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black
art, scandals, barbarous punishments,
weird customs that prevailed
at man's
most
important ceremonies, his baptism,
marriage and burial, the
binding of
apprenticeships,
obsolete trades, such as that of the
person who is styled
"aquavity
man" or
the "saltpetre man," the
mode of settling quarrels and disputes,
duels,
sports,
games, brawls, the expenses
of supplying a queen's household,
local
customs
and observances--all these find a place
in these amazing records. In
short,
there
is scarcely any feature of
the social life of our
forefathers which is
not
abundantly
set forth in our parish
registers. The loss of them would indeed
be great
and
overwhelming.
As
we have said, many of them
have been lost by fire and
other casualties, by
neglect
and carelessness. The
guarding of the safety of those
that remain is an
anxious
problem. Many of us would
regret to part with our
registers and to allow
them
to leave the church or town
or village wherein they have
reposed so long.
They
are part of the story of
the place, and when American
ladies and gentlemen
come
to find traces of their
ancestors they love to see
these records in the
village
where
their forefathers lived, and to
carry away with them a
photograph of the
church,
some ivy from the tower,
some flowers from the
rectory garden, to preserve
in
their western homes as memorials of
the place whence their
family came. It
would
not be the same thing if
they were to be referred to a
dusty office in a
distant
town.
Some wise people say that
all registers should be sent to London,
to the
Record
Office or the British
Museum. That would be an
impossibility. The
officials
of
those institutions would tremble at
the thought, and the
glut of valuable books
would
make reference a toil that
few could undertake. The
real solution of the
difficulty
is that county councils
should provide accommodation
for all deeds and
documents,
that all registers should be
transcribed, that copies
should be deposited
in
the county council
depository, and that the
originals should still
remain in the
parish
chest where they have lain
for three centuries and a
half.
CHAPTER
XVIII
OLD
CUSTOMS THAT ARE VANISHING
Many
writers have mourned over
the decay of our ancient
customs which the
restlessness
of modern life has
effectually killed. New
manners are ever
pushing
out
the old, and the lover of
antiquity may perhaps be pardoned if he
prefers the
more
ancient modes. The death of the
old social customs which
added such
diversity
to the lives of our
forefathers tends to render the
countryman's life one
continuous
round of labour unrelieved by pleasant
pastime, and if innocent
pleasures
are not indulged in,
the tendency is to seek for
gratification in
amusements
that are not innocent or
wholesome.
The
causes of the decline and
fall of many old customs
are not far to
seek.
Agricultural
depression has killed many.
The deserted farmsteads no longer
echo
with
the sounds of rural revelry;
the cheerful log-fires no
longer glow in the
farmer's
kitchen; the harvest-home song
has died away; and "largess"
no longer
rewards
the mummers and the
morris-dancers. Moreover, the
labourer himself has
changed;
he has lost his simplicity.
His lot is far better
than it was half a
century
ago,
and he no longer takes pleasure in
the simple joys that
delighted his
ancestors
in
days of yore. Railways and cheap
excursions have made him
despise the old
games
and pastimes which once pleased
his unenlightened soul. The
old labourer is
dead,
and his successor is a very
"up-to-date" person, who reads
the newspapers
and
has his ideas upon
politics and social
questions that would have
startled his less
cultivated
sire. The modern system of
elementary education also has
much to do
with
the decay of old
customs.
Still
we have some left. We can
only here record a few that
survive. Some years
ago
I wrote a volume on the
subject, and searched diligently to
find existing
customs
in the remote corners of old
England.61
My book
proved useful to Sir
Benjamin
Stone, M.P., the expert
photographer of the House of
Commons, who
went
about with his camera to
many of the places
indicated, and by his art
produced
permanent
presentments of the scenes which I had
tried to describe. He was
only
just
in time, as doubtless many of
these customs will soon pass
away. It is,
however,
surprising to find how much
has been left; how
tenaciously the
English
race
clings to that which habit
and usage have established;
how deeply rooted
they
are
in the affections of the people. It is
really remarkable that at
the present day, in
spite
of ages of education and social
enlightenment, in spite of centuries
of
Christian
teaching and practice, we have
now amongst us many customs
which owe
their
origin to pagan beliefs and
the superstitions of our
heathen forefathers, and
have
no other raison
d'être for
their existence than the
wild legends of
Scandinavian
mythology.
