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'When an afflicted person is believed to be a victim of nazar, or
the glance of the evil eye, a particular kind of incense, which is
made of seeds of the wild rue, mixed with myrtle and frankincense,
is burned at sunset; and while the smoke is curling about the head
of the victim the following incantation is repeated...' The Wild
Rue is a unique study of magic, myth and folklore in Iran. In this
classic work, Bess Donaldson records the beliefs and superstitions
of the country at a time when they were increasingly threatened by
the Shah's programme of modernisation. This earlier way of life,
with its belief in angels and the evil eye, and with its age-old
rituals surrounding childbirth and burial, is recounted in a highly
readable text. Among the wide variety of topics covered are
cosmology, dreams, names and numbers, talismans and signs, oaths
and curses, childbirth, angels, trees and plants, the evil eye, and
the calendar. Long unavailable, The Wild Rue is indispensable to
any serious student of Iran and will be welcomed by all with an
interest in the country's culture and history.
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