" class=
-"pageref">91</a>.</p>
-<p>Levan, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, carols, <a href="#pb8" class=
-"pageref">8</a>;<br>
-legend of, <a href="#pb76" class="pageref">76</a>.</p>
-<p>Libbety, game of, <a href="#pb186" class="pageref">186</a>.</p>
-<p>Little Colan, Palm Sunday at, <a href="#pb24" class=
-"pageref">24</a>.</p>
-<p>Lizard district, <a href="#pb100" class="pageref">100</a>.</p>
-<p>Loe-pool, <a href="#pb73" class="pageref">73</a>.</p>
-<p>Looe, East and West, May-day at, <a href="#pb28" class=
-"pageref">28</a>, <a href="#pb30" class="pageref">30</a>;<br>
-superstition at, <a href="#pb158" class="pageref">158</a>.</p>
-<p>Logan rock, <a href="#pb68" class="pageref">68</a>, <a href="#pb77"
-class="pageref">77</a>, <a href="#pb145" class="pageref">145</a>.</p>
-<p>Long hundred, rhyme of, <a href="#pb204" class=
-"pageref">204</a>.</p>
-<p>Lostwithiel, custom at, <a href="#pb27" class="pageref">27</a>;<br>
-oak near, <a href="#pb104" class="pageref">104</a>.</p>
-<p>Lyonnesse, tradition of, <a href="#pb67" class="pageref">67</a>.</p>
-<p>Mabyn, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, legend of, <a href="#pb59"
-class="pageref">59</a>.</p>
-<p>Madron, Maddern, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, feast of, <a href=
-"#pb5" class="pageref">5</a>;<br>
-well of, <a href="#pb32" class="pageref">32</a>;<br>
-house in, <a href="#pb83" class="pageref">83</a>;<br>
-superstition at, <a href="#pb99" class="pageref">99</a>;<br>
-M&ecirc;n-an-tol, <a href="#pb104" class="pageref">104</a>, <a href=
-"#pb160" class="pageref">160</a>.</p>
-<p>Malaga raisins, game of, <a href="#pb177" class=
-"pageref">177</a>.</p>
-<p>Malpas, <a href="#pb103" class="pageref">103</a>.</p>
-<p>Marazion, wrestling, <a href="#pb37" class="pageref">37</a>;<br>
-legend of marsh, <a href="#pb85" class="pageref">85</a>;<br>
-Mayor of, <i>ib.</i></p>
-<p>Marble-playing, <a href="#pb187" class="pageref">187</a>.</p>
-<p>Marriage superstitions, <a href="#pb165" class=
-"pageref">165</a>.</p>
-<p>Martin&rsquo;s, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, Holy well, <a href=
-"#pb64" class="pageref">64</a>.</p>
-<p>Mary&rsquo;s, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> (Scilly), <a href=
-"#pb112" class="pageref">112</a>;<br>
-Buzza&rsquo;s hill, <a href="#pb113" class="pageref">113</a>;<br>
-Peninnis, <a href="#pb114" class="pageref">114</a>;<br>
-Tom Butt&rsquo;s bed, <a href="#pb115" class="pageref">115</a>;<br>
-Ennor Church, <a href="#pb119" class="pageref">119</a>;<br>
-ducking chair, <i>ib.</i></p>
-<p>Mawgan, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, in Kerrier, Church of,
-<a href="#pb105" class="pageref">105</a>.</p>
-<p>May, day, customs, <a href="#pb28" class="pageref">28</a>;<br>
-Sundays in, <a href="#pb32" class="pageref">32</a> to <a href="#pb34"
-class="pageref">34</a>;<br>
-superstitions, <a href="#pb159" class="pageref">159</a>.</p>
-<p>M&ecirc;n-an-tol, Perranworthal, <a href="#pb103" class=
-"pageref">103</a>;<br>
-Madron, <a href="#pb104" class="pageref">104</a>, <a href="#pb160"
-class="pageref">160</a>.</p>
-<p>Menhir, near Fowey, legend of, <a href="#pb103" class=
-"pageref">103</a>.</p>
-<p>Merlin, prophecy of, <a href="#pb78" class="pageref">78</a>.</p>
-<p>Merran, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, hurling match at, <a href=
-"#pb25" class="pageref">25</a>.</p>
-<p>Merry Maidens, <a href="#pb77" class="pageref">77</a>.</p>
-<p>Mevagissey, Church of, <a href="#pb107" class="pageref">107</a>.</p>
-<p>Michael, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, legend of, <a href="#pb34"
-class="pageref">34</a>;<br>
-Mount of, <a href="#pb65" class="pageref">65</a>.</p>
-<p>Miners&rsquo; superstitions, <a href="#pb130" class=
-"pageref">130</a>.</p>
-<p>Mock mayors, <a href="#pb27" class="pageref">27</a>, <a href="#pb37"
-class="pageref">37</a>, <a href="#pb45" class="pageref">45</a>.</p>
-<p>Morvah, feast of, <a href="#pb51" class="pageref">51</a>.</p>
-<p>Morwenstow, Church of, <a href="#pb108" class="pageref">108</a>;<br>
-legend of, <a href="#pb110" class="pageref">110</a>.</p>
-<p>Mother may I go out to play? game of, <a href="#pb182" class=
-"pageref">182</a>.</p>
-<p>Mullion, <a href="#pb95" class="pageref">95</a>;<br>
-legend of, <a href="#pb100" class="pageref">100</a>.</p>
-<p>Mylor, custom at, <a href="#pb45" class="pageref">45</a>.</p>
-<p>Nails, to cut, <a href="#pb162" class="pageref">162</a>.</p>
-<p>Nelson, death of, <a href="#pb81" class="pageref">81</a>.</p>
-<p>Neot, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, Holy well, <a href="#pb64"
-class="pageref">64</a>;<br>
-Church of, <a href="#pb105" class="pageref">105</a>.</p>
