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SAD WITCH

@flower-morgue / flower-morgue.tumblr.com

Alyssa (ah-lee-sah) | 26 | Virgo 🌞, Aries 🌙, Scorpio ⬆️| NYC | Afro-Dominicana | bi
Green Witch 🌱| Art Witch 🎨|
Oracle & Pendulum Readings OPEN|
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mimimariet

@DelaneysArt is an ART THEFT. LONG POST. PLEASE SHARE & READ.

Lemme start off by saying I only discovered this person cause someone alerted me they plagiarized my cruddy Doja Cat fanart. This woman ACTIVELY steals from BabsDraws, Missupacey, and several other artists. They are RACIST, TRANSPHOBIC, A PLAGIARIST, a STALKER and a SCAMMER. She is currently trying to engage in the Stranger Things fandom as an “Eddissy” shipper. SHE HAS NOT SEEN THE SHOW LMAO.

DO NOT ENGAGE WITH HER. She’s an asshole and will harass you on her several alts. Her following is a bunch of horny simps who will die for her. It’s all disgusting. BONUS She caters to pedophiles.

This is from 2019 but she’s been doing this for over 7 years now.

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bekkathyst

BEKKATHYST FIRST 2022 GIVEAWAY

~This giveaway is in no way affiliated with Tumblr.~

Please read thoroughly before entering!

Hello lovely Tumblr folk! It’s that time again- I have a giveaway for you all. This is the first one of 2022 and will likely be the last one we post while still living in the US! 💜

We have an online store that could use your support!

My business is a small, family run establishment that I started here on tumblr in 2013. I’ve been lucky enough to grow to the point where my husband and I opened a brick and mortar store and I’ve been able to employ my mother and some of my siblings! I’ve been supporting my mom and younger siblings since 2016 💜 I’ve always strived to put compassion and ethics above all else in my business!

This giveaway will have two winners.

What the first winner receives:

  • The large assortment of crystals & the altar cloth pictured above! There are 18 crystals in total. The full retail value is about $510
  • A $100 gift card that can be used for our online store or tumblr sales!

What the second winner receives:

  • A $50 gift card that can be used for our online store or tumblr sales!

Rules:

  1. You must be 16 or older. (If under 18 you MUST have parent’s permission)
  2. You don’t have to live in the US to join!
  3. Shipping is entirely free, I will cover it. But if you live outside the US and for whatever reasons your country wants to charge you import tax, you are responsible for it. If it gets sent back to me, you will need to pay shipping to have it sent again.
  4. You must be following me, so you can get updates if anything about the giveaway changes.
  5. Please check out our online shop!
  6. DO NOT tag this post as giveaway. That will risk the notes getting messed up, and this will be ruined for everyone.
  7. Reblog this post to enter. Likes count as additional entries. No giveaway or spam blogs. If you reblog on a side blog, let me know in the tags what the name of your blog is that you’re following me with.
  8. Please don’t spam people with reblogs- limit 2 reblogs per blog per day.  
  9. At the end, each entry will be assigned a number and the winner will be chosen by a random number generator.
  10. The giveaway ends Tuesday, March 15th, 2022 at 6 pm Pacific time.
  11. The winners will be messaged and must respond with their full name and address within 24 hours, or a new winner will be chosen.

Please respect me and my rules, and have fun!

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reblogged
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bekkathyst

BEKKATHYST FIRST 2022 GIVEAWAY

~This giveaway is in no way affiliated with Tumblr.~

Please read thoroughly before entering!

Hello lovely Tumblr folk! It’s that time again- I have a giveaway for you all. This is the first one of 2022 and will likely be the last one we post while still living in the US! 💜

We have an online store that could use your support!

My business is a small, family run establishment that I started here on tumblr in 2013. I’ve been lucky enough to grow to the point where my husband and I opened a brick and mortar store and I’ve been able to employ my mother and some of my siblings! I’ve been supporting my mom and younger siblings since 2016 💜 I’ve always strived to put compassion and ethics above all else in my business!

This giveaway will have two winners.

