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HEARTH WITCHERY

This is the ancient wisdom of the grandmothers, the wise women, once passed down from mother to daughter and crone to apprentice, and then improved by a lifetime of study and the daily observation of the patterns of nature.

In bygone ages most of us lived much closer to nature than we do now. Once every woman had to be something of an herbalist and healer, responsible for her household’s health, since professional medical help was either unavailable or too expensive (and possibly dangerous to boot). Every home kept some drying herbs and flowers to make herbal infusions, powders, oils and poultices, brewed wine and ale, preserved fruit, made jams and jellies, pickles and chutneys, and many also made inks, dyes, soaps and household cleaners. A girl would be initiated into the secrets of these family formulas by her mother, along with her knowledge of folklore, stories, healing potions, minor surgery, gardening, brewing and wine making, spinning, weaving, dyeing, childcare, home management, animal husbandry, bee-keeping, fortune telling and cookery know-how.

And then there were those in the community who knew that little bit more, the village wise woman or cunning man. When joined my first coven Julia, our high priestess, told us stories of the herb wives of the past, who cared for the bodies and spirits of those around them, telling their fortunes, treating their bodily ailments with herbs, dowsing their lost property, and physicking their farm animals. She held them up to us as examples of powerful, magical women in an age when women otherwise had little influence. They were the midwives who brought new life into the world, she said, and who laid out the dead at the end of life. Though such stories have often been wildly romanticised, folklore records and accounts do show that virtually every village seems to have had a wise woman or a cunning man of some sort. These village shamans had different names in different places, including handywomen, blessers, witches, conjurors, herb wives, wild herb men, snake doctors, fairy doctors and currens. These practitioners didn’t use athames and magic swords but everyday objects – stones, keys, shears, sieves, pitchforks, brooms, divining rods, wax, bottles, paper and anything that came readily to hand from the kitchen or farm.

This is the ancient wisdom of the grandmothers, the wise women, once passed down from mother to daughter and crone to apprentice, and then improved by a lifetime of study and the daily observation of the patterns of nature. Such expertise formed the pattern of women’s lives for thousands of years and that women developed highly skilful methods in all these areas, even though no contemporary historian wrote about them or accorded women due status for their invaluable work. Women’s knowledge has been derided and ignored for most of our history, and this is just as true today in western culture, in which knowledge is ‘owned’ by experts (mainly men) and can only be passed on through state-approved academic institutions, and where those seeking to follow traditional or alternative paths – such as herbalism – are dismissed as uneducated, naïve or even dangerous.

But this is our knowledge, our heritage – as women and as witches, both male and female. Discovering it and practicing my Craft has been a marvellous adventure for me, and it never ceases to fill me with wonder and awe at the power of Mother Nature. It makes me aware of the magic that flows throughout the world in every uncurling oak leaf in spring, every blushing rose petal, every humming summer bee, every rutting stag, and every misty shore. This is the reward of the path of the hearth witch.

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THIS WEEK’S READING (27.5.24) – THE HIGH PRIESTESS

The card of the High Priestess is a card of mystery that represents a link to the subconscious mind and the inner world of the self, which cannot be accessed through the intellect or waking consciousness, but which is only revealed in dreams and symbols. Its hidden workings shape the underlying personality and responses of an individual, which become manifest in the everyday world.

Now is not the time to act, but to retreat, think and meditate. You may find that your dreams and intuitions are very powerful at this time; the Otherworld may be trying to break through with small signs and unexpected encounters that you should take note of.

Your views are changing and your life with them: you are about to undergo a new level of enlightenment and spiritual development.  You may be inspired to be creative, and this is a particularly good card for poets and writers.

The High Priestess can mean that a noble, spiritual woman enters your life, either as a friend, teacher or lover, who can show you the world of the mystical, esoteric and spiritual. She may, however, block you from moving ahead too far and too fast, and this is part of her wisdom – to see too much at once would overwhelm you and invite madness.

