BBC Countryfile Magazine

MAGPIE MYTH AND MAGIC

On a damp November evening in 1997, Discworld author Terry Pratchett had a bee in his bonnet. Or rather, a bird. He was at a book signing for his novel Jingo,buthis mind was on his upcoming work, Carpe Jugulum, which would feature magpies prominently.

Pratchett started asking everyone in the queue what variation of the magpie counting rhyme they knew. He was disheartened when person after person recited the same one:

One for sorrow, Two for joy, Three for a girl, Four for a boy, Five for silver, Six for gold, Seven for a secret never to be told, Eight for a wish, Nine for a kiss, Ten for a bird, You must not miss.

This was the version made famous by the ’60s and ’70s children’s TV show . For Pratchett it was “like some cuckoo in the

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from BBC Countryfile Magazine

BBC Countryfile Magazine2 min read
Countryside Crossword
1/21 across Sheep-herding and most intelligent dog? (6, 6) 5 Brown and white raptors, fish-hawks (7) 9 Ruminant in Dundee river! (4) 10 E.g a Fenland waterway (5) 11 Meat that can be ‘white’ or ‘rose/pink’ (4) 12 Britain’s largest bat (clue: notmodif
BBC Countryfile Magazine2 min read
A Year In The Countryside
Your new book, created with John Craven, is fresh off the press. What’s in it? It’s really an anthology of some of the best nature and countryside writing from the past 15 years. It was my happy job to go back through more than 200 issues of BBC Coun
BBC Countryfile Magazine6 min read
Classic Walk Boat-chasing In The Broads
On a sunny morning I head to a favourite place in the Norfolk Broads, not just for a walk, but a vicarious adventure. I have been sailing for 40 years, always preferring to be on the water than in it, but next to it does pretty well. Happily, there a

Related Books & Audiobooks