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Register_, 1769, p. 117.: a Susannah Lott was burned for the murder of her husband at Canterbury, Benjamin Buss, her paramour, being hanged about fifteen minutes before she was burned. T. S. N. * * * * * FOLK LORE. _Death-bed Mystery._--In conversation with an aged widow,--as devout and sensible as she is unlettered,--I yesterday learned a death-bed mystery which appeared new to me, and which (if not more commonly known than I take it to be) you may perhaps think worthy of a place in "NOTES AND QUERIES," to serve as a minor satellite to some more luminous communication, in reply to B. H. at Vol. i., p. 315. My informant's "_religio_" (as she appears to have derived it by tradition from her mother, and as confirmed by her own experience in the case of a father, a {52} husband, several children, and others), is to the effect that a considerable interval _invariably_ elapses between the first semblance of death, and what she considers to be the departure of the soul. About five minutes after the time when death, to all outward appearance, has taken place, "the last breath," as she describes, may be seen to issue with a vapour, or "steam," out of the mouth of the departed. The statement reminds me of Webster's argument, in his _Display of supposed Witchcraft_, chap. xvi., where, writing of the bleeding of corpses in presence of their murderers, he observes: "If we physically consider the union of the soul with the body by the mediation of the spirit, then we cannot rationally conceive that the soul doth utterly forsake that union, until by putrefaction, tending to an absolute mutation, it is forced to bid farewell to its beloved tabernacle; for its not operating _ad extra_ to our senses, doth not necessarily infer its total absence. And it may be, that there is more in that of _Abel's blood crying unto the Lord from the ground_, in a physical sense than is commonly conceived," &c. Sir Kenelm Digby (I think I remember) has also made some curious remarks on this subject, in his observations on the _Religio Medici_ of Sir T. Brown. J. SANSOM. _Easter Eggs._-The custom of dyeing eggs at Easter (alluded to, Vol. i., pp. 244. and 397.) prevails in different parts of Cumberland, and is observed in this city probably more specially than in any other part of England. On Easter Monday and Tuesday the inhabitants assemble in certain adjacent meadows, t
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