It waits for you beside the pool, in rooms gone overgrown.
Mike Driver
occasionally subtle
Xuebing Du

Misplaced Lens Cap
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
will byers stan first human second
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Peter Solarz
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
d e v o n
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@rune-boy
It waits for you beside the pool, in rooms gone overgrown.

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Creating galdrastafur
Do you know how you must cut [them]?
Do you know how you must interpret?
Do you know how you must colour?
Do you know how you must try?
Do you know how you must invoke?
Do you know how you must sacrifice?
Do you know how you must send?
Do you know how you must kill?
Whenever someone asks me how to get started on creating galdrastafur I always think of this poem from the Havamal. Odin in here gives you the starting point. First learn the elder futhark until you understand the meanings and names and then learn the younger.
Vikings did not use the elder futhark. They used the younger. For divination they used the younger futhark and for galdr they used the younger futhark. Viking aged magickal texts use the younger futhark.
You then study the terminal staves and their meaning. How they were used in galdrastafur creation by viewing old manuscripts like the galdrabók skuggis skreed and the like. You can find some of these on galdrastafir.org
You will need to study older manuscripts in order to see how they were used back then. What types of woods? What metals? What taufr? This takes years to develop so don't feel frustrated. I have been on the Norse path for more than 25 years. Start by learning the futhark and create your own runes. Sacrifice to them and learn more about them.
I AM BACK. AND I AM DEATH. HELLO.
Hey, If anyone has an in depth knowledge of dreams or astrology i could really use some help. Ive been having the most whack dreams lately and I believe it might have to do with the perseid, but I could be wrong. If anyone knows anything, please reach out.
I apologize for my absence, if anyone's been wondering. Ive been taking some time just for myself. Some introspection and self learning really does good.

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Working on the farm yesterday. Here's Barack
……leave me alone, old man
I relate entirely too hard to this
Victor Hugo’s Blotto Drawings In Coal, Dust And Blood (1848-1866).
“Exaltation is a tremendous lucidity” (Le vertige est une lucidité formidable), particularly an exaltation carrying you simultaneously towards day and night, composed of two eddies turning into opposite directions. One sees too much and not enough. One sees everything, and nothing” – Victor Hugo (1802-1885).
A Folk Witch Library
Hidden like Viking gold under the landscape there is a rich body of nearly lost folkwitch tradition hiding in plain sight on the internet. Particularly in the 18th and 19th century antiquarians, folklorists and ethnologists documented the rural and occasionally urban folk beliefs of practically all of the UK and much of Europe. Organizations like the Folklore Society, founded in 1878, were created to help catalog and publish this body of collected ethnological data. A vast repository of a spectrum of witch and cunning craft practices.
Below are a list of links to various sources on the internet. The non Abramhamic roots of British folk traditions date from an era of Celtic settlers, and thus much of the spirit tradition concerns beings we now collectively call “fairies”, though their origins and nature differ greatly.
Books Available Online for free:
Folklore Society/Folk-Lore Journal:
Over 100 publications made by the Folk-Lore Society can be found on Archive.org. Unfortunately these are mostly unsorted, although they represent a massive amount of folkwitch information. Particularly in the realm of curses, hexes, salves, second sight, and boundary magic.
I will be launching a separate blog dedicated to delving into the contents of the Folklore Society’s publications in the next few weeks. In the meantime - Happy digging: Link to archive of FOLKLORE JOURNAL
Books whose content focuses on first-hand accounts of folk traditions, alpha by author. (* denotes particularly important titles)
Richard Blakeborough - Wit, Character, Folklore and Customs of the North Riding of Yorkshire (1898)
J G Campbell - Witchcraft & Second Sight in the Highlands and Islands of Scotland (1902) - Superstitions of the Highlands & Islands of Scotland, Collected entirely from Oral Sources (1900)*
Edward Clodd - Tom Tit Tot - an essay on savage philosophy in folk-tale (1898)
Oswald Cockayne - Leechdoms, Wortcunning, and Starcraft of Early England (1864)
Thomas Crofton Croker - Fairies Tales and Legends of the South of Ireland (1834)*
John Graham Dalyell - The Darker Superstitions of Scotland (1834)*
Walter Evans-Wentz - The Fairy-Faith in Celtic Countries (1911)
Richard Folkard - Plant Lore, Legends and Lyrics (1892)
W. Gregor - Notes on the Folklore of the North East of Scotland (1881)
Lady Gregory - Visions and Beliefs in the West of Ireland (1920)*
William Henderson - Notes on the Folk-Lore of the Northern Counties of England and the Borders (1866)*
Thomas Keightley - The Fairy Mythology (1828)
Robert Kirk - The Secret Commonwealth (1893, written 1691)*
Fiona Macleod (William Sharp) - Where the Forest Murmurs (Nature Essays) 1906
James Napier - Folk Lore - Superstitious Beliefs in the West of Scotland within this Century (1879)*
Sir Walter Scot - Letters on Witchcraft and Demonology (1884) - The Existence of Evil Spirits Proved (1843)
Charles Kirkpatrick Sharpe - A Historical Account of the belief in Witchcraft in Scotland (1884)
Wirt Sikes - British Goblins Welsh Folklore fairy mythology legends and traditions (1880)
Eve Simpson - Folklore in Lowland Scotland (1908)
Benjamin Thorpe -Northern Mythology, Comprising the Principal Popular Traditions and Superstitions of Scandinavia, North Germany, and the Netherlands Volume 1 Volume 2 Volume 3
Lady Wilde - Ancient Legends, Mystic Charms, and Superstitions of Ireland * Volume 1 Volume 2 Volume 3
Thomas Wilkie - Old Rites, Ceremonies, and Customs of the Inhabitants of the Southern Counties of Scotland (1916) (History Of The Berwickshire Naturalists’ Club Vol 23 1916-18, pages 50-145)
Suggested books that are unfortunately in copyright or otherwise not currently available online:
(Links to goodreads and worldcat.org)
Katharine Briggs - The Anatomy of Puck (1959)* - Pale Hecate’s Team (1962)* - Fairies in English Tradition and Literature (1967)
Thomas Davidson - Rowan Tree and Red Thread (1949)
George Ewart Evans - The Pattern Under the Plow (1971)* - Ask the Fellow Who Cuts the Hay (1965) - The Crooked Scythe
Harold Hansen - The Witch’s Garden (1978)
DA Mac Manus -The Middle Kingdom (1959)*
Emma Wilby - Cunning Folk and Familiar Spirits: Shamanistic Visionary Traditions in Early Modern British Witchcraft and Magic (2005)* - The Visions of Isobel Gowdie: Magic, Witchcraft and Dark Shamanism in Seventeenth-Century Scotland (2010)
C. L. Zalewski - Herbs in Magic and Alchemy: Techniques From Ancient Herbal Lore (1990)
Misc Short articles:
Frederika Bain - The Binding of the Fairies: Four Spells (2012)
Thomas Forbes - Witch’s Milk and Witches’ Marks (link to pdf)* (Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine, XXII 1950)
Fae Honeybell - Cunning Folk and Wizards In Early Modern England (2010) (link to pdf)
Canon J. A. Macculloch - The Mingling of Fairy and Witch Beliefs in Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century Scotland (Folk-Lore/Volume 32/1921)
Germanic Magick Discord Server
So i've noticed theres a large amount of people who practice germanic magick here on tumblr, but at the same time, ive noticed there isnt a big pool of resources and there isn't a lot of interaction between blogs, aside from a couple blogs that message each other
So i'm mulling over the idea of making a discord dedicated to germanic magick. One where members can talk, share their knowledge and interact with their community. If this sounds like a good idea, or if you know a server like this, shoot me a message or reblog and like to let me know
I would need help modding and setting up bots since I dont have a lot of knowledge regarding that
Thanks!

