Written by folklorist Andrew Lang (1844–1912), this 1894 publication examines the ambivalent relationship the living have attempted to forge with the dead throughout history. Nicknamed 'the Wizard of St Andrews', this prolific polymath also worked as an anthropologist, classicist, historian, poet, mythologist, essayist and journalist, producing over a hundred publications in his lifetime. Largely ignored by scholarship, this book suggests expanding the study of folklore to include contemporary narratives of supernatural events. Taking its title from the legends of the notorious Cock Lane ghost, the work considers the survival of ancient beliefs such as hauntings, clairvoyance, and other phenomena believed to transcend the laws of nature, and how such beliefs have persisted through great social upheaval and change. It includes chapters on savage and ancient spiritualism, comparative psychical research, haunted houses, second sight, crystal gazing, and Presbyterian ghost hunters, among others.
Cock Lane and Common-Sense by Andrew Lang c1894
Title: Cock Lane and Common Sense
Author: Andrew Lang
Publisher: Longmans Green & Co
Publication Date: 1894
Format: HardbackCondition: Brown covers with gilt lettering to spine and front-some bumping and scuffing to corners and spine. Front cover just starting to crack at spine. The pages are clean with no ink or pencil marks, slight tanning due to age. Previous owners name to front in pencil.
Book measures 20cm x 14cm with 357 pages.