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of England, no set of men are more likely to help you than the clergy, particularly the younger part, viz., curates, to whom the stories they hear among their flock have the gloss of novelty. I send you a specimen of old charms, &c. that have come under my notice in the south-eastern counties. No. 1. is a dialogue between the Parson and the old Dame:-- "_P._ Well, Dame Grey, I hear you have a charm to cure the toothache. Come, just let me hear it; I should be so much pleased to know it. "_Dame_. Oh, your reverence, it's not worth telling." (Here a long talk--Parson coaxing the Dame to tell him--old lady very shy, partly suspecting he is quizzing her, partly that no charms are proper things, partly willing to know what he thinks about it.) At last it ends by her saying-- "Well, your reverence, you have been very kind to me, and I'll tell you: it's just a verse from Scripture as I says over those as have the toothache:-- "'And Jesus said unto Peter, What aileth thee? and Peter answered, Lord, I have toothache. And the Lord healed him.'" "_P._ Well, but Dame Grey, I think I know my Bible, and I don't find any such verse in it." "_Dame_. Yes, your reverence, that is just the charm. _It's in the Bible_, but _you can't find it_!" No. 2. To avert sickness from a family, hang up a sickle, or iron implement, at the bed head. No. 3. Should a death happen in a house at night, and there be a hive or hives of bees in the garden, go out and wake them up at once, otherwise the whole hive or swarm will die. I hope your Folk Lore is not confined to the fading memorials of a past age. The present superstitions are really much more interesting and valuable to be gathered together; and I am sure your pages would be very well employed in recording these for a future generation. I would {294} suggest, in all humility, that it would be really useful, for the rulers of our Church and State, to know how far such a superstition as the following prevails among the peasantry: That, if a dying person sees "glory," or a bright light, at or near the time of their dissolution, such a vision is a sure sign of their salvation, whatever may have been their former life, or their repentance. D. Sholbus. _Superstitions in North of England._--I find some curious popular superstitions prevalent in the north of England some three centuries ago recorded in the _Proceedings befo
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