Heres a story, but believe me i don't recall it as i am not that old
Old wives tales and superstitious beliefs, particularly in the curative properties of animals, still exercise a world wide spell.
Macbeth’s witches in their incarnation round the cauldron sang of :-
Eye of newt and toe of frog,
Wool of bat and tongue of dog,
Adder’s fang and blind worms sting,
Lizards’ leg and owlets’ wing.
In Hull during June, 1936, a couple were sent to prison for neglecting two children. An inspector of the N.S.P.C.C., stated that the woman had told him that she had given the children, who were ill, mouse pie because she thought it was the best thing to cure them.
The belief in the curative properties of mice, which lingers in Yorkshire and other parts of England and Scotland is more than 6,000 years old. It was held by the ancient Egyptians, who gave mice as medicine to their children.
On research I found out that on Egyptian papri written about 1400 B.C., it described the eating of a skinned mouse as a remedy for an infantile ailment. There is positive evidence that the use of mice for children was many centuries older than this written record. In a pre-dynastic Egyptian cemetery, which at the lowest possible computation is over 6,000 years old, the remains of mice were discovered in the mummified bodies of children in circumstances which proved that the little animals had been skinned before they were eaten.
The belief still persists in some parts of Europe. There are unquestionably many persons living today who in their childhood, were given skinned mice as a remedy for infantile ailments, though probably in the majority of cases they did not know what they were eating.
In North-east Lancashire, fried mice was regarded as an infallible cure for whooping cough. Instances are recorded of the cough passing away after the taking of “mouse medicine” though whether due to the treatment, I would not like to say.
Edited by johndawsonjune1955, 18 January 2012 - 12:19 AM.












