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This enchantingly illustrated natural history of magick, compiled
in the 1920s by the globetrotting naturalist Professor Conrad
Gessner for his grandson, is now unveiled for readers of today.
Featuring a gold foil-embossed cloth cover, a ribbon marker and
sprayed gold edges, this gorgeous volume is filled with intriguing
sketches and precise notes detailing the secret world of magic, a
natural force hidden all around us. Inside, you will discover the
history of magic and its dazzling array of practices around the
globe. Delight in this hidden world as you learn about these and
more topics: Different types of magic (Explore divination, tarot
reading, astrology, numerology, alchemy and more.) Powerful plants
(Peppermint is fantastic for cleansing, and also known to ward off
vampires.) Wand trees (Apple tree wands are helpful in matters of
love and fertility while beech is best for scholars using wordy
spells.) Familiars (Choose the perfect magical companion. If you
love to gossip, you might choose a ferret as your familiar or, for
improved thinking, an owl.) The most magical of days (Discover the
power and stories of Imbolc, the solstices, All Hallows' Eve and
more.) Magical scripts (Learn about the secret languages used
through history for communicating with the spirit world.) With this
precious scrapbook as your guide, tap into the powerful energies
that will help you harness your own magic.
Over the last few years there has been a burgeoning interest in
both space and place as linguistic phenomena. Some of this interest
stemmed from studies on the situatedness of language and speech in
time and space and how deixis anchors speech to a context. Both our
frame of reference with respect to surrounding space and how we
conceive and describe it are closely linked to the language we
speak. This is why different cultures perceive spatial relations
differently, with speakers of one language, for instance, encoding
spatial relations with respect to absolute directions while
speakers of a different language use egocentric terms. This book
focuses on space, place and the discursive construction of identity
in the present, globalized era, where technological developments
are causing a change in the perception of spatial boundaries and
geographical locations, and identities are experienced in hitherto
unknown ways.
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