862 lines
51 KiB
Plaintext
862 lines
51 KiB
Plaintext
COUSINS ISSUE #2 - December 1991
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A place for the Witches, pagans, nature spirits, fey-folk, and assorted elder
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kin of Sherwood to share ideas, challenges, dreams, and projects, and to stir
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up a little magic of our own.
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contact Susan Gavula, sjgavula@terminator.rs.itd.umich.edu for more
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information.
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This Issue's Fun Word: PAGAN
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One who follows the ways of the rural people. From the Latin paganus, a well
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from which country folk would get their water; later came to mean "farmer,"
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"hick," or "civilian" (when most Romans in a given area were in the army.)
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Eventually came to denote adherence to a native pantheist/polytheist religion
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(when most invaders in a given area were monotheists.) Comparable to
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"heathen," "one who lives among the heather on the heath."
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Has anyone else out there got a favorite word?
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* * *
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LETTERS
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Amber Foxfire
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I just got the first (Nov. '91) issue of Cousins and I love it. Since I'm new
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to Robin of Sherwood fandom, just now watching - and taping - the episodes for
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the first time while my local PBS station airs the episodes, I found the
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newsletter to be highly informative. I enjoyed Ariel's article and all the
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letters that were published. Since one of the most appealing aspects of RoS
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for me is its pagan-orientation, I particularly enjoy the Wiccan- orientation
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of your letterzine.
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The series seems to imply that the common folk observe both Christian and
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pagan customs and rites, but in actual fact does anyone actually know if the
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rural people of that period observed synchronized Christian/pagan
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customs/rites or was it either/or, either Christian only or pagan only?
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I found the observations of Marion and her connection with which of
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the three goddess aspects very interesting. For myself, I would connect her to
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the maiden aspect; she seems to be guided by Artemis/Diana, even though she is
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not a Celtic goddess, primarily because Marion is very outdoorsy, very much at
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home in the woods, very good with the bow, and is as much a partner as lover
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to Robin of Loxley.
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This is all I can write for now. I've enclosed a SASE for any
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replies.
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Question: How many issues per year do you plan to publish of Cousins and is
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there a subscription fee?
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[Amber - I'll publish as often as A) I have enough material and B) I can get
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to a copying machine and afford the postage. There's no set subscription fee,
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but the more postage contributions I get, the more frequently I can publish!
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Thank you for the stamps. -H]
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Laura Woodswalker Todd Thanks for the first issue of Cousins! I wasn't sure if
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I should join because I'm not really a committed Wiccan but just sort of a
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generic pagan. I've always worshipped Mother Earth thru hiking and communing
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with the Woods (hence the name Woodswalker). More recently I've become
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interested in Goddess and Pagan lore. But the formality of conducting rituals
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seems too much like "religion" to me. Besides, who has the time? My magical
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practice of late has consisted of doing writing and artwork for the zines.
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However, I love letterzines, so if that's what Cousins is going to be, count
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me in! I'm fascinated to read such tidbits as the true meaning of the rag on
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Robin's pants. I always thought it was to hold his pants together and to look
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sexy. [Hey, it worked...-H] I find the Pagan archetypes fascinating,
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especially the symbolism in Jenni's Hooded Man of Robin and Robert as the
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Holly King and the Oak King. Apparently these are summer and winter archetypes
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in pagan mythology that are continually in conflict as the year-wheel turns.
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However-- I hope this doesn't get carried too far, because it would mean that
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Robert slays Robin, who comes back 6 months later and slays him in turn...
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Yes, let's not get too literal with these archetypes. The pagan symbolism adds
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resonance, but I don't see the RoS characters as Pagan placards but as human
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beings. Why force Marion into a label like "Maiden/Mother/ Crone," when she's
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a little of each...like we all are. I don't see the characters as a literal
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coven because while they seem to hold both the Old Religion and the New in
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respect, they are just not all that religious...mostly they're just concerned
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with survival.
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I don't mind if writers make Loxley a little more "magical" than the series
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shows him, just so they keep it believable. (Don't ever make him a sorcerer
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with the abilities of, say, Belleme.) One really neat example of fannish
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inventiveness concerning magic was the zine Sherwood Legacy, where Loxley (who
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never died in this story) was learning to be Herne's apprentice. [Spoiler! -H]
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There was a wonderful story where he established a psychic link with Robert
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and was able to rescue him from imprisonment. (I do believe this is one of
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Kitty's stories!)
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A few general comments on the magical aspects: I just watched the show for the
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first time in February of this year and I missed half the first season. Lord
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of the Trees was the second of the shows I saw and I was instantly hooked,
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given my background of "tree worship." Hey, I wish the Trees would take
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revenge today on the forest destroyers! And then there was Children of Israel,
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dealing with Jewish magic, and being Jewish myself I was really impressed
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(most medieval fiction ignores the existence of Jews.) Magic seemed less
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prominent in the 3rd season, although some form of magic or psychic power
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usually figured in plots like Power of Albion, Inheritance, and Rutterkin. One
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thing that always bothered me was the "satanic coven" stereotype perpetrated
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by Gulnar, Morgwyn, and Belleme. Why would Carpenter pander to these negative
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clichs, when modern Pagans are trying so hard to fight against them? I was so
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unconvinced by this threadbare concept that I usually yawned with boredom
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whenever one of this unholy trilogy came onto the screen. How many "good"
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witches/covens are featured in RoS? (Maybe in episodes 2-5 that I missed?)
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I really appreciated the comments by Ariel and Hilda about Robert. Hilda, your
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comments are right on target: Robert is the character who I can identify with
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the most.
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To me Loxley is the "perfect" Robin. He gets put on a pedestal and called a
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"god." He is as well adapted to his environment as a tiger is to the
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rainforest. I haven't seen a lot of writers delve into his insecurities,
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fears, etc. While Robert is like us: he has problems. Such as his
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relationships with his father, the other outlaws, Marion, and Gisburne.
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"Alienation" is the word Hilda used, and yes, Robert has an identity crisis.
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He is also stuck with a very tough act to follow. (I was so crushed after
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Loxley died I didn't want to like Robert for about 3 episodes. I'm sure the
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characters themselves felt the same way.) This creates a lot of grist for
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fanfic. Perhaps this is why in the zines I've seen (a total of about 7), about
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2/3 of the stories tend to be about Robert.
