[130.3] Von Wlislocki, Volksgl. Zig., 133.

[131.1] Von Wlislocki, Siebenb. Sachs., 75, 203.

[131.2] Von Wlislocki, Volksleb. Mag., 34.

[131.3] Krauss, Sitte und Brauch, 165.

[132.1] vi. Journ. Am. F.L., 69.

[132.2] Mrs. Latham, in i. F.L. Record, 44; Roth, in xxii. Journ. Anthr. Inst., 235. Elsewhere in England you are advised to burn your hair when cut off, lest the birds carry it away; but what the result of their doing so would be I do not know. Addy, 142.

[132.3] Grimm, Teut. Myth., 1804, 1822.

[132.4] Zingerle, Sitten, 28.

[133.1] Liebrecht, 333.

[133.2] Mrs. Fanny D. Bergen, in iv. Journ. Am. F.L., 153. Brain fever was even feared in Massachusetts. Sarah B. Farmer, in vii. Journ. Am. F.L., 252.