Who Gets The Wishbone?
If you believe your wish will come true when you win the
break in a wishbone contest, then you're following in the
footsteps of civilizations dating back to the Etruscans,
322 B.C., And -- it started with a hen, not a turkey.
In those days, when a man wanted an egg he waited for the
hen to announce the coming of her product. This made the
animal mystical in that it could tell the future -- and
that led to what became known as the "hen oracles".
If you lived back then, and wanted to receive an answer to
an important question from these oracles, you would draw
a circle on the ground and divide it into the twenty-four
letters of the alphabet. Grains of corn were placed in
each section, and the cock or hen was led into the circle
and then set free. It was believed that the fowl would
spell out words or symbols by picking up kernels of corn
from the different sections. For example, the first letter
of a future husband's name would be the first kernel of
corn picked. After writing the message, the fowl was sacrificed
to a special deity and its collarbone was hung out to dry.
Then, you'd get to make a wish on the bone. Then two other
people got a chance to make a wish by snapping the dried
bone in the same way we do now, with each one pulling on an
end. The person with the larger end of the bone got the wish
-- and it became known as a "lucky break."
The Romans brought the wishbone tradition with them when
they conquered England, and that's how we got it.