Grymdycche
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« Reply #1 on: August 31, 2011, 06:04:13 PM » |
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Absolutely wn! That's just another type of spread, really. Offhand, I can't remember which of my books mention that form of reading, but I think the Runecaster's Handbook is one of them. I think the way it was read was, runes closest to the center were either of the more immediate future, getting more distant in time as you read towards the edge, or of more significance. I think the former though. Runes that fall face down can either be ignored, or read as "murkstaves", and also runes that fall in close proximity to each other have a stronger bearing on each other, reinforcing the meanings they make in combination, than runes that fall apart from each other or oppose each other i.e. one far right, one far left.
If in fact it was the casting of runes that Tacitus wrote about in his work "Germania" (though he only mentioned staves from a fruit bearing tree) it would indicate that it was the original method of runic divination. And while we have no concrete proof it was actually runes that were inscribed on those staves, I'm not aware of any other symbology used by the ancient germanics... what else could it be?
But outside of that, I think pretty much any reading system you devise, so long as it is consistent, should work for you. In fact, much like spellwork, one you customize yourself might work better for you than any of the standard types. (I'm being maybe a bit hypocritical here, I've never used anything other than the Celtic Cross when reading Tarot, lol)
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