Itchy snitch
Image courtesy Wikimedia CommonsIf your nose itches, the saying is, ‘Be kissed, be cursed or shake hands with a fool.’ At least, that is what I remember. However, in Wiltshire, the response is, ‘Should your nose itch you will either be kissed, cursed, vexed, run against a gatepost, or shake hands with a fool,’ whereas in Norfolk, the saying is, ‘If your nose itches you'll hear some news: left side – ‘bad', right side – ‘good', or you will be kissed by a fool.’
I can find neither rhyme nor reason for these sayings – they’re just nonsense. They must have started somewhere, but under what circumstances?
An itchy nose is sometimes a precursor to a sneeze.
Sneezing had several explanations in less enlightened times. In the Middle Ages people believed that sneezing rid the body of evil spirits, or that the body was laid open to the Devil to make his entrance, overcome and take possession of the sneezer.
During the Black Death in the 14th century in Europe, sneezing was a worrying symptom that might lead to bubonic plague. That was a natural and logical reaction.
Meanwhile, the Christian church believed the heart stopped during a sneeze and some people still believe that a person is closest to sudden death while sneezing.
None of these seem to lead logically or seamlessly to being kissed, cursed or shaking hands with a fool! That is, apart from bubonic plague, which would certainly be a curse.