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❄️⚔️❄️Queen Jadis, the White Witch of Narnia, who ruled the land with an enchanted, endless Winter. #FairyTaleTuesday
🌿🌗🌿Hawthorn trees are beloved of the Fae, and it's said that if you sit under one when the veil between the worlds is thin - at Beltane, Midsummer Eve or Samhain - you run the risk of being enchanted or stolen away.
#SuperstitionSat
❄️🌱❄️Superstition warned against bringing snowdrops into a house, claiming that the flowers would summon bad luck, sickness or even death - but a brighter belief says that the very first one you see growing in Spring will grant you a wish.
#FolkloreThursday
🌿🌗🌿Hawthorn trees are sacred to the Fae, and it was believed that anyone foolhardy enough to rest beneath one when the veil between the worlds was thin - at Beltane, the Solstices and Samhain - risked falling under their power and being stolen away.
#SuperstitionSat
💔🐇❤️🔥Cornish folklore said that a woman who died of a broken heart could wreak vengeance on the man who wronged her from beyond the grave. Her spirit in the form of a beautiful white hare - visible only to her betrayer - would haunt and torment him to death.
#FolkloreThursday
✨🍀✨It was believed that carrying a four-leaf clover would grant the ability to see Faeries.
#SuperstitionSat
✨❤️🔥✨"Doubt thou the stars are fire, Doubt that the sun doth move, Doubt truth to be a liar, But never doubt I love."
👑Hamlet.
#ShakespeareSunday
⛈️🐈⬛⛈️If a Ship's Cat is unusually excitable or frolicsome it's a sure sign that a storm is on the way!
#SuperstitionSat #Caturday
❄️🤍❄️Jadis 'The White Witch' from The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by C. S. Lewis, had the power to create ice and snow, and ruled over the land of Narnia by conjuring the Hundred Years Winter.
#FairyTaleTuesday
🌿🐜🌿Ants in Cornwall - known as Meryons or Muryans - were believed to be diminishing Faeries living out the last and smallest stage of their earthly existence before disappearing from this world - therefore misfortune would befall anyone who harmed an ant.
#SuperstitionSat