8 Apr 2010

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The old-fashioned Gypsy encampments, once so frequent in shady lanes and secluded spots, have almost entirely disappeared from some parts of England. Hence it has been too hastily assumed that these inveterate strollers have forsaken tent-life and become permanent house-dwellers. Even Mr. Borrow makes the remark (“Lavo-lil,” p. 221,) that you may “walk from London to Carlisle, but neither by the roadside nor on heath or common will you see a single Gypsy tent.” This is certainly a mistake. Harassed by the rural police, deprived of his accustomed camping-grounds by Enclosure Acts, the Gypsy, like the bittern, has been extirpated from many of his old haunts—ancient commons and wastes from which “the Northern farmer” and other pioneers of modern agriculture have “raäved an’ rembled un oot”—but he has only shifted his quarters, and not changed his habits. Read more... )
The patrin, or Gypsy trail, deserves a few words of explanation. As the Gypsies are a wandering and vagabond race, it has always been necessary for them to have some way of pointing out to stragglers the direction taken by the rest of the gang. As, moreover, in civilized countries they must travel more or less along the principal roads and highways, any ordinary spoor or trace would soon be effaced by the subsequent traffic. Hence arose the patrin-system, the invention of certain recognizable signs, by which the caravan on the march could indicate to loiterers the path it had taken, and guide them safely to the halting-place. Different kinds of patrins:
  1. Three heaps of grass (or any plant agreed upon) placed on the left-hand side of the road taken (day-patrin).
  2. Pieces of rag, generally three in number, tied to the twigs of the hedge on the left-hand side of the road taken (day-patrin).
  3. Boughs, or cleft sticks, pointing down the road taken (night-patrin).
  4. Marks and signs on the road itself—generally a cross (used in snowy, dusty, or dirty weather).
  5. Stones placed in a certain manner on the left-hand side of the road taken (used in windy weather).
  6. Shoe-prints or foot-marks, etc., etc.
—B.C. Smart, M.D., & H.T. Crofton:
The Dialect of the English Gypsies,
London, 1875.

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