They’re a Superstitious Lot, Those Victorians
By Kerry A Waight
While the Victorian Era was a period of technological
advancement, encompassing as it did the end of the Industrial Revolution, and
formality, it was also a period of superstitions, many of which are still
observed today.
Death
In a period where medical cures were never as sure as they
are today, there were, understandably, a lot of superstitions around death and
dying. Many researchers say that the Victorians were, in fact, obsessed with
death and the afterlife.
How to know to expect trouble.
There were many signs to give you the ‘heads up’ to expect
death, either to yourself or someone close to you.
1.) Seeing
yourself in a dream is a sign that you will die.
2.) A
dream of a baby being born is an omen that someone will die.
3.) Large
drops of rain are an indication that there has been a death, as is a bird
pecking on your window.
5.) If
a picture falls off a wall, someone you know will die.
6.) Finding
a single snowdrop flower in the garden.
8.) Seeing
a sparrow land on a piano foretells of death.
9.) When
someone in your house is sick, you don’t want to hear a dog howling—it’s a bad
omen. If you turn reach under the bed to turn a shoe over the omen can be reversed.
Death and darkness
Of course, you needed to protect yourself from the dead and
dark entities, even your family members.
10.) The
dead were carried out of the home feet first so that the dead could not look
back and call any remaining relatives to follow them into death.
11.) Family photographs were often turned face down so that the
dearly departed could not possess any of the subjects of the photo.
13.) If
you need to yawn, make sure you cover your mouth. You don’t want your spirit to
leave and be replaced by the devil.
14.) Speaking of evil, planting yellow flowers in the garden
will protect the family from witches.
There were also things to avoid doing to spare either
yourself or others.
15.) Placing new shoes on a table will lead to the death to
the wearer within a year. My
paternal grandmother was a very superstitious woman. This is the one that
sticks in my mind the most. To this day, I cannot put new shoes on a table.
16.) If you open an umbrella indoors, you may lead to the
murder of a family member.
17.) While waiting for the funeral, all mirrors in the house
were covered with heavy black material so that the soul of the departed could
not be trapped in the mirror
18.) To ward off bad luck following a
death, it was common practice to stop the clocks in the house at the time of
death and not starting them again until after the funeral.
19.) Apparently, you could protect both people and animals
from death in a house where many people have died if you tie a black ribbon on
everything alive that enters your house, including your animals.
Funerals and burials
20.) Coming across a funeral procession in Victorian times
was very bad luck indeed. If possible, you would, and should, turn around and
go the other way. Failing that, grabbing a button while the procession passed
may save you from the bad luck.
21.) It is bad luck to lock the house after a funeral
procession left the house.
22.)
The flowers growing on your grave could tell the world what you were really
like. Blooming flowers on a grave told of a good person but weeds indicate a
wicked person.
23.) If you don’t hold your breath while you are passing by
a graveyard, you will not be buried. Given that burial and not cremation was
the tradition in the Western World at the time, I would have to presume that
your body was not around to be buried.
Life
Nice things!
Not all superstitions were around death, dying and demons
though.
24.) Absently rocking an empty cradle means that a baby is
on the way.
25.)The sound of a robin singing on a bride’s wedding day
was very good luck because they were an omen of joy.
26.) Victorian wedding guests threw
rice, grain or birdseed at the couple as they left the church to ensure
fertility.
27.) Putting a garment on inside out is good luck.
28.)If a little spider was found on the wedding dress on the
morning of the wedding, the bride would never be without money.
29.)Many couples were married in the home. Good luck icons
such as bells, doves, wishbones were used to decorate the area where they
exchanged vows .
30.) Throwing the first Shrove Tuesday pancake to the hens
will give you plenty of eggs for the rest of the year.
31.) Something old, something new, something borrowed and
something blue? “Blue was the colour sacred to Virgin Mary. Old symbolized that
she should still love and stay attached to her old life, new indicated success
in her new life, borrowing indicated that friends would be helpful and faithful
when needed and blue for symbol of loyalty and constancy” (The Victorian
Era 2018).
32.) Turning money over in your pocket while staring at a
new moon will double your money.
As you can imagine, there are many more superstitions out
there from the Victorian era. While many may laugh at them, how many of us
don’t put umbrella’s up inside, throw rice or confetti at a wedding—or follow
any type of superstition, even though our modern mind tells us it isn’t true?
I, for one, have no intention of stepping on a crack and breaking my mother’s
back.
Kerry A Waight
Married with two grown
children, Kerry is a retired History and Legal Studies teacher. She is also a
genealogist, with the material for the novel in progress coming from her own
family records. Published for the first time this year in the anthology Heart of a Child, Kerry is a largely
writer of historical fiction, with some non-fiction
thrown in around research. With an interest in not only history but the
paranormal, Kerry is working not only on a new historical novel and short
story, but a paranormal short story under the name Kerriann Waight.
Heart of a
Child
Whether you want to take a
trip through time, go on an adventure in your back yard, or feel a burst of
excitement only to return to an adult reality, each story has something for
every reader who wants to feel like a child or be part of a life many children
have led before.
Take a trip down memory lane or pull your child into your lap and see the world through their eyes. In this second anthology written by members of Authors’ Tale, both light and heavy themes bring out the child in almost every genre.
This year's anthology features many stories about young hearts and some written for young-at-hearts. These tales will make any reader feel nostalgic or even open their eyes to something they never considered—something that will challenge their view of what childhood can really be like.
References
Beliefs & Superstitions: The
Haunted House. na. Superstitions. Accessed June 26th, 2018.
https://beliefsandsuperstitions.weebly.com/superstitions.html.
'Classicbookreader'. 2013. Victorian
Superstitions. 31st July. Accessed June 26th, 2018.
https://classicbookreader.wordpress.com/2013/07/31/victorian-superstitions/.
CORBELLA, Aleandra. na. Superstitious
Beliefs of Victorian Society. Accessed June 26th, 2018.
https://classroom.synonym.com/superstitious-beliefs-victorian-society-5443.html.
DEARY, Terry. 2007. Horrible
Histories: Vile Victorians. London: Scholastic Children's Books. Accessed
June 21st, 2018.
'Etcetera'. 2012. Superstitions of the
Victorian Era. 6th June. Accessed June 26th, 2018.
http://www.infobarrel.com/Superstitions_of_the_Victorian_Era.
Friends of Oakgrove Cemetery. 2008. Victorian
Funeral Customs and Superstitions. Accessed June 26th, 2018.
https://friendsofoakgrovecemetery.org/victorian-funeral-customs-fears-and-superstitions/.
MORGAN, Rosa. 2011. Superstitions .
17th October. Accessed June 26th, 2018. http://thevictoriantimes.blogspot.com/2011/10/superstitions.html.
The Victorian Era. 2018. Victorian
Wedding Lore and Superstition. Accessed June 26th, 2018.
http://www.victorian-era.org/victorian-wedding-lore-superstition.html.
I have died many times over according to this fabulous post. It goes on my fb page now.
ReplyDeleteNew shoes on a table! Mum and Nana were strong believers in this one so I still avoid it. Never letting knives cross each other - even in a heap of cutlery for washing up - was another I remember though I don't know how old that superstition is. I still regularly find myself uncrossing knives!
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