To meet the Devil here, one placed a frog, caught under a full moon, in an anthill. It was then necessary to go to a crossroads where five roads met and, during the midnight bell, to invoke him. The Devil was then said to appear on one of the five roads.

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Scotland is rich in ghostly lore. It is said that the ghost of Lady Blanche Drummond haunts the halls of Castle Fraser. She was murdered in its Green Room in 1874. Its secret staircases & trap doors befit her spectral presence. Clad in a long gown, she haunts 😱#SuperstitionSat

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“... go stand by the gate of heaven till the Judgment Day..." (Lady Wilde)

Cursed the girl her dead lover, haunting her thrice, regretted it immediately, prayed she might be reunited with him, died within the year and found him waiting there

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In the lore of Zakarpattia, the restless souls seek help from the living.

The words “Every living breath praises the Lord” can help identify whether they are malicious or not: an evil specter will disappear, but a good one will respond “and so do I!”.

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In the Norman Bessin, sorcerers are known to transform people into black dogs and send them to the city of Bayeux as Rongeur d'Os, bone gnawers.

Seeing one means certain death.

🎨 Kastelkreuz

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Invisibility spell: Take a dead bat to a stream where you can't hear the rooster crow. Remove bat's skeleton and cast the bones in the stream. The bone floating upstream is the magic one. Place it under your tongue for invisibility 🦇 ✨


🎨 Jessica Roux

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The Jersey Devil is a legendary creature said to inhabit the forest of Pine Barrens in S Jersey. It's described as a wyvern-like creature with a horse- or goat-like head, bat-like wings, horns, and a forked tail. 

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King Herla was invited to the marriage feast of the King of the Fae; upon leaving, his host gave him horses and a fine bloodhound, which sat on the saddlehorn. The fae king warned Herla not to dismount before the dog leapt down, or he would turn to dust... 1/2

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The natives of Renwick, Cumbria were once known as “bats” due to the monstrous creature that is said to have flown around their ruined church at night 🦇


art: Matthew Starbuck

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🐾🔥🐾"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.

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The toxic wolfsbane plant was mixed with bait and used to kill wolves in the past. This association with wolves carried on into the future. It was both ingested to treat lycanthropy (many people died) and planted to repel werewolves.

🎨Kiriska

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Tying the wolf’s mouth was a spell once used by Anatolian communities to protect their missing sheep from wolf attacks. The blade of a knife would be closed and tied, with prayers told over it. This was thought incapacitate the jaws of wolves in the area. (1/2)

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A branch from the elder tree will protect one from the charms of witches & wizards...

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As well as carrying the devil’s curse on all those who eat them after on 29th September, blackberries can protect your home against vampires. If planted nearby, a vampire gets distracted by counting the berries & forgets his harmful intentions.

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‘Man is certainly stark mad; he cannot make a worm, and yet he will be making gods by dozens.’
Montaigne, The Complete Essays.
🖼️ Hebe, Carolus-Duran.

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‘There is a faculty in man that will acknowledge the unseen. He may scout and scare religion from him; but if he does, superstition perches near.’
Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu, The Haunted Baronet and Others: Ghost Stories 1861-70.

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It had become a glimmering girl
With apple blossom in her hair
Who called me by my name and ran
And faded through the brightening air.

'The Song of Wandering Aengus'


🖼️'Boreas',1903

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The Ghost light is a common ritual in Shakespeare theatre it originated from the curse of the Macbeth play, the ghost light is kept on in empty theaters to appease the ghosts.

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According to old Irish superstition, fairy queens gathered the most powerful magical herbs by the light of a candle held by a dead man’s hand under the full moon.

🎨 Carus

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In Greek mythology, one of the most famous tales involving weaving is of Penelope, whose weaving and unraveling allowed her to keep her suitors at bay while her husband Odysseus was away. More in the thread below.

🎨'Penelope at her Loom'- Sidney Harold Meteyard. https://t.co/OT7zSueJzF

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