[42.1] ii. Witzschel, 251. Cf. the superstition known from Britain to Transylvania, that if bread in baking start, or a glass in the house break without apparent cause, there will be a death.
[42.2] Backhouse, 104.
[43.1] i. Cosquin, 71.
[43.2] Ostermann, 476.
[43.3] Jones and Kropf, lxiv.
[43.4] Tanner, 155.
[44.1] Miss Owen, Old Rabbit, 178, 169.
[44.2] i. Giles, 306.
[44.3] Pliny, Nat. Hist., xxix. 22; Jevons, Plutarch’s Romane Questions, xlvii. See a curious tale pointing to a modern survival of this belief, Pigorini-Beri, 58. In Switzerland at the present day, if a peasant have a son born and a foal or lamb dropped at the same time, the same name is given to both. Ploss, i. Kind, 189. Among the Poles (who have, it may be remarked, a great regard for snakes) a secret connection is believed to exist between cattle and lizards. Every cow is held to have a particular lizard as its guardian. If the lizard be killed, the cow will die, or at least will give blood instead of milk. iii. Am Urquell, 272. This can hardly be said to favour Mr. Frazer’s totemistic theory. See also vii. Rep. Bur. Ethn., 152; Burton, Wit and Wisd., 390. The belief in widely separated countries like Sardinia and India that it is lucky to have a snail in the house appears to be connected with this superstition. See i. Rivista, 221.
[45.1] Rev. J. Macdonald, in xx. Journ. Anthr. Inst., 131; Lubbock, 245, quoting Arbousset’s Tour to the Cape of Good Hope.