What the first winner receives:

  • The large assortment of crystals & the altar cloth pictured above! There are 18 crystals in total. The full retail value is about $510
  • A $100 gift card that can be used for our online store or tumblr sales!

What the second winner receives:

  • A $50 gift card that can be used for our online store or tumblr sales!

Rules:

  1. You must be 16 or older. (If under 18 you MUST have parent’s permission)
  2. You don’t have to live in the US to join!
  3. Shipping is entirely free, I will cover it. But if you live outside the US and for whatever reasons your country wants to charge you import tax, you are responsible for it. If it gets sent back to me, you will need to pay shipping to have it sent again.
  4. You must be following me, so you can get updates if anything about the giveaway changes.
  5. Please check out our online shop!
  6. DO NOT tag this post as giveaway. That will risk the notes getting messed up, and this will be ruined for everyone.
  7. Reblog this post to enter. Likes count as additional entries. No giveaway or spam blogs. If you reblog on a side blog, let me know in the tags what the name of your blog is that you’re following me with.
  8. Please don’t spam people with reblogs- limit 2 reblogs per blog per day.  
  9. At the end, each entry will be assigned a number and the winner will be chosen by a random number generator.
  10. The giveaway ends Tuesday, March 15th, 2022 at 6 pm Pacific time.
  11. The winners will be messaged and must respond with their full name and address within 24 hours, or a new winner will be chosen.

Please respect me and my rules, and have fun!

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My elderly immunocompromised mom having COVID is the most horrifying thing. I tried so hard not to bring COVID home to them and she ended up getting it on her own at work. My parents are both vaccinated, thank goodness. But please dear god let her get through this smoothly and my elderly, diabetic dad doesn’t catch COVID.

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ameshowdown

If you see @/laneykiff in the fandom please be warned, they are a known plagiarizer/copier art thief. Protect your art and your community.

its better to not talk to them, the can be super nasty. Im not the only one shes coppied, not by a long shot.

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nightmaskart

“Like the dawn, you broke the dark and my whole earth shook. I was sleeping in the garden when I saw you at last, at last”

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broomsick

Eir

(Healer of the Gods)

“An enigmatic figure within the Norse mythos. She was either a goddess and/or a valkyrie, and associated with medical skill.

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Hello, witches! Since I’m always harping on about learning your history and checking your sources, I thought I’d help folks get a head start by compiling some source material.

To that end, I’ve started a Dropbox folder with a stash of historical texts on witchcraft, magic, and related topics. Nearly everything I’ve managed to find so far is public domain (thank you Project Gutenberg), with the exception of a very thorough herbal grimoire I found online some years ago and a book of witchcraft from the 1970s that appears to be out of print.

I will be continuing in this vein with future texts that I find. Everything will be public domain or cited to the source that it came from, in PDF format. I will NOT be including PDFs of any book currently in circulation with a copyright linked to a living author or estate. The point of this folder is that everything in it should be free for sharing and open use as research materials.

Below is the initial list of titles. I tried to include as many as I could find, with a focus on some oft-cited classics. I will be adding new texts as I find them.