We
have still our Berkshire
mummers at Christmas, who come to us
disguised in
strange
garb and begin their quaint
performance with the
doggerel rhymes--
I
am King George, that noble
champion bold,
And
with my trusty sword I won
ten thousand pounds in
gold;
'Twas
I that fought the fiery
dragon, and brought him to
the
slaughter,
And
by these means I won the
King of Egypt's daughter.
62
Other
counties have their own
versions. In Staffordshire they
are known as the
"Guisers,"
in Cornwall as the "Geese-dancers," in
Sussex as the
"Tipteerers."
Carolsingers
are still with us,
but often instead of the old
carols they sing
very
badly
and irreverently modern hymns,
though in Cambridgeshire you
may still hear
"God
bless you, merry gentlemen,"
and the vessel-boxes (a corruption of
wassail)
are
still carried round in
Yorkshire. At Christmas Cornish
folk eat giblet-pie,
and
Yorkshiremen
enjoy furmenty; and mistletoe and
the kissing-bush are still
hung in
the
hall; and in some remote parts of
Cornwall children may be
seen dancing round
painted
lighted candles placed in a box of sand.
The devil's passing-bell
tolls on
Christmas
Eve from the church
tower at Dewsbury, and a
muffled peal bewails
the
slaughter
of the children on Holy
Innocents' Day. The boar's
head is still brought
in
triumph
into the hall of Queen's
College. Old women "go
a-gooding" or mumping
on
St. Thomas's Day, and
"hoodening" or horse-head mumming is practised
at
Walmer,
and bull-hoodening prevails at
Kingscote, in Gloucestershire. The
ancient
custom
of "goodening" still obtains at
Braughing, Herts. The
Hertfordshire
Mercury
of
December 28, 1907, states
that on St. Thomas's Day
(December 21)
certain
of the more sturdy widows of
the village went round
"goodening," and
collected
£4 14s. 6d., which was equally
divided among the eighteen
needy widows
of
the parish. In 1899 the
oldest dame who took
part in the ceremony was
aged
ninety-three,
while in 1904 a widow "goodened"
for the thirtieth year in
succession.
In
the Herts
and Cambs Reporter for
December 23, 1904, is an account
of
"Gooding
Day" at Gamlingay. It appears
that in 1665 some almshouses for
aged
women
(widows) were built there by
Sir John Jacob, Knight.
"On Wednesday last
(St.
Thomas's Day)," says this
journal, "an interesting
ceremony was to be seen.
The
old women were gathered at
the central doorway ...
preparatory to a pilgrimage
to
collect alms at the houses
of the leading inhabitants.
This old custom, which
has
been
observed for nearly three
hundred years, it is safe to say, will
not fall into
desuetude,
for it usually results in
each poor widow realising a
gold coin." In the
north
of England first-footing on New
Year's Eve is common, and a
dark-
complexioned
person is esteemed as a herald of good
fortune. Wassailing exists
in
Lancashire,
and the apple-wassailing has
not quite died out on
Twelfth Night.
Plough
Monday is still observed in
Cambridgeshire, and the
"plough-bullocks"
drag
around the parishes their
ploughs and perform a weird
play. The Haxey
hood
is
still thrown at that place in
Lincolnshire on the Feast of
the Epiphany, and
valentines
are not quite forgotten by
rural lovers.
Shrovetide
is associated with pancakes.
The pancake bell is still
rung in many
places,
and for some occult
reason it is the season for
some wild football games
in
the
streets and lanes of several towns and
villages. At St. Ives on the
Monday there
is
a grand hurling match, which
resembles a Rugby football
contest without the
kicking
of the ball, which is about
the size of a cricket-ball, made of
cork or light
wood.
At Ashbourne on Shrove-Tuesday thousands
join in the game, the
origin of
which
is lost in the mists of
antiquity. As the old church
clock strikes two a
little
speech
is made, the National Anthem
sung, and then some popular
devotee of the
game
is hoisted on the shoulders of
excited players and throws up
the ball. "She's
up,"
is the cry, and then
the wild contest begins,
which lasts often till
nightfall.
Several
efforts have been made to
stop the game, and even the
judge of the Court of
Queen's
Bench had to decide whether it was
legal to play the game in
the streets. In
spite
of some opposition it still
flourishes, and is likely to do so
for many a long
year.
Sedgefield, Chester-le-Street, Alnwick,
Dorking also have their
famous
football
fights, which differ much
from an ordinary league match. In
the latter
thousands
look on while twenty-two men
show their skill. In these
old games all
who
wish take part in them, all
are keen champions and know
nothing of
professionalism.
