Ultimate Grimoire and Spellbook

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There are numerous charms connected with the ash-leaf, and among
those employed in the North of England we may quote the following:

"The even ash-leaf in my left hand,
The first man I meet shall be my husband;
The even ash-leaf in my glove,
The first I meet shall be my love;
The even ash-leaf in my breast,
The first man I meet's whom I love best;
The even ash-leaf in my hand,
The first I meet shall be my man.

Even ash, even ash, I pluck thee,
This night my true love for to see,
Neither in his rick nor in his rear,
But in the clothes he does every day wear."

And there is the well-known saying current throughout the country:

"If you find an even ash or a four-leaved clover,
Rest assured you'll see your true love ere the day is over."

Longfellow alludes to the husking of the maize among the American
colonists, an event which was always accompanied by various
ceremonies, one of which he thus forcibly describes:

"In the golden weather the maize was husked, and the maidens
Blushed at each blood-red ear, for that betokened a lover,
But at the crooked laughed, and called it a thief in the corn-field:
Even the blood-red ear to Evangeline brought not her lover."

Charms of this kind are common, and vary in different localities, being
found extensively on the Continent, where perhaps even greater importance
is attached to them than in our own country. Thus, a popular French one--
which many of our young people also practise--is for lovers to test the
sincerity of their affections by taking a daisy and plucking its leaflets off one
by one, saying, "Does he love me?—a little--much--passionately--not at all!"
the phrase which falls to the last leaflet forming the answer to the inquiry:


"La blanche et simple Paquerette,
Que ton coeur consult surtout,
Dit, Ton amant, tendre fillette,
T'aime, un peu, beaucoup, point du tout."

Perhaps Brown alludes to the same species of divination when he writes of:
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