Ringing the Devil's Knell
- Ringing the Devil's Knell
About ten o'clock on *
Christmas Eve, ringers gather at All Saints church, Dewsbury, Yorkshire, to Ring the Devil's Knell. The church's tenor bell, called Black Tom of Southill, is rung once for every year since Christ's birth. It is called the Devil's Knell, or more colourfully, The Old Lad's Passing Bell, because of the belief that the Devil died when Christ was born. The tolling is carefully timed to finish on the stroke of midnight. A local legend explains the custom as established by one Thomas de Soothill, in penance for murdering one of his servants five or six hundred years ago.
■ Sykes, 1977: 149; Hole, 1975: 12-13.
A Dictionary of English folklore.
Jacqueline Simpson & Steve Roud.
2014.
Look at other dictionaries:
Devil's Knell — see *Ringing the Devil s Knell … A Dictionary of English folklore
The Minister's Black Veil — The children fled from his approach , illustration by Elenore Abbott, 1900 The Minister s Black Veil is a short story written by Nathaniel Hawthorne. It was first published in the 1836 edition of The Token and Atlantic Souvenir, edited by Samuel… … Wikipedia
Richard Hudson (musician) — Infobox Musical artist Img size = 150 | Name = Richard Hudson Landscape = Background = solo singer Birth name = Richard William Stafford Hudson Alias = Born = birth date and age|1948|5|9 Died = Origin = Tottenham, London, England Instrument =… … Wikipedia
Inchcape — or the Bell Rock is a notorious reef off the east coast of Angus, Scotland, near Dundee and Fife (coord|56|26.052|N|2|23.236|W|type:landmark region:GB scale:100000). Bell Rock Lighthouse, an automatic lighthouse, occupies the reef. The… … Wikipedia