295 lines
9.4 KiB
Plaintext
295 lines
9.4 KiB
Plaintext
3
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[A]bort, [P]ause, any to continue
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A M I D S U M M E R CELEBRATION
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===================================
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by Mike Nichols (a.k.a. Gwydion)
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In addition to the four great
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festivals of the Pagan Celtic year,
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there are four lesser holidays as
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well: the two solstices, and the two
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equinoxes. In folklore, these are
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referred to as the four 'quarter-days'
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of the year, and modern Witches call
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them the four 'Lesser Sabbats', or the
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four 'Low Holidays'. The Summer
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Solstice is one of them.
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Technically, a solstice is an
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astronomical point and, due to the
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procession to the equinox, the date
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may vary by a few days depending on
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the year. The summer solstice occurs
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when the sun reaches the Tropic of
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Cancer, and we experience the longest
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day and the shortest night of the
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year. Astrologers know this as the
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date on which the sun enters the sign
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of Cancer. This year it will occur at
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10:57 pm CDT on June 21st.
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However, since most European
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peasants were not accomplished at
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reading an ephemeris or did not live
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close enough to Salisbury Plain to
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trot over to Stonehenge and sight down
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it's main avenue, they celebrated the
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event on a fixed calendar date, June
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24th. The slight forward displacement
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of the traditional date is the result
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of multitudinous calendrical changes
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down through the ages. It is
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analogous to the winter solstice
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celebration, which is astronomically
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on or about December 21st, but is
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celebrated on the traditional date of
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December 25th, Yule, later adopted by
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the Christians.
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Again, it must be remembered that
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the Celts reckoned their days from
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sundown to sundown, so the June 24th
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festivities actually begin on the
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previous sundown (our June 23rd).
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This was Shakespeare's Midsummer
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Night's Eve. Which brings up another
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point: our modern calendars are quite
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misguided in suggesting that 'summer
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begins' on the solstice. According to
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the old folk calendar, summer BEGINS
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on May Day and ends on Lammas (August
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1st), with the summer solstice, midway
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between the two, marking MID-summer.
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This makes more logical sense than
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suggesting that summer begins on the
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day when the sun's power begins to
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wane and the days grow shorter.
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Although our Pagan ancestors
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probably preferred June 24th (and
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indeed most European folk festivals
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today use this date), the sensibility
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of modern Witches seems to prefer the
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actual solstice point, beginning the
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celebration at sunset. Again, it
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gives modern Pagans a range of dates
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to choose from with, hopefully, a
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weekend embedded in it. (And this
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year, the moon is waxing throughout.)
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As the Pagan mid-winter
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celebration of Yule was adopted by
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Christians as Christmas (December
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25th), so too the Pagan mid-summer
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celebration was adopted by them as the
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feast of John the Baptist (June 24th).
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Occurring 180 degrees apart on the
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wheel of the year, the mid-winter
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celebration commemorates the birth of
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Jesus, while the mid-summer
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celebration commemorates the birth of
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John, the prophet who was born six
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months before Jesus in order to
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announce his arrival.
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This last tidbit is extremely
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conspicuous, in that John is the ONLY
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saint in the entire Catholic
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hagiography whose feast day is a
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commemoration of his birth, rather
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than his death. A generation ago,
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Catholic nuns were fond of explaining
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that a saint is commemorated on the
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anniversary of his or her death
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because it was really a 'birth' into
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the Kingdom of Heaven. But John the
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Baptist, the sole exception, is
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emphatically commemorated on the
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anniversary of his birth into THIS
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world. Although this makes no sense
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viewed from a Christian perspective,
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it makes perfect poetic sense from the
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viewpoint of Pagan symbolism.
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In most Pagan cultures, the sun
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god is seen as split between two rival
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personalities: the god of light and
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his twin, his 'weird', his 'other
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self', the god of darkness. They are
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Gawain and the Green Knight, Gwyn and
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Gwythyr, Llew and Goronwy, Lugh and
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Balor, Balan and Balin, the Holly King
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and the Oak King, etc. Often they are
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depicted as fighting seasonal battles
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for the favor of their goddess/lover,
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such as Creiddylad or Blodeuwedd, who
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represents Nature.
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The god of light is always born at
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the winter solstice, and his strength
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waxes with the lengthening days, until
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the moment of his greatest power, the
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summer solstice, the longest day.
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And, like a look in a mirror, his
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'shadow self', the lord of darkness,
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is born at the summer solstice, and
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his strength waxes with the
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lengthening nights until the moment of
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his greatest power, the winter
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solstice, the longest night.
