Folklore as an Historical Science by George Laurence Gomme
The Story
This isn't a book with a plot, but it has a clear mission. Gomme lays out a big argument: our old songs, nursery rhymes, and local ghost stories aren't just for entertainment. He believes they contain hidden memories of actual events, ancient laws, and old ways of life. The book is his attempt to create a set of rules—a 'science'—for how to carefully pull those historical facts out of the world of giants, fairies, and magical spells. He walks you through different types of folklore, showing how they might connect to things like old property boundaries, forgotten community rituals, or clashes between different groups of early settlers.
Why You Should Read It
What grabbed me was Gomme's genuine respect for the storytellers of the past. He treats the guy telling a tale about a haunted hill as someone preserving his community's history, not just spinning a yarn. Reading it today, you can feel his frustration with mainstream history books that only cared about kings and battles. He wanted history to include the regular folk, and he saw folklore as their archive. It's fascinating to watch him try to build this new system from the ground up, even if some of his specific conclusions feel a bit dated now.
Final Verdict
This is a classic for a reason. It's perfect for anyone curious about where history and storytelling meet. You'll enjoy it if you love local history, are into the early days of anthropology, or just really like the idea that the old tale about the devil's footprint in a nearby rock might have a grain of truth to it. Be ready for writing that's over a century old—it's clear, but it's not a modern page-turner. Think of it as a foundational text that helped people take folklore seriously.
This publication is available for unrestricted use. Enjoy reading and sharing without restrictions.
Patricia Johnson
1 year agoJust what I was looking for.
Melissa Clark
6 months agoVery interesting perspective.
George Wright
1 year agoThe layout is very easy on the eyes.