Notes and Queries, Number 34, June 22, 1850. Various
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"The girls are all stark naught that wed in May."
Mickleham, June 12.
"Trash" or "Skriker."—Many hundreds of persons there are in these districts who place implicit credence in the reality of the appearance of a death sign, locally termed trash or skriker. It has the appearance of a large black dog, with long shaggy hair, and, as the natives express it, "eyes as big as saucers." The first name is given to it form the peculiar noise made by its feet when passing along, resembling that of a heavy shoe in a miry road. The second appellation is in allusion to the sound of its voice when heard by those parties who are unable to see the appearance itself. According to the statements of parties who have seen the trash frequently, it makes its appearance to some member of that family from which death will shortly select his victim; and, at other times, to some very intimate acquaintance. Should any one be so courageous as to follow the appearance, it usually makes its retreat with its eyes fronting the pursuer, and either sinks into the earth with a strange noise, or is lost upon the slightest momentary inattention. Many have attempted to strike it with any weapon they had at hand; but although the appearance stood its ground, no material substance could ever be detected. It may be added that "trash" does not confine itself to churchyards, though frequently seen in such localities.
Burnley.
NOTES ON MILTON
L'Allegro.
On l. 6. (D.):—
"Where triumphant Darkness hovers
With a sable wing, that covers
Brooding Horror."
On l. 11. (G.) Drayton has this expression in his Heroical Epistles:—
"Find me out one so young, so fair, so free."
and afterwards,—
"Leave that accursed cell;
There let black Night and Melancholy dwell."
On l. 24. (G.) Most probably from a couplet in Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy:—
"And ever and anon she thinks upon the man,
That was so fine, so fair, so blith, so debonaire."
And in Randolph's Aristippus,—
"A bowle of wine is wondrous boone chere
To make one blith, buxome, and deboneere
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