Crows--the most intelligent of birds--are the inspiration for a prophetic rhyme Heidi Holder first heard from her grandmother. She expands this rhyme to 12 omens and uses a weasel and a mink to interpret them. Full-color pictures throughout.
I found a first edition at work and read through it, and I love the charming old rhyme, the gorgeous art, the list of signs and symbols in the back with accompanying herbs, all of it. What an absolutely gorgeous offering.
I thought briefly someone may get cranky seeing a favorite childhood book listed under both children's and occult/witchcraft, but if crows as divination signs accompanied by herbs didn't tell you where this rhyme came from, I'm not the person to try to convince you.
This is a marvelous older picture book titled Crows, in which Heidi Holder illustrates an old rhyme. The pages range from one crow to twelve, include a framed picture of the crows themselves with beautiful illumination and rhyming couplets. Below that picture is an illustration of the content with rabbits. In the opposite "full" page is a similar scene, but with a female mink and a swashbuckling weasel She also shares that the rhyme comes handed down from her grandfather, but only seven parts (maybe for the days of the week?). And she found different versions of it in her research. Heidi adds in an author's note that birds more than any other creature are known to be prophetic. In my own research, I've seen this termed an "oracular" rhyme, meaning "prophetic". In other words, if one sees one crow, it portends "bad news". It is helpful that Holly has included additional pages of information, one of which is a key to the symbols in her illustrations. For example, in the page for "one crow", she's included meadow rue, which means "regret" and forget-me-nots, which mean "true love". It's a fascinating book that pleases me to imagine someone telling this rhyme as foretelling fun, or would it be foretelling truth?