Folk-lore of Shakespeare

Chapter 26

Chapter 2615,057 wordsPublic domain

MISCELLANEOUS CUSTOMS, ETC.

_Badge of Poverty._ In the reign of William III., those who received parish relief had to wear a badge. It was the letter P, with the initial of the parish to which they belonged, in red or blue cloth, on the shoulder of the right sleeve. In "2 Henry VI." (v. 1) Clifford says:

"Might I but know thee by thy household badge."

_Bedfellow._ A proof of the simplicity of manners in olden times is evidenced by the fact that it was customary for men, even of the highest rank, to sleep together. In "Henry V." (ii. 2) Exeter says:

"Nay, but the man that was his bedfellow, Whom he hath dull'd and cloy'd with gracious favours."

"This unseemly custom," says Malone, "continued common till the middle of the last century, if not later." Beaumont and Fletcher, in the "Coxcomb" (i. 1), thus refer to it:

"Must we, that have so long time been as one, Seen cities, countries, kingdoms, and their wonders, Been bedfellows, and in our various journey Mixt all our observations."

In the same way, letters from noblemen to each other often began with the appellation _bedfellow_.[961]

[961] Nares's "Glossary," vol. i. p. 68.

_Curfew Bell_, which is generally supposed to be of Norman origin, is still rung in some of our old country villages, although it has long lost its significance. It seems to have been as important to ghosts as to living men, it being their signal for walking, a license which apparently lasted till the first cock. Fairies, too, and other spirits, were under the same regulations; and hence Prospero, in "The Tempest" (v. 1), says of his elves that they

"rejoice To hear the solemn curfew."

In "King Lear" (iii. 4) we find the fiend Flibbertigibbet obeying the same rule, for Edgar says: "This is the foul fiend Flibbertigibbet; he begins at curfew, and walks till the first cock."

In "Measure for Measure" (iv. 2) we find another allusion:

"_Duke._ The best and wholesom'st spirits of the night Envelope you, good provost! Who call'd here of late?

_Provost._ None, since the curfew rung."

And, once more, in "Romeo and Juliet" (iv. 4), Capulet says:

"Come, stir, stir, stir! the second cock hath crow'd, The curfew bell hath rung, 'tis three o'clock."[962]

[962] See Brand's "Pop. Antiq.," 1849, vol. iii. pp. 220-225; also, Harland and Wilkinson's "Lancashire Folk-Lore," 1867, p. 44.

_Sacring Bell._ This was a bell which rang for processions and other holy ceremonies.[963] It is mentioned in "Henry VIII." (iii. 2), by the Earl of Surrey:

"I'll startle you Worse than the sacring bell."

[963] Dyce's "Glossary," p. 379.

It is rung in the Romish Church to give notice that the "Host" is approaching, and is now called "Sanctus bell," from the words "Sanctus, Sanctus, Sanctus Dominus Deus Sabaoth," pronounced by the priest.

On the graphic passage where Macbeth (ii. 1) says:

"The bell invites me. Hear it not, Duncan; for it is a knell That summons thee to heaven or to hell"--

Malone has this note: "Thus Raleigh, speaking of love, in England's 'Helicon' (1600):

"'It is perhaps that sauncing bell That toules all into heaven or hell.'"

_Sauncing_ being probably a mistake for sacring or saint's bell, originally, perhaps, written "saintis bell." In "Hudibras" we find:

"The old saintis bell that rings all in."

_Carpet-knights._ These were knights dubbed at court by mere favor, and not on the field of battle, for their military exploits. In "Twelfth Night" (iii. 4), Sir Toby defines one of them thus: "He is knight, dubbed with unhatched rapier, and on carpet consideration."

A "trencher knight" was probably synonymous, as in "Love's Labour's Lost" (v. 2):

"Some mumble-news, some trencher-knight, some Dick."

These carpet-knights were sometimes called "knights of the green cloth."[964]

[964] See Douce's "Illustrations of Shakespeare," pp. 65, 66.

_Chair Days._ Days of old age and infirmity. So, in "2 Henry VI." (v. 2), young Clifford, on seeing his dead father, says:

"Wast thou ordain'd, dear father, To lose thy youth in peace, and to achieve The silver livery of advised age, And, in thy reverence, and thy chair-days, thus To die in ruffian battle?"

_Chivalry._ The expression "sworn brothers," which Shakespeare several times employs, refers to the "fratres jurati," who, in the days of chivalry, mutually bound themselves by oath to share each other's fortune. Thus, Falstaff says of Shallow, in "2 Henry IV." (iii. 2): "He talks as familiarly of John o' Gaunt as if he had been sworn brother to him." In "Henry V." (ii. 1), Bardolph says: "we'll be all three sworn brothers to France." In course of time it was used in a laxer sense, to denote intimacy, as in "Much Ado About Nothing" (i. 1), where Beatrice says of Benedick, that "He hath every month a new sworn brother."[965]

[965] We may compare, too, what Coriolanus says (ii. 3): "I will, sir, flatter my sworn brother, the people."

According to the laws of chivalry, a person of superior birth might not be challenged by an inferior; or, if challenged, might refuse combat, a reference to which seems to be made by Cleopatra ("Antony and Cleopatra," ii. 4):

"I will not hurt him.-- These hands do lack nobility, that they strike A meaner than myself."

Again, in "Troilus and Cressida" (v. 4), the same practice is alluded to by Hector, who asks Thersites:

"What art thou, Greek? art thou for Hector's match? Art thou of blood and honour?"

Singer quotes from "Melville's Memoirs" (1735, p. 165): "The Laird of Grange offered to fight Bothwell, who answered that he was not his equal. The like answer made he to Tullibardine. Then my Lord Lindsay offered to fight him, which he could not well refuse; but his heart failed him, and he grew cold on the business."

_Clubs._ According to Malone, it was once a common custom, on the breaking-out of a fray, to call out "Clubs, clubs!" to part the combatants. Thus, in "1 Henry VI." (i. 3), the Mayor declares:

"I'll call for clubs, if you will not away."

In "Titus Andronicus" (ii. 1), Aaron says:

"Clubs, clubs! these lovers will not keep the peace."

"Clubs," too, "was originally the popular cry to call forth the London apprentices, who employed their clubs for the preservation of the public peace. Sometimes, however, they used those weapons to raise a disturbance, as they are described doing in the following passage in 'Henry VIII.' (v. 4): 'I miss'd the meteor once, and hit that woman; who cried out 'Clubs!' when I might see from far some forty truncheoners draw to her succour, which were the hope o' the Strand, where she was quartered.'"[966]

[966] Cf. "Romeo and Juliet," i. 1; "As You Like It," v. 2.

_Color-Lore._ Green eyes have been praised by poets of nearly every land,[967] and, according to Armado, in "Love's Labour's Lost" (i. 2), "Green, indeed, is the colour of lovers."

[967] See Singer's "Shakespeare," vol. viii. p. 204.

In "A Midsummer-Night's Dream" (v. 1), Thisbe laments:

"Lovers, make moan: His eyes were green as leeks."

The Nurse, in her description of Romeo's rival ("Romeo and Juliet," iii. 5), says:

"An eagle, madam, Hath not so green, so quick, so fair an eye As Paris hath."

In the "Two Noble Kinsmen" (v. 1), Emilia, praying to Diana, says:

"O vouchsafe, With that thy rare green eye--which never yet Beheld thing maculate--look on thy virgin."

The words of Armado have been variously explained as alluding to green eyes--Spanish writers being peculiarly enthusiastic in this praise--to the willow worn by unsuccessful lovers, and to their melancholy.[968] It has also been suggested[969] that, as green is the color most suggestive of freshness and spring-time, it may have been considered the most appropriate lover's badge. At the same time, however, it is curious that, as green has been regarded as an ominous color, it should be connected with lovers, for, as an old couplet remarks:

"Those dressed in blue Have lovers true; In green and white, Forsaken quite."[970]

[968] See Douce's "Illustrations of Shakespeare," p. 133.

[969] See an article by Mr. Black, in _Antiquary_, 1881, vol. iii.

[970] See Henderson's "Folk-Lore of the Northern Counties," pp. 34, 35.

In "Merchant of Venice" (iii. 2), "green-eyed jealousy," and in "Othello" (iii. 3), its equivalent, "green-eyed monster," are expressions used by Shakespeare.

_Yellow_ is an epithet often, too, applied to jealousy, by the old writers. In the "Merry Wives of Windsor" (i. 3), Nym says he will possess Ford "with yellowness." In "Much Ado About Nothing" (ii. 1) Beatrice describes the Count as "civil as an orange, and something of that jealous complexion." In "Twelfth Night" (ii. 4), Viola tells the Duke how her father's daughter loved a man, but never told her love:

"She pin'd in thought, And with a green and yellow melancholy She sat like patience on a monument."

_Dinner Customs._ In days gone by there was but one salt-cellar on the table, which was a large piece of plate, generally much ornamented. The tables being long, the salt was commonly placed about the middle, and served as a kind of boundary to the different quality of the guests invited. Those of distinction were ranked above; the space below being assigned to the dependants, inferior relations of the master of the house, etc.[971] Shakespeare would seem to allude to this custom in the "Winter's Tale" (i. 2), where Leontes says:

"lower messes, Perchance, are to this business purblind?"

[971] Gifford's note on "Massinger's Works," 1813, vol. i. p. 170; see Dyce's "Glossary to Shakespeare," pp. 269, 380.

Upon which passage Steevens adds, "Leontes comprehends inferiority of understanding in the idea of inferiority of rank." Ben Jonson, speaking of the characteristics of an insolent coxcomb, remarks: "His fashion is not to take knowledge of him that is beneath him in clothes. He never drinks below the salt."

_Ordinary._ This was a public dinner, where each paid his share, an allusion to which custom is made by Enobarbus, in "Antony and Cleopatra" (ii. 2), who, speaking of Antony, says:

"Being barber'd ten times o'er, goes to the feast, And, for his ordinary, pays his heart For what his eyes eat only."

Again, in "All's Well that Ends Well" (ii. 3), Lafeu says: "I did think thee, for two ordinaries, to be a pretty wise fellow; thou didst make tolerable vent of thy travel."

The "ordinary" also denoted the lounging-place of the men of the town, and the fantastic gallants who herded together. They were, says the author of "Curiosities of Literature" (vol. iii. p. 82), "the exchange for news, the echoing-places for all sorts of town talk; there they might hear of the last new play and poem, and the last fresh widow sighing for some knight to make her a lady; these resorts were attended also to save charges of housekeeping."

_Drinking Customs._ Shakespeare has given several allusions to the old customs associated with drinking, which have always varied in different countries. At the present day many of the drinking customs still observed are very curious, especially those kept up at the universities and inns-of-court.

_Alms-drink_ was a phrase in use, says Warburton, among good fellows, to signify that liquor of another's share which his companion drank to ease him. So, in "Antony and Cleopatra" (ii. 7) one of the servants says of Lepidus: "They have made him drink alms-drink."