-<p>Nettle stings, <a href="#pb162" class="pageref">162</a>.</p>
-<p>Newlyn West, bonfires, <a href="#pb43" class="pageref">43</a>;<br>
-legend of, <a href="#pb79" class="pageref">79</a>;<br>
-Laregan river, <a href="#pb84" class="pageref">84</a>.</p>
-<p>New year customs, <a href="#pb14" class="pageref">14</a>.</p>
-<p>Nicky Nan night, <a href="#pb21" class="pageref">21</a>.</p>
-<p>Nighton&rsquo;s Kieve, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, tale of,
-<a href="#pb107" class="pageref">107</a>.</p>
-<p>Nunne&rsquo;s, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, Holy well, <a href=
-"#pb61" class="pageref">61</a>;<br>
-Nunn&rsquo;s, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, <a href="#pb62" class=
-"pageref">62</a>.</p>
-<p>Nut-tree hill, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Germans, <a href=
-"#pb37" class="pageref">37</a>.</p>
-<p>Oak-apple day, <a href="#pb37" class="pageref">37</a>.</p>
-<p>Old Witch, game of, <a href="#pb180" class="pageref">180</a>,
-Addenda.</p>
-<p>Padstow, skip-skop night, <a href="#pb5" class="pageref">5</a>;<br>
-May-day at, <a href="#pb30" class="pageref">30</a>;<br>
-church near, <a href="#pb67" class="pageref">67</a>.</p>
-<p>Palm Sunday, <a href="#pb24" class="pageref">24</a>.</p>
-<p>Par-chapel well, carols, <a href="#pb8" class="pageref">8</a>;<br>
-legend of, <a href="#pb76" class="pageref">76</a>.</p>
-<p>Paul&rsquo;s, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, eve, pitcher night,
-<a href="#pb19" class="pageref">19</a>.</p>
-<p>Paul, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> (Pol-de-Leon), feast of,
-<a href="#pb2" class="pageref">2</a>;<br>
-legend of, <a href="#pb78" class="pageref">78</a>.</p>
-<p>Peasen Monday, <a href="#pb21" class="pageref">21</a>.</p>
-<p>Pellars, <a href="#pb139" class="pageref">139</a>, <a href="#pb142"
-class="pageref">142</a>;<br>
-rings of, <i>ib.</i>;<br>
-visits to, <a href="#pb144" class="pageref">144</a>.</p>
-<p>Pendeen, legends of, <a href="#pb9" class="pageref">9</a>, <a href=
-"#pb74" class="pageref">74</a>.</p>
-<p>Pengersick castle, legend of, <a href="#pb86" class=
-"pageref">86</a>.</p>
-<p>Penryn, <a href="#pb45" class="pageref">45</a>;<br>
-legend of, <a href="#pb79" class="pageref">79</a>;<br>
-Lillo&rsquo;s play, <a href="#pb101" class="pageref">101</a>.</p>
-<p>Penzance, feast of, <a href="#pb2" class="pageref">2</a>;<br>
-Shrove Tuesday, <a href="#pb21" class="pageref">21</a>;<br>
-Midsummer eve, <a href="#pb39" class="pageref">39</a>;<br>
-fires, <a href="#pb40" class="pageref">40</a>;<br>
-fairs, <a href="#pb42" class="pageref">42</a>;<br>
-ghosts, <a href="#pb79" class="pageref">79</a>;<br>
-tales of, <a href="#pb83" class="pageref">83</a>;<br>
-butchers, <a href="#pb84" class="pageref">84</a>;<br>
-rhyme of, <a href="#pb85" class="pageref">85</a>;<br>
-superstition at, <a href="#pb153" class="pageref">153</a>.</p>
-<p>Perran Porth, Good Friday at, <a href="#pb26" class=
-"pageref">26</a>;<br>
-legend of, <a href="#pb67" class="pageref">67</a>.</p>
-<p>Peter&rsquo;s, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, eve, Newlyn West,
-<a href="#pb43" class="pageref">43</a>;<br>
-Polperro, <a href="#pb44" class="pageref">44</a>.</p>
-<p>Picrous-day, <a href="#pb6" class="pageref">6</a>.</p>
-<p>Pies, <a href="#pb8" class="pageref">8</a>, <a href="#pb26" class=
-"pageref">26</a>.</p>
-<p>Pig-in-the-middle, game of, <a href="#pb176" class=
-"pageref">176</a>.</p>
-<p>Pinny-ninny, <a href="#pb18" class="pageref">18</a>.</p>
-<p>Piran&rsquo;s, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, day, <a href="#pb24"
-class="pageref">24</a>;<br>
-oratory at, <a href="#pb26" class="pageref">26</a>;<br>
-legend of, <a href="#pb64" class="pageref">64</a>.</p>
-<p>Pixies, stories of, <a href="#pb120" class="pageref">120</a>;<br>
-rhymes of, <a href="#pb122" class="pageref">122</a>;<br>
-charms against, <a href="#pb126" class="pageref">126</a>.</p>
-<p>Polperro, superstition at, <a href="#pb26" class=
-"pageref">26</a>;<br>
-May-day at, <a href="#pb29" class="pageref">29</a>;<br>
-feast of, <a href="#pb44" class="pageref">44</a>.</p>
-<p>Porthleven, May-day at, <a href="#pb37" class="pageref">37</a>.
-<span class="pagenum">[<a id="xd25e8948" href="#xd25e8948" name=
-"xd25e8948">viii</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Porthgwarra, legend of, <a href="#pb75" class="pageref">75</a>.</p>
-<p>Pray pretty Miss, game of, <a href="#pb174" class=
-"pageref">174</a>.</p>
-<p>Probus, Church of, <a href="#pb53" class="pageref">53</a>.</p>
-<p>Quinsey, charm for, <a href="#pb155" class="pageref">155</a>.</p>
-<p>Raleigh, Sir Walter, <a href="#pb81" class="pageref">81</a>,
-<a href="#pb101" class="pageref">101</a>.</p>
