The British Roman And Saxon Antiquities And Folklore of Worcestershire

Cover The British Roman And Saxon Antiquities And Folklore of Worcestershire
The British Roman And Saxon Antiquities And Folklore of Worcestershire
Jabez Allies
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'!. ').
J This name, probably, is a contraction of Tibia, the name of an ancient musical pipe.
See p. 140.
448 Saxon " hieg. " To dance the hay, means to dance in a ring, probably from dancing round a haycock *. Hay (Fr. Haie, a hedge) means a net which encloses the haunt of an animal f. There is a piece of land called " Robin's Hays, " in Northfield*.
" Patch Hill, " in Alfrick, lies in Patches Farm ; and there is a very steep, deep, and gloomy lane, called the Sandy Lane, which runs down the
...south side of the farm by Patch Hill to the main road, by the Fairy's Cave in the rock at the Knap, by the Bridge 's-stone, near the north side of Old Storage, and many are the tales told of the haunted lane. Frequently has the benighted peasant been scared by the sight of a black greyhound, or of a horse or man of the same sombre hue. Sometimes a mysterious waggon, drawn by four black horses, has passed by him, while at others his eyes have encountered the form of a crow, perched upon one of the barrels in an old cider-house !| attached to a mouldering building in the lane.

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