_By-drinkings._ This was a phrase for drinkings between meals, and is used by the Hostess in "1 Henry IV." (iii. 3), who says to Falstaff: "You owe money here besides, Sir John, for your diet, and by-drinkings."

_Hooped Pots._ In olden times drinking-pots were made with hoops, so that, when two or more drank from the same tankard, no one should drink more than his share. There were generally three hoops to the pots: hence, in "2 Henry VI." (iv. 2), Cade says: "The three-hooped pot shall have ten hoops." In Nash's "Pierce Pennilesse" we read: "I believe hoopes on quart pots were invented that every man should take his hoope, and no more."

The phrases "to do a man right" and "to do him reason" were, in years gone by, the common expressions in pledging healths; he who drank a bumper expected that a bumper should be drunk to his toast. To this practice alludes the scrap of a song which Silence sings in "2 Henry IV." (v. 3):

"Do me right, And dub me knight: Samingo."

He who drank, too, a bumper on his knee to the health of his mistress was dubbed a knight for the evening. The word Samingo is either a corruption of, or an intended blunder for, San Domingo, but why this saint should be the patron of topers is uncertain.

_Rouse._ According to Gifford,[972] a _rouse_ was a large glass in which a health was given, the drinking of which, by the rest of the company, formed a carouse. Hamlet (i. 4) says:

"The king doth wake to-night, and takes his rouse."

[972] See Dyce, vol. iv. p. 395.

The word occurs again in the following act (1), where Polonius uses the phrase "o'ertook in's rouse;" and in the sense of a bumper, or glass of liquor, in "Othello" (ii. 3), "they have given me a rouse already."

_Sheer Ale._ This term, which is used in the "Taming of the Shrew" (Induction, sc. 2), by Sly--"Ask Marian Hacket, the fat ale-wife of Wincot, if she know me not: if she say I am not fourteen pence on the score for sheer ale"--according to some expositors, means "ale alone, nothing but ale," rather than "unmixed ale."

_Sneak-cup._ This phrase, which is used by Falstaff in "1 Henry IV." (iii. 3)--"the prince is a Jack, a sneak-cup"--was used to denote one who balked his glass.

_Earnest Money._ It was, in olden times, customary to ratify an agreement by a bent coin. In "Henry VIII." (ii. 3), the old lady remarks:

"Tis strange: a three-pence bow'd would hire me, Old as I am, to queen it."

There were, however, no threepences so early as the reign of Henry VIII.

_Exclamations._ "Charity, for the Lord's sake!" was the form of ejaculatory supplication used by imprisoned debtors to the passers-by. So, in Davies's "Epigrams" (1611):

"Good, gentle writers, 'for the Lord's sake, for the Lord's sake,' Like Ludgate prisoner, lo, I, begging, make My mone."

In "Measure for Measure" (iv. 3), the phrase is alluded to by Pompey: "all great doers in our trade, and are now 'for the Lord's sake.'"

"Cry Budget." A watchword. Thus Slender says to Shallow, in the "Merry Wives of Windsor" (v. 2); "We have a nay-word, how to know one another: I come to her in white, and cry 'mum;' she cries 'budget;' and by that we know one another."

"God save the mark." "Romeo and Juliet" (iii. 2). This exclamation has hitherto baffled the research of every commentator. It occurs again in "1 Henry IV." (i. 3); and in the "Merchant of Venice" (ii. 2) and in "Othello" (i. 1), we have "God bless the mark." In the quarto, 1597, instead of "God save the mark" in the first passage quoted, we have "God save the sample," an expression equally obscure.[973]

[973] Staunton's "Shakespeare," vol i. p. 257.

_Halidom._ This exclamation was used, says Minsheu,[974] by old countrymen, by manner of swearing. In "Two Gentlemen of Verona" (iv. 2), the Hostess says: "By my halidom, I was fast asleep;" the probable derivation being _holy_, with the termination _dome._

[974] "Guide into Tongues," 1607.

_Hall! Hall!_ An exclamation formerly used, to make a clear space in a crowd, for any particular purpose, was "_A hall, a hall_." So, in "Romeo and Juliet" (i. 5), Capulet says:

"Come, musicians, play.-- A hall, a hall! give room! and foot it, girls."

_Hay._ This is equivalent to "you have it," an exclamation in fencing, when a thrust or hit is received by the antagonist. In "Romeo and Juliet" (ii. 4), Mercutio speaks of "the punto reverso! the hay!"

_Hold._ To cry _hold!_ when persons were fighting, was an authoritative way of separating them, according to the old military law. So Macbeth, in his struggle with Macduff, says:

"And damn'd be he that first cries, 'Hold, enough!'"

We may compare Lady Macbeth's words (i. 5):

"Nor heaven peep through the blanket of the dark, To cry, 'Hold, hold!'"

"I' the name of me." A vulgar exclamation formerly in use. So in the "Winter's Tale" (iv. 2) it is used by the Clown.

"_O ho, O ho!_" This savage exclamation was, says Steevens, constantly appropriated by the writers of our ancient mysteries and moralities to the devil. In "The Tempest" (i. 2), Caliban, when rebuked by Prospero for seeking "to violate the honor of my child," replies:

"O ho, O ho! would it had been done! Thou didst prevent me; I had peopled else This isle with Calibans."

_Push._ An exclamation equivalent to _pish_.[975] It is used by Leonato in "Much Ado About Nothing" (v. 1):

"And made a push at chance and sufferance;"

and again, in "Timon of Athens" (iii. 6), where one of the lords says: "Push! did you see my cap?"

[975] See Dyce's "Glossary," p. 343.

_Rivo_ was an exclamation often used in Bacchanalian revels, but its origin is uncertain. It occurs in "1 Henry IV." (ii. 4): "'Rivo!' says the drunkard." Gifford suggests that it is "corrupted, perhaps, from the Spanish _rio_, which is figuratively used for a large quantity of liquor," a derivation, however, which Mr. Dyce does not think probable.

_Sneck-up._ This was an exclamation of contempt, equivalent to "go and hang yourself."[976] It is used by Sir Toby in "Twelfth Night" (ii. 3), in reply to Malvolio's rebuke: "We did keep time, sir, in our catches. Sneck up!"

[976] Dyce's "Glossary," p. 402.

_So-ho._ This is the cry of sportsmen when the hare is found in her seat.

_Spy._ "I spy" is the usual exclamation at a well-known childish game called "Hie spy, hie!"[977]

[977] Ibid., vol. vi. p. 45.

_Tailor._ Johnson explains the following words of Puck in "A Midsummer-Night's Dream" (ii. 1) thus:

"The wisest aunt, telling the saddest tale, Sometime for three-foot stool mistaketh me; Then slip I from her bum, down topples she, And 'tailor' cries, and falls into a cough."

"The custom of crying tailor at a sudden fall backwards, I think I remember to have observed. He that slips beside his chair, falls as a tailor squats upon his board." Mr. Dyce,[978] however, adds, "it may be doubted if this explains the text."

[978] Ibid., p. 43.

_Tilly-vally._ An exclamation of contempt, the etymology of which is uncertain. According to Douce it is a hunting phrase borrowed from the French. Singer says it is equivalent to _fiddle-faddle_. It occurs in "Twelfth Night" (ii. 3), being used by Sir Toby: "Am not I consanguineous? am I not of her blood? Tilly-vally, lady!"

In "2 Henry IV." (ii. 4), the Hostess corrupts it to _tilly-fally_: "Tilly-fally, Sir John, ne'er tell me: your ancient swaggerer comes not in my doors."

As a further illustration of the use of this word, Singer quotes a conversation between Sir Thomas More and his wife, given in Roper's Life: "Is not this house, quoth he, as nigh heaven as my own? To whom she, after her accustomed homely fashion, not liking such talk, answered, Tylle-valle, Tylle-valle."

_Westward, ho._ This was one of the exclamations of the watermen who plied on the Thames, and is used by Viola in "Twelfth Night" (iii. 1). Dyce[979] quotes from Peel's "Edward I." to illustrate the use of this word:

"_Queen Elinor._ Ay, good woman, conduct me to the court, That there I may bewail my sinful life, And call to God to save my wretched soul. [_A cry of 'Westward, ho!'_ Woman, what noise is this I hear?

_Potter's Wife._ An like your grace, it is the watermen that call for passengers to go westward now."

[979] "Glossary," p. 497; see Nares's "Glossary," vol. ii. p. 952.

Dekker took the exclamation "Westward, ho!" for the title of a comedy; and Jonson, Chapman, and Marston adopted that of "Eastward, ho!" for one jointly written by them a few years afterwards.

_Fools._ Mr. Douce, in his essay "On the Clowns and Fools of Shakespeare," has made a ninefold division of English fools, according to quality or place of employment, as the domestic fool, the city or corporation fool, the tavern fool, the fool of the mysteries and moralities. The last is generally called the "vice," and is the original of the stage clowns so common among the dramatists of the time of Elizabeth, and who embody so much of the wit of Shakespeare.

A very palpable distinction is that which distinguishes between such creatures as were chosen to excite to laughter from some deformity of mind or body, and such as were chosen for a certain alertness of mind and power of repartee--or, briefly, butts and wits. The dress of the regular court fool of the middle ages was not altogether a rigid uniform, but seems to have changed from time to time. The head was shaved, the coat was motley, and the breeches tight, with, generally, one leg different in color from the other. The head was covered with a garment resembling a monk's cowl, which fell over the breast and shoulders, and often bore asses' ears, and was crested with a coxcomb, while bells hung from various parts of the attire. The fool's bauble was a short staff bearing a ridiculous head, to which was sometimes attached an inflated bladder, by which sham castigations were inflicted; a long petticoat was also occasionally worn, but seems to have belonged rather to the idiots than the wits. The fool's business was to amuse his master, to excite his laughter by sharp contrast, to prevent the over-oppression of state affairs, and, in harmony with a well-known physiological precept, by his liveliness at meals to assist his lord's digestion.[980]

[980] "Encyclopædia Britannica," 1879, vol. ix. p. 366; see Doran's "History of Court Fools," 1858.

The custom of shaving and nicking the head of a fool is very old. There is a penalty of ten shillings, in one of Alfred's Ecclesiastical Laws, if one opprobriously shave a common man like a fool; and Malone cites a passage from "The Choice of Change," etc., by S. R. Gent, 4to, 1598--"Three things used by monks, which provoke other men to laugh at their follies: 1. They are shaven and notched on the head like fooles."

In the "Comedy of Errors" (v. 1), the servant says:

"My master preaches patience to him, and the while His man with scissors nicks him like a fool."

_Forfeits._ In order to enforce some kind of regularity in barbers' shops, which were once places of great resort for the idle, certain laws were usually made, the breaking of which was to be punished by forfeits. Rules of this kind, however, were as often laughed at as obeyed. So, in "Measure for Measure" (v. 1):

"laws for all faults, But faults so countenanc'd, that the strong statutes Stand like the forfeits in a barber's shop, As much in mock as mark."