-<p>Ranter-go-round, card game, <a href="#pb18" class=
-"pageref">18</a>.</p>
-<p>Riddles, <a href="#pb206" class="pageref">206</a>.</p>
-<p>Riding, Bodmin, <a href="#pb46" class="pageref">46</a>;<br>
-the hatch, <a href="#pb70" class="pageref">70</a>;<br>
-a custom, <a href="#pb167" class="pageref">167</a>.</p>
-<p>Ringing night, <a href="#pb4" class="pageref">4</a>.</p>
-<p>Redruth fair, <a href="#pb38" class="pageref">38</a>.</p>
-<p>Robin&rsquo;s alight, game of, <a href="#pb16" class=
-"pageref">16</a>.</p>
-<p>Roche, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, Holy Thursday at, <a href=
-"#pb25" class="pageref">25</a>;<br>
-dance at, <a href="#pb38" class="pageref">38</a>;<br>
-Chapel at, <a href="#pb73" class="pageref">73</a>.</p>
-<p>Roll-tobacco, game of, <a href="#pb39" class="pageref">39</a>.</p>
-<p>Rudall, <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr>, ghost-layer, <a href=
-"#pb99" class="pageref">99</a>.</p>
-<p>Rules of contrary, game of, <a href="#pb179" class=
-"pageref">179</a>.</p>
-<p>Sailors&rsquo; superstitions, <a href="#pb132" class=
-"pageref">132</a>.</p>
-<p>Sancreed, Holy well near, <a href="#pb33" class=
-"pageref">33</a>.</p>
-<p>Scald, charm for, <a href="#pb147" class="pageref">147</a>.</p>
-<p>Scarlet well, <a href="#pb61" class="pageref">61</a>.</p>
-<p>Scat, game of, <a href="#pb177" class="pageref">177</a>.</p>
-<p>Scilly, Christmas custom at, <a href="#pb11" class=
-"pageref">11</a>;<br>
-harvest home, <a href="#pb53" class="pageref">53</a>;<br>
-News rock, <a href="#pb94" class="pageref">94</a>;<br>
-description of islands, <a href="#pb111" class="pageref">111</a>.</p>
-<p>Sennen, twelfth-night at, <a href="#pb16" class=
-"pageref">16</a>;<br>
-legend of cove, <a href="#pb71" class="pageref">71</a>;<br>
-Table M&ecirc;n, <a href="#pb75" class="pageref">75</a>.</p>
-<p>Shallal, a custom, <a href="#pb166" class="pageref">166</a>.</p>
-<p>She said and she said, game of, <a href="#pb178" class=
-"pageref">178</a>.</p>
-<p>Shingles, charm for, <a href="#pb154" class="pageref">154</a>.</p>
-<p>Ship sail, game of, <a href="#pb186" class="pageref">186</a>.</p>
-<p>Shovel, Sir Cloudesley, wreck of, <a href="#pb115" class=
-"pageref">115</a>.</p>
-<p>Shrove Tuesday, customs, <a href="#pb21" class="pageref">21</a>.</p>
-<p>Sickness, death, burial superstitions, <a href="#pb167" class=
-"pageref">167</a>.</p>
-<p>Sithney, fair at, <a href="#pb52" class="pageref">52</a>.</p>
-<p>Skip-skop night, <a href="#pb5" class="pageref">5</a>.</p>
-<p>Sleeping foot, charm for, <a href="#pb150" class=
-"pageref">150</a>.</p>
-<p>Snail, creep dance, <a href="#pb39" class="pageref">39</a>;<br>
-superstitions, <a href="#pb131" class="pageref">131</a>, <a href=
-"#pb138" class="pageref">138</a>.</p>
-<p>Snake superstitions, <a href="#pb155" class="pageref">155</a>.</p>
-<p>Solomon had a great dog, game of, <a href="#pb177" class=
-"pageref">177</a>.</p>
-<p>Spider superstition, <a href="#pb60" class="pageref">60</a>.</p>
-<p>Spriggans, <a href="#pb8" class="pageref">8</a>, <a href="#pb120"
-class="pageref">120</a>, <a href="#pb126" class="pageref">126</a>;<br>
-charms to drive away, <a href="#pb127" class="pageref">127</a>.</p>
-<p>Staunch blood, to, <a href="#pb151" class="pageref">151</a>.</p>
-<p>Stephen&rsquo;s day, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, <a href="#pb14"
-class="pageref">14</a>.</p>
-<p>Strain, charm for, <a href="#pb150" class="pageref">150</a>.</p>
-<p>Stratton, <a href="#pb4" class="pageref">4</a>;<br>
-legend of, <a href="#pb109" class="pageref">109</a>.</p>
-<p>Superstitions, <a href="#pb130" class="pageref">130</a>.</p>
-<p>Sweethearts, trying for, <a href="#pb3" class="pageref">3</a>,
-<a href="#pb16" class="pageref">16</a>, <a href="#pb25" class=
-"pageref">25</a>, <a href="#pb33" class="pageref">33</a>, <a href=
-"#pb42" class="pageref">42</a>, <a href="#pb165" class=
-"pageref">165</a>.</p>
-<p>Sweet nightingale, ballad, <a href="#pb199" class=
-"pageref">199</a>.</p>
-<p>Talland, legend of, <a href="#pb97" class="pageref">97</a>.</p>
-<p>Taking day, <a href="#pb48" class="pageref">48</a>.</p>
-<p>Tetter, charm for, <a href="#pb149" class="pageref">149</a>.</p>
-<p>Thomasine Bonaventure, <a href="#pb110" class="pageref">110</a>.</p>
-<p>Three dukes a-riding, game of, <a href="#pb172" class=
-"pageref">172</a>.</p>
-<p>Thorn prick, charm for, <a href="#pb148" class=
-"pageref">148</a>.</p>
-<p>Thrush, charm for, <a href="#pb159" class="pageref">159</a>.</p>
-<p>Tibb&rsquo;s eve, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, <a href="#pb15"
-class="pageref">15</a>.</p>
-<p>Tintagel, castle of, <a href="#pb57" class="pageref">57</a>;<br>
-superstition at, <a href="#pb155" class="pageref">155</a>.</p>