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Seljalandsfoss waterfall in southern Iceland [1365x2048] [OC] - regisfrost
I gotta find an apothecary nearby.
I forgot how much I revile pagan stores.
Honestly most "pagan" or "witch" stores I find are just glorified shinny rock shops with like two good books and a ton of weird borderline appropriate-y stuff
Find locally owned natural food stores too. They have spell ingredients impossible to find anywhere else and other goodies you wouldn’t think to find there. Local is key though, find a family-owned one. It’s my go-to place for ingredients, herbs and local seasonal goodies like lavender bread and honey scones that relate to the wheels of the year.
I like the local co-op, they have some good stuff. But it can be real expensive. My dream would be to start an herb garden or something like that
I gotta find an apothecary nearby.
I forgot how much I revile pagan stores.
Honestly most "pagan" or "witch" stores I find are just glorified shinny rock shops with like two good books and a ton of weird borderline appropriate-y stuff
ok i know norse gods have the alcohol tolerance of like three freight trains but wouldn’t it be hysterical if odin was a lightweight
odin: i am the king of the gods. i contain the power of the runes, and hung myself from yggdrasil to obtain wisdom beyond your comprehension. to obtain more knowledge, i’ve travelled to the roots of yggdrasil—
odin, after half a bottle of vodka: IM GONNA TAKE MY HORSE TO THE OLD TOWN RO
Odin, looking at you after you remember he subsists off only wine/mead as per source texts: That’s my secret, I’m always drunk.
city people are cowards. YES the cows know the sins of man and YES the brook is speaking a tongue that existed long before the oldest ancestors of us both. what about it. smoke some wheat

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sometimes I wish I was a woman literally just so I could carry my runestones and tarot cards around with me in a socially acceptable purse thank you for coming to my ted talk
Fuck society
Cool leather bags are cool leather bags dude
Black dog don’t believe in sin