_Gambling._ It was once customary for a person when going abroad "to put out" a sum of money on condition of receiving good interest for it on his return home; if he never returned the deposit was forfeited. Hence such a one was called "a putter-out." It is to this practice that reference is made in the following passage ("The Tempest," iii. 3):

"or that there were such men Whose heads stood in their breasts? which now we find Each putter-out of five for one will bring us Good warrant of."

Malone quotes from Moryson's "Itinerary" (1617, pt. i. p. 198): "This custom of giving out money upon these adventures was first used in court and noblemen;" a practice which "banker-outs, stage-players, and men of base condition had drawn into contempt," by undertaking journeys merely for gain upon their return. In Ben Jonson's "Every Man Out of His Humour" (ii. 3) the custom is thus alluded to: "I do intend, this year of jubilee coming on, to travel; and because I will not altogether go upon expence, I am determined to put forth some five thousand pound, to be paid me _five for one_, upon the return of my wife, myself, and my dog, from the Turk's court at Constantinople. If all, or either of us, miscarry in the journey, 'tis gone; if we be successful, why then there will be five and twenty thousand pound to entertain time with."

_Garters._ It was the regular amorous etiquette in the reign of Elizabeth,[981] "for a man, professing himself deeply in love, to assume certain outward marks of negligence in his dress, as if too much occupied by his passion to attend to such trifles, or driven by despondency to a forgetfulness of all outward appearance." His "garters, in particular, were not to be tied up." In "As You Like It" (iii. 2), this custom is described by Rosalind, who tells Orlando: "There is none of my uncle's marks upon you: he taught me how to know a man in love; ... your hose should be ungarter'd, your bonnet unbanded, your sleeve unbuttoned, your shoe untied, and every thing about you demonstrating a careless desolation." Another fashion which seems to have been common among the beaux of Queen Elizabeth's reign, was that of wearing garters across about the knees, an allusion to which we find in "Twelfth Night" (ii. 5), in the letter which Malvolio reads: "Remember who commended thy yellow stockings, and wished to see thee ever cross-gartered." Douce quotes from the old comedy of "The Two Angrie Women of Abingdon" (1599), where a servingman is thus described:

"Hee's a fine neate fellow, A spruce slave, I warrant ye, he'ele have His cruell garters crosse about the knee."

[981] Nares's "Glossary," vol. i. p. 350.

In days gone by, when garters were worn in sight, the upper classes wore very expensive ones, but the lower orders worsted galloon ones. Prince Henry calls Poins ("1 Henry IV.," ii. 4) a "caddis garter," meaning a man of mean rank.

_Gaudy Days._ Feast-days in the colleges of our universities are so called, as they were formerly at the inns-of-court. In "Antony and Cleopatra" (iii. 13), Antony says:

"come, Let's have one other gaudy night: call to me All my sad captains; fill our bowls once more; Let's mock the midnight bell."

They were so called, says Blount, "from _gaudium_, because, to say truth, they are days of joy, as bringing good cheer to the hungry students."

_Glove._ As an article of dress the glove held a conspicuous place in many of our old customs and ceremonies. Thus, it was often worn in the hat as a favor, and as a mark to be challenged by an enemy, as is illustrated by the following dialogue in "Henry V." (iv. 1):

"_King Henry._ Give me any gage of thine, and I will wear it in my bonnet: then, if ever thou darest acknowledge it, I will make it my quarrel.

_Williams._ Here's my glove: give me another of thine.

_King Henry._ There.

_Williams._ This will I also wear in my cap: if ever thou come to me and say, after to-morrow, 'This is my glove,' by this hand, I will take thee a box on the ear.

_King Henry._ If ever I live to see it, I will challenge it.

_Williams._ Thou darest as well be hanged."

Again, in "Troilus and Cressida" (v. 2), Diomedes, taking the glove from Cressida, says:

"To-morrow will I wear it on my helm, And grieve his spirit that dares not challenge it."

And in "Richard II." (v. 3), Percy narrates how Prince Henry boasted that--

"he would unto the stews, And from the common'st creature pluck a glove, And wear it as a favour; and with that He would unhorse the lustiest challenger."

The glove was also worn in the hat as the memorial of a friend, and in the "Merchant of Venice" (iv. 1), Portia, in her assumed character, asks Bassanio for his gloves, which she says she will wear for his sake:

"Give me your gloves, I'll wear them for your sake."

When the fashion of thus wearing gloves declined, "it fell into the hands of coxcombical and dissolute servants."[982] Thus Edgar, in "King Lear" (iii. 4), being asked by Lear what he had been, replies: "A serving-man, proud in heart and mind; that curled my hair; wore gloves in my cap."

[982] Nares's "Glossary," vol. i. p. 371.

To throw the glove, as the signal of a challenge, is alluded to by Troilus (iv. 4), who tells Cressida:

"For I will throw my glove to Death himself, That's there's no maculation in thy heart"

--the meaning being, says Johnson: "I will challenge Death himself in defence of thy fidelity."

The glove then thrown down was popularly called "a gage,"[983] from the French, signifying a pledge, and in "Richard II." (iv. 1), it is so termed by Aumerle:

"There is my gage, the manual seal of death, That marks thee out for hell."

[983] The verb "to gage," or "to pledge," occurs in "Merchant of Venice," i. 1:

"but my chief care Is, to come fairly off from the great debts Wherein my time, something too prodigal, Hath left me gaged."

Cf. "1 Henry IV.," i. 3.

In the same play it is also called "honor's pawn." Thus Bolingbroke (i. 1) says to Mowbray:

"Pale trembling coward, there I throw my gage, Disclaiming here the kindred of the king; And lay aside my high blood's royalty, Which fear, not reverence, makes thee to except. If guilty dread hath left thee so much strength As to take up mine honour's pawn, then stoop."

And further on (iv. 1), one of the lords employs the same phrase:

"There is my honour's pawn; Engage it to the trial, if thou dar'st."

It is difficult to discover why the glove was recognized as the sign of defiance. Brand[984] suggests that the custom of dropping or sending the glove, "as the signal of a challenge, may have been derived from the circumstance of its being the cover of the hand, and therefore put for the hand itself. The giving of the hand is well known to intimate that the person who does so will not deceive, but stand to his agreement. _To shake hands upon it_ would not be very delicate in an agreement to fight, and, therefore, gloves may possibly have been deputed as substitutes."

[984] "Pop. Antiq.," vol. ii. p. 127.

Again, the glove was often thrown down as a pledge, as in "Timon of Athens" (v. 4), where the senator says to Alcibiades:

"Throw thy glove, Or any token of thine honour else, That thou wilt use the wars as thy redress, And not as our confusion."

Whereupon Alcibiades answers: "Then there's my glove." In "King Lear" (v. 2), Albany thus speaks:

"Thou art arm'd, Gloster:--let the trumpet sound: If none appear to prove, upon thy person, Thy heinous, manifest, and many treasons, There is my pledge; [_Throwing down a glove_] I'll prove it on thy heart."

In "Troilus and Cressida" (iv. 5), Hector further alludes to this practice:

"Your quondam wife swears still by Venus' glove: She's well, but bade me not commend her to you."

Scented gloves were formerly given away as presents. In "Winter's Tale" the custom is referred to by Mopsa, who says to the Clown (iv. 4): "Come, you promised me a tawdry lace, and a pair of sweet gloves;" and Autolycus is introduced singing:

"Gloves as sweet as damask roses."

In "Much Ado About Nothing" (iii. 4), Hero says: "These gloves the count sent me; they are an excellent perfume." Trinity College, Oxford, not ungrateful to its founder and his spouse, has many entries, after the date of 1556, in the Bursar's books, "pro fumigatis chirothecis," for perfumed gloves.

_Kiss._ In years past, a kiss was the recognized fee of a lady's partner, and as such is noticed in "Henry VIII." (i. 4):

"I were unmannerly to take you out, And not to kiss you."

In "The Tempest" (i. 2) it is alluded to in Ariel's song:

"Come unto these yellow sands, And then take hands: Court'sied when you have, and kiss'd, The wild waves whist, Foot it featly here and there, And, sweet sprites, the burthen bear."

There is probably a veiled allusion to the same ceremony in "Winter's Tale" (iv. 4), where, at the dance of shepherds and shepherdesses, the following dialogue occurs:

"_Clown._ Come on, strike up!

_Dorcas._ Mopsa must be your mistress: marry, garlic, To mend her kissing with.

_Mopsa._ Now, in good time!

_Clown._ Not a word, a word; we stand upon our manners. Come, strike up!"

In an old treatise entitled the "Use and Abuse of Dancing and Minstrelsie" we read:

"But some reply, what fools will daunce, If that when daunce is doon, He may not have at ladyes lips, That which in daunce he doon."

The practice of saluting ladies with a kiss was once very general, and in the "Merry Wives of Windsor" to kiss the hostess is indirectly spoken of as a common courtesy of the day.

In "Romeo and Juliet" (i. 5) a further instance occurs, where Romeo kisses Juliet at Capulet's entertainment; and, in "Henry VIII." (i. 4), Lord Sands is represented as kissing Anne Bullen, next to whom he sits at supper.

The celebrated "kissing comfits" were sugar-plums, once extensively used by fashionable persons to make the breath sweet. Falstaff, in the "Merry Wives of Windsor" (v. 5), when embracing Mrs. Ford, says: "Let it thunder to the tune of 'Green Sleeves,' hail kissing comfits, and snow eringoes."

In "Measure for Measure" (iv. 1, song) kisses are referred to as "seals of love." A Judas kiss was a kiss of treachery. Thus, in "3 Henry VI." (v. 7), Gloster says:

"so Judas kiss'd his master, And cried 'All hail!' when-as he meant all harm."

_Lace Songs._ These were jingling rhymes, sung by young girls while engaged at their lace-pillows. A practice alluded to by the Duke in "Twelfth Night" (ii. 4):

"O, fellow, come, the song we had last night.-- Mark it, Cesario; it is old and plain; The spinsters and the knitters in the sun, And the free maids that weave their thread with bones Do use to chant it."

Miss Baker, in her "Northamptonshire Glossary" (1854, vol. i. p. 378). says, "The movement of the bobbins is timed by the modulation of the tune, which excites them to regularity and cheerfulness; and it is a pleasing sight to see them, in warm, sunny weather, seated outside their cottage doors, or seeking the shade of a neighboring tree; where, in cheerful groups, they unite in singing their rude and simple rhymes. The following is a specimen of one of these ditties, most descriptive of the occupation:

"'Nineteen long lines, bring over my down, The faster I work it, I'll shorten my score, But if I do play, it'll stick to a stay, So heigh ho! little fingers, and twank it away.'"

_Letters._ The word Emmanuel was formerly prefixed, probably from feelings of piety, to letters and public deeds. So in "2 Henry VI." (iv. 2) there is the following allusion to it:

"_Cade._ What is thy name?

_Clerk._ Emmanuel.

_Dick._ They use to write it on the top of letters."

Staunton says: "We can refer to one MS. alone, in the British Museum (Ad. MSS. 19, 400), which contains no less than fourteen private epistles headed 'Emanewell,' or 'Jesus Immanuel.'"

