In literature they were indeed beatifully discribed by Nicolay Gogol in his collections of short stories "Evenings on the farm near Dikanka" and "Mirgorod", which I hardly recomend to everyone interested.
Wow. I have to say, it's ultra rare.
We have about a million different editions of Dead Souls, The Mantle and The Nose, some of Taras Bulba, but it appears, "Evening on..." got translated into Hungarian only once, in the 1920s. I could only find it in two editions, both of them complete collections: one of them published in 1962, the other in '71. I was searching the net for almost an hour until I found a copy in an acceptable state that I could order. Thank you for the recommendation. At least it's decided what am I going to read after finishing Surface Detail.
we do this knock-on-the-wood thing either And some others habits, like to sit down for a while before to go out for long way, or to look at the mirror if you forgot something (the tickets, for example ) at home and had to return to take it.
I heard something similar, but I have never seen anyone doing it: if you turn back from the door before a journey, you leave your luck at home, so
then you should sit down for a little before setting out again.
As for mirrors, I just know the usual "breaking it means seven years of bad luck", but that saying is hardly a local thing. Okay, habits are hard to follow if they are originally coming from a particular culture's past or not, so I'm curious who finds these superstitions familiar:
If I see a chimney sweeper, I shall grasp a button. (It's said to be almost as good as finding a four-lettered clover, so why not?) Spiders also mean good luck. Oh, and so does one of my favourites: if you accidentally dress up with at least one of your clothes turned inside out. (Well, the
last time it happened to me, I could find a safe spot where I could turn my T-shirt, so I guess it worked...)
We also often remind each other, that one shouldn't say thanks for medicine, if they want it to work. Itching right palm means money (so don't scratch it); left palm means losing some. If your nose is itching, you'll be angry. If someone sneezes more then one time at once, after saying the local version of "bless you", it's not rare that I hear the sentence "Someone's surely speaking about you." (Well, some say it after just one sneeze.) Sitting by the corner of the table means you'll never get married. When guests arrive, we usually try to avoid that place or give them to someone already in wedlock.
Not that we would
truly believe in these things - more like... "you may never know".
People, who read this: do you also have some more known (and possibly "alive") superstitions you deem as worthy of mentioning? (Although, I'd be glad for reading about "dead" customs as well.)