Monday, August 1, 2011

are you a good witch or a bad witch?

A recent purchase, and one of the coolest books I own:
I will warn, though, that it is something of a tease, offering up all sorts of uses for mandrake, when it turns out that the entire plant is poisonous, especially to children. Nevertheless, Gardener's Magic and Other Old Wives' Lore is chock-full of information and advice of dubious practical value, including, but not confined to, the following:
Never take a house with an established garden in which parsley is not growing, or you will never see the year out. The trouble for the previous owner may have been, of course, the fact that it takes an honest man to grow parsley; or he may have been aware that he who grows it well will have no sons and only barren daughters. All round, it seems safer for a man to make his wife sow it; and indeed there is another saying that where it grows well it is the man of the house who wears the trousers. (32)
Before picking or digging up, the plant should always be 'saluted' and told for what purpose it is needed, and if possible for whom, thus pacifying it and ensuring its cooperation. (33)
The (mandrake) root does go down exceedingly deep, certainly as much as five feet. The Greeks believed that you might even, if you fell into the hole when you had dug it up, tumble straight down to Hades. (37)
Both Bartholomew and the good Bishop Vincent of Beauvais testified that a decoction of heliotrope, drunk with the invocation of powerful enough spirits, had the power to give invisibility at will. (43)
Gardener's Magic and Other Old Wives' Lore was preceded by Old Wives' Lore for Gardeners, another title I'll have to snatch up some time in the near future. I'm thinking the 2012 garden might have something of a theme to it. Now, if I could only remember where I put my broom and pointy hat...

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