Another superscription of a letter in years gone by was "to the bosom" of a lady. Thus Hamlet (ii. 2) says in his letter to Ophelia:

"In her excellent white bosom, these."

And in the "Two Gentlemen of Verona" (iii. 1), Proteus says:

"Thy letters may be here, though thou art hence; Which, being writ to me, shall be deliver'd Even in the milk-white bosom of thy love."

This custom seems to have originated in the circumstance of women having a pocket in the forepart of their stays, in which, according to Steevens, "they carried not only love-letters and love-tokens, but even their money and materials for needlework."

_Livery._ The phrase "sue my livery," which occurs in the following speech of Bolingbroke ("Richard II." ii. 3),

"I am denied to sue my livery here, And yet my letters-patents give me leave; My father's goods are all distrain'd, and sold, And these, and all, are all amiss employ'd,"

is thus explained by Malone: "On the death of every person who held by knight's service, the escheator of the court in which he died summoned a jury, who inquired what estate he died seized of, and of what age his next heir was. If he was under age, he became a ward of the king's; but if he was found to be of full age, he then had a right to sue out a writ of _ouster le main_, that is, his livery, that the king's hand might be taken off, and the land delivered to him." York ("Richard II.," ii. 1) also says:

"If you do wrongfully seize Hereford's rights, Call in the letters-patents that he hath By his attorneys-general to sue His livery."

_Love-Day._ This denoted a day of amity or reconciliation; an expression which is used by Saturninus in "Titus Andronicus" (i. 1):

"You are my guest, Lavinia, and your friends.-- This day shall be a love-day, Tamora."

MILITARY LORE. _Fleshment._ This is a military term; a young soldier being said to _flesh_ his sword the first time he draws blood with it. In "King Lear" (ii. 2), Oswald relates how Kent

"in the fleshment of this dread exploit, Drew on me here again,"

upon which passage Singer (vol. ix. p. 377) has this note: "Fleshment, therefore, is here metaphorically applied to the first act which Kent, in his new capacity, had performed for his master; and, at the same time, in a sarcastic sense, as though he had esteemed it an heroic exploit to trip a man behind, who was actually falling." The phrase occurs again in "1 Henry IV." (v. 4), where Prince Henry tells his brother:

"Come, brother John, full bravely hast thou flesh'd Thy maiden sword."

_Swearing by the Sword._ According to Nares,[985] "the singular mixture of religious and military fanaticism which arose from the Crusades gave rise to the custom of taking a solemn oath upon a sword. In a plain, unenriched sword, the separation between the blade and the hilt was usually a straight transverse bar, which, suggesting the idea of a cross, added to the devotion which every true knight felt for his favorite weapon, and evidently led to this practice." Hamlet makes Horatio swear that he will never divulge having seen the Ghost (i. 5):

"Never to speak of this that you have seen, Swear by my sword."

[985] "Glossary," vol. ii. p. 858; see Dyce's "Glossary," p. 431.

In the "Winter's Tale" (ii. 3), Leonato says:

"Swear by this sword Thou wilt perform my bidding."

The cross of the sword is also mentioned to illustrate the true bearing of the oath. Hence, in "1 Henry IV." (ii. 4), Falstaff says jestingly of Glendower, that he "swore the devil his true liegeman upon the cross of a Welsh hook."[986] On account of the practice of swearing by a sword, or, rather, by the cross or upper end of it, the name of _Jesus_ was sometimes inscribed on the handle or some other part.

[986] A Welsh hook was a sort of bill, hooked at the end, and with a long handle. See Dyce's "Glossary," p. 497; and Singer's "Shakespeare," vol. ix. p. 168.

_Mining Terms._ According to Mr. Collier, the phrase "truepenny" is a mining term current in the north of England, signifying a particular indication in the soil, of the direction in which ore is to be found. Thus Hamlet (i. 5) says

"Ah, ha, boy! say'st thou so? art thou there, truepenny?"

when making Horatio and Marcellus again swear that they will not divulge having seen the ghost.

_Patrons._ The custom of clergymen praying for their patrons, in what is called the bidding prayer, seems alluded to by Kent in "King Lear" (i. 1):

"Royal Lear, Whom I have ever honour'd as my king, Lov'd as my father, as my master follow'd, As my great patron thought on in my prayers."

_Sagittary._ This was a monster, half man, half beast, described as a terrible archer; neighing like a horse, and with its eyes of fire striking men dead as if with lightning. In "Troilus and Cressida" (v. 5), Agamemnon says:

"The dreadful Sagittary Appals our numbers."

Hence any deadly shot was called a sagittary. In "Othello" (i. I) the barrack is so named from the figure of an archer over the door.

_Salad Days._ Days of green youth and inexperience. Cleopatra says (i. 5):

"My salad days, When I was green in judgment:--cold in blood."

_Salt._ The salt of youth is that vigor and strong passion which then predominates. The term is several times used by Shakespeare for strong amorous passion. Iago, in "Othello" (iii. 3), refers to it as "hot as monkeys, as salt as wolves in pride." In "Measure for Measure" (v. I), the Duke calls Angelo's base passion his "salt imagination," because he supposed his victim to be Isabella, and not his betrothed wife, whom he was forced by the Duke to marry.[987]

[987] Brewer's "Dictionary of Phrase and Fable," p. 782.

_Salutations._ God-den was used by our forefathers as soon as noon was past, after which time "good-morrow" or "good-day" was esteemed improper; the phrase "God ye good den" being a contraction of "God give you a good evening." This fully appears from the following passage in "Romeo and Juliet" (ii. 4):

"_Nurse._ God ye good morrow, gentlemen.

_Mercutio._ God ye good den, fair gentlewoman."

Upon being thus corrected, the Nurse asks, "Is it good den?" to which Mercutio replies, "'Tis no less, I tell you, for the bawdy hand of the dial is now upon the prick of noon."

A further corruption of the same phrase was "God dig-you-den," as used by Costard in "Love's Labour's Lost" (iv. 1): "God dig-you-den all!" Shakespeare uses it several times, as in "Titus Andronicus" (iv. 4), where the Clown says: "God and Saint Stephen give you good den;" and in "King John" (i. 1) we have "Good-den, Sir Richard!"

Another old popular salutation was "good even and twenty" ("Merry Wives of Windsor," ii. 1), equivalent to "twenty good-evenings." Mr. Halliwell-Phillipps quotes a similar phrase from Elliot's "Fruits of the French" (1593), "God night, and a thousand to everybody."

We may also compare the phrase "good deed" in "Winter's Tale" (i. 2)--a species of asseveration, as "in very deed."

_Servants Customs._ The old custom of the servants of great families taking an oath of fidelity on their entrance into office--as is still the case with those of the sovereign--is alluded to by Posthumus in "Cymbeline" (ii. 4), where, speaking of Imogen's servants, he says:

"Her attendants are All sworn and honourable."[988]

[988] See Percy's "Northumberland Household Book," p. 49.

Gold chains were formerly worn by persons of rank and dignity, and by rich merchants--a fashion which descended to upper servants in great houses--and by stewards as badges of office. These chains were usually cleaned by being rubbed with crumbs. Hence, in "Twelfth Night" (ii. 3), Sir Toby says to the Clown:

"Go, sir, rub your chain with crumbs."

In days gone by, too, it was customary for the servants of the nobility, particularly the gentleman-usher, to attend bare-headed. In the procession to the trial in "Henry VIII." (ii. 4), one of the persons enumerated is a gentleman-usher "bare-headed." On grand occasions, coachmen, also, drove bare-headed, a practice alluded to in Beaumont and Fletcher's "Woman-Hater" (iii. 2):

"Or a pleated lock, or a bareheaded coachman, This sits like a sign where great ladies are To be sold within."

_Sheriffs' Post._ At the doors of sheriffs were usually set up ornamental posts, on which royal and civic proclamations were fixed. So, in "Twelfth Night" (i. 5), Malvolio says: "He'll stand at your door like a sheriff's post." "A pair of mayors' posts," says Staunton, "are still standing in Norwich, which, from the initials T. P., and the date 159, are conjectured to have belonged to Thomas Pettys, who was mayor of that city in 1592."

_Shoeing-Horn._ This, from its convenient use in drawing on a tight shoe, was applied in a jocular metaphor to other subservient and tractable assistants. Thus Thersites, in "Troilus and Cressida" (v. 1), in his railing mood gives this name to Menelaus, whom he calls "a thrifty shoeing-horn in a chain, hanging at his brother's [Agamemnon] leg."

It was also employed as a contemptuous name for danglers on young women.

In the same way "shoe-tye" became a characteristic name for a traveller, a term used by Shakespeare in "Measure for Measure" (iv. 3), "Master Forthright the tilter, and brave Master Shoe-tie, the great traveller."

_A Solemn Supper._ In Shakespeare's day this was a phrase for a feast or banquet given on any important occasion, such as a birth, marriage, etc. Macbeth says (iii. 1):

"To-night we hold a solemn supper, sir, And I'll request your presence."

Howel, in a letter to Sir T. Hawke, 1636, says: "I was invited yesternight to a _solemne supper_ by B. J. [Ben Jonson], where you were deeply remembered."

So, in "Romeo and Juliet" (i. 5), Tybalt says:

"What! dares the slave Come hither, cover'd with an antic face, To fleer and scorn at our solemnity?"

And in "All's Well that Ends Well" (ii. 3), the King, on the conclusion of the contract between Helena and Bertram, says:

"The solemn feast Shall more attend upon the coming space, Expecting absent friends."

_Statute Caps._ These were woollen caps enforced by Statute 13 Elizabeth, which, says Strype, in his "Annals" (vol. ii. p. 74), was "for continuance of making and wearing woollen caps in behalf of the trade of cappers; providing that all above the age of six years (excepting the nobility and some others) should on Sabbath-days and holy-days wear caps of wool, knit thicked, and drest in England, upon penalty of ten groats." Thus, in "Love's Labour's Lost" (v. 2), Rosaline says:

"Well, better wits have worn plain statute-caps."

Jonson considered that the statute caps alluded to were those worn by the members of the universities.

_Theatrical Lore._ At the conclusion of a play, or of the epilogue, it was formerly customary for the actors to kneel down on the stage, and pray for the sovereign, nobility, clergy, and sometimes for the commons. So, in the epilogue to "2 Henry IV.," the dancer says: "My tongue is weary; when my legs are too, I will bid you good night; and so kneel down before you:--but, indeed, to pray for the queen." Collier, in his "History of English Dramatic Poetry" (vol. iii. p. 445), tells us that this practice continued in the commencement of the 17th century.

_Tournaments._ In "Coriolanus" (ii. 1) Shakespeare attributes some of the customs of his own times to a people who were wholly unacquainted with them. In the following passage we have an exact description of what occurred at tiltings and tournaments when a combatant had distinguished himself:

"Matrons flung gloves, Ladies and maids their scarfs and handkerchers, Upon him as he pass'd: the nobles bended, As to Jove's statue; and the commons made A shower and thunder with their caps and shouts: never saw the like."[989]

[989] See Singer's "Shakespeare," vol. vii. p. 350.

