Weather and Folk Lore of Peterborough and District eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 47 pages of information about Weather and Folk Lore of Peterborough and District.

Weather and Folk Lore of Peterborough and District eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 47 pages of information about Weather and Folk Lore of Peterborough and District.

Knives crossed and laid on the floor is a strong protection against the power of witchcraft.

A very old woman told me she once tried the knives on one of her neighbours, as she suspected the woman of overlooking her; so she asked the woman to come and see her one day but before the woman came into the house she crossed two knives and put them on the floor in a dark corner.  When the suspected person came in she wouldn’t sit down and soon left, appearing to be very uncomfortable; so she was a “wrong un” but the old lady said she was all right after that, and had no more trouble.

Straws crossed and placed on a footpath, or on the road, prevents a witch from passing.

Many years since I remember hearing of this being done as a suspected woman was coming along, and it was said the woman got very angry and foamed at the mouth but she didn’t pass the straws.

The following is in use at the present time:—­

If a husband runs away from his wife she buys a pennyworth of Dragon’s Blood, wraps it in paper, and places it under her pillow when she goes to bed, and it is sure to draw him back again.

A chemist in Peterborough had a letter a few years since, from a woman in the Fens, asking him to send her a “pennorth of Dragons Blood” for this very purpose; and the following shows that the custom is in use, even in the United States of America, at the present time according to the following extract from the “Daily Express” of 18th February, 1905: 

          Drank Dragon’s Blood.

      Buffalo Bill’s wife gave him love Philtres.

          “Express” Correspondent.

  Cheyenne (Wyoming), Friday, February 17th., 1905.

It came out, during the hearing of Buffalo Bill’s divorce case to-day, that he had been dosed with many love Philtres.

Mrs. Cody, his wife, was extremely jealous of him and imagining that his affection for her was gone, mixed gipsy love potions in his drinks.  One of these, which was supposed to be particularly efficacious, was known as “Dragon’s Blood.”

Mrs. Parker, a witness, told the court that Mrs. Cody believed that every woman was infatuated with her husband, and confided to her the names of many prominent women who, she said, were in love with him.

The witness stated, in cross examination, that during these outbursts of jealousy Colonel Cody was beside himself with rage.

Dragon’s Blood is not a fluid.  It is a resin from certain kinds of palm.

At Oundle “There is a Well that is credibly reported to drum as a presage of very great alterations to publick affairs.”  M.S.S. dated 1703, of the Phillips Stourhead Collection, No. 22244.

I came across this Croyland rhyme some time since:—­

  In Holland fen, now mark the name,
    Old Croyland stands, of mickle fame,
  There is a wine of a certain class,
    There is fodder like sword grass,
  There’s a bed as hard as stone,
    Thence depart, with “get ye gone.”

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Weather and Folk Lore of Peterborough and District from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.