Page:Folk-lore - A Quarterly Review. Volume 22, 1911.djvu/247

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Collectanea. 213

small objects, only of value as homage. Rag offerings are naturally most frequent where there is a " blessed bush " at the well, but they are frequently hung on a bramble, or even, on the Atlantic coast, kept in place by stones. Rags abounded, with other offer- ings, at Gleninagh, at least till 1899, being tied to the twigs of an old elder bush. They were hung in quantities on the stunted old hawthorn at Oughtmama well, and were found at Tobersraheen, at Aglish graveyard in Ogonello, and on the large fallen hawthorn near the basin at Kiltinanlea. They are often accompanied by rosaries, religious medals, necklaces and ribbons, broken or whole plaster and china figures and vessels, and glass, buttons, pins, and nails. Such objects are abundant at many wells, such as the little rock well in Glensleade between the largest Berneens dolmen and the road, Killone altar, St. Senan's well near Kiltinanlea (Plate XL), Fortanne, Kilseily, St. Lachtin's well near Miltown Malbay, Kilcredaun, and a well of St. Inghean Baoith (stopped by a too zealous Protestant, but recently reopened and dedicated to St. Joseph) near Inchiquin lake. The almost disused dolmen- well of Tobergrania had in 1893 two rude crosses of laths tied together, buttons, bottles, glass, crockery, and a coin.^^ In 1889 Kilfarboy well near Milltown was frequented on Sundays and Thursdays by sick persons, and abounded in such offerings as bits of leather, crockery, and blacking pots. (I am not certain whether this note refers to St. Lachtin's well or to one near Kilfarboy church.) China and pebbles have been offered at Kilcredaun in a cleft beside the Shannon estuary, and pebbles placed in the " Font" of Doughnambraher in central Clare. ^^

Thos. J. VVestorpp.

{To be contifiued.)

A Few Norwegian Proverbs. The following group of Norwegian proverbs has been selected by my good friend Captain Einar Sagen, of the Fifth Regiment

^^ Cf. view of well and its offerings, Proceedings of Royal Irish Academy, Ser. iii., vol. iv, , p. 87. ^'See Plate iv., ante, p. 54.