An allusion to the mock tournaments, in which the combatants were armed with rushes in place of spears, is used in "Othello" (v. 2):

"Man but a rush against Othello's breast."

_Trumpet._ In olden times it was the fashion for persons of distinction, when visiting, to be accompanied by a trumpeter, who announced their approach by a flourish of his trumpet. It is to this custom, Staunton[990] thinks, that Lorenzo refers in the "Merchant of Venice" (v. 1), where he tells Portia:

"Your husband is at hand; I hear his trumpet."

[990] "Shakespeare," 1864, vol. i. p. 61.

WAR-CRY. "_God and Saint George!_"--the common cry of the English soldier when he charged the enemy. "Richard III." (v. 3). The author of the "Old Arte of Warre," printed in the latter end of Queen Elizabeth's reign, formally enjoins the use of this cry among his military laws (p. 84): "Item. That all souldiers entring into battaile, assaulte, skirmishe, or other faction of armes, shall have for their common cry-word, 'Saint George, forward, or upon them, Saint George!' whereby the souldier is much comforted to minde the ancient valour of England, which with that name has been so often victorious; and therefore he who upon any sinister zeale shall maliciously omit so fortunate a name, shall be severely punished for his obstinate, erroneous heart and perverse mind."

"_Havoc!_" To cry "havoc" appears to have been a signal for indiscriminate slaughter. The expression occurs in "King John" (ii. 1): "Cry havoc, kings!" In "Coriolanus" Menenius says (iii. 1):

"Do not cry havoc, where you should but hunt With modest warrant."

And in "Julius Cæsar" (iii. 1):

"Cry 'Havoc!' and let slip the dogs of war."

"_Kill, kill, kill, kill, kill him!_" This was the ancient cry of the English troops when they charged the enemy. It occurs where the conspirators kill Coriolanus (v. 6).

_Leet-Ale._ This was the dinner provided for the jury and customary tenants at the court-leet of a manor, or "view of frank-pledge," formerly held once or twice a year, before the steward of the leet.[991] To this court Shakespeare alludes in the "Taming of the Shrew" (i. 2), where the servant tells Sly that in his dream he would "rail upon the hostess of the house," and threaten to "present her at the leet."

[991] See page 312.

Aubrey, in his MS. History of Wiltshire, 1678, tells us, too, how "in the Easter holidays was the Clerk's ale for his private benefit, and the solace of the neighbourhood."

INDEX.

Aconite, its deadly poison, 201.

_Adonis horti_, 469.

Agate, applied to a diminutive person, 12, 390.

Ague, spider a cure for, 258.

Air, drizzling dew, 90.

All hid, all hid, children's game, 395.

All-Saints' Day, 326.

All-Souls' Day, 327.

Almanacs, 505.

Alms-drink, 527.

Alphabet, called Christ-cross-row, 508.

Amaimon, name of evil spirit, 60.

Amulets, 505.

Anemone, legend relating to, 203.

Ant, 250.

Antic, a dance, 424.

Ape, term of contempt or endearment, 161; leading of, in hell, 161.

Apostle-spoons, 336, 337.

Apple, 203, 204.

Apple-John, name of apple, 204.

Apple-squire, 204, note.

Apricock or apricot, 208.

Archery, 394.

Ariel, fairy so called, 83, 162.

Aroint thee, meaning of, 41.

Aspen, supplied wood of Cross, 208; trembling of, 209.

Ass, 161.

Astrology, 80-82.

Audry's (St.) Day, 324; lace, 325.

Baby-in-the-eye, 483.

Bachelor's buttons, 209.

Backgammon, 396.

Badge of Poverty, 521.

Baffle, old punishment, 434.

Bagatelle, 422.

Bakie bird, name of bat, 163.

Balm, curative properties of, 210; as oil of consecration, 211.

Bandy, term at tennis, 420.

Barbason, evil spirit, 60.

Barbers' forfeits, 533.

Barefoot, dancing, 354.

Barla-breikis, 396.

Barley-break, 396.

Barley broth, 211.

Barnacle goose, 97.

Bartholomew's (St.) Day, 321.

Bartholomew Fair, 321; pigs 321.

Base, old game, 397.

Basilisk, 174.

Basins, burning, held before the eyes, 433.

Bat, superstitions relating to, 162.

Bat-fowling, 398.

Bate, term in falconry, 125, note.

Bay-tree, ominous, 211.

Bear, folk-lore of, 163; caught by mirrors, 164; baiting, 164.

Beard, characteristic of a witch, 29; customs associated with, 486; mutilation of, considered an outrage, 486; stroking of, preparatory to a favor, 486; swearing by, 487; shape of, 487.

Beauty, characteristic of fairies, 10.

Bedfellow, custom of having, 521.

Beef, supposed to impair intellect, 496.

Beetle, old name for, 100.

Belemnite, 92.

Bell, tolling of, at funerals, 381; curfew, 85, 521.

Belly-blind, old game, 409.

Bergomask, dance, 424.

Betrothing customs, 342-350.

Bid the base, 398.

Bilboes, punishment, 435.

Billiards, 399.

Bird-batting, 398, note.

Birding, term of hawking, 128.

Birth and baptism, 332-341.

Biting of thumb, as an insult, 492.

Bitter-sweeting, apple so called, 205.

Blackbird, 100.

Black Monday, 302, 303.

Bleeding, custom of, in spring, 266; cures for, 264, 265.

Blessed thistle, 222.

Blindness, 266.

Blind-worm, 255.

Blister, superstition relating to, 266.

Blood, thickened by emotional influences, 477; phrases connected with, 476, 477.

Blood-drinking sighs, 289.

Blood-sucker, name for leech, 281.

Blue-bottle, insect so called, 250.

Boar-hunting, 166.

Body, trembling of, 475.

Boiling to death, old punishment, 433.

Bone-ace, old game, 399.

Bone-ache, 267.

Boots, to give the, harvest custom, 322.

Bots, 251.

Brain, notions relating to, 478.

Brain-pan, name for skull, 479.

Brand, old punishment, 436.

Brawl, old dance, 425.

Breech, term for whipping, 436.

Breese, 252.

Bridal-bed, blessing of, 355; decorating with flowers, 355.

Bridal couple serenaded, 357.

Bride-ale, 312.

Bride's veil, 353; hair loose at wedding ceremony, 352.

Brine, soaking in, old punishment, 434.

Bruise, remedies for, 268.

Bubukle, name for pimple, 268.

Bull-baiting, 168.

Bullfinch, 101, note.

Bully-rook, term of reproach, 153.

Burn, remedy for, 268.

Buzzard, 100.

By-drinkings, 527.

Cakes and ale at festivals, 331.

Camomile, 212.

Canary, old dance, 425.

Candles of the night, stars so called, 83.

Carbuncle, supernatural qualities of, 390.

Cards, playing, 401.

Carnations, 220.

Carp, most cunning of fishes, 497.

Carraways, 207.

Castor and Pollux, meteors so called, 83.

Cat, familiar of witches, 168-171; said to have nine lives, 172; used as a term of contempt, 173.

Cataract, 268, 269.

Cattle, destroyed by witches, 39.

Ceremonies, omens from sacrifices, 506.

Chaffinch, 100.

Challenge, glove sent as a, 537.

Chameleon, said to feed on air, 173; changes color, 174.

Changelings, 11, 24, 333, 334.

Charity, St., 320.

Charles's wain, 80.

Charms, 506.

Check, term in hawking, 123.

Cherry-pit, old game, 401.

Cherry-tree, in connection with cuckoo-rhyme, 111.

Chess, 402.

Chester mysteries, 311.

Chewet, meaning of term, 101.

Chilblains, 269.

Children of the revels, 297.

Christ-cross-row, name for alphabet, 508.

Christening day, 338.

Christenings, entertainments at, 338.

Christmas, customs at, 329; carol, 329; eve, cock-crow on, 103; gambol, 329; wassail-bowl at, 330; candle, 330; mummers, 331; nutmeg, gift at, 233.

Christom child, 340.

Chrysolite, supernatural virtues of, 391.

Cicely, St., 321, note.

Cinders of the elements, stars so called, 83.

Cinque-pace, old dance, 425.

Clacking at Easter, 302.

Clare's (St.) fire, meteor so called, 83.

Closing eye of the dead, 372.

Clouds, weather-lore of, 96.

Cloud-in-the-face, term applied to a horse, 191.

Clover-flowers, 212.

Cobwebs, used for stanching blood, 265.

Cock, crows on Christmas Eve, 103; spirits disappear at cock-crow, 48.

Cock-a-hoop, applied to a reckless person, 107.

Cockatrice, superstitions relating to, 174, 175; applied to a loose woman, 175.

Cock-boat, 108, note.

Cock-chafer, old name for, 100.

Cock-fighting, 105.

Cockle, badge of pilgrims, 498.

Cock-light, 160.

Cock's-body, 106.

Cock-shut time, name for twilight, 159.

Cock's-passion, 106.

Coddling, apple so called, 206.

Cold palsies, 284.

Colt, its metaphorical use, 175; pixey, 6.

Columbine, a thankless flower, 212.

Comets, considered ominous, 89.

Cony-catch, term for cheating, 196.

Cooling-card, 415.

Coranto, old dance, 426.

Cormorant, 108.

Corpse, unlucky to keep on board, 370.

Cotswold games, 316.

Couch-glass, 243.

"Coventry Mysteries," 313.

Crab, name of apple, 205.

Crants, name for garlands, 374.

Cricket, a good omen; 251; unlucky, 516.

Crispin's (St.) Day, 325.

Crocodile, tears of, 176; said to be deceitful, 176.

Cross, wood of, 208.

Cross-bow, shooting with, 178.

Cross-road, ghosts of suicides haunt, 382.

Crow, bird of ill-omen, 108.

Crow-flowers, 212.

Crowfoot, 213.

Crow-keeper, 109.

Crown, burning, placed on criminals, 436, 437.

Cry, applied to pack of hounds, 179.

Cry Budget, a watchword, 529.

Crystal, old term for the eye, 483.

Cuckold, 113.

Cuckoo, superstitions connected with, 110-113.

Cuckoo-buds, 213.

Cuckoo-flowers, 213.

Cuerpo-Santo, meteor so called, 84.

Curfew-bell, 85.

Curtal dog, 183.

Cut, name for a horse, 192.

Cuttle, a foul-mouthed person so called, 498.

Cypress, 213, 214.

Daffodil, weather-lore of, 214.

Dances, 424-432.

Dancing, ascribed to fairies, 18.

Dark-house, term for a mad-house, 50, 278.

Darnel, 215.

Date, 215.

David's (St.) Day, 226, 303.

Dead, burying of, in their ordinary dress, 375, 376; feasts of the, 378; tombs of, ornamented, 377; cannot die on pigeons' feathers, 367; closing eyes of, 372; decorated with flowers, 373.

