"Hareskins is in—leastways I c'lects them—from September to the end of March, when hares, they says, goes mad."
Perhaps the allusion to the well-known saying, "as mad as a March hare," on this occasion was made without the collector of hareskins being aware of the existence of such a saying. Is anything known of its origin? I imagine that Mr. Mayhew's work will bring many such sayings to light.
L. L. L.
160. Vermin, Payments for Destruction of, and Ancient Names.
—Can you afford me any information as to the authority (act of parliament, or otherwise,) by which churchwardens in old times paid sums of money for the destruction of vermin in the several parishes in England; and by what process of reasoning, animals now deemed innocuous were then thought to merit so rigorous an extirpation?
In some old volumes of churchwardens' accounts to which I have access, I find names which it is impossible to associate with any description of vermin now known. Perhaps some of your correspondents may be able to identify them: such as glead, ringteal, greas'head, baggar. My own impression as to the latter name was, that it was only another way of spelling badger; but as, in the volume to which I refer, the word bowson occurs, which the historian Dr. Whitaker pronounces to be identical with that species of vermin, my surmise can scarcely be correct.
J. B. (Manchester).
161. Fire unknown.
—Leibnitz (Sur l'Entendement humain, liv. i. § 4.) speaks of certain islanders to whom fire was unknown. Is there any authentic account of savages destitute of this essential knowledge?
C. W. G.