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I haven't seen too many of the "negative" portrayals of Robert which Ariel
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mentions, aside from a few really depressing stories where he wastes away
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after Marion leaves. (All thru these stories I am saying No way!) What I have
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seen is his vulnerability. It's this which finally made him grow on me. I
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became fascinated with the question of "What makes Robert tick? Why did Herne
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choose him and not some local peasant lad?" I was finally forced to start
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writing just to answer these questions. Which leads me to my soapbox rant:
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there are some assumptions made in fandom that I just can't buy. Like the
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claim that Robert became an outlaw simply because of Marion. Likewise when
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writers cite an abstract "passion for justice" as his motivation, it rings
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false to me. I suppose a hormonal teenager or a flaky hippie might act from
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these motivations...but I don't see such an immature person making a credible
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"Robin Hood." No, there have got to be intense personal factors in Robert's
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life that would put such a fire in his spirit that he would leave his home,
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family, and future for the sake of the peasants. Put yourself in his place: we
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all give lip service to "helping the poor," but what would cause you to leave
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a comfortable life to go and live as a fugitive, risking your life to aid the
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Underclass?
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Back to the topic of Magic: I never understood why some writers portray Robert
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as an earthbound guy with no spiritual or psychic sensitivity. Also at some
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point he must have had exposure to the Old Religion. Perhaps he had a servant
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or nursemaid who taught him things that the average earl's son wouldn't know.
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Otherwise he'd have crossed himself and run like hell at the first sight of
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Herne. Since when does an English nobleman take off to do the bidding of a god
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with horns? It bothers me that fans take such things at face value and don't
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probe beneath the surface. In fact, I'd have liked to see Kip himself explain
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these things more adequately, but then us fan writers would be out of a job.
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To my mind it's Marion who really gets the bad press in fanfic. How about when
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Will calls her a bitch and tells her "you never really loved either of them!"
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(The Hollow Hills, Albion 4). Or how about in Hooded Man (I think) where
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Robert says "do you love me? Or do you just love Herne's Son?" (Translation:
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"You're a god groupie.") Granted, Marion's behavior toward Robert is
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understandable for a woman traumatized by grief. But it is not the behavior of
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a Goddess archetype. She is all too human. I think she is the weakest and most
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vulnerable of the 3 lead characters. Why is there not more fan fiction from
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her viewpoint? Is it because people just don't like her? I admit I was pretty
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disgusted when she left Robert. I understood it intellectually, but still I'd
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have liked to shake some sense into her.
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Well, I've ranted far too long, as usual. Blessed be!
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Janet VanMeter
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I just got your letter and also the first issue of Cousins. While things are
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fresh in my mind, I thought I'd write - even though we will see each other
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next week! By the way, I liked the "Cousin Jennet" idea!
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Anyway, I think I have to agree with Ariel on her character descriptions. In
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fact, I totally agree with her! And also with your ideas on Robert.
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Well, the main item I wanted to address this time goes along with Raven's
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question "Where is the Goddess?" By agreeing with the idea that Robin (either
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one) is the "legman" for Herne, then I think Marion is the "leg woman" for the
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Lady. And who is the Lady? I firmly believe that role should be given to
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Sherwood Forest/Britain. Yes, I mean the actual Earth Mother - does she really
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need a human manifestation besides what is found within her children - Marion
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and all the others? I keep remembering Loxley's moving speech after the battle
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at Castle Belleme about what and why they are fighting for. "Sherwood protects
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Her own," that sort of idea. What do you think of my theory? It works for me!
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Staying on this train of thought...isn't one of the major beliefs underlying
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the Craft the idea that the Goddess and the God are both to be found within
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everyone - that gender starts getting a bit ambiguous after a while? I think
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that a lot of problems facing the past and present stemmed from the attempt to
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cram everyone into little boxes/roles of "male or female" only. If everything
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originally came from the Mother, doesn't that mean that everything is a
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mixture of feminine/masculine? (I guess those folks more learned in yin and
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yan could take over from here.)
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So, Hilda, carols for a female "Sol" [reference to a previous conversation -H]
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seem to me as appropriate as anything else! I forget which cultures they are,
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but some places did consider the sun as feminine [i.e. Sulis, for whom
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Salisbury is named -H] and the moon as masculine. Maybe the "Man in the Moon"
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isn't as crazy as some people think! I could see the first or last rays of the
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sun as long beautiful tresses of gold. Why not? [Fine, you Huntingdon fans,
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beat up on me, just because you know Janet could shoot your camera out of your
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hand at 50 paces... -H] We each should be able to find whatever we need
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spiritually in all of these things. (Are we back to yin and yan again?) Why
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else did we end up with all the diverse myths, etc. rather than everyone
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simultaneously believing only one exact explanation for the cosmos? Because
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each of us needs something just a little bit "individualized" to "complete"
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ourselves spiritually.
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Tina Evans
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The question of a feminine counterpart for Herne seems to be an underlying
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theme in Issue No. 1, and I would like to try and address that question. My
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first thought is: should we consider Herne a god? All the references to Herne
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that I have seen indicate he is a local legend particular to the Windsor Park
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area. This in itself may make it hard to find a feminine counterpart for him.
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But a local legend must have origins in some older being or tradition.
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Certainly Cernunnos is the logical assumption. Pottery fragments bearing the
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images of female horned figures have been found in Britain, but there is
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little information to be found concerning these female figures. Does anyone
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else know anything about female horned figures in general? To my mind, the
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"horned god" cult is essentially male in nature. If Herne had his origins in
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such a cult it would be difficult to equate a female figure with him.
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Nor do I think Cernunnos is the only figure that can stand as Herne's
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counterpart. Perhaps Woden, the Anglo-Saxon god of battle, could serve as a
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counterpart as well. The stag is used to symbolize Woden in some instances.
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More importantly, Woden is the figure associated with the Wild Hunt in Europe,
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in much the same way that Herne is associated with the Wild Hunt in Britain.
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It is quite conceivable that fragments of a religion associated with Woden
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survived among the native "Saxon" population, despite the Church and the
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Norman Conquest, and eventually evolved into the figure of Herne.
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So, I tend to agree with Hilda, Herne probably does not have a feminine
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counterpart. But the beauty of fan fiction is that you are not limited to a
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strict historical interpretation of the material. You can do what you like
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with your characters. I think the concept of a "female Herne" is very
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interesting!
