The Sorcerer's Companion: A Guide to the Magical World of Harry Potter (72 page)

BOOK: The Sorcerer's Companion: A Guide to the Magical World of Harry Potter
13.96Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

What can be learned from the dregs of a cup of tea? Well, tea-leaf readers claim to see the shape of things to come. Patterns of lines, dots, and geometric shapes, as well as images that suggest plants, animals, and objects, are all said to have specific meanings. A single straight line, for example, indicates careful planning and peace of mind; two parallel lines mean a rewarding journey is in store. A circle with a cross on top is usually a bad sign, suggesting enforced confinement, as in a prison or hospital, while a tree indicates success and an acorn predicts good health. The closer the image is to the rim of the cup, the sooner it will occur. An event indicated by an image at the bottom of the cup is said to lie in the distant future.

Like Professor Trelawney, many diviners insist only someone with well-honed psychic abilities can read tea leaves properly. According to this theory, the tea leaves stimulate the intuitive powers of the reader, who will be able to foretell the future and perceive truths that would otherwise remain hidden. However, this doesn’t stop thousands of nonpsychic people from trying a little tasseomancy just for fun. If you want to try it and you don’t have a copy of
Unfogging the Future
on hand, you might use some of these traditional interpretations:

Acorn
Good health
Anchor
Voyage
Arrow
Bad news in a letter
Balloon
Troubles lifting
Banana
A business trip
Bat
Disappointment
Bee
Meeting friends
Bells
Good news
Bird
Good luck
Boat
Visit from a friend
Book
Awareness, learning
Branch
New friendship
Butterfly
Happiness
Cat
Treachery
Chair
Unexpected guest
Circle
Love
Clock
Recovery from illness
Clouds
Doubt
Coin
Payment of debt
Crab
An enemy nearby
Cross
Trouble on the way
Cup
Great success
Dagger
Danger from foes
Diamond
An expensive gift
Dog
Faithful friends
Donkey
Patience needed
Dove
Good luck
Dragon
Changes
Drum
Gossip
Egg
Fertility, increase
Envelope
News
Eye
Exercise caution
Face
New friends
Feather
Requires more effort
Fish
News from abroad
Flag
Danger
Flowers
Love, honor, esteem
Fork
Diversion from a goal
Frog
Business upswing
Giraffe
A misunderstanding
Glove
Luck and honor
Goat
Misfortune
Goose
An invitation
Grapes
Good times with friends
Guitar
Romance on the horizon
Gun
Danger, strife, catastrophe
Hammer
Triumph over adversity, hard work
Hand
Friendship
Hat
A new work situation
Horn
Abundance
Horseshoe
Good luck
House
Stability
Kangaroo
Unexpected travel
Kettle
A friendly home
Key
Unveiling of mystery
Keyhole
Unwanted news
Lace
Fragile matters
Ladder
Advancement, movement, success
Lamp
Monetary gain
Leaf
Good luck
Lion
Helpful friends
Lizard
Hidden enemies
Man
An unexpected visitor
Mermaid
Temptation
Moon
Love
Mountain
Journey or hindrance
Mouse
Financial insecurity
Mushroom
Expect delays
Musical instruments
Good company
Needle
Respect from others
Nest
Shelter
Noose
Danger ahead
Oar
Temporary problem
Owl
Scandal, bad health
Ox
Arguments with associates
Parrot
A disturbance
Pendulum
Indecision
Pig
Difficulty in relationship
Pipe
New ideas
Pumpkin
A warm relationship
Question mark
Uncertainty, change
Rabbit
Success
Rainbow
Good luck
Rat
Danger, lost possession
Ring
Marriage
Saw
Trouble with a stranger
Scales
Justice, success at law
Scepter
More responsibilities
Scissors
Angry words, family misunderstandings
Scythe
Good harvest, or a death warning
Scorpion
An enemy’s plot
Sheep
Good luck
Shoe
A career change
Skeleton
Illness
Snake
Falsehood, temptation
Spade
Good fortune through industry
Spider
Good luck, money
Squirrel
Future wealth
Stairs
Improvement coming
Star
Good luck
Sun
Continued happiness
Sword
Argument with close friend
Table
A pleasant get-together
Thistle
High ambitions
Tortoise
Criticism
Tree
Success
Triangle
Unexpected event
Umbrella
Annoyances
Vase
A friend in need of help
Violin
Loneliness
Walking stick
Need for support
Waterfall
Affluence
Web
Intrigue, complications
Window
Help from a friend
Wineglass
New acquaintances
Wings
News

 

 

arry has Hedwig, Hermione’s got Crookshanks, and Neville keeps company with his beloved toad, Trevor. Like
owls
and
cats
, toads have long been associated with
witches
and
sorcerers
in popular legend and lore. Although there’s little doubt that Trevor is a very nice fellow, most toads have a rather unsavory reputation.

During the years of
witch persecution
in seventeenth-century England and Scotland, witches were said to keep toads as “familiars”—minor
demons
disguised as animals who could be sent out to perform all manner of mischief for their mistresses. After all, how much easier for a toad than a witch to creep into a neighbor’s well and poison the water or secretly place an evil
charm
under a victim’s pillow? Toads were also rumored to play an important role in the initiation ceremonies of new witches, who might be required to nurture or kiss toads as part of the process of pledging their allegiance to the Devil. Occasionally, witches were said to transform into toads themselves.

In testimony given at witch trials, some witnesses claimed to have seen witches baptize and name their toads, dressing them up in black or scarlet velvet outfits and tying little bells to their feet. Such care suggested that witches were quite attached to their pets, and many people believed it risky to harm a toad, lest it be a witch’s warty pal. One tale from Somerset, England, recounts how an old woman went out for a walk carrying her three pet toads, Duke, Dick, and Merry-boy, in a basket. When she stopped to watch three farmers at work cutting wheat, one toad escaped and jumped into the path of a farmer’s scythe. Laughing, the farmer let the blade fall upon the toad, killing it. “I’ll show you!” cried the woman. “None of you will finish today’s work!” Within moments, the first farmer had sliced his hand with his scythe. Soon the second man cut across the toe of his boot with his blade, and then the third sliced his own boot open from one side to the other. Frightened, the farmers fled the field, leaving day’s work left undone.

 

(
photo credit 82.1
)

 

According to popular belief, witches dressed their pet toads in tiny cloaks and fastened bells around their ankles. Apparently, these toads enjoyed their party clothes
.

 

According to some popular lore, however, the relationship between witches and toads wasn’t always so loving. Any toad not lucky enough to be kept as a pampered pet was believed to be raw material for brewing
potions
and casting
spells
. To do away with an enemy, a witch might baptize a toad with the enemy’s name and then kill the toad in a particularly unpleasant manner. Wherever the human victim was, he would supposedly suffer the same fate. To make themselves invisible, witches were rumored to apply a skin lotion made of toad saliva mixed with the sap of the sowthistle plant.

Other books

Hunter's Need by Shiloh Walker
American Mutant by Bernard Lee DeLeo
An Axe to Grind by Hope Sullivan McMickle
The Boys Next Door by Jennifer Echols
Hard Ride to Wichita by Ralph Compton, Marcus Galloway