Tag Archives: Folklore

The Boiling of Bad Lord Soulis

On a circle of stone they placed the pot, On a circle of stones but barely nine, They heated it up red and fiery hot, Till the burnished brass did glimmer and shine. They rolled him up in a sheet of lead, A sheet of lead for a funeral pall, They plunged him in the ... [More »]

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Vampire Folklore Considered, 1904

The Washington Post21 August 1904

THE COMMON VAMPIRE


(Andrew Lange In the London Post) MR. BRAM STOKER lately added to the gayety of nations by a romance about vampires named “Dracula.” Vampires, these scourges of nature, were represented as having made great strides In culture. They had large balances at their banks, and one vampire employed two firms of family solicitors. They extended ... [More »]

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Ignis Fatuus, 1882

The Atlantic Monthly, Vol 49, No. 294*01 April 1882

Feux Follets


He [the devil] leaves nothing undone… to destroy the souls of dying persons. Let us suppose that the habitant’s father, the bon homme of the household, is taken suddenly ill after reading his Formulaire. The habitant at once hurries to the stable, to prepare for a swift journey to the priest’s. But Satan has been ... [More »]

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Werewolf Lore, 1882

The Atlantic Monthly, Vol. 49, No. 294* 01 April 1882

The Loup-Garou


…The most formidable creature in Lower Canada is the Loup-Garou, who acquaintance we made at the Isle of Orleans. The Loup-Garou, or man-wolf, was known in ancient times both to theologians and to law-givers. A council which was called by the Emperor Sigismund decided that sorcerers often assumed the form of Loup-Garous,and strange tales are ... [More »]

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Spirits in the Fog, Wales

Notes and Queries 2 (19), page 2949 March 1850

FOLKLORE OF WALES


No. 1. Cron Annwn. – When a storm sounds over the mountains, the Welsh peasant will tell you that his ear discerns the howl of the Cron Annwn mingling with that of the wind, yet as clearly distinct from it as is the atmosphere in a diving-bell from that of the surrounding waters. These dogs ... [More »]

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