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Raven, I don't know of any Craft groups using Robin Hood as a tradition, but I
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have heard that John and Caitlin Matthews will be holding a celebration of
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Beltane and the Robin Hood legend on April 25, 1992 in London. Mark Ryan will
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be among those participating in the event. I have also heard that John
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Matthews is publishing a book on Robin Hood sometime next year, which may be
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of interest. If you come up with no other leads on using Robin Hood as a
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tradition, you might try writing to them. The address can be found in their
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books, or you could write to me. Good Luck!
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Lynn
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Finally finding time to write. Received "Cousins" this week. To say I am
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impressed is an understatement. It was terrific! However, you just have to put
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wider margins on it! [Would that my postage endowment were as generous as my
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natural one... -H] I kept writing notes and comments in the existing ones, and
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since I had to write small, I couldn't read some of them the next day. It's a
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sad state of affairs when you can't read your own writing. I have so many
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comments on it. I don't know if I'll be able (timewise) to put them all down,
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as I want to get this in today's post.
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1st: Herne. What if Herne had originally been Robin in the Hood? The Sacred
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King sacrifice could have been symbolic for him, not actual as it was with
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Robin. It was his death as Robin Hood and rebirth as Herne (Dread Lord of
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Death aspect of God). Natural evolution, so to speak, or part of the Wheel.
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Also, as for no Goddess aspect (Raven's letter) - perhaps his original partner
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died or he never had one. Maybe he was the only magically talented person in
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that area & time. If the latter was so, then the God aspect would be stronger
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because that is the one he would naturally manifest.
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Also, this was a TV show for the general public. Perhaps Kip though that a
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male mentor would be more readily accepted than a female. After all, a female
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would probably be blatantly a witch to viewers. He may have not wanted to rub
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that into viewers. Let them develop interest in Herne and gradually absorb
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Craft philosophy.
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Also on his "consort" - if not match (i.e. magical ability) - it may possibly
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have been a mismatch, as with Robin and Marion (more on that later). If he had
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had a "consort," with high female mortality rates, she probably would have
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passed over before this time and be unbeknown to Robin. We really know nothing
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of Herne's past.
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Marion - Mayhap she was chosen by the Gods and by Robin, but possibly not
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choosing the Gods herself. As Robin's partner & chosen one she would fall into
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the role of Maiden, but may not really have been a practicing Wiccan. I have
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often seen modern couples where one is strong magically (more of a calling)
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while the other isn't (perhaps a balancing that may be necessary). Also, I
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have seen some couples where one believes strongly, while the other just
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nominally goes along because of love for the partner.
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Why divorce RoS from the way the Craft is today?
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Robert - How many of us have been raised Christian; but are now Craft? It
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could have been the same for him. He was not really magically talented. When
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his initiation came (i.e. presentation of tools - "String the bow.") the need
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for a Robin Hood wasn't immediate, so he could have the traditional year and a
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day (probably what he needed in this case for his subconscious to mull over
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what had happened to him and bring him to a point where he could accept his
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position as Herne's Son.)
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Robin, on the other hand, was magically talented. When he was "initiated" he
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also resisted, but for less time because the need for a Robin Hood was
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immediate. Thus, the year and a day was "waived" as it sometimes is today.
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Robin, being magically talented, could be paired with Marion. Robert, not
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being magically talented, probably would have eventually paired with Isadora
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who was magically talented, or one like her. Then the Goddess would have taken
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precedence. Marion, I think, would have stayed in Halstead as the "Mother"
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aspect or later the "Crone." After all, the Mary "cult" is really just another
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way of worshipping the Lady.
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When Michael Praed left the show, they were in a real bind. I think Kip
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handled an awkward situation brilliantly. They could have recast, but instead
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he used Craft belief to get them out of their predicament.
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Again, Raven's letter - There was no need for background on Rhiannon or
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Arianrhod as the show was for a British audience. I think they would know
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these two just as we would know Paul Bunyan or Pecos Bill. Also, Herne may be
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bigger in the Craft there, as He pops up quite frequently in Paddy Slade's
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Encyclopedia of White Magic. He is involved in many of the rituals, and is
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possibly a more integral part of their version of the Craft and therefore the
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obvious aspect for the mentor in RoS.
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Ariel
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Replies to first issue of Cousins:
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On Metempsychosis: I have only one idea on this - watch the movie Dead Again
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and you'll see "metempsychosis" in action!
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Raven: Your comments were very to the point, and are probably things that
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other people have wondered about, too. Personally, I never "got" the pagan
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references (outside of Robin following Herne) until I started reading fanfic,
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and then doing my own research into the Craft. I think Hilda's right about
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Kip's avoiding the word "goddess" to get the show on the air. From the various
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books I've perused on Wicca, it seems to me that in the historical time period
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in which the series is set, the paganism of the English peasants might well
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have been of the male-oriented variety (but I'm certainly no authority on
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this, and fanfic that includes the Goddess is doing a handy job at evening
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things up a bit). If you read my lengthy piece in the last issue, you'll know
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how I feel about Marion as the Priestess. Personally, I can't see her in this
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role. As for her Christianity - I have the same response as I do to Robert's
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faith - it was very possibly tinged with cynicism.
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I think the main reason Marion went to Kirklees was to avoid being married off
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to someone she didn't like (i.e., Belleme) and she (apparently) went to
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Halstead for sanctuary more than religious beliefs. (But given that many women
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went to the convent because there was nobody suitable for them to marry or
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because their fathers couldn't afford a dowry or because their parents had
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promised one of their children to the Church... it seems likely that very few
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women went to a convent because of their religious convictions!) I also agree
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with Hilda that as the only well- defined female member of the cast, Marion
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takes the role of Maiden, Mother, and Crone at various points in the series.
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Using Robin Hood as a tradition...hmm. One of the books I recently read was
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Margaret Murray's excellent work, The God of the Witches. She describes Robin
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Hood as having been associated with the Horned God. The name may possibly have
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been a title for a coven High Priest. Interestingly, the coven High Priestess
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was usually referred to as the Maiden or Maid.
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I don't think the "non-pagan contingent" perceives us in any particular way.
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Individual fans' religious beliefs do not seem as important to the fandom at
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large as their interest in the show.