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Indirect evidence supporting this
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mirror-birth pattern is strongest in
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the Christianized form of the Pagan
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myth. Many writers, from Robert
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Graves to Stewart Farrar, have
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repeatedly pointed out that Jesus was
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identified with the Holly King, while
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John the Baptist was the Oak King.
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That is why, 'of all the trees that
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are in the wood, the Holly tree bears
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the crown.' If the birth of Jesus,
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the 'light of the world', is
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celebrated at mid-winter, Christian
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folk tradition insists that John the
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Oak King was born (rather than died)
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at mid-summer.
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It is at this point that I must
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diverge from the opinion of Robert
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Graves and other writers who have
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followed him. Graves believes that at
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midsummer, the Sun King is slain by
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his rival, the God of Darkness; just
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as the God of Darkness is, in turn,
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slain by the God of Light at
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midwinter. And yet, in Christian folk
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tradition (derived from the older
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Pagan strain), it is births, not
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deaths, that are associated with the
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solstices. For the feast of John the
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Baptist, this is all the more
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conspicuous, as it breaks the rules
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regarding all other saints.
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So if births are associated with
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the solstices, when do the symbolic
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deaths occur? When does Goronwy slay
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Llew and when does Llew, in his turn,
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slay Goronwy? When does darkness
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conquer light or light conquer
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darkness? Obviously (to me, at
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least), it must be at the two
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equinoxes. At the autumnal equinox,
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the hours of light in the day are
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eclipsed by the hours of darkness. At
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the vernal equinox, the process is
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reversed. Also, the autumnal equinox,
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called 'Harvest Home', is already
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associated with sacrifice, principally
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that of the spirit of grain or
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vegetation. In this case, the god of
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light would be identical.
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In Welsh mythology in particular,
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there is a startling vindication of
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the seasonal placement of the sun
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god's death, the significance of which
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occurred to me in a recent dream, and
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which I haven't seen elsewhere. Llew
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is the Welsh god of light, and his
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name means 'lion'. (The lion is often
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the symbol of a sun god.) He is
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betrayed by his 'virgin' wife
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Blodeuwedd, into standing with one
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foot on the rim of a cauldron and the
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other on the back of a goat. It is
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only in this way that Llew can be
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killed, and Blodeuwedd's lover,
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Goronwy, Llew's dark self, is hiding
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nearby with a spear at the ready. But
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as Llew is struck with it, he is not
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killed. He is instead transformed
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into an eagle.
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Putting this in the form of a
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Bardic riddle, it would go something
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like this: Who can tell in what
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season the Lion (Llew), betrayed by
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the Virgin (Blodeuwedd), poised on the
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Balance, is transformed into an Eagle?
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My readers who are astrologers are
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probably already gasping in
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recognition. The sequence is
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astrological and in proper order: Leo
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(lion), Virgo (virgin), Libra
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(balance), and Scorpio (for which the
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eagle is a well-known alternative
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symbol). Also, the remaining icons,
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cauldron and goat, could arguably
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symbolize Cancer and Capricorn,
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representing summer and winter, the
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signs beginning with the two solstice
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points. So Llew is balanced between
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cauldron and goat, between summer and
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winter, on the balance (Libra) point
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of the autumnal equinox.
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This, of course, is the answer to
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a related Bardic riddle. Repeatedly,
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the 'Mabinogion' tells us that Llew
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must be standing with one foot on the
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cauldron and one foot on the goat's
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back in order to be killed. But
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nowhere does it tell us why. Why is
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this particular situation the ONLY one
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in which Llew can be overcome?
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Because it represents the equinox
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point. And the equinox is the only
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time of the entire year when light
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(Llew) can be overcome by darkness
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(Goronwy).
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It should now come as no surprise
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that, when it is time for Llew to kill
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Goronwy in his turn, Llew insists that
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Goronwy stands where he once stood
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while he (Llew) casts the spear. This
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is no mere vindictiveness on Llew's
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part. For, although the 'Mabinogion'
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does not say so, it should by now be
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obvious that this is the only time
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when Goronwy can be overcome. Light
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can overcome darkness only at the
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equinox -- this time the vernal
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equinox.
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So Midsummer (to me, at least) is
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a celebration of the sun god at his
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zenith, a crowned king on his throne.
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He is at the height of his strength
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and still 1/4 of a year away from his
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ritual death at the hands of his
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rival. The spear and the cauldron
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have often been used as symbols for
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this holiday and it should now be easy
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to see why. Sun gods are virtually
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always associated with spears (even
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Jesus is pierced by one), and the
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midsummer cauldron of Cancer is a
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symbol of the Goddess in her fullness.
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It is an especially beautiful time of
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the year for an outdoor celebration.
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May yours be magical!
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FEATURE FILES
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