[257] Jour. Anthrop. Inst., 1890, XX. pp. 9, 15.

[258] J. Stow, Survey of London, ed. H. Morley, 1890, pp. 46-7; Stow’s authority is Fitzstephen. See also H. B. Woodward, Geol. of the London District (Mem. Geol. Surv.), 1909, p. 120.

[259] G. S. Tyack, loc. cit.

[260] In addition to the works already cited, these are useful: Sir G. L. Gomme, Ethnology in Folk-Lore, 1880, ch. iv. and table on p. 105; also his Folk-Lore as an Historical Science, 1908, pp. 163-4, 323, 326; W. S. Walsh, Curiosities of Popular Customs, 1898, pp. 987-90; Folk-Lore, passim, especially Vols. III. and IV.; Sir J. Rhŷs, Celtic Folk-Lore, I. pp. 332-5, 354-400. May-day customs are treated at some length by J. G. Frazer, The Golden Bough, 1890, I. pp. 72-86. R. C. Hope, op. cit., gives extensive lists for the English counties. Some curious facts will be found in J. Aubrey’s Remaines of Gentilisme and Judaisme, 1686-7, pp. iii, 34, 58 etc. Sir Norman Lockyer, Stonehenge, 1906, ch. xxi.; T. S. Knowlson, Origins of Pop. Superstitions and Customs, 1910, pp. 193-205.

[261] Rev. E. Owen, in Antiquities and Curiosities of the Church, ed. W. Andrews, 1897, pp. 229-35.

[262] Ibid., p. 230. Cf. Gomme, Prim. Folk-Moots, 1880, pp. 98-103.

[263] W. Borlase, Observations on the Antiquities of Cornwall, 1769, p. 117; J. Toland, Hist. of the Druids, 1726, p. 108; Archaeologia Cambrensis, 2nd Ser., 1850, I. p. 5.

[264] Cambrian Journal, 1856, II. p. 97; Archaeologia Cambrensis, 2nd Ser., 1850, I. p. 11; Allcroft, op. cit. pp. 594-5.

[265] E. Owen, loc. cit.; G. S. Tyack, op. cit. pp. 12-13.

[266] G. Baldwin Brown, op. cit. I. p. 269.