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Janet: Hello! Like you, I was raised in the Methodist Church. As for
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discovering other archetypes, all I can say is read, read, read! That's what
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I've done. I listed some books at the end of my last article, and am hoping to
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include a more complete list sometime soon. College and university libraries,
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occult bookshops, and other fans/Wiccans are the best sources for reading
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material.
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Mary Ann: Your questions about witchcraft in the middle ages are interesting.
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From what information I've gleaned, I think that the Old religion persisted
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for quite a bit longer than the Christian Church would like to have people
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believe. (And still does, if you look at our customs of Christmas trees,
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Easter eggs, etc.). Laura Chevening pointed out at Herne's Con 2 that most
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peasants would have been lucky to see a priest once a year. Books I've read
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have suggested that for a long time the peasants probably kept one foot in
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each camp: professing Christianity to their noble masters and secretly
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honoring the Old Religion upon which they believed the health of their crops
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depended. With the growth of cities and towns and the increasing numbers of
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clergy therein, it probably grew more difficult for peasants to keep to the
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old ways. A couple of writers have even suggested that some of the nobility
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||
themselves (including the Plantagenet kings) may have been closet pagans. I
|
||
think the notion of witches worshipping the Christian devil came about
|
||
principally during the witch-hunts (and was usually "confessed" by witches
|
||
under torture). [I'd say alleged Witches under torture. Whether one was a
|
||
Witch or not seldom had as much to do with the accusation of Witchcraft as
|
||
such factors as political dissent, female independence, or being the last
|
||
obstacle to some influential person's acquisition of a juicy bit of property.
|
||
- H]
|
||
In this context, I'm not sure entirely what Kip was getting at in "Swords of
|
||
Wayland." According to most of my sources, the first "Black Mass" was
|
||
performed as a lark by some priests of Louis VIX of France. [VIX? -H] I can
|
||
only speculate that Morgwyn was doing essentially what Belleme and Gulnar did:
|
||
summoning a force or spirit of evil, giving it a name, and performing a very
|
||
powerful magical spell to incarnate this force. Some people refer to the Gods
|
||
and Goddesses a all being aspects of the One. Is it not possible that various
|
||
Devils are similarly aspects of "the Evil One," no matter what name you give
|
||
it?
|
||
|
||
From what I foggily remember, the Druids were a class of pre-Christian Celts
|
||
who studied magical phenomena. Doreen Valiente, in An ABC of Witchcraft,
|
||
mostly describes the similarities of their practices with those of the
|
||
witches. Other books may have better references.
|
||
|
||
The Celtic Calendar is divided into the four great Sabbats: Beltaine (April
|
||
30), Lammas (August 1), Samhain (October 31), and Imbolc (February 2). Between
|
||
those Sabbats are the four solstices or lesser Sabbats: Midsummer's Eve
|
||
(Litha, June 21), the Autumnal Equinox (Mabon, September 21), the Spring or
|
||
Vernal Equinox (Ostra, March 21) and the Winter Solstice (Yule, December 22).
|
||
The dates of Christmas and Easter were "rearranged" by early Christians to
|
||
coincide with Yule and Ostra. There seems to be some consensus in
|
||
occult/mythological/historical literature that Lammas may have been a time of
|
||
sacrifice, but whether or not this was done in the middle ages, I haven't
|
||
really been able to figure out. As Hilda pointed out, by Robin Hood's time,
|
||
the sacrifices may have consisted of the first fruits of the harvest (or the
|
||
first grains). As I noted in my article, some fen regard Robin's death as a
|
||
harvest sacrifice (or at least a symbol thereof).
|
||
|
||
As for "Earth Magic..." I'm not really sure. Probably, someone else could give
|
||
a more detailed explanation, but from what I understand, it's using the energy
|
||
inherent in the earth to work magic (but again, this is sketchy). I think the
|
||
story you refer to may be Julianne Toomey and Caitlin Sebastian's "Walk in
|
||
Soul," from Apocryphal Albion 2. In that story, I believe it's Robert who, in
|
||
a fit of desperation, wildly summons the earth power to snap the soldiers'
|
||
crossbow strings (he then spends a couple of days unconscious). Later in the
|
||
story, Robin's ghost appears and gives Robert some tips on how to properly
|
||
channel the energy. Was that the story, or was it another piece?
|
||
|
||
As for Loxley using magic on his own, without Herne's involvement...again, I
|
||
went into that in my last piece and don't want to repeat myself. Personally, I
|
||
can't see him doing this, but plenty of other fans and writers have portrayed
|
||
him as capable of working his own magic.
|
||
|
||
As for the other things you're interested in: check out past issues of Herne's
|
||
Stepchildren (the letterzine), the Journal of the Friends of Robin of Sherwood
|
||
(shameless plug), and Spirit of Sherwood's newsletter On Target. All of these
|
||
have included pieces on medieval life and customs, costuming, food, history,
|
||
etc. Ask other fans who might have back issues. Again, libraries often contain
|
||
quite a bit of this stuff in their history sections.
|
||
|
||
Nansi & Nancy: Hi! Welcome to the circle!
|
||
|
||
Hilda: Your comments on my piece were very fair. As I said, I was up on a real
|
||
soapbox there. I agree with you that Marion's departure for Halstead was
|
||
probably one of the only ways that Judi Trott could be temporarily removed
|
||
from the program without actually killing off her character (a point I should
|
||
have brought up in my article).
|
||
|
||
I've never heard of the faery being six feet tall. That's quite interesting.
|
||
Anything I've read has described them as short. Thanks for pointing that out.
|
||
|
||
Okay, okay, maybe I was being a bit harsh, calling the Maiden/Mother bit an
|
||
"excuse." I suppose any plotline developed to get Marion out of the convent,
|
||
or indeed, any plot wherein Robert meets another woman could be called an
|
||
"excuse" also, though the latter would be more likely termed a "Mary Sue."
|
||
|
||
I'll agree with you that the magical stories are often excellent; some of them
|
||
are spellbinding (gotcha!). I enjoy reading these stories very much. However,
|
||
after reading a great quantity of them, I begin to feel like these are not
|
||
quite the characters I've come to know and love. There are a lot of tense
|
||
situations in the TV series where the characters have to work out the solution
|
||
to a problem themselves. This may be somewhat mundane, but I find it more
|
||
satisfying.