Dead men's fingers, orchis so called, 227.

Death and burial customs, 362-385.

Death, prophecy at point of, 362; high spirits presage impending, 363; warnings at time of, 364, 365; watch, 516; delayed until ebb of tide, 370; devil seizes soul at, 365.

Death's-head rings, 388.

Deer, hunting customs relating to, 177-181; shooting with cross-bow, 178; tears of, 180.

Deformed children, 78.

Deformity, superstitions connected with, 269, 270.

Demoniacal possession, 475.

Demonology, 52-61.

Dennis, St., patron saint of France, 326.

Devil, cloven foot of, 57.

Devil's Dyke, myth of, 189.

Dew, its supposed virtues, 90; curious notions respecting, 63.

Dice, 402.

Disedge, term in falconry, 127.

Divine right of kings, 512.

Dog, its howl ominous, 181, 516; rides with ghosts, 49; days, 183, 319; killer, 183.

Domestic fowl, 113.

Dove, customs associated with, 113-115; Mahomet's, 115; of Venus, 115.

Dragon, type of evil, 184; draws chariot of night, 184; folk-lore of, 185.

Dreams, prognostics of good and evil, 508; malicious spirits torment their victims in, 509.

Dribble, term in archery, 411.

Drowning, dangerous to save a person from, 271.

Duck, to swim like a, 116.

Duck-hunting, 115.

Duels, 509.

Dun is in the mire, Christmas game, 403.

Dwarf elder, superstition connected with, 216.

Eagle, gazes on the sun, 116; its great age, 117; bird of good omen, 118; selected for Roman standard, 118.

Ear, tingling of, 480; biting of, expression of endearment, 481; want of, for music, 481.

Earnest-money, 528.

Earthquakes, cause of, 93; ominous, 93, 516.

Easter morning, dancing of sun on, 63; clacking at, 302; new clothes worn on, 302; Monday, 302, 303.

Ebb of tide, death delayed until, 370.

Ebony, emblem of darkness, 215.

Eclipses, savage notions respecting, 71; unlucky, 72, 516; a bad omen, 65.

Eels, roused by thunder, 93.

Eggs in moonshine, 78; witches sail in, 35.

Eisel, name for vinegar, 292.

Elberich, 14.

Elbow, itching of, 481.

Elder, tree on which Judas hanged himself, 216; plant of bad omen, 216.

Elements, the four, 475.

Elephant, said to have no joints, 186; capture of, 186.

Elf-fire, 87, note; elf-locks, 190.

Elfin-grey, 17.

Elmo's (St.) stars, 84.

Elves, 9.

Embossed, applied to deer, 179.

Emmew, a term in falconry, 128.

Engine, name for the rack, 439.

Epilepsy, 271, 283.

Equinox, weather-lore of, 93.

Eringoes, 217.

Etheldreda's (St.) Day, 324.

Evil spirits, assume various forms, 53; a dead friend, 55.

Exclamations, 529-531.

Exorcism of spirits, 44.

Eyas-musket, name for a young sparrow-hawk, 154.

Eye, closing of, at death, 372; bitten, 335; blueness of, 482; the evil, 335, 482.

Face, to play the hypocrite, 484.

Fading, a dance, 426.

Fairies, assume various forms, 12; attentive to youthful dead, 22; beauty of, 10; fond of cleanliness, 18; diminutiveness of, 12; dislike irreligious people, 18; dress of, 17; enrich their favorites, 21; exchange children, 24; expeditious in their actions, 21; fatal to speak to, 21; fond of dancing and music, 17, 18; haunts of, 15; immortality of, 11; kind to mortals, 20; malignant, 22; mischievous, 23; perpetual youth of, 11; vanish at will, 12.

Fairy revels, 18.

Fairy-rings, 15, 16, 232.

Falcon-gentle, species of hawk, 158.

Falling-sickness, 271.

Fast and loose, a cheating game, 403.

Feet, stumbling of, unlucky, 454.

Fencing, 404.

Fennel, an inflammatory herb, 217.

Fern-seed, renders invisible, 217, 218.

_Feux follets_, name for will-o'-the-wisp, 88.

Fever, spider a cure for, 258.

Fiery dragon, 85.

Fiery Trigon, 79.

Fig, phrases connected with, 218, 219.

Filliping the toad, game of boys, 406.

Finch-egg, 101.

Finger, itching of, 482.

Finger-stone, 92.

Fire-drake, 84, 85.

Fistula, 271, 272.

Fit, 272, 273.

Fitchew, 196.

Flagellation, treatment for persons possessed, 56.

Flap-dragon, 406.

Flap-jacks, name for pancakes, 299.

Flaws, sudden gusts of wind, 95.

Fleas, loach said to breed, 499.

Fleshment, military term, 541.

Fleur-de-lys, 219.

Flibbertigibbet, a fiend, name also for _ignis fatuus_, 6, 61, 85, 269.

Flitter-mouse, term for the bat, 163.

Flower-de-luce, 219.

Flowers, carried on a maiden's coffin, 374; for decorating corpses, 374; on graves, 373; at weddings, 355.

Flowering Sunday, 374.

Fly, form of an evil spirit, 54.

Folk-medicine, 264-295.

Fools, 532.

Football, 407.

Forelooked, term for evil eye, 335.

Forfeits, 533.

Fortune-tellers, 510.

Fox, hunting of, 187; a weapon so called, 186.

Frateretto, fiend so called, 61.

Friar's lantern, name for _ignis fatuus_, 87, note.

Frogs used for divination, 252.

Fullams, false dice, 403.

Funeral rites, supposed necessity for, 46, 382.

Gad-fly, 252.

Gage, a glove so called, 536, note.

Gall of goat, used by witches, 187.

Galliard, dance, 425, note.

Gambling, 533.

Game laws, 180.

Garters, 534.

Gaudy days, 535.

George (St.) and dragon, myth of, 184.

George's (St.) Day, 304.

Giants, belief in, 512.

Gib cat, 173.

Gillyflower, 221.

Gimmal-ring, 347.

Gleek, old game, 408.

Glove, worn as a favor, 536; memorial of a friend, 536; signal of a challenge, 536; a pledge, 537; scented, 538.

Glow-worm, superstition relating to, 138.

Goat, superstition relating to, 187.

"God save the mark," exclamation, 529.

God's tokens, plague-spots, 285.

Gold, melted, poured down the throat, 369; chains, worn by persons of rank, 544; medicinal virtues of, 273.

Golden-russeting, name of an apple, 206.

Goldfinch, 119.

Good Friday, 301.

Good Lubber, name of a spirit, 8.

Good year, corruption of _goujère_, 274.

Goose, emblem of cowardice, 119; terms connected with, 118, 119.

Gossamer, notions relating to, 259.

Gossip's bowl, 205.

Gourds, false dice, 402.

Gout, 288.

Grand liquor, the _aurum potabile_ of alchemists, 274.

Grave, position of, 382; yards, haunted by spectres, 381, 382.

Gudgeon, 498.

Guinea-hen, 113.

Gull, term for a fool, 120; used for a trick or imposition, 120.

Gull-catcher, applied to sharpers, 120; groper, 120.

Gurnet, term of reproach, 499.

Habundia, Mab, perhaps, a contraction of, 4.

Hack, punishment of knight, 434.

Hag-seed, 40.

Haggard, term in hawking, 122.

Hair, antipathy to red and yellow, 485; much, denotes want of intellect, 462, 488; stands on end through fear, 488; turns white through sorrow and fear, 489; used metaphorically, 490; bride's, dishevelled at wedding, ceremony, 352, 353.

Halcyon days, 131.

Halidom, meaning of, 529.

Hallowmas, 326.

Hand, palmistry of, 490; worms bred in fingers of idle servants, 491; terms associated with, 491, 492.

Hare, a melancholy animal, 187; proverb relating to, 462.

Harebell, 221.

Hare-lip, supposed to be work of fairy, 492.

Hairie-racket, old game, 396.

Hart royal, 178.

Havoc, to cry, 514.

Hawk, catching game with, 121-126; to seel a, 127; training of, 126; to imp a, 128.

Hay, old dance, 427; exclamation, 529.

Head, shape of, 493.

Heart, seat of understanding, 493, 494; courage, 494; death from broken, 493.

Heart's-ease, nickname of, 227; used for love-philtres, 227.

Hecate, 35.

Hedgehog, said to suck udders of cows, 188; familiar of witches, 189; legends connected with, 188, 189; a term of reproach, 189.

Helen's (St.) fire, meteor so called, 83.

Helme's (St.) the, 83.

Hemlock, its poisonous character, 221; supposed to be death-drink of Greeks, 221; nickname for, 223.

Henbane, 223.

Herb of Grace, 221, 222.

Herm's (St.) the, meteor, 83.

Herne's oak, 233, 234.

Heron, used in hawking, 129.

Hid, or hide fox, game so called, 408.

High spirits a bad omen, 363.

Hippopotamus, 504.

Hob-and-his-lanthorn, 87, note.

Hobany's lanthorn, 87, note.

Hobbididance, evil spirit so called, 61.

Hobgoblin, 7.

Hobby-horse, character in morris-dance, 309; applied to a loose woman, 310.

Hock cart, at harvest-home, 323.

Hold, term in fighting, 530.

Holy-Cross Day, 324.

Holyrood Day, 324.

Holy thistle, 222.

Honey-dew, 91.

Honey-stalks, name for clover-flowers, 212.

Hoodman-blind, 408, 409.

Horn-mad, 278.

Horses, fairies play pranks with, 190; witches harass, 190; terms connected with, 191; forehorse of a team decorated, 192; hair, notion respecting, 190; racing, 409.

Hum-buz, name for cockchafer, 100.

Hunting customs, 178, 179.

Hunt's-up, morning song to a newly-married couple, 179, 357.

Hysteria, 275.

Idiots, said to be fairies' children, 334.

Imp, to, term in falconry, 128.

Incubi, class of devils, 78.

Infection, notions respecting, 276.

Iniquity, character in old miracle-plays, 314.

Insane root, 223.

Insanity, influenced by moon, 73, 277.

Irreligious persons, fairies dislike, 18.

Ivy, hung at door of a vintner, 223.

Jack-a-lantern, 87.

Jack-a-Lent, 299.

Jackdaw, 102.

Jacket-a-wad, 87, note.

Jane Shore, 27, 37.

Jaundice, spider a cure for, 258.

Jay, applied to loose woman, 130.

Jesses, trappings of hawks, 126.

Jesus, inscribed on letters, 540.

Jews, torturing of, 474.

Jew's eye, 473.

Jig, an old dance, 427.

Joan of Arc, 26.

Joan in-the wad, 87, note.

John (St.) Baptist's night, 319.

John's (St.) wort, divination by, 318.

Judas, hanged himself on an elder, 216; kiss, 539.

Justice Jarvis, old pastime, 418.

Kecksies, stalks of hemlock, 224.

Kestrel, applied to hawk, 130.

Key cold, meaning of, 265.

Kid fox, game, 408.

