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🍀🍄🍀Clover was believed to protect humans and animals from the spells cast by Faeries - and carrying a four-leaved clover was said to bestow the ability to see them.
#SuperstitionSat
🌊💀🌊Voices of the drowned were believed to be heard in storms. In Norfolk they were said to scream their names. Cornish fishermen avoided old shipwrecks as they feared they would hear their own name called out by the dead crew - an omen that they would soon die.
#FolkloreSunday
🌿🌗🌿Ancient hollow Yews - living doorways between the present, the past and a #DeeperOlderDarker mythic reality, where longbows and silver-tipped arrows are your only defence...
#SuperstitionSat #FolkloreSunday #MythologyMonday
📚Books back in stock!
https://t.co/aXWYbm57Vf
🍂🖤🍂"I believe - I know that ghosts have wandered the earth. Be with me always - take any form - drive me mad. Only do not leave me in this abyss, where I cannot find you!"
📖Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë.
#FaustianFriday
🔥🖤🔥"This thing of darkness I acknowledge mine."
🌩️The Tempest.
#ShakespeareSunday
🐾🔥🐾"Looming over him and blotting out the mouth of the barrow, framed by the dim stain of light from distant towns and the miserable slate of the storm clouds, was an immense Black Dog."
📖Deeper Older Darker.
#SuperstitionSat
🍀🥾🍀An old Northamptonshire superstition warned that if a shrew crossed your path as you set out on a journey, your travels would be struck with misfortune.
#FolkloreThursday
🌿👑🌿"It will not happen for hundreds of years, but both of us are to come back."
📖The Once and Future King by T.H. White.
#WyrdWednesday
🍂⌛️🍂"O! call back yesterday, bid time return."
⚜️Richard II
#ShakespeareSunday