|
||
|
||
I didn't think about the writers' using Marion's asking about Samhain to
|
||
explain the festival to the audience, but you're right. It's done on other
|
||
programs all the time, but this one went right over my head. (Maybe because it
|
||
was so subtle, or maybe because I wasn't looking at it from that perspective).
|
||
|
||
Your assessments of the characters are quite good, including your suggestions
|
||
as to why people like to "stick pins" in Robert. "A National Enquirer need to
|
||
injure those we admire most" - well put!
|
||
|
||
Re-reading my piece, I guess my overall peeve is that I don't like seeing
|
||
characters get pigeonholed, something that's happened to just about every
|
||
other character in this particular series. A lot of friendly debate has been
|
||
exchanged regarding pieces that deal with Tuck's religious beliefs, "Gisburne
|
||
turns Good" stories, the "Nasir subservience" issue and so on.
|
||
|
||
I also spotted two errors. The Order of the Garter was founded by Edward III,
|
||
not Henry III. Also, when Robin first meets Herne, he doesn't shout "No!", he
|
||
just sort of shakes his head and runs off.
|
||
|
||
Well, that's all the rambling for this issue!
|
||
Blessed Be!
|
||
|
||
Janet P. Reedman
|
||
|
||
Ooh Hilda - Loved your newsletter and am dying to participate. So many lights
|
||
flashed in my little brain while I was reading it. I'm sure my reply may sound
|
||
rather disjointed, but there are so many topics I want to touch on!!!
|
||
|
||
Raven: Goddesses/Herne's consort. Most of us know Rhiannon as a Welsh goddess
|
||
seemingly associated with the Celtic horse-cult, but if you break down her
|
||
name into composite elements of the ancient Brythonic language, it becomes
|
||
something like 'Great Queen.' The 'rig' denotes royalty; it is the same word
|
||
element in the Irish 'Morrigan' or 'Great Phantom Queen' and also the 'rig' in
|
||
'The Rig Veda!'
|
||
|
||
Herne or Cernunnos (Carnun in Gaelic) is never written of as having a consort,
|
||
but it would certainly seem likely. The Gundestrup Cauldron, a beautiful piece
|
||
of Celtic artistry, bears a depiction of Cernunnos, and it was found deposited
|
||
in a sacred bog traditionally sacred to the Goddess Nerthus-- the Great
|
||
Goddess, according to writers of the time, of the early Danish people. This
|
||
may be telling...(or maybe not!)
|
||
|
||
I too have some difficulty seeing Marion playing the role of priestess,
|
||
because of her Christian upbringing, though who knows? There was an intense
|
||
devotion to the Virgin Mary in the Middle Ages, which seems to contain some
|
||
traces of Goddess worship. Also, many of the carvings on English churches of
|
||
the time are distinctly non-Christian--green men, female exhibitionists, etc.
|
||
|
||
Mary Ann: Druids - History is still pretty vague as to what and who the druids
|
||
were. They appear to have been the wise men/shamans of the Celts. The name
|
||
itself roughly means 'oak-seer' [I've also heard it explained as a variation
|
||
of the word for "to know" -H]; the oak was the tree most beloved by the
|
||
druids. Purportedly the Romans stamped them out after desecrating their shrine
|
||
on the isle of Anglesey (Mona), but it's doubtful they would be completely
|
||
eradicated at this time.
|
||
|
||
The 'Wheel' is a very interesting subject, most prevalent in Eastern
|
||
mythologies. However, the term 'Wheel' has been applied in Celtic/Norse
|
||
beliefs as both the Sun and the Moon. ('Arianrhod' actually means something
|
||
like 'Silver Wheel.') The shape of stone circles in general might also give
|
||
rise to a 'wheel' association as in 'Rhiannon's Wheel.'
|
||
|
||
To be sure, Beltaine customs were performed in the 1100's. People still
|
||
practice some of these customs today (and I'm talking about folk who know
|
||
nothing whatsoever about paganism!) Maypole dancing is still a common sight in
|
||
Britain on May Day (Beltaine). This is the day the 'May Queen' is chosen. In
|
||
fact, if one looks at a calendar of events in Britain, a good share, such as
|
||
the Hobby Horse, pace-egging, cheese-rolling, the Haxey Hood game, the
|
||
Castleton festival, and the Abbots Bromley Horn Dance, have obvious ancient
|
||
roots.
|
||
|
||
In the Haxey Hood game (which takes place in Lincolnshire every year) opposing
|
||
teams fight for the possession of 'the Hood.' The man who wins is known as the
|
||
'Lord of the Hood,' and those he fights to get it are known, rather
|
||
sinisterly, as 'boggans,' which would seem to be a corruption of 'bugganes' or
|
||
'boggarts'--evil, goblinish spirits. During the ceremony, they also used to
|
||
'smoke the fool'--hang a living man upside down over a smoldering fire! Of
|
||
course, this has been done away with for safety reasons! This custom may
|
||
indeed have had its origin in human sacrifice, though no doubt, by the Middle
|
||
Ages, the sacrifice was symbolic rather than actual.
|
||
|
||
In the Abbots Bromley Horn Dance, men dance from dawn to dusk with antlers on
|
||
their heads (one horn was dated to Viking times.) And at Castleton in
|
||
Derbyshire, a 'Green Man' is paraded on horseback down the village street to
|
||
the church. [But is his name Edyard? -H] Once he reaches the end of the route,
|
||
his green covering of leaves and burs is hauled up the church spire to be torn
|
||
apart by the winds. [Somebody help me here - which was the fantastic zine
|
||
story that made such fascinating use of this custom? I think it was being
|
||
practiced in John's home town. -H] Again, this has been theorized as a
|
||
possible remnant of a human sacrifice.
|
||
|
||
(For anyone interested in the subject of sacrifice, The Life and Death of a
|
||
Druid Prince by Celtic historian Anne Ross and Don Robbins is absolutely
|
||
brilliant! It tells of an actual sacrifice--that of the 'bogman' discovered in
|
||
1984 in Lindow Moss near Manchester. This preserved man, who lived at the time
|
||
the Romans were subduing Britain, was ritually sacrificed around Beltaine, and
|
||
had suffered a 'triple death'--he was struck over the head, garrotted, and
|
||
then thrown into the bog. Ross believes he was a druid, possibly from Ireland,
|
||
and that he was chosen by eating a portion of 'burnt bannock' to die for the
|
||
land. After he was garrotted, she believes he was heaped onto a white horse
|
||
and then taken to interment in the bog--which may be the source of local
|
||
legends concerning 'a wizard with a white horse' and 'the king under the
|
||
ground.')