  • A Collection of Rare and Curious Tracts on Witchcraft and the Second Sight, by David Webster (1820)
  • A History of Witchcraft in England from 1558 to 1718, by Wallace Notestein (1909)
  • British Goblins, Welsh Folk-lore, Fairy Mythology, Legends and Traditions, by Wirt Sikes (1880)
  • Curiosities of Superstition, by W. H. Davenport Adams (1882)
  • Daemonologie, by King James I/VI (1597)
  • Fairy and Folk Tales of the Irish Peasantry, Edited and Selected by W. B. Yeats (1888)
  • Irish Witchcraft and Demonology, by St. John Drelincourt Seymour (1913)
  • La Sorcière, or The Witch of the Middle Ages, by Jules Michelet (1863)
  • Lives of the Necromancers, by William Godwin (1834)
  • Magic and Fetishism, by Alfred C. Haddon (1906)
  • Magic and Witchcraft, by Anonymous (1852)
  • Modern Magic, by M. Schele de Vere (1873)
  • Plant Lore, Legends, and Lyrics, by Richard Folkard (1884)
  • Practical Psychomancy and Crystal Gazing, by William Walker Atkinson (1908)
  • The Devil in Britain and America, by John Ashton (1896)
  • The Discoverie of Witchcraft, by Reginald Scot (1594, 1886 reprint)
  • The Extremely Large Herbal Grimoire (date unknown, internet publication)
  • The Golden Bough : A Study of Magic and Religion, by Sir James George Frazer (1890)
  • The Illustrated Key to the Tarot, by L.W. de Laurence (1918)
  • The Magic of the Horse-shoe, by Robert Means Lawrence (1898)
  • The Mysteries of All Nations, by James Grant (1880)
  • The Mystery and Romance of Alchemy and Pharmacy, by Charles John Samuel Thompson (1897)
  • The Superstitions of Witchcraft, by Howard Williams (1865)
  • The Witchcraft Delusion in Colonial Connecticut by John M. Taylor (1908)
  • The Wonders of the Invisible World, by Cotton Mather and A Farther Account of the Tryals of the New-England Witches, by Increase Mather (1693, 1862 reprint)
  • Witch Stories, by E. Lynn (Elizabeth Lynn) Linton (1861)
  • Witch, Warlock, And Magician, by W. H. Davenport Adams (1889)
  • Witchcraft & Second Sight in the Highlands & Islands of Scotland, by John Gregorson Campbell (1902)
  • Witches’ Potions & Spells, ed. by Kathryn Paulsen (1971)

Disclaimer: Please keep in mind that these texts are (with few exceptions) more than a century old, and may contain depictions, references, or language that are outdated and inappropriate. The point of including these documents is to provide access to historical texts for research and reference. Inclusion in the collection does not equal unconditional agreement with or wholesale approval of the contents.

Take everything with a grain of salt and remember to do your due diligence!

Happy Witching!   -Bree

Additional texts added 12/31/20:

  • A Compleat History of Magick, Sorcery, and Witchcraft, by Anonymous (1715)
  • A True and Faithful Relation of What Passed for Many Yeers Between Dr. John Dee and some Spirits, by John Dee (1659)
  • Crystal Gazing, by Northcote W. Thomas
  • Malleus Maleficarum, or Hammer of the Witches, trans. Montague Summers (1486, 1928 translation)
  • Occult Science in Medicine, by Franz Hartmann (1893)
  • The Book of Ceremonial Magic, by A.E. Waite (1913)
  • The Complete Herbal, by Nicholas Culpeper (1652, 1850 reprint)
  • The Devils of Loudun, by Edmund Goldsmid (1887)
  • The History of Witchcraft and Demonology, by Montague Summers (1926)
  • The Old English Herbals, by Eleanour Sinclair Rohde (1922)

Many of these were retrieved from Global Grey Ebooks, which I suggest visiting for more information.

Additional texts added 01/20/2021:

  • Devil-Worship in France, by A.E. Waite (1896)
  • Magic and Husbandry: The Folk-Lore of Agriculture, by Lewis Dayton Burdick (1905)
  • Norse Stories Retold from the Eddas, by Hamilton Wright Mabie (1902)
  • The Book of Black Magic, by A.E. Waite (1910)
  • The Book of Were-Wolves, by Sabine Baring-Gould (1865)
  • The Encyclopaedia of Gardening, by T.W. Sanders (1822)
  • The Folk-Lore of Plants, by T.F. Thiselton-Dyer (1889, facsimile copy)
  • The Greater Key of Solomon, Vol. I & II, trans. S. Liddell MacGregor Mathers (1999 from the 1916 deLaurence edition)
  • The Handbook of Palmistry, by Rosa Baughan (1885, facsimile from the Bodleian Library)
  • The Prose Edda, intro and notes by Rasmus B. Anderson (1897)
  • The Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage, Books 1-3, trans. S. Liddell MacGregor Mathers (1998 from the 1900 Watkins edition)
  • The Vampire, His Kith and Kin, by Montague Summers (1928)

I’m always looking for more titles. Stay tuned for periodic updates!