-<p>Tom Toddy, game, <a href="#pb189" class="pageref">189</a>.</p>
-<p>Toothache, charm for, <a href="#pb149" class="pageref">149</a>.</p>
-<p>Towans, <a href="#pb67" class="pageref">67</a>.</p>
-<p>Towednack, feast of, <a href="#pb28" class="pageref">28</a>;<br>
-legend of, <a href="#pb68" class="pageref">68</a>.</p>
-<p>Trecarrel, of Launceston, legend of, <a href="#pb108" class=
-"pageref">108</a>.</p>
-<p>Tregeagle, legend of, <a href="#pb72" class="pageref">72</a>.</p>
-<p>Tresco (Scilly), Abbey, <a href="#pb113" class="pageref">113</a>,
-<a href="#pb117" class="pageref">117</a>;<br>
-gardens, stone in, <a href="#pb114" class="pageref">114</a>;<br>
-Piper&rsquo;s hole, <a href="#pb115" class="pageref">115</a>;<br>
-witches, <a href="#pb118" class="pageref">118</a>;<br>
-wreckers, <i>ib.</i></p>
-<p>Trevilian, legend of, <a href="#pb67" class="pageref">67</a>.</p>
-<p>Treryn castle, <a href="#pb77" class="pageref">77</a>.</p>
-<p>Troth plight, <a href="#pb114" class="pageref">114</a>, <a href=
-"#pb153" class="pageref">153</a>.</p>
-<p>Troy-town, <a href="#pb119" class="pageref">119</a>.</p>
-<p>Truro, fair at, <a href="#pb52" class="pageref">52</a>;<br>
-custom at, <a href="#pb103" class="pageref">103</a>.</p>
-<p>Tweedily, tweedily, twee, ballad, <a href="#pb197" class=
-"pageref">197</a>.</p>
-<p>Twelfth-tide customs, <a href="#pb15" class="pageref">15</a>,
-<a href="#pb19" class="pageref">19</a>.</p>
-<p>Uncle Jan Dory, rhyme of, <a href="#pb205" class=
-"pageref">205</a>.</p>
-<p>Uny, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, well of, <a href="#pb33" class=
-"pageref">33</a>, <a href="#pb127" class="pageref">127</a>.</p>
-<p>Uppa, uppa, etc., game formula, <a href="#pb188" class=
-"pageref">188</a>.</p>
-<p>Vellan-drucher Moor, <a href="#pb74" class="pageref">74</a>.</p>
-<p>Veryan, legend of, <a href="#pb102" class="pageref">102</a>.</p>
-<p>Vesey, vasey, game of, <a href="#pb175" class="pageref">175</a>.</p>
-<p>Vizzery, vazzery, game formula, <a href="#pb175" class=
-"pageref">175</a>.</p>
-<p>Vow, the lady of the, <a href="#pb9" class="pageref">9</a>.</p>
-<p>Warleggan, custom at, <a href="#pb9" class="pageref">9</a>.</p>
-<p>Warna&rsquo;s, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>, Holy well, <a href=
-"#pb118" class="pageref">118</a>.</p>
-<p>Warsail boys, <a href="#pb14" class="pageref">14</a>.</p>
-<p>Warts, charms for, <a href="#pb148" class="pageref">148</a>.</p>
-<p>Weigh the butter, game of, <a href="#pb185" class=
-"pageref">185</a>.</p>
-<p>Wesley, <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr> John, ghost story,
-<a href="#pb99" class="pageref">99</a>.</p>
-<p>When shall we be married? ballad, <a href="#pb198" class=
-"pageref">198</a>.</p>
-<p>White witches, <a href="#pb145" class="pageref">145</a>.</p>
-<p>Whitsuntide customs, <a href="#pb37" class="pageref">37</a>.</p>
-<p>Whisk (whist), <a href="#pb17" class="pageref">17</a>.</p>
-<p>Whooping cough, charms for, <a href="#pb161" class=
-"pageref">161</a>.</p>
-<p>Widow&rsquo;s superstition, <a href="#pb167" class=
-"pageref">167</a>.</p>
-<p>Wildfire, charm for, <a href="#pb150" class="pageref">150</a>.</p>
-<p>Winkey eye, game of, <a href="#pb188" class="pageref">188</a>.</p>
-<p>Woods, <abbr title="Reverend">Rev.</abbr>, ghost-layer, <a href=
-"#pb96" class="pageref">96</a>.</p>
-<p>Wreckers, <a href="#pb89" class="pageref">89</a>.</p>
-<p>Wrestling, <a href="#pb37" class="pageref">37</a>.</p>
-<p>Ye sexes give ear, ballad, <a href="#pb195" class=
-"pageref">195</a>.</p>
-<p>Zennor, Christmas custom at, <a href="#pb7" class=
-"pageref">7</a>;<br>
-Midsummereve, <a href="#pb41" class="pageref">41</a>;<br>
-legend of, <a href="#pb70" class="pageref">70</a>;<br>
-old custom at, <a href="#pb166" class="pageref">166</a>.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1" id="toc">
-<h2 class="main">Table of Contents</h2>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="8"><a href=
-"#preface"><i>PREFACE.</i></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="8"><a href="#ch1">CORNISH FEASTS AND
-&ldquo;FEASTEN&rdquo; CUSTOMS.</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href="#ch1">1</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="8"><a href="#ch2">LEGENDS OF PARISHES,
-ETC.</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href="#ch2">56</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e2613"><span class=
-"sc">Cornwall Stone.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e2613">93</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="8"><a href="#ch3">FAIRIES.</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href="#ch3">120</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="8"><a href="#ch4">SUPERSTITIONS:
-<span class="sc">Miners&rsquo;, Sailors&rsquo;,
-Farmers&rsquo;.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href="#ch4">130</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="8"><a href="#ch5">CHARMS, <span class=
-"sc">Etc.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href="#ch5">143</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e3862"><span class=
-"sc">For Tetters.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e3862">149</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e3884"><span class=
-"sc">Toothache.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e3884">149</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e3919"><span class=
-"sc">For a Strain.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e3919">150</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e3932"><span class=
-"sc">For Ague.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e3932">150</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e3938"><span class=
-"sc">For Wildfire</span> (Erysipelas).</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e3938">150</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="8"><a href="#ch6">CORNISH
-GAMES.</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href="#ch6">172</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e4617"><span class=
-"sc">Pray, pretty Miss.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e4617">174</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href=
-"#xd25e4718">&ldquo;<span class="sc">Friskee, friskee, I was, and I
-was.</span>&rdquo;</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e4718">175</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href=
-"#xd25e4734">&ldquo;<span class="sc">Fool, fool, come to
-School.</span>&rdquo;</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e4734">176</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href=
-"#xd25e4765">&ldquo;<span class="sc">Scat</span>&rdquo; (Cornish for
-&ldquo;slap&rdquo;).</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e4765">177</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e4773"><span class=
-"sc">Hole in the Wall.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e4773">177</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e4779"><span class=
-"sc">Malaga, Malaga Raisins</span> (a forfeit game).</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e4779">177</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e4787"><span class=
-"sc">She Said, and She Said.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e4787">178</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e4819"><span class=
-"sc">Drop the Handkerchief.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e4819">178</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e4845"><span class=
-"sc">How Many Miles to Babylon?</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e4845">179</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e4864"><span class=
-"sc">Rules of Contrary.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e4864">179</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e4881"><span class=
-"sc">Lady Queen Anne.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e4881">179</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e4949"><span class=
-"sc">Old Witch.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e4949">180</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5012"><span class=
-"sc">Ghost at the Well.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5012">182</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5044"><span class=
-"sc">Mother, Mother, may I go out to Play?</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5044">182</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5116"><span class=
-"sc">Here I sit on a cold green Bank.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5116">183</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5159"><span class=
-"sc">Joggle along.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5159">184</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5193"><span class=
-"sc">The Jolly Miller</span>,</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5193">184</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5243"><span class=
-"sc">Bobby Bingo.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5243">185</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5263"><span class=
-"sc">Weigh the Butter, weigh the Cheese</span>,</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5263">185</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5272"><span class=
-"sc">Libbety, libbety, libbety-lat.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5272">186</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5287"><span class=
