In the modern day seven ravens (one birds
is a spare!) are looked after the Ravenmaster. Their wings are clipped so they
cannot fly away but despite this, occaisionally one goes AWOL or is sacked. A
raven called Grog diseappeared, last seen outside an East
End pub, whilst another called George was dismissed for chewing
television aerials.
Odin, with Huginn and Muninn on his shoulders. |
Huginn and Muninn fly each day
over the spacious earth.
I fear for Huginn, that he come not back,
yet more anxious am I for Muninn
Another image of Odin, with Huginn and Muninn |
In England , medieval folk lore linked
the appearance of a raven to predicting an impending death. It was said that a
bird perched on a house of a sick person was sure sign they would not recover. It's
possible this reputation came about because ravens eat carrion and therefore
have a reputation for sniffing out death - an impression heightened when
farmers report having seen ravens hovering near injured sheep, waiting for them
to die so they can feast.
One of the ravens currently resident at the Tower March 2013 |
Perhaps it is their sinister cawing, or the
jet black nature of their plumage, but from Virgil writing in 40BC, to Pliny
the Elder in AD 77, and indeed William Shakespeare in the early 17th century
(Macbeth) - ravens are regarded as prophetic or agents of death.
"The
raven himselfe is hourse
That
croaks the fatall entrance of Duncan
Under
my battlements."
But if you think yourself immune to such
superstition, who has not heard this rhyme about magpies ?(a member of the
corvid family and a relative of the raven):
Two
for joy,
Three
for a girl
And
four for a boy."
An Australian magpie pursuing a cyclist. |
It seems the magpie is beleaguered so because,
according to Christian folklore, the magpie was the only bird to remain silent
and not sing to comfort Jesus at his crucifixion. Perhaps even more sinister is
Scottish ore that holds a magpie keeps a drop of the devil's blood beneath his
tongue!
So if you meet that most portentous of
sights, a lone magpie, how can you diffuse it's evil influence? Simple! You talk to him, saying:
"Morning,
Mr Magpie, and how is your wife?"
Hence invoking the presence of a second
bird and converting sorrow to joy!
This was an interesting post. Living in California, I've never seen a raven, only crows. But I've always been riveted by Poe's "The Raven", and now i know why he made it so ominous. I love these tidbits of English history. Thanks for another good share.
ReplyDeleteYou've put your finger on it - Poe's "The Raven" was directly plumbing into the sinister associations with the occult and death. Thank you for leaving a comment and I'm so glad you are enjoying the posts.
ReplyDeleteGrace x