 © Anna Franklin, Pagan Ways Tarot, Schiffer, 2015

THIS WEEK’S READING (25.5.25) THE MAGICIAN (reversed)

The Magician stands in the sunlight before an altar on which is a sword, a wand, a cup and a pentacle, the four magical tools of the four realms of the Minor Arcana which represent the classical elements that make up the world – air, fire, water and earth.

The Magician represents creation and positive action, but the reversed card indicates an inability to act. You may fear failure, lack self-confidence or be confused about how to proceed. Before you go ahead you need a clear plan of action, must assess your skills and perhaps learn new ones, and above all, seek advice from those who are more experienced.

The Magician reversed can become the plausible and charming trickster, the liar and conman who uses his cleverness to exploit and swindle others.

© Anna Franklin, Pagan Ways Tarot, Schiffer, 2015

Warding Magic

In old cottages, you might find various things hanging up around the house, a horseshoe over the door, horse brasses on the hearth, or glass balls in the windows. These are not just decorations; they are wards for magical protection. Their purpose is to turn away negativity and evil.

We all want to protect our homes; we fit locks and security cameras to deter thieves and those who would intrude on the very place where we should feel safest, where we should be able to keep out what we don’t want. Within living memory, it was also common to protect the home with magical wards – charms and spells to keep it safe and lucky. As witches, it is part of our craft to take basic precautions against harmful spiritual energies. Failing to do so would be like not bothering to lock the front door.

The threshold of a house is liminal place, neither inside nor outside, but a boundary between the two, and therefore vulnerable, a way for the Otherworld to intrude. In British folklore, it was thought unlucky to tread on the threshold itself, and people were always careful to step over it; this is why brides, in a transitional stage of life, are carried across it.  The Irish scattered primroses on the doorsteps to keep fairies from crossing it, and in England thresholds were made of protective holly wood for the same reason. In parts of Britain, defensive designs called step patterns were drawn on the doorstep in salt or chalk or reproduced in mosaic or tiles. These took the form of knotwork and ‘tangled thread’ patterns since spirits are said to follow straight paths when travelling and get caught up in trying to follow the twisting lines. You can protect your threshold by using white chalk or paint to inscribe protective runes, pentacles, knotwork or tangled patterns on the doorstep.

Historical ‘witch bottles’, dating back to the seventeenth century, have been found in cottages, colleges, inns, ecclesiastical premises and historical buildings either buried beneath the floor, under the threshold, near the hearth or up a chimney – entry and exit points of the building, and therefore more susceptible to ingress by dark, supernatural forces, witches, ghosts, fairies and demons. It was usual to get one of the cunning folk to create it. Witch bottles were used for protection from magical attack, or from disease. Each was found stoppered and filled with an assortment of items such as iron nails, lead shot, bundles of hair, thorns and small bones. These are all protective items, and iron in particular is inimical to evil witches and fairies. They were then filled with the final ingredient, the urine of the victim (the person who needed protection from magical attack), to bind the bottle to its creator, stoppered and buried. As well as protection from bewitchment, the witch bottle was used for protection against disease. A plastic witch bottle in the Museum of London found in the River Thames, seems to date from 1982, according to the latest coin found within it, along with slivers of metal, coins, a tiny bottle of oil of cloves, and a large number of human adult teeth. It appears to have been aimed at protection from toothache or tooth decay, since oil of cloves is a remedy for toothache.

Country and cunning folk would hang a broom above the front door to keep evil spirits out or cross brooms in front of the door to keep negative energy and malicious magical practitioners at bay.

Hagstones are naturally holed stones, usually found on the seashore or riverbanks, associated with the hag goddess herself, and long believed to have a protective influence. A naturally holed stone is a ring, a circle of power. They may still sometimes still be seen hanging in barns, stables and other farm buildings throughout the UK. Sometimes a small one is added to the property’s bunch of keys or hung over the keyholes.

