Topic: Folklore
Browse Notes & Queries articles (1849–1900) tagged with the topic “Folklore”. Explore Victorian-era queries, notes, and replies on this subject.
36 articles found.
- BISHOP BARNABY (1849, REPLY)
- GROG—BISHOP BARNABY (1849, QUERY)
- Divination by the Bible and Key (1850, NOTE)
- Long Lonkin (1850, QUERY)
- The Frog and the Crow of Ennow (1850, REPLY)
- The dun cow (1850, NOTE)
- Piskies (1850, NOTE)
- St. Thomas's Day (1850, NOTE)
- PIXEY LEGENDS (1850, NOTE)
- Pixies or Piskies (1850, NOTE)
- Many Nits, Many Pits (1850, NOTE)
- Mice as a Medicine (1850, REPLY)
- THE POOL OF THE BLACK HOUND (1850, NOTE)
- LOCAL RHYMES AND PROVERBS OF DEVONSHIRE (1850, NOTE)
- DRAGONS: THEIR ORIGIN (1850, QUERY)
- Curious Welsh Custom (1850, QUERY)
- Sympathetic Cures (1850, NOTE)
- THE STORY OF THE THREE MEN AND THEIR BAG OF MONEY (1850, NOTE)
- "Trash" or "Skriker." (1850, NOTE)
- "A Frog he would a-wooing go." (1850, REPLY)
- Charm for Warts (1850, NOTE)
- Death-bed Superstition (1850, NOTE)
- Norfolk-Weather-Rhyme (1850, NOTE)
- Superstitions of the Midland Counties (1850, NOTE)
- Sir Thomas Boleyn's Spectre (1850, NOTE)
- BALLAD OF DICK AND THE DEVIL (1850, REPLY)
- Shuck the Dog-fiend (1850, NOTE)
- Cwn Wybir, or Cwn Annwn—Curlews (1850, REPLY)
- The King's Messengers (1851, NOTE)
- Snail, Snail, come out of your Hole (1851, NOTE)