

Household Lore
Bed
The position of a bed has significance in many
cultures, although opinions seem to be evenly divided as to whether the bed
should be aligned north-south or east-west for best results; perhaps a better
idea is to go with the opinion that the bed should point in the same direction
as the floorboards, rather than go across them.
In Chinese Feng Shui, a bed
which is arranged so that the sleeper's feet point
towards the door is
unlucky; this is known as the Coffin position, but can be cured with the
addition of a crystal between the bed and the doorway. A bed which is cut across
by overhead beams is also unlucky as it cuts through the life energy; red
tassels should be hung on the beams to correct this.
It is also
considered unlucky to get out of bed in the morning on a different side to that
on which the bed was entered the night before; anyone who does so will have a
bad temper all day and is said to have .got out of bed on the wrong side'.
Candles
To our ancestors,
candles were often the only source of light, and the way a candle burns is often
considered portentous. If the candle-flame burns blue and dim, it is considered
a sign that a spirit is passing, although in some places a blue flame indicates
frost on the way. A bright spark in the wick means a letter for the person
nearest the candle, or sometimes the arrival of a visitor.
Weather was
also foretold by candle-flame; a flame which flickers and wavers when there is
no breeze or draught means windy weather is on the way, whereas a candle which
will not light easily indicates rain.
It was deemed unlucky to light a
candle from the hearth. Candles should also be blown out before they burned out,
for if they were allowed to gutter out in the candlestick it was said that a
sailor would die at sea. To snuff a candle out accidentally was an omen of a
wedding.
Three candles should never be lit from a single match or taper,
and to have three candles burning in one room was very ill-omened, although in
some parts of Britain it foretold a wedding. In other places people who sat
together in a room with three candles lit would quarrel.
It was
considered unlucky to leave a candle to burn in an empty room (a superstition
which probably originated in the practical fact that it would waste the candle!)
However, a large candle was often left burning through the night of Christmas
Eve in order to ensure prosperity, warmth and light throughout the coming year;
this custom has its origins in the pre-christian festival of Yule.
Candles were used in spells by our ancestors, as they still are today. A
lover could be called to visit by thrusting two pins into a lit candle and
reciting a charm over it.
Front
Door
The front door in some districts was rarely used except on
special occasions, but as the symbolic and ceremonial entrance it was the center
of a number of traditions. A bride must always leave by the front door, both
going to the ceremony and leaving on the honeymoon. When moving into a new home,
it is considered wise to enter for the first time by the front door, to ensure
that life in that house will not be unhappy.
After a death, the front
door was often left unlocked until the burial of the body, lest the soul of the
dead person be confused and unable to leave the house. During the funeral, the
coffin was carried out of the house through the front door, which was then left
open until the mourners returned after the burial in order that the
person's
spirit might come and go freely.
Hearth
Before the introduction of electric and gas heating,
the hearth was the symbolic (and often literal) center of the house. In ancient
times the fire burnt in the middle of the main room, where it served for cooking
and heating and symbolically stood for the source of life. In ancient times the
fire was never allowed to go out; the
phrase 'a desolate hearth' also meant
an abandoned house, a scattered family, lost kinfolk. A bride would be led to
the hearth of her new home and the fire-irons put into her hand to symbolism her
new status as mistress of the house.
In Scotland and Ireland the
open peat fires were often ritually raked at night; this was a complicated
ceremony involving the division of the embers into three separate parts with a
small heap in the middle, each of which had a peat laid in it, the whole thing
then being covered with just enough ashes to keep the fire quiet
without
extinguishing it. Generally performed by the woman of the house, this ritual was
intended for protection of the entire household and sleeping family, symbolized
by the subdued fire.
It is still often considered unlucky to poke
someone else's fire without permission, unless one had known the householder
well for at least seven years. Until the last century it was also considered in
some parts of Britain to be unlucky to give fire, or even a light, out of one's
house on New Year's Day; if fire was given it was said that a death would follow
within the year.
The behavior of a fire in the grate is the source of
many omens. If the fire burns all on one side, or falls into two heaps in the
grate, a parting is foretold; if it will not start in the morning it foretells
quarrels in the house, and quarrels are also foretold from a spluttering piece
of coal. A coffin-shaped piece of coal flying
out of the fire and into the
room foretells a death, whereas a cradle-shaped (oval) piece means a birth. If
the flames are bluish, or very high, it means that frosty weather is coming. A
cluster of bright sparks at the back of the chimney means good news on the way,
and dull sparks means bad news.