Additional texts added 01/31/2021:

  • A Manual of Cartomancy and Occult Divination, by Grand Orient (1909, facsimile)
  • A Manual of Occultism, by Sepharial (1914)
  • An Encyclopaedia of Occultism, by Lewis Spence (1920)
  • Demonology And Devil-Lore, Volumes 1 & 2, by Moncure Daniel Conway (1879)
  • Demons and Tongues, by Alma White (1910)
  • Fortunes and Dreams, by Astra Cielo (1917)
  • General Book of the Tarot, by A.E. Thierens (1930)
  • Letters on Demonology and Witchcraft, by Sir Walter Scott (1884)
  • Magic and Religion, by Andrew Lang (1901)
  • Magic and Mystery, A Popular History, by Alfred Thompson (1894)
  • Magic, Black and White, Charms and Counter Charms, by T. Witton Davies (1910)
  • Numbers, Their Occult Powers and Mystical Virtues, by William Wynn Westcott (1911)
  • Occultism and Common Sense, by Beckles Wilson (1908)
  • Practical Astrology, by Edgar De Valcourt-Vermont (1901, facsimile from The Library of Brigham Young University)
  • Psychic Self-Defense, by Dion Fortune (1930) 
  • Superstitions of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland, by John Gregorson Campbell (1900)
  • Telling Fortunes by Tea Leaves, by Cicely Kent (1922)
  • The Black Pullet, by Anonymous (18th Century)
  • The Curious Lore of Precious Stones, By George Frederick Kunz (1913)
  • The Golden Wheel Dream-book and Fortune-Teller, by Felix Fontaine (1862)
  • The History of Magic, by Eliphas Levi, trans. by A.E. Waite (1922)
  • The Lesser Key of Solomon, trans. by S. L. McGregor Matthews (1904)
  • The Leyden Papyrus, trans. by F.L. Griffith and Herbert Thompson (1904)
  • The Mysteries of Astrology and the Wonders of Magic, by Charles W. Roback (1854, facsimile)
  • The Place of Magic in the Intellectual History of Europe, by Lynn Thorndike (1905, facsimile)
  • The Secret Book of the Black Arts, by Unknown (1878, facsimile)
  • The Symbolism of the Tarot, trans. by P.D. Ouspensky (1913)
  • The Witches’ Dream Book and Fortune Teller, by A.H. Noe (1885)
  • The Witches’ Pharmacopoeia, by Robert Fletcher (1896)
  • Witchcraft and Superstitious Record in the South-Western District of Scotland, by J. Maxwell Wood (1911)

I’m very pleased to include The Lesser Key of Solomon and The Black Pullet in this latest update. I’ve been mining the depths of Project Gutenberg and Global Grey Ebooks, and today I hit paydirt. I’ll keep digging, so stay tuned for more updates.

Enjoy!

Additional texts added 05/03/2021:

  • Aradia Or the Gospel of the Witches, by Charles G. Leland (1899) [Please note that this title has been updated since publication and newer editions are available in print.]
  • Clairvoyance and Occult Powers, by William Walker Atkinson (1914)
  • Fairy Legends and Traditions of the South of Ireland, by Thomas Crofton Croker (1827)
  • Historic Ghosts and Ghost Hunters, by H. Addington Bruce (1909)
  • Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds, by Charles MacKay (1841)
  • Practical Occultism, by J.J. Morse (1888)
  • Signs, Omens and Superstitions, by Astra Cielo (1918)
  • The Fairy Faith in Celtic Countries, by W.Y. Evans-Wentz (1911)
  • The Fairy Mythology, by Thomas Keightley (1870)
  • The Gardnerian Book of Shadows, by Gerald B. Gardner (1949-1961)
  • The Human Aura, by William Walker Atkinson (1912)
  • The Origins of Popular Superstitions and Customs, by T. Sharper Knowlson (1910)
  • The Secret Commonwealth of Elves, Fauns and Fairies, by Robert Kirk (written 1691, pub. in print 1893)

If you can, please donate to Global Grey Ebooks to thank the archivist for all their hard work!

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