-"sc">Ship Sail</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5287">186</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5293"><span class=
-"sc">Buck shee, buck</span>,</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5293">186</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5311"><span class=
-"sc">Accroshay.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5311">187</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5318"><span class=
-"sc">Buckey-how.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5318">187</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5324"><span class=
-"sc">Cutters and Trucklers (Smugglers).</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5324">187</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5330"><span class=
-"sc">Marble Playing</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5330">187</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5339"><span class=
-"sc">Cock-haw.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5339">188</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5352"><span class=
-"sc">Winky-eye.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5352">188</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5358"><span class=
-"sc">Uppa, Uppa Holye</span> (pronounced oopa, oopa holly).</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5358">188</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5387"><span class=
-"sc">Tom Toddy</span>,</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5387">189</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="8"><a href="#ch7">BALLADS,
-<span class="sc">Etc.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href="#ch7">190</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5471"><span class=
-"sc">John Dory.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5471">191</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5566">An Old Ballad
-On a Duke of Cornwall&rsquo;s Daughter</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5566">192</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5738"><span class=
-"sc">Ye Sexes give ear.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5738">195</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5836"><span class=
-"sc">A Fox went forth.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5836">196</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5923"><span class=
-"sc">Tweedily, Tweedily, Twee</span> (North Cornwall).</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5923">197</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e5985"><span class=
-"sc">When shall we be Married?</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e5985">198</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e6026"><span class=
-"sc">Sweet Nightingale.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e6026">199</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e6097"><span class=
-"sc">The Stout Cripple of Cornwall.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e6097">200</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e6325"><span class=
-"sc">The Baarley Mow</span> (a harvest song).</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e6325">203</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e6436"><span class=
-"sc">The Long Hundred.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e6436">205</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e6464"><span class=
-"sc">Elicompane.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e6464">205</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#xd25e6482"><span class=
-"sc">Uncle Jan Dory.</span></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e6482">205</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="8"><a href=
-"#addenda">ADDENDA.</a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href="#addenda">207</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="8"><a href=
-"#vi"><i>INDEX.</i></a></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><a class="pageref" href="#vi">v</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-<div class="transcribernote">
-<h2 class="main">Colophon</h2>
-<h3 class="main">Availability</h3>
-<p class="first">This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no
-cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give
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-title="External link" href="https://www.gutenberg.org/license" rel=
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-<p>Scans for this book are available on the Internet Archive (copy
-<a class="seclink xd25e45" title="External link" href=
