Page:Notes on the folk-lore of the northern counties of England and the borders.djvu/384

362 with black ribbon, of spinster with white, 58; extinguishing fire where corpse is kept, 59; killing cats and dogs after passing over a corpse, ib.; carrying the dead with the sun, 61—case at Stanton, ib.; in Wales carried on right hand of way and by north gate, ib.

Divination by horse-knot or Centaurea nigra; by “kenips” or spikes of ribwort plantain; by water and holly, 99; by nine leaves of she-holly; by knot-weed, 100; by yarrow from a young man’s grave; by hanging sark to dry, 101; by sprigs of sage, rose water, and shift; by knotting garter about stocking, 102; by the willow wand; by “hair-snatching” in Germany; by crossed garters and looking-glass in Belgium, 103; by sowing hemp-seed on All Hallowe’en—and on St. Martin’s night in Norfolk, 104; by new-laid egg;