Page:Folklore1919.djvu/169

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Notes on Welsh Folklore.
157

lamb of the season is male the farmer will have good luck: bad luck if it is a female.

Swans.—The eggs of the swan are hatched by thunder and lightning.

Pigeons.—If a rich man asks for a pigeon-pie or a pigeon in any other form, it is a sign that his death is near.

Fairies.—Fairies are the souls of good Druids who died before the introduction of Christianity. They are not good enough for heaven, and not bad enough for hell.

A Wishing Cell.—At St. Govain in Pembrokeshire there is a “wishing cell” in the rock. It is said that any one who turns round inside wishing for the same thing all the time, will get it before the end of the year. The place is still visited by young people who are in love.

To cure the bite of a mad dog.—An old man who was brought up on the mountains of Cardiganshire informed me that when a dog was bitten by a mad dog it was customary to write on a piece of paper the following charm: arare, char are, phragnare, phragnare, cnare, arare, arare, cnarare, phragnare. This was put in a piece of bread and given to the dog to eat. This charm is said to have been received from the celebrated wizard, Dr. Harries of Cwrtycadno in Carmarthenshire, well known in Wales and on the English borders.

Llanilar, Cardiganshire.


An Italian Cattle Festival.

Sir James Frazer kindly sends the following extract:

“At a village called Valle Pietra near Subiaco, on a certain day in August the villagers drive a cow round the village, goading it with thrusts of knives and other weapons, and singeing it with lighted sticks. After this the animal is put in a stable for the night: but it is essential that it should not be fed. The following day it is again hunted in the same manner, and it is finally killed and the meat eaten. On the second day, as it passes the houses, the villagers give money to pay the cost of