|
||
|
||
Ariel: Love your theories; you've raised many interesting points of discussion
|
||
about our favorite characters.... I quite agree, with you and Kip, that Herne
|
||
& Robin would equate with Merlin & Arthur (which could provide Loxley fans
|
||
good reason to believe he's not REALLY dead, just sleeping!) [Oh, goody,
|
||
another excuse... OK, OK, I'll leave you alone now, Ariel! -H]
|
||
|
||
As for possessing extra abilities in fanfic--like Hilda, I would be bored if
|
||
the characters had to be drawn completely as they were on TV. So little of
|
||
ourselves would go into them, then, and they would never come alive--just be
|
||
poor copies of Carpenter's creations. It's like when you're playing a
|
||
character as an actor; you don't go out and try to imitate the actor who's
|
||
played the part before you. Borrowing is all right, but you've got to give
|
||
something of yourself. The only thing I'd object to in fan-fic is if Robin
|
||
used 'powers' in a situation that could have been resolved in another way. You
|
||
have to be careful with magic; if it's too easy to use, it becomes merely a
|
||
plot device. But that's a writing problem rather than a problem with the
|
||
action itself!
|
||
|
||
Now for Faerie: As Hilda noted later in the newsletter, the Sidhe were at
|
||
least six feet tall. The Saxon 'elves' were also described as tall (as in the
|
||
legend of Wild Edric...the border lord who captured and wed the faerie woman,
|
||
Godda.) The 'fays' in Arthurian myth are the size of human women, if possessed
|
||
of more than human beauty. In fact, in most faerie lore the 'hidden people'
|
||
are NOT tiny (see the works of folklorist Katherine Briggs) but three feet and
|
||
up to around the shorter heights of normal men. The idea of thumbnail sized,
|
||
winged sprites is Elizabethan. (It is my belief that 'faeries' may indeed have
|
||
been aboriginal people of Britain; faeries traditionally fear iron--so would
|
||
bronze- using tribes.)
|
||
|
||
Another note of completely useless info: Contrary to popular belief, Neolithic
|
||
and Bronze Age men were not, on average, that much shorter than modern man!!
|
||
From data gathered on the Orkneys in Neolithic tombs, men averaged 5' 5" to 5'
|
||
7" while women ranged 4'10" to 5'3". Around Stonehenge, Bronze Age men
|
||
averaged 5'8". The 'Bush Barrow' chief was 6'!
|
||
|
||
True, there's nothing mentioned in the series that would lead one to believe
|
||
Robin's mother was of 'faery' race--but it DOES seem to be prevalent in the
|
||
fandom. I'm not sure why, but if you use the theory that the 'faery' were
|
||
aboriginals, it could work rather well. After all, from analysis of
|
||
bones/crania etc., it is believed that the earliest folk of the British Isles
|
||
were 'slender and dark, with attractive faces and high cheekbones' (taken from
|
||
a book on Cornwall's ancient sites.) 'Faery' in this instance could be more of
|
||
a title than an actuality, the folk being as mortal as you and me, yet
|
||
believed to possess strange powers (and certainly a race apart from the
|
||
average Saxon.)
|
||
|
||
The idea you pose about Robin's ancestry being Welsh or Irish is interesting
|
||
too (especially as Michael does have some Irish ancestry.) And I think I may
|
||
just have to write a story on this subject...hmm...
|
||
|
||
Marion - I do think she was 'weaker' in the third season, but chose to believe
|
||
this was caused by her grief. I was stunned when I first saw her wailing and
|
||
weeping in Owen's castle, and surprised she didn't fight back then and there.
|
||
I mean, as you noticed yourself, Ariel, this is the woman who played
|
||
'Conquest' with King John! (Of course, that was later in the series when
|
||
Marion would have perhaps been a little more her old self.) I find your
|
||
psychological reason for Marion remaining in Halstead to be very true and
|
||
plausible.
|
||
|
||
Robert - I, too, tire of seeing Robert suicidal and semi-catatonic after
|
||
Marion's departure! However, if Marion was not Robert's main reason for being
|
||
an outlaw, what was? Even if he hated what was being done to the people of
|
||
England, the lack of justice, would it be enough to make him want to be
|
||
outlawed, to lose everything? Couldn't it serve the cause more if he stayed at
|
||
Huntingdon and tried to rally other nobles to his cause, rather than becoming
|
||
a hunted man? I wish he had spoken of his reasons at some point in the series!
|
||
|
||
I must admit I have some troubles understanding Robert's character, and also
|
||
the magic in the third season. Herne seemed distant to me; less of a real
|
||
presence. And other magic/magical beings seemed to be of a dark sort--Gulnar,
|
||
Cromm Cruac.
|
||
|
||
I also had trouble with Owen and his men in the third season. I love the
|
||
HERNE'S SON episode, but who were those people??! They mentioned Arianrhod but
|
||
also the Hammer of Thor! Are they Celts or Vikings? A cross? With the 'Cult of
|
||
Fenris' I would say definitely more Viking, but...I presume that blue stuff on
|
||
their faces is woad, used by the ancient Britons? And Owen's name is certainly
|
||
Welsh enough! But speaking of names, why does Grendel have the name of a Saxon
|
||
monster?
|
||
|
||
But I digress here...And so I end my wild ramble through the magic forest...
|
||
P.S. Another note on Sacred Kings - several years ago excavations at
|
||
Stonehenge revealed the skeleton of a young man of about 24 in the ditch. He
|
||
had been shot through the back with arrows: several flint arrowheads were
|
||
still wedged in his ribs. He dated from the Middle Bronze Age. Obviously the
|
||
monument was still sacred and in use at this time - why would they leave, say,
|
||
a murderer or felon in its ditch?? Was this youth a Sacred King, ritually
|
||
sacrificed? If only the stones could speak!!!
|
||
|
||
Hilda
|
||
|
||
FOLKS, PLEASE TAKE NOTE - I'm not ignoring anyone here, but if I don't answer
|
||
you directly or only address one of your points, it simply means that I agree,
|
||
don't know the answer, never thought of it before, or think someone else could
|
||
do a better job.