Kingfisher, weather lore of, 131; hung up in cottages, 131.

Kings, supernatural authority of, 517.

King's evil, 279.

Kiss, at betrothal, 346; at marriage ceremony, 351; fee of lady's partner, 538; saluting ladies with, 539.

Kissing comfits, 539.

Kit-with-the-candle-stick, 87.

Kite, bird of ill-omen, 131; curious notion respecting, 132.

Knotgrass, hinders growth, 225.

Lace songs, 539.

Lachrymatory vials, 379.

Lady-bird, term of endearment, 253.

Lady-smocks, 225.

Lamb ale, 312.

Lamb-mass, 320.

Lambert's (St.) Day, 324.

Lamb's-wool, 205.

Lammas Day, 320.

Lamps, perpetual, 383.

Lapwing, an eccentric bird, 132; symbol of insincerity, 133; draws pursuers from its nest, 133.

Lark, changes eyes with toad, 134; song of, 135; mode of capturing, 134.

Laudatory verses, affixed to tomb, 377.

Laugh-and-lie-down, game at cards, 410.

Laurel, symbol of victory, 225.

Lavolta, French dance, 428.

Leap-frog, 409.

Leather-coat, name of apple, 206.

Leech, 281.

Leek, on St. David's Day, 226, 303.

Leet ale, 312, 548.

Lent, Jack-a-lent made at, 299; fleshmeat not sold during, 300.

Leprosy, 280.

Lethargy, confounded with apoplexy, 280.

Letters, Emmanuel prefixed to, 540.

Light-o'-love, tune of dance, 429.

Lightning, persons struck by, accounted holy, 92.

Lily, 226.

Lion, supposed generosity of, 193; will not injure a royal prince, 194; kept without food, 194.

Liver, seat of love, 494; absence of blood in, 478.

Livery, to sue one's, 541

Lizard, said to be venomous, 253; used by witches, 254.

Loach breeds fleas, 499.

Loaf mass, 320.

Lob of spirit, 1, 5, 8.

Lob's pound, 8.

Loggat, game so called, 410.

Long purples, name of orchis, 226.

Loose, term in archery, 395.

Lord Mayor's Day, 327; show, 315; fool, 327.

Love charms 359.

Love-day, 541.

Love-in-idleness, 227.

Love-lock, 480.

Love philtres, 227, 264, 359.

Lovers, eccentricities of, 361, 406, 478, note, 534.

Lucky days, 512.

Mab, fairy queen, 4, 5, 24.

Magpie, regarded as mysterious bird, 135; claims for averting ill-luck of seeing, 136; nicknamed magot-pie, 135.

Magic, system of, 482; verses, 508.

Mahu, prince of darkness, 61.

Mahomet's dove, 115.

Man in the moon, 68, 244.

Mandrake, resemblance of, to human figure, 228; watched over by Satan, 230; its groans, 228; superstitions relating to, 229-231.

Manningtree ox, 317.

Marbles, 411.

Marigold, opens its flowers at sun's bidding, 230.

Marriage, 342-361; ceremony mostly on Sunday, 358, 359.

Martin, unlucky to molest a, 136; builds near human habitations, 136.

Martin's (St.) Day, 328; summer, 131.

Martlemas, 328.

Mary-bud, name for marigold, 231.

Mankin, used for hare, 168, note.

May-day observances, 305.

Maying, going a, 307.

May-pole, 307.

Meadow cress, 213.

Measles, 281.

Medlar, applied to woman of loose character, 231.

Merlin, 511; prophecies of, 515.

Mermaid, 500-503.

Meteors, regarded as ominous, 88, 516; names for, 83.

Metrical charms, 508.

Michaelmas, 324.

Midsummer Eve, 218, 318; man, 318; watch, 315.

Military lore, 541.

Mill, name for nine-men's-morris, 413.

Mines, guarded by evil spirits, 59; truepenny, mining term, 542.

Minnow, term of contempt, 503.

Miracle-plays, 313.

Mirror, bears surprised by, 164.

Mistletoe, notions respecting, 231, 232.

Mock-water, 295.

Moist star, name for moon, 74.

Moldwarp, term for mole, 195.

Mole said to be blind, 194.

Moles on body ominous, 495.

Moon, adoration of, 69; eclipse of, 71; man in the, 68, 69, 244; sanguine color of, 73, 516; paleness of, 73; weather-lore of, 76-78; insane persons affected by, 73; swearing by, 70; enchantment of, 71; invocation of, 70; inconstancy of, 70; horns of, 77; moisture of, 74; influence over agricultural affairs, 75; waxing and waning of, 76; affected by witchcraft, 71.

Moon-calf, 77.

Moralities, 314.

Morris-dance, 186, note, 308, 311, 431.

Moth, a fairy, 9; insect, 254.

Mother, name for hysteria, 275.

Mother of all humors, the moon, 74.

Mouse, term of endearment, 195.

Mouse-hunt, 195.

Mummy, 282.

Murdered persons bleed at approach of murderer, 486.

Mushroom, superstitions relating to, 232.

Music, ascribed to fairies, 17; as a medical agency, 278; cure for madness, 277; at funerals, 381; weddings, 352; of the spheres, 80.

Muss, a scramble, 411.

Mustard, 232; mustard-seed, a fairy, 9.

Narcissus, legend concerning, 233.

Negro, form of evil spirit, 53.

Nicholas's (St.) Day, 328; patron of children, 328; clerks, cant term for highwaymen, 329.

Night crow, 150; heron, 150; raven, 150.

Nightingale, sings with breast on thorn, 137; evil spirits assume form of, 54; story of, and glow-worm, 138.

Nightmare, charms for, 283.

Nine-holes, old game, 411.

Nine-men's-morris, rustic game, 411.

Nine Worthies, the, 316.

Noddy, game at cards, 413.

Nose, bleeding of, unlucky, 266, 516.

_Novem quinque_, game of dice, 413.

Numbers, odd, 40.

Nuptial kiss, 351.

Nutmeg, gift at Christmas, 233.

O ho! exclamation, 530.

Oak, crown of, a mark of honor, 233; Herne's, 233.

Oberon, king of fairyland, 2, 3.

Obidicut, evil spirit, 61.

Odd numbers, 40.

Olive, emblem of peace, 234.

One-and-thirty, old game, 399.

Osprey, fascinating influence of, 138.

Ostrich, extraordinary digestion of, 138, 139.

Otnit, German story of, 3, 14.

Ouphe, name for fairy, 9, 17.

Our Lady's smock, 225.

Ousel, name for blackbird, 100.

Owl, bird of ill-omen, 139; legend concerning, 142.

Owlet's wing used by witches, 141.

Oysters, proverb relating to, 468.

Paddock, term for toad, 144, 262.

Pageants, 315.

Palm, symbol of victory, 234.

Palmers, name for pilgrims, 235.

Palmistry, 475, 490.

Paralysis, 284.

Parish-top, 413.

Parrot, restless before rain, 143; taught unlucky words, 143.

Partridge, 133.

Passing-bell, 366.

Patrick (St.) drives reptiles from Ireland, 257; his festival, 304; purgatory, 304, 368.

Patrons, praying for, 543.

Pavan, a dance, 429.

Peacock, its proverbial use, 143.

Peajock, peacock so called, 144.

Pear, 235.

Pearls, swallowing of, 392; powdered, thrown over sovereigns, 391; medicinal properties of, 392; legendary origin of, 392.

Peas-blossom, name of fairy, 9.

Peascod wooing, 235.

Peg-a-lantern, 87, note.

Peg-morris, game so called, 412.

Pelican, feeds young ones with her blood, 144; hatched dead, 145.

Periapts, 506.

Pheasant, 145.

Philip, name for sparrow, 154.

Philomel, term for nightingale, 138.

Philosopher's stone, 284.

Phoenix, rises from its own ashes, 145.

Pigeon, feathers of, unlucky, 367; used as carrier, 146; constancy of, 147.

Pike, old name for, 503.

Pilgrims, 235.

Pillory, mode of punishment, 437.

Piskey, Devonshire name for fairy, 6.

Pismire, name for ant, 250.

Pixy, name for fairy, 6.

Pixy-led, misled by fairies, 8.

Planets, 78; influence of, 79; irregular motion of, 78.

Plantain, its medicinal use, 76, 236; water, 268.

Pleurisy, 281.

Plica Polonica, 190.

Pluck a crow, 110.

Plucking geese, a boy's sport, 119.

Poake-ledden, 8.

Poison, vulgar error relating to, 286.

Polecat, 196.

Pomander, 287.

Pomewater, name of apple, 207.

Pooka, 6.

Poor man's parmacetti, 267.

Poperin, name for pear, 235.

Popinjay, name for parrot, 143.

Poppy, deadly qualities of, 237.

Porcupine darts his quills, 196.

Porpoise, weather-lore of, 503.

Portents, belief in, 516.

Posy rings, 388, 389.

Potato, 237.

Poverty, badge of, 521.

Prayers, of Church, morbific influence of, 372; witches say backwards, 40, 41.

Press, old torture, 438.

Primavista, game at cards, 414.

Primero, 414.

Primrose, 237.

Priser, term for a wrestler, 423.

Prison bars or base, rustic game, 397.

Prophecy, at death, 362.

Proud tailor, name for goldfinch, 119.

Proverbs, 444-474.

Puck, name of fairy, 5-8, 11, 87.

Punishments, 433-443.

Push, exclamation, 498; pin, game, 415.

Puttock, name for kite, 132.

Quails, 148; fighting, 148.

Quarry, term in falconry, 124.

Quintam, 415.

Quoits, 416.

Rabbit, 196; suckers, 196.

Race of horses, term for a stud, 193.

Rack, torture of, 438.

Racking clouds, 96.

Ragged-robin, 213.

Rainbow, 91.

Rapture, name for trance, 272, 273.

Rat, rhymed to death, 197; leaving a ship, ominous, 198.

Raven, bird of ill-omen, 149; supposed longevity of, 149; deserts its young, 151; feathers, used by witches, 151.

Red blood, sign of courage, 477.

Red pestilence, 285.

Reed, for shepherds' pipes, 238.

Rere-mouse, name for bat, 162.

Rheumatism, 288.

Rhyne toll, old manorial custom, 167.

Rings, symbolical use, 386; exchange in marriage contracts, 346; death's-head, 388; running for the, 417; rush, 242; posy, 388; token, 387; thumb, 389.

Rivo, an exclamation, 530.

Robin Goodfellow, 5-7, 86.

Robin Hood, 310.

Robin Redbreast covers dead bodies with leaves, 152.

Rook, weather-lore of, 153; bird of good omen, 153; deserting a rookery, 153.

Rose, associated with "Wars of Roses," 239, 240; divination by, 318; symbolical use, 238; customs connected with, 238; cakes, 239; water, 239.

Rosemary, strengthens memory, 240; symbol of remembrance, 240; at weddings and funerals, 240; for garnishing dishes at Christmas, 241.

Roundel, a dance, 429.

Rouse, 528.

