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* * * * FOLK LORE. _Lammer Beads_ (Vol. iii. p. 84.).--If L. M. M. R. had taken the trouble to consult Jamieson's _Etymological Dictionary_,--that rich storehouse of curious information, not merely in relation to the language, but to the manners and customs, and the superstitions of North Britain,--he would have found interesting notices connected with his inquiry. See the word LAMMER, and the same in the Supplement. We might accept, without a moment's hesitation, the suggestion of a learned friend of Dr. Jamieson's, deriving Lammer from the French, _l'ambre_, were it not that Kilian gives us Teut. Lamertyn-steen, _succinum_. In Anglo-Saxon times it was called Eolhsand (_Gloss. AElfr._), and appears to have been esteemed in Britain from a very early period. Amongst antiquities of the Anglo-Saxon age, beads of amber are of very frequent occurrence. Douglas has collected some interesting notes regarding this substance, in his _Nenia_, p. 9. It were needless to cite the frequent mention of _precularia_, or Paternosters, of amber, occurring in inventories. The Duke of Bedford, Regent of France, purchased a most costly chaplet from a Parisian jeweller, in 1431, described as "une patenostres a signeaux d'or et d'ambre musquet." (Leber, Inventaires, p. 235.) The description "de alba awmbre," as in the enumeration of strings of beads appended to the shrine of S^r William, at York Minster, may have been in distinction from jet, to which, as well as to amber, certain virtuous or talismanic properties were attributed. There were, however, several kinds of amber,--_succinum rubrum_, _fulvum_, &c. The learned professor of Copenhagen, Olaus Worm, alludes to the popular notions and superstitious use of amber-- "Foris in collo gestatum, contra fascinationes et nocturna terriculamenta pueros tueri volunt; capitis etiam destillationibus, et tonsillarum ac faucium vitiis resistere, oculorum fluxus et ophthalmias curare." By his account it would seem to have been received as a panacea, sovereign for asthma, dropsy, toothache, and a multitude of diseases. "In summa (he concludes) Balsami instar est, calorem nativum roborans et morborum insultibus resistens."--_Museum Wormianum_, p. 32. Bartholomaeus Glanvilla, in his work, _De Proprietatibus Rerum_, has not overlooked the properties of amber, which he seems to regard as a kind of jet (book xvi., c. xlix.). "Gette, hyght Gagates,
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