"Ycleping,"
or, as it is now called,
clipping churches, is another
Shrovetide custom,
when
the children join hands
round the church and walk
round it. It has just
been
revived
at Painswick, in the Cotswolds,
where after being performed
for many
hundred
years it was discontinued by the late
vicar. On the patron saint's
day (St.
Mary's)
the children join hands in a
ring round the church and
circle round the
building
singing. It is the old Saxon
custom of "ycleping," or naming
the church on
the
anniversary of its original
dedication.
Simnels
on Mothering Sunday still
exist, reminding us of Herrick's
lines:--
I'll
to thee a Simnel bring,
'Gainst
thou goes a
mothering;
So
that when she blesseth
thee
Half
the blessing thou'lt give
me.
Palm
Sunday brings some curious
customs. At Roundway Hill, and at
Martinsall,
near
Marlborough, the people bear
"palms," or branches of willow and hazel,
and
the
boys play a curious game of
knocking a ball with
hockey-sticks up the hill;
and
in
Buckinghamshire it is called Fig
Sunday, and also in Hertfordshire.
Hertford,
Kempton,
Edlesborough, Dunstable are homes of
the custom, nor is the
practice of
eating
figs and figpies unknown in
Bedfordshire, Northamptonshire,
Oxfordshire,
Wilts,
and North Wales. Possibly
the custom is connected with
the withering of the
barren
fig-tree.
Good
Friday brings hot-cross-buns
with the well-known rhyme.
Skipping on that
day
at Brighton is, I expect,
now extinct. Sussex boys
play marbles, Guildford
folk
climb
St. Martha's Hill, and poor
widows pick up six-pences
from a tomb in the
churchyard
of St. Bartholomew the
Great, London, on the same
Holy Day.
Easter
brings its Pace eggs,
symbols of the Resurrection, and
Yorkshire children
roll
them against one another in fields
and gardens. The Biddenham
cakes are
distributed,
and the Hallaton hare-scramble and
bottle-kicking provide a
rough
scramble
and a curious festival for
Easter Monday. On St. Mark's
Day the ghosts of
all
who will die during the year
in the villages of Yorkshire
pass at midnight
before
the
waiting people, and Hock-tide
brings its quaint diversions
to the little
Berkshire
town
of Hungerford.
The
diversions of May Day are
too numerous to be chronicled
here, and I must
refer
the reader to my book for a
full description of the sports that
usher in the
spring;
but we must not forget
the remarkable Furry Dance at
Helston on May 8th,
and
the beating of the bounds of
many a township during
Rogation Week. Our
boys
still
wear oak-leaves on Royal Oak
Day, and the Durham
Cathedral choir sing
anthems
on the top of the tower in
memory of the battle of
Neville's Cross, fought
so
long ago as the year
1346.
Club-feasts
and morris-dancers delight the
rustics at Whitsuntide, and the wakes
are
well
kept up in the north of
England, and rush-beating at Ambleside,
and hay-
strewing
customs in Leicestershire. The
horn dance at Abbot Bromley
is a
remarkable
survival. The fires on
Midsummer Eve are still
lighted in a few
places
in
Wales, but are fast
dying out. Ratby, in
Leicestershire, is a home of old
customs,
and
has an annual feast, when
the toast of the immortal
memory of John of Gaunt
is
drunk
with due solemnity. Harvest
customs were formerly very
numerous, but are
fast
dying out before the
reaping-machines and agricultural depression.
The "kern-
baby"
has been dead some
years.
Bonfire
night and the commemoration of
the discovery of Gunpowder
Plot and the
burning
of "guys" are still kept up
merrily, but few know
the origin of the
festivities
or
concern themselves about it.
Soul cakes and souling still
linger on in Cheshire,
and
cattering and clemmening on the
feasts of St. Catherine and
St. Clement are
still
observed in East Sussex.
Very
remarkable are the local
customs which linger on in
some of our towns and
villages
and are not confined to
any special day in the year.
Thus, at Abbots Ann,
near
Andover, the good people hang up
effigies of arms and hands in memory
of
girls
who died unmarried, and gloves
and garlands of roses are
sometimes hung for
the
same purpose. The Dunmow
Flitch is a well-known matrimonial
prize for
happy
couples who have never
quarrelled during the first
year of their wedded
life;
while
a Skimmerton expresses popular
indignation against quarrelsome or
licentious
husbands and wives.
Many
folk-customs linger around
wells and springs, the
haunts of nymphs and
sylvan
deities who must be propitiated by
votive offerings and are
revengeful when
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