Ruddock, name for redbreast, 153.

Rue, divination by, 318.

Running, for the ring, 417; the figure of eight, 417; counter, hunting term, 178.

Rush-bearings, 242.

Rush candle, 242.

Rush-ring, 242.

Sabbath of witches, 30.

Saffron, its uses, 242, 243.

Sagittary, 543.

Salad-days, 543.

Saliva, medical notion respecting, 289.

Salt, used metaphorically, 543; sitting below the, 526.

Salutations, 544.

Sampson, Agnes, reputed witch, 33.

Satyrs' dance, 430.

Scale of dragon, used by witches, 185.

Scambling days, 301.

Scammell or scamel, 121.

Scare-crow, 109.

Scrofula, cure for, 279.

Sea, source of dew, 90; persons drowned in, 382; eagle, name for osprey, 138; gull, 121; mell or mew, 121; monster, 504.

Secondary rainbow, 91.

See-saw, game, 417.

Seel, term in falconry, 127.

Serpent, called a worm, 254; its forked tongue supposed to injure, 255; said to cause death without pain, 255, 256; used by witches, 255; emblem of ingratitude, 256; cures for bite of, 256; driven out of Ireland by St. Patrick, 257; casting of its slough, 257.

Serpigo, name for skin disease, 288.

Servants, taking oath of fidelity, 544; gold chains worn by, 544; attend bare-headed, 545.

Sheep-shearing customs, 317.

Sheer ale, 528.

Shepherd's, mill, 413; purse, 268.

Shepherd-queen, 318.

Sheriffs' post, 545.

Shoe-tye, name for a traveller, 545.

Shoeing-horn, 545.

Shooting stars, 516.

Shore, Jane, 27, 37.

Shove-groat, 417; shove-halfpenny, 418.

Shrouding-sheet, 380.

Shrove Tuesday, 299.

Sickness, 288.

Sieve, used by witches, 34; toss in a, punishment so called, 441.

Sigh, notions respecting, 289.

Signatures, doctrine of, 218.

Silence before thunder, 93.

"Six Worthies," 316.

Skimmington, old ceremony of, 443.

Slide, board, or groat, 418, note; thrift, 418, note.

Slip-thrift, 418, note.

Slough of snake, 257.

Slow-worm, 255.

Smulkin, evil spirit, 61.

Smithfield fair, 321.

Snails, charming of, 198; omens of fine weather, 199.

Sneak-cup, 528.

Sneck-up, exclamation, 531.

Snipe, applied to foolish man, 154.

Snowballs, 418.

Solemn supper, 545.

Sop o' the moonshine, 78.

Souls, transmigration of, 50.

Soul-bell, 367; mass cakes, 379.

Souling, going a, 326.

Span-counter, old game, 418.

Sparrow, called Philip, 154; hawk, 154.

Spear-grass, 243.

Spectre huntsman, 49.

Spider, considered venomous, 258; cure for jaundice and ague, 258; web used for stopping blood, 258; bottled, 259; gossamer, notion respecting, 259.

Spirits, various kinds of, 60; unlucky to cross their path, 48; disappear at cock-crow, 104; impatient at being interrogated, 45; their appearance, 45; walking of, by way of penance, 46; reason for appearing, 46; allotted time for work, 47; signs of their approach, 47; of revenge, 58.

Spleen, supposed cause of laughter, 496.

Spy, I, exclamation, 531.

Squalls, weather-lore of, 95.

Stalking horse, 191.

Starling, 155.

Stars, influence on mundane events, 80; heroes reckoned among, 82.

Statute-cap, 546.

Stephen's (St.) Day, hunting wren on, 501.

Sterility, 289.

Stigmatic, deformed person so called, 270.

Stocks, old punishment, 440.

Stool-ball, old game, 419.

Stoop, or swoop, term in falconry, 124.

Stover, fodder for cattle, 243.

Strappado, military punishment, 440.

Strawberry, 243.

Succubi, class of devils, 78.

Suicide, 290.

Sun, weather-lore of, 63-65; dancing of, 63; cloudy rising, ominous, 64; red sunrise, 64; watery sunset, 65; supposed to be a planet, 62.

Sunday, fashionable day for weddings, 358.

Sunshine in March, 68.

Swallow, harbinger of spring, 155; bird of good omen, 156.

Swan, sings before death, 156.

Sword, swearing by, 542; dance, 430.

Sympathetic indications, 518.

Tailor, exclamation, 531.

Tailor's goose, name for pressing-iron, 118.

Tassel-gentle, name of hawk, 157.

Tavy's (St.) Day, 226, 304.

Tawdry lace, 325.

Tears, of the deer, 180; crocodile, 176.

Teeth, superstitions relating to, 332, 333.

Telme's (St.) fire, meteor so called, 83.

Ten bones, name for fingers, 491.

Ten commandments, 491.

Tennis, 419.

Termagant, tyrant of miracle-plays, 313.

Tewksbury mustard, 232.

Theatrical lore, 546.

Thorns, legend relating to, 244.

Threshold, bride must not cross, 358.

Thumb, biting of, an insult, 492; rings, 389.

Thunder, notions relating to, 91; bolt, 91; stone, 91.

Tick-tack, old game, 421.

Tiger, roars in stormy weather, 199.

Tire, term in falconry, 127.

Titania, fairy queen, 2, 3, 14.

Tilly-vally, exclamation, 531.

Toad, evil spirit likened to, 262; changes eyes with lark, 134; said to be venomous, 261; stone, 260.

Tokens plague-spots, 285.

Tomb, ornamenting, 377.

Tongue, blister on, 266.

Toothache, 507; caused by a worm, 290.

Torches at weddings, 357.

Toss in a sieve, punishment so called, 441.

Touching for king's evil, 279.

Tournaments, 547.

Tower, term in falconry, 123.

Transmigration of souls, 50.

Tread a measure, dance, 431.

Trefoil, divination by, 318.

Trial by the stool, for detecting witches, 31.

Trip and go, a morris-dance, 431.

Troll-my-dame, or Troll-madam, game so called, 422.

Truepenny, mining term, 542.

Trump, old game, 422.

Trumpet, for announcing visitors, 547.

Tub-fast, 292.

Turkey, 158.

Turquoise, supposed virtues of, 393.

Tutelary guardians, 57.

Twelfth Day, 297.

Tybert or Tybalt, cat so called, 172.

Unicorn, mode of betraying, 199.

Up-spring, German dance, 431, 432.

Urchin, name for fairy, 9, 17.

Urchins' dance, 9.

Valentine's (St.) Day, 298; birds choose their mates on, 298; selecting valentines on, 298; customs in France on, 298.

Vervain, divination by, 318.

Vice, character in old miracle-plays, 314.

Violet, associated with early death, 244; superstition relating to, 244.

_Virus lunare_, 75.

Vitalis (St.) invoked in case of nightmare, 283.

Vulture, 158.

Wagtail, used in opprobrious sense, 158.

Wakes, 331.

Walking fire, name for _ignis fatuus_, 86.

Wandering, knight, name of sun, 63; stars, 78, 79.

War-cry, 547.

Warden, name of pear, 235.

Wasp, 262.

Wassail, bowl, 205; candle, 330.

Wat, name for hare, 188.

Water, casting, 293; galls, name for rainbow, 91.

Waxen images, used by witches, 37.

Weasel, considered ominous, 200; kept in houses, 200; said to be quarrelsome, 200.

Weathercocks, 108.

Web-and-pin, name for cataract, 269.

Wedding-torch, 357.

Were-wolf, mark of, 31.

Westward, ho, exclamation, 531.

Whale, 504.

Wheel, punishment of, 441.

Whipping, 442.

Whistling of swan, 157.

White dog-rose, 240.

Whitsun, ale, 312; mysteries, 311.

Whitsuntide, 310.

Wild-goose chase, 118.

Will-o'-the-wisp, 8, 85.

Will-with-a-wisp, 87.

Willow, symbol of sadness, 245; garlands made of, 245.

Winchester, college, custom at, 387; goose, 119.

Wind, weather-lore of, 94; sale of, 34.

Winding-sheet, 380, 516.

Wisp, punishment for a scold, 442.

Witches, in "Macbeth," 27; create storms, 32; drawing blood from, 32; propitiation of, 32; powers limited, 31; harass horses, 190; offspring of, 40; say their prayers backwards, 40; sell or give winds, 34; ointment, 36; intercourse between, and demons, 40; protection from, 32; vanish at will, 35; destroy cattle, 39; look into futurity, 36; beard, characteristic of, 29; trials, 36.

Witch of Brentford, 27.

Wits, the five, 496.

Woodcock, applied to a foolish person, 159.

Worm, a poor creature, 256; name for serpent, 254; toothache, said to be caused by, 290.

Wormwood used in weaning, 246.

Wren, its diminutiveness, 160.

Wrestling, 422.

Yew, planted in churchyards, 247; stuck in shroud, 274, 380; poisonous qualities, 248.

THE END.

ENGLISH CLASSICS.

EDITED BY

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We have in this volume the choicest from what would fill many library shelves, and also, at hand here, many fragmentary pieces, familiar favorites, but such as otherwise we should not know where to find when wanted.--_The Advance_, Chicago.

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TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES

Obvious punctuation and printer's errors have been corrected. See below for the detailed list.

page 6--typo fixed: changed 'feeche' to 'fecche' page 47--spelling normalized: changed 'wide-spread' to 'widespread' page 54--typo fixed: changed 'London' to 'Loudun' page 92--spelling normalized: changed 'thunderbolt' to 'thunder-bolt' page 129--spelling normalized: 'sparrowhawk' changed to 'sparrow-hawk' page 138--spelling normalized: changed 'glowworm' to 'glow-worm' page 182--typo fixed: changed 'Georgic' to 'Georgics' page 189--spelling normalized: changed 'hedgepig' to 'hedge-pig' page 201--typo fixed: changed 'Biesly' to 'Beisly' page 202--typo fixed: changed 'Georgic' to 'Georgics' page 213--typo fixed: changed 'Biesly' to 'Beisly' page 316--spelling normalized: changed 'merrymakings' to 'merry-makings' page 327--spelling normalized: changed 'Lord-Mayor's Day' to 'Lord Mayor's Day' page 353--typo fixed: changed 'Jeafferson' to 'Jeaffreson' page 394--typo fixed: changed 'Skakespeare' to 'Shakespeare' page 399--spelling normalized: changed 'One-and Thirty' to 'One-and-Thirty' page 486--typo fixed: changed 'Ceila' to 'Celia' page 542--typo fixed: changed 'Shakepeare' to 'Shakespeare' page 548--spelling normalized: changed 'Leet-Ale' to 'Leet Ale' page 549--typo fixed: changed 'Belemite' to 'Belemnite' page 549--spelling normalized: changed 'Blindworm' to 'Blind-worm' page 552--spelling normalized: changed 'Foot-ball' to 'Football' page 552--spelling normalized: changed 'Gadfly' to 'Gad-fly' page 554--spelling normalized: changed 'Maypole' to 'May-pole'