Knife
In previous centuries a knife was a very personal
possession, carried at all times by its owner and used for hunting and work as
well as cutting food. A steel knife was regarded as being protection against
fairies and curses; a house could be protected by a knife being thrust into the
door and a baby protected by a knife stuck into the headboard of its cradle. A
knife could also be thrust into the mast of a boat for luck, although the word
'knife' was never spoken at sea.
If two knives are crossed accidentally
at the table it means bad luck or quarrels unless one of the knives is
immediately straightened. A knife falling to the ground means the arrival of a
male visitor. A knife with a white handle could be used to divine whether the
enquirer's future spouse would be fair or dark; the knife was spun round, and if
it came to rest with the handle pointing towards the enquirer, the spouse would
be fair; if the blade pointed at them, the spouse would be dark.
The
most common belief about knives is that a knife given as a gift will sever the
love or friendship between giver and recipient; a knife should never be taken
without something being rendered in exchange, generally a penny or other small
coin.
Laundry
Some days are
considered badly-omened for doing laundry; clothes should never be washed on New
Year's Day, since this was once thought to 'wash one of the family away' or to
cause a death or parting of someone in the family. Laundry was generally done at
the beginning of the week, and therefore washing on a Saturday was considered
the mark of a bad housewife.
In Wales it was considered a bad omen to
spill water on the way from the spring or well to the washtub; it is also
unlucky to splash water about too freely during the washing, or for the
laundress to make her own clothes very wet. It was once said that if an
unmarried girl got wet while doing the laundry, her husband was bound to be a
drunkard.
Mirror
The most
common mirror superstition is that to break a mirror means seven years' bad
luck. It is also considered unlucky for an actor to look into the mirror over
another actor's shoulder, or to allow a baby to look at itself in a mirror
before it is a year old. The most unlucky omen of all is to look into a mirror
and see no reflection; this is said to be a certain omen of death.
Mirrors were once covered after there was a death in the house, since it
was thought that if someone saw their reflection at such a time, they or another
person in the house would die soon afterwards.
Brides are also supposed
to avoid seeing themselves in their wedding clothes before the ceremony, lest
something happen to prevent the marriage taking place; this superstition is
often got around by having the bride leave off the veil, shoes, jewelry or some
other essential part of the wedding costume.
Nails
Being made of iron, nails were once used in many
charms and spells. The Romans once drove nails into the walls of houses as an
attempt at warning off the plague, and also thought that epilepsy could be cured
by driving a nail into the piece of ground the epileptic had fallen onto in a
fit.
In Britain it is considered lucky to find a nail in the road,
especially a rusty one; it should be picked up and taken home. Nails carried in
the pocket or placed somewhere in the house guard against bewitchment and the
evil eye, and during the hysteria of the Burning Times it was considered a sure
test of witchcraft to drive a nail into the footprint of the suspected person.
If really a witch, it was thought that he or she would be compelled to return to
the spot to remove the nail.
In mediaeval times a cure for toothache was
to scratch the gum with a nail till it bled, and then to drive the nail into an
oak tree. In Cheshire, nails were used as part of a binding ceremony involving a
group of people. A group would go together to a wooded area away from their
homes and would drive a nail into a tree, swearing to keep their vow for as long
as the nail was there. It could not be
withdrawn without the consent of all
of them, but once it was removed, they were all released from their vow.
Scissors
Like knives,
scissors as a gift were also considered to cut the bonds of friendship and love,
and must be given only in exchange for a small coin or other token.
Scissors were also used like knives as a charm against evil; a pair of
scissors could be thrust into the door for protection, or opened to form a
cross-shape and laid on the threshold. To drop a pair of scissors by accident is
unlucky, and the person who dropped them should never pick them up; another
person should always be asked to do this. Scissors which fall point downward
foretell a death in the
neighborhood, unless their owner is a dressmaker, in
which case they
mean an order for plenty more work to come.
Spoon
To drop a spoon is generally said to
mean that a child is about to visit the house. A spoon which falls with the bowl
downwards means a disappointment, but if the bowl is uppermost it means a
surprise on the way. Two teaspoons in a saucer means a wedding; if they are in
the saucer of a girl or young woman, they mean that she will marry twice.
Author Unknown
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