A note from the administrator.

I have had to close the forum to new members. Registration is shut. I'm sorry for it - but I can no longer vouch for who comes through the door.

You may also find that certain older topics are no longer where you left them. I have, with great reluctance, removed a small number of threads and posts from this forum. I did so at the written request of a firm of solicitors acting for the landowner, who hold that the material touched on matters they would prefer were not aired in public.

I have complied, because I am one man and they are not. I want it set down plainly, here, that I did so under protest, and that I do not accept the grounds. Nothing removed was untrue. Nothing removed was anyone's business to suppress.

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E. Selwood

Corn dollies and the last sheaf

Old stories, sayings, customs, and the Devil's doings on the downs.
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Avebury_Janet
Posts: 31
Joined: Mon Jun 20, 2011 2:10 pm

Corn dollies and the last sheaf

#1 Post by Avebury_Janet »

A gentler subject for harvest time. The corn dolly: the last sheaf of the harvest plaited into a shape and kept through the winter, then ploughed back in or fed to the horses in the spring. The society has a lovely collection of the old county patterns, the Wiltshire whorl among them. The belief, where anyone remembers a belief at all now, is that the spirit of the corn lives in the last sheaf, and that you keep her safe over winter in the dolly and return her to the field in spring so the corn will come again. Whether anyone truly believed it, or whether it was just the shape of the year, it is a kindly thought: that you would give the spirit of the field a warm place by the hearth until it was time.

Aldbourne_Annie
Posts: 17
Joined: Tue May 22, 2012 10:58 pm

#2 Post by Aldbourne_Annie »

The last-sheaf customs are some of the cruellest and tenderest we have, Janet, side by side. In some places they raced to cut the last stand of corn by throwing their sickles at it, so that no one person could be blamed for killing the corn spirit. In others they made the last sheaf into the Hag, the Cailleach, and the farmer who got her had bad luck or a hungry winter, so you flung her into your neighbour's field if you could. Tenderness and a kind of dread, both at once, for the same handful of wheat. We have lost the dread and kept the prettiness, which is perhaps a pity. The dread is where the meaning was.
Ask me about the old stories, Ive got hundreds :)

Avebury_Janet
Posts: 31
Joined: Mon Jun 20, 2011 2:10 pm

#3 Post by Avebury_Janet »

You always find the darker root, Annie, and you are right to. I shall think of the thrown sickles next time I admire a tidy little dolly in a gift shop. Still, I am glad we kept the prettiness; better a remembered shape than nothing at all. Do come and see the collection, we have one nobody can identify, a sort of double knot, that may be unique to one vanished village's harvest. Even the dollies have their lost villages.

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