-"https://archive.org/details/cu31924029890575">1</a>).</p>
-<h3 class="main">Metadata</h3>
-<table class="colophonMetadata">
-<tr>
-<td><b>Title:</b></td>
-<td>Cornish Feasts and Folk-lore</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><b>Author:</b></td>
-<td>Margaret Ann Courtney (1834&ndash;1920)</td>
-<td><a href="https://viaf.org/viaf/43083635/" class=
-"seclink">Info</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><b>Language:</b></td>
-<td>English</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><b>Original publication date:</b></td>
-<td>1890</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><b>Keywords:</b></td>
-<td>Cornwall</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td>England</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td>Fasts and feasts</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td>Folklore</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td>Legends</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td>Social life and customs</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<h3>Catalog entries</h3>
-<table class="catalogEntries">
-<tr>
-<td>Related Library of Congress catalog page:</td>
-<td><a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/28031161" class=
-"seclink">28031161</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>Related WorldCat catalog page:</td>
-<td><a href="https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/702566" class=
-"seclink">702566</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>Related Open Library catalog page (for source):</td>
-<td><a href="https://openlibrary.org/books/OL6723199M" class=
-"seclink">OL6723199M</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>Related Open Library catalog page (for work):</td>
-<td><a href="https://openlibrary.org/works/OL6665109W" class=
-"seclink">OL6665109W</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<h3 class="main">Encoding</h3>
-<p class="first"></p>
-<h3 class="main">Revision History</h3>
-<ul>
-<li>2017-04-23 Started.</li>
-</ul>
-<h3 class="main">External References</h3>
-<p>This Project Gutenberg eBook contains external references. These
-links may not work for you.</p>
-<h3 class="main">Corrections</h3>
-<p>The following corrections have been applied to the text:</p>
-<table class="correctiontable" summary=
-"Overview of corrections applied to the text.">
-<tr>
-<th>Page</th>
-<th>Source</th>
-<th>Correction</th>
-<th>Edit distance</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e500">14</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">[<i>Not in source</i>]</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">&rsquo;</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e827">24</a>,
-<a class="pageref" href="#xd25e831">24</a>, <a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e3646">141</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd25e6625">208</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">&rdquo;</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">[<i>Deleted</i>]</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e871">25</a>,
-<a class="pageref" href="#xd25e3820">147</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">[<i>Not in source</i>]</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">&ldquo;</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e959">28</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">bedroom</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">bed-room</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e2161">72</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">ther</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">their</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e2223">76</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">&rsquo;</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">&rdquo;</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e2865">105</a>,
-<a class="pageref" href="#xd25e3754">144</a>, <a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e4552">173</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">&ldquo;</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">&lsquo;</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e2868">105</a>,
-<a class="pageref" href="#xd25e3757">144</a>, <a class="pageref" href=
