For to Make Horn-Blood Overwarm

SpellsTrick  ► Fire  ► For to Make Horn-Blood Overwarm
A stave-roun for to overwarm the cup-mere for the word-gates of a foe-wight.

Casting Instructions for 'For to Make Horn-Blood Overwarm'

You will need the following items for this spell:

  • New-fallen branch-bairn (
  • Mouth-spear from the smith-stead (
  • Spice-mouth and kernel-tooth (
Share   
     
You will need the following items for this spell:

  • New-fallen branch-bairn (
  • Mouth-spear from the smith-stead (
  • Spice-mouth and kernel-tooth (
Take the branch-bairn and carve upon it the eril-staves ice, birch, blister, ice, fee, and blister. Once done, mell this roun while making the branch-bairn into a meal in the spice-mouth:

Up, ale-pearls! Up, kettle-breath!
May your sire fall on the foeman's chest.

Drop a pinch of the product into your foeman's tongue-wash-bearer, and when he next brings it to his tooth-mantles, he will be burned.

Share   
     

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Added to on Dec 10, 2017
Part of the Spell Casters Library.

Comments


Comments are open to members. Join today and be part of the largest pagan / new age community online.

What's the point of this? I'm really confused by this.

This is nonsense.

Very prose-y, but not necessarily nonsense. It is just seems cryptic because it is either translated verbatim from some form of Olde English, or it is heavily styled as such using very, -very- old vernacular.

Barn refers to a child, or youth. So a branch-bairn would be the child of a branch- like a leaf, flower, or possibly bark or a cutting. Mouth-spear, spice-mouth, and kerneltooth are likely descriptive names for herbs. Like mint (sharp taste, like a spear on the tongue), spice-mouth (cayenne, cinnamon, pepper, something fiery-spicy) and... Corn, maybe? Because the ears are tooth-like.

My guess/interpretation; Carve runes on the wooden stick (bairn), use the stick to crush and mix (mell/mill and roun/stir). Then say the chant and place your intent into the mixture.

To use, add a pinch to the cup of your enemy (the bearer of what washes the mouth, ie holds water/ale). When they drink it, it will make them sick.

My interpretation has holes in it... I don't truly have an idea on the specific herbs as that seems to require some inside knowledge, which the original poster should have included as what is the sense of making a recipe public while keeping it a secret? Or at least include where it came from, because it feels very 15th to 16th century and a little context would go a long ways.


Print Spell

Is this content used without proper permission?
Please report any violations of copyright via our contact page.

* All information on this page is provided by the coven or person named and the contents of this page is not mediated by the administrators of the website. Please use common sense when following any directions on this page. Do not ingest anything which does not seem safe. If you suspect the content of this page to be intentionally deceiving please contact us immediately.