Horseshoes draw on the power of iron to repel malicious magic and spirits. They are nailed above doors to protect the entrance to the home, hung points upwards as a sign of power. 

Hammered ceremonially into woodwork, especially doorframes, iron nails are a means of warding off bad luck and harm from households. Like horseshoes, they have the protective power of iron. Nails are symbols of binding harmful forces, literally ‘nailing the problem’.

Witch balls are hollow spheres of glass or polished metal that are hung in the window for protection, to deflect evil spirits, bad luck, negative energies and magic sent against the homeowner. They had a widely spread historical use in England (and later America) and are still to be found today in houses and shops.  I’ve seen examples that are (roughly spherical) glass bottles, glass fishing floats, and very expensive purpose-made glass orbs. In the past, the balls were filled with coloured threads, so that any spirit trying to enter would be forced to follow the thread and get lost, or sometimes they contained holy water or salt.

The hearth is a threshold too. A common folk ward was the so-called ‘witch mark’. Rather than being a defence against witches, they were for general protection, and found carved into the door posts or stones near liminal places such as doors and hearths. They have been found dating back to the medieval period, on barns, churches, and houses. One of the most common is the hexafoil, or ‘daisy wheel’, boxes, meshes and grids. These function as spirit traps. You might still see horse brasses hung on the hearth in old pubs and houses. They were originally defensive charms attached to horse harnesses, to protect the animals from enchantment, but since used as hearth wards. Traditional designs include lucky symbols such as the sun or moon, horseshoes, stars and wheels, or apotropaic (evil repelling) symbols like serpents, lions, and dogs. Witch posts were built into fireplaces in the north of England to prevent evil coming down the chimney to enter the hearth and home, and to keep away evil witches. It was said that a witch could not pass the rowan wood post and the cross carved upon it, or the crooked silver sixpence that was kept in a hole at the centre of the post. The sixpence itself had magical properties and if the butter would not turn, you prised it out and put it in the churn.

© Anna Franklin condensed extract from the forthcoming, The Path of the Hearth Witch, Llewellyn 2025

6 MAY – MILK A PUNCH DAY

Cattle were turned out to their summer pastures at the beginning of this month. The Anglo Saxons called May Thrimilce, or ‘thrice milking’. Because of the abundance of grass, the milk was of finer quality and the cows yielded much more abundantly, and had to be milked three times each day, so it was in May that the Anglo-Saxons began making cheese. On May 6, Alderney farmers celebrated Milk a Punch Day, when they drank fresh milk as a toast to the season of plenty.

THIS WEEK’S READING (6 May 24) – TWO OF SWORDS

THIS WEEK’S READING (6 May 24) – TWO OF SWORDS

Travelling on through a moody landscape of pools and rocks, the Fool encounters two women quarrelling and batting at each other with wooden swords. The younger one turns to him.

“I am the Vanir goddess Freya, mistress of magic, and this is the Aesir goddess Sif. I went to Asgard, the home of the Aesir gods, and they seized upon my gifts, putting aside their own ways to satisfy their desires with magic. Then they blamed me for their own shortcomings and tried to kill me!  So the Aesir and Vanir went to war, the Aesir using weapons and the Vanir using magic. Both sides were evenly matched, and neither could win. Eventually we called a truce and came together to spit into a cauldron to create Kvasir, the wisest of all beings. Thus we learned to live in tolerance and mutual respect of each other’s ways, accepting that neither side was right or wrong.”

A quarrel has reached stalemate, and an uneasy truce is declared because both sides are equal and unyielding, and neither can win. You may just have to agree to disagree or go your separate ways.

The card can also suggest internal conflicts in which you try to avoid facing the truth about something, someone or a relationship. This is not the answer as any problem will only grow if ignored, as will the inner turmoil it creates. Step back and think logically about the situation so that you can make a considered judgment.

© Anna Franklin, Pagan Ways Tarot, Schiffer, 2015