-"#xd25e4555">173</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">&rdquo;</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">&rsquo;</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e3041">113</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">it</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">its</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e3188">120</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">elfiish</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">elfish</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e3317">128</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">possiby</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">possibly</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e3348">129</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">[<i>Not in source</i>]</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">.</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e3368">130</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">,&rsquo;</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">&rsquo;,</td>
-<td class="bottom">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e3371">130</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">.&rsquo;</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">&rsquo;.</td>
-<td class="bottom">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e4436">170</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">[<i>Not in source</i>]</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">,</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e4922">180</a>,
-<a class="pageref" href="#xd25e4932">180</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">courtesy</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">curtsey</td>
-<td class="bottom">3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e5182">184</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">midle</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">middle</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e6599">207</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">semed</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">seemed</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e6647">208</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">ancles</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">ankles</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd25e7463">vi</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">,</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">.</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<h3 class="main">Abbreviations</h3>
-<p>Overview of abbreviations used.</p>
-<table class="abbreviationtable" summary=
-"Overview of abbreviations used.">
-<tr>
-<th>Abbreviation</th>
-<th>Expansion</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">4<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></td>
-<td class="bottom">4 shilling 6 pence</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i></td>
-<td class="bottom">6 shilling 8 pence</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">999<i>l.</i> 19<i>s.</i> 11&frac34;<i>d.</i></td>
-<td class="bottom">999 pounds 19 shilling 11&frac34; pence</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">A.D.</td>
-<td class="bottom">[<i>Expansion not available</i>]</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">B.B.</td>
-<td class="bottom">[<i>Expansion not available</i>]</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">F.L.S.</td>
-<td class="bottom">The Folklore Society</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">F.M.</td>
-<td class="bottom">[<i>Expansion not available</i>]</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">F.R.S.</td>
-<td class="bottom">Fellow of the Royal Society</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">H. G. T.</td>
-<td class="bottom">[<i>Expansion not available</i>]</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">H.R.C.</td>
-<td class="bottom">[<i>Expansion not available</i>]</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">J. H. C.</td>
-<td class="bottom">[<i>Expansion not available</i>]</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">M.A.</td>
-<td class="bottom">Master of Arts</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">M.B.</td>
-<td class="bottom">Bachelor of Medicine</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">Rev.</td>
-<td class="bottom">Reverend</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">St.</td>
-<td class="bottom">Saint</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">T.S.B.</td>
-<td class="bottom">[<i>Expansion not available</i>]</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">W. A. B. C.</td>
-<td class="bottom">[<i>Expansion not available</i>]</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">W. Antiquary</td>
-<td class="bottom">Western Antiquary</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">W. B.</td>
-<td class="bottom">[<i>Expansion not available</i>]</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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