|
||
|
||
Amber: I would expect that there were many "totally Pagan" people in England
|
||
in Robin Hood's time, since there had been for so long already. But with
|
||
Christianity still being phased in and communications technology virtually
|
||
nonexistent, I think that most Christianity practiced outside of the convent
|
||
or monastery was probably a composite of imported Roman ideas and whichever
|
||
local images and rituals didn't conflict outright. There's a good example in
|
||
"The Cross of St. Ciricus." When I was a little Catholic kid in New Hampshire,
|
||
I don't remember my religious education teacher saying anything about curing
|
||
physical ailments by burning candles that had touched the bones of a
|
||
saint...But we did have the Blessing of the Throats on St. Blaise's Day at the
|
||
beginning of cold and flu season (I think St. Blaise came in with the French
|
||
Canadians), where the priest would hold crossed candles to our throats and say
|
||
a prayer so that we wouldn't get sick. Composite Christianity survives most
|
||
notably today in Yoruba/Catholic faiths such as Macumba, Candombl, and
|
||
Vodoun, where each Yoruba deity is also a saint (i.e., Yemaya is another name
|
||
for Mary, Oshun is St. Theresa - Are these right?) David Byrne did a really
|
||
cool mini-documentary about this - who here has seen it and remembers its
|
||
name? Anyway, most saints are adopted deities from territories conquered by
|
||
Christians or by peoples who subsequently became Christian (like my favorite,
|
||
St. Brigid!) There's still a Church of St. Bacchus somewhere in Eastern
|
||
Europe, and Brittany boasts a St. Cornely - the patron saint of domestic
|
||
horned animals! Mary Herself was an apocryphal figure in early Christianity,
|
||
but got promoted to Queen of Heaven when it seemed necessary to get matristic
|
||
hayseeds into the church.
|
||
|
||
Woodswalker - I don't recall the outlaws putting together one formal ritual.
|
||
Their work was looking after the Lady's children, and they did it very well
|
||
considering their circumstances! Beats me why we had to put up with "satanic
|
||
covens." I guess because they're really scary, but still OK to put on TV
|
||
because you're supposed to hate them. I do wonder what would have happened if
|
||
black magic had been portrayed as a bid for individual gain (which I suspect
|
||
is the motivation for most real black magic) rather than as slavish and
|
||
frankly insane devotion to a perversion of Christian or older archetypes.
|
||
Maybe that would have been too scary - or given people nasty ideas. I doubt
|
||
that Georgia-Pacific would stop short of such tactics were they considered
|
||
workable! Hitler didn't, or so I understand.
|
||
|
||
I don't think that Robert's noble contemporaries would necessarily have been
|
||
spooked by an encounter with an elder God. It's entirely possible that the
|
||
ruling class' devotion to the Church was largely a matter of diplomacy, and
|
||
individual nobles may well have held their forebears' faiths in secret.
|
||
|
||
I don't think that characters yelling nasty things at Marion in zines means
|
||
that the writers themselves feel the same way about her. Most RoS fan writers
|
||
are women, and what woman hasn't been slapped in the face with accusations of
|
||
never having loved someone when she won't knuckle under to his every demand?
|
||
Which of us hasn't succumbed to the temptation to consider our every motive
|
||
false and tainted, when this is the image of women presented to us from Day 1?
|
||
By living out these accusations through an admirable and strong character like
|
||
Marion, riding them out, and proving them false, writers can tap into an
|
||
inexhaustible font of shared experience and keep us glued to the page.
|
||
|
||
Janet V.: I think you know now that I agree with you about exactly who and
|
||
where the Goddess is in the series!
|
||
|
||
Lynn - all I can say is, I agree! But I do want to reserve Robert the
|
||
possibility of having a latent magical talent, perhaps buried under layers of
|
||
diplomatic training, because it could make for some really juicy stories. Some
|
||
of the blatantly Craft-flavored stuff I've seen written about Marion gives her
|
||
character a lovely new dimension and the first taste of familiarity I've
|
||
gotten for her, despite its being a total departure from the show.
|
||
|
||
Ariel - I seem to recall that "Robin" is archaic Welsh male-anatomical slang.
|
||
(Thingie of Sherwood?) Not a bad choice for the name of the male protagonist
|
||
of a fertility religion... "Maiden" or "Maid" originally meant "unmarried
|
||
woman," I think, but I'd love some etymological backup on this.
|
||
|
||
I personally don't have an idea of an "Evil One" (an external personification
|
||
of evil and a handy- dandy scapegoat when you know you've screwed up,) but
|
||
it's a convenient conception, and might well have found as much favor in the
|
||
12th and 13th centuries as it does now. Gods, spirits, and demons are like
|
||
that. If a specific sort would suit your purpose, you can usually conjure it
|
||
up, whether you put any forethought into the potential consequences or not...
|
||
|
||
Although I'm not convinced that Satanism existed in England before the Church
|
||
even got a proper foothold, I'd be willing to believe that sorcery (in the
|
||
sense of calling up an otherworldly type and bargaining with it for assistance
|
||
in accomplishing some goal) was practiced. Especially in a time when just
|
||
about everybody was downtrodden, I can easily imagine people slipping into the
|
||
habit of centering their power outside of themselves in the form of demons and
|
||
rent-a-monsters.
|
||
|
||
Other names I've heard for holidays: Lammas - Lughnassadh; Samhain -
|
||
Hallowmass or Day of the Dead; Imbolc - Candlemas or Brigid; Litha - Summer
|
||
Solstice; Ostra - Ostara, Eostar or Eostre (kin to "estrogen" and "oestrus
|
||
cycle").
|
||
|
||
In case anybody hasn't run into "Mary Sue" yet, she's an annoyingly perfect
|
||
female character written into fan literature to give the author's fantasy
|
||
personification a proper debut into the universe in question. Come to think of
|
||
it, I don't expect that anyone who enjoys fan literature hasn't met Mary Sue!
|
||
|
||
You're right - some themes are eminently tempting (like what's Tuck doing out
|
||
in the woods with a load of fogbound Herne-worshippers,) but I think that it's
|
||
not so much a matter of characters being pigeonholed as it is the emergence
|
||
and reemergence of something inherently fascinating as more and more people
|
||
try their hands at writing fanfic. I tend to see the "Gisburne turns Good"
|
||
stories as a sort of there-but-for-grace escape hatch for people who were
|
||
abused as children to take pride in how they've reshaped their own situations;
|
||
and the "Nasir subservience" issue as a way for writers to explore exactly how
|
||
divergent two cultures can be without regressing into pure space-alien
|
||
speculation; but then I'll always pick a sociological explanation if there's
|
||
one kicking around.
