Page:The Folk-Lore Journal Volume 5 1887.djvu/210

 202 amongst its contents, as well as the knuckle-bone, was the tip of an oxtongue kept for good-luck.

Slippers on going to bed are when taken off, for the same complaint, often placed under the bed with the soles upwards, or on their heels against the post of the bed with their toes up. The following is from Mr. T. Q. Couch: "The cramp is keenless, Mary was sinless, when she bore Jesus: let the cramp go away in the name of Jesus." All the charms published by the above-named author in his History of Polperro were taken from a manuscript-book, which belonged to a white witch.

When a foot has "gone to sleep" I have often seen people wet their forefingers in their mouths, stoop and draw the form of a cross on it. This is said to be an infallible remedy. Mr. Robert Hunt has a rather similar cure for hiccough." "Wet the forefinger of the right hand with spittle, and cross the front of the left shoe (or boot) three times, repeating the Lord's Prayer backwards." The most popular cure for this with children is a heaping spoonful of moist sugar. A sovereign remedy for this and almost every complaint is a small piece of a stale Good Friday bun grated into a glass of cold water. This bun is hung up in the kitchen from one year to the other. Bread baked on this day never grows mouldy.

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When our Saviour saw the cross, whereon he was to be crucified, his body did shake. The Jews said, "Hast thou an ague?" Our Saviour said, "He that keepeth this in mind, thought, or writing, shall neither be troubled with ague or fever."

(Erysipelas).