Page:Cornish feasts and folk-lore.djvu/65

 water. If he who holds the "neck" can manage to get into the house in any way unseen, or openly by any other way than the door by which the girl stands with the pail of water, then he may lawfully kiss her; but if otherwise he is regularly soused with the contents of the bucket. The object of crying the "neck" is to give notice to the surrounding country of the end of the harvest, and the meaning of " we yen " is we have ended.

The last sheaf of the barley-harvest (there is now but little grown) was the " crow-sheaf," and when cut the same ceremony was gone through; but instead of "a neck," the words "a crow" were substituted.

When "the neck" is cut at the house of a squire, the reapers sometimes assemble at the front of the mansion and cry "the neck," with the addition of these words, " and for our pains we do deserve a glass of brandy, strong beer, and a bun."—(John Hills, Penryn, W. Antiquary, October, 1882.)

In East Cornwall "the neck," which is made into a slightly different shape, is carried to the mowhay (pronounced mo-ey) before it is cried (a mowhay is an inclosure for ricks of corn and hay). One of the men then retires to a distance from the others and shouts the same formula. It is hung up in the kitchen until Christmas-day, when it is given to the best ox in the stalls.

The harvest-home feast in the neighbourhood of Penzance goes by the name of " gool-dize," or " gool-an-dize." In Scilly it is known as the " nickly thize." Farmers there at that season of the year formerly killed a sheep, and as long as any portion of it was left the feast went on.

Ricks of corn in Cornwall are often made, and left to stand in the "arish-fields " (stubble-fields) where they were cut. These are all called " arish-mows," but from their different shapes they have also the names of " brummal-mows " and " pedrack-mows."

Probus and Grace fair is held on the 17th of September, through a charter granted by Charles II. after his restoration, to a Mr. Williams of that neighbourhood, with whom he had lived for some time during the Civil Wars.