|
||
|
||
Gosh, it's fun typing your compliments! I'll argue with you any day... I don't
|
||
really think that Robert was originally portrayed as particularly psychic, but
|
||
I enjoy fanfic that explores that possibility. Personally, I'd like more
|
||
Loxley-employs-his-own-earthy-peasant-common-sense stuff, but I'd like more
|
||
Loxley anything! (Note blatant favoritism here.) Thanks for the bolt out of
|
||
the grey-blue. Hope to hear more from you soon.
|
||
|
||
Janet R.: I suppose "female exhibitionist" is the literal translation of
|
||
Sheila-na-Gig, the grinning female figure found carved over doorways in Celtic
|
||
countries, holding her Gates of Life open wide. But, honestly, what a
|
||
dismissive term! Not your fault, of course - modern folk would be just as
|
||
shocked if an Egyptian Priestess of Bast turned up and offered them a glimpse
|
||
of the Divine. People's ideas of holiness vary from culture to culture. That's
|
||
why RoS' setting is so conducive to plots involving mysticism - two wildly
|
||
divergent worldviews were simultaneously prevalent, and the combination offers
|
||
the opportunity to borrow the most interesting elements of each.
|
||
|
||
It's hard to be precise about Druids, since they maintained an oral tradition
|
||
only and refused to write anything down. Some guesses as to why include the
|
||
desire to cultivate memory skills and to shield sacred teachings from non-
|
||
initiates. My own favorite speculation is that the Druids might have
|
||
considered written teachings too vulnerable to misinterpretation and abuse.
|
||
"Nobody knows who they were, or what they were doing..." Identify that quote
|
||
about the Druids, anyone, and I'll buy you an ice cream!
|
||
|
||
Wheels and more wheels - there's also the Wheel of the Year, and Arianrhod's
|
||
Silver Wheel may have been a reference to the apparent turning of the stars
|
||
through the sky. The Norse influence brought the spinning wheel of the Norns
|
||
(Fates.) Just about any agrarian people tends to have a cyclic view of things,
|
||
since they have to keep such close track of which part of the year is best for
|
||
planting, harvesting, etc. Does anybody here know anything about the origins
|
||
of the Rotary Club? Their club sign is a wheel, unlike the perfectly mundane
|
||
(!) lions, eagles, and elks of other civic clubs. Now who was it whose sign
|
||
was a device used for drawing a circle...
|
||
|
||
Someone recently mentioned to me how interesting it was that, of all of the
|
||
British Isles, the only country where Witch-burning never really caught on was
|
||
the home of the Lindow Man...
|
||
|
||
On Faerie stature - I wish I could remember where I read the theory that the
|
||
nomenclatures "Wee Folk" and "Little People" (as well as the unconvincingly
|
||
saccharine "Good Folk" and the ridiculous "Mother's Helpers") were
|
||
conciliatory diminutives intended to pacify rather than accurately describe
|
||
the denizens of an ill-understood and frankly frightening realm. In the Middle
|
||
Ages, one's "little Auntie" was more likely to be a favorite, beloved relation
|
||
than a literally small person. This manner of denoting affection seems to have
|
||
largely fallen out of common English usage, except in reference to kittycats
|
||
and other assorted fuzzy-wuzzums.
|
||
|
||
Owen and the Composite Pagans from Heck...They seem like a load of sloppy
|
||
malcontents to me. "Gosh, here's a scary wolf god (who answers to somebody
|
||
named Thor, we think) and some nifty blue makeup that gives us interesting
|
||
visions..." (Yes, woad is a hallucinogen.) It's as though some modern kids
|
||
from dysfunctional families decided that good old reliable Bacchus, Carlos
|
||
Castaneda's awesome peyote dude Mescalito, the Egyptian Dark God Set, and the
|
||
nastier aspects of the Morrigan were the way to get their jabs in, since
|
||
things on the material plane seem so hopeless and/or meaningless... I know it
|
||
seems silly, but yes, Virginia, the Pagans have their Jimmy Swaggarts too, and
|
||
probably have for a long time. I don't think paranoiac monomania is
|
||
necessarily a recent invention.
|
||
|
||
I have read that the Druids would only use bows and arrows against humans in
|
||
ritual, never in war, considering it cowardly to kill an enemy one couldn't
|
||
properly see. If only the stones could speak...They do, Janet. Big clunky
|
||
types that they are, they probably haven't figured out how to thank you for
|
||
being their voice, so I guess it falls to me. Thank you very much.
|
||
|
||
Editor's Notes
|
||
|
||
Ariel mentioned the newsletters of Spirit of Sherwood and Friends of Robin of
|
||
Sherwood. Here's where you can get those:
|
||
|
||
Spirit of Sherwood
|
||
c/o Chris Haire & Denise Hamlin
|
||
1276 West Marshall
|
||
Ferndale, MI 48220
|
||
|
||
Friends of Robin of Sherwood
|
||
c/o Jeannie Pellerin Box 237
|
||
W. Upton, MA 01587
|
||
|
||
Check with them first about back issues - it's a lot easier to run a reprint
|
||
of a club journal than of a zine!
|
||
|
||
And those of you who are desperately seeking the loan of some book - let me
|
||
know! I'll gladly print your name, address, and the titles or subjects of the
|
||
books you'd like to borrow.
|
||
|
||
Cousins' first material- plane circle at Visions '91 (all 4 of us!) was quiet
|
||
and steady, almost subsonic. We invoked the spirit of Friendship, and set up a
|
||
strong, gentle transdimensional "goodwill node" to attract those with good
|
||
intentions and to be invisible to any who might be frightened or hostile. It
|
||
was as though we had managed through sheer desire to reconstruct the awesome
|
||
power of love that we felt at Herne's Con I and II. It's still there, and it's
|
||
always been there. Here's where you come in: mention Cousins to your open-
|
||
hearted friends who enjoy Robin of Sherwood and have an interest in the show's
|
||
magical dimension. Effecting change in accordance with will is what we're all
|
||
about! Until next time and always, blessed be. Love, Hilda
|
||
|