|
Starfire Astrology
provides you with everything you need to chart your daily course.
From daily horoscopes to email services to reading about your favorite
celebrities.
Weekly
Romance
Guide
The favorite place to
realize your hearts potential. keep up
to date on your possibilities.
Featured
Astrology
Article
Interesting people,
places and things from around the world and how
they are being affected by
astrology.
LadyFire
Daily Visits
Daily Inspiration
Fortune
Dream Center
|
|
| |
 |
| |
Samhain marks one of the
two great doorways of the Celtic year, for the Celts divided the year
into two seasons: the light and the dark, at Beltane on May 1st and
Samhain on November 1st. Some believe that Samhain was the more
important festival, marking the beginning of a whole new cycle, just
as the Celtic day began at night. For it was understood that in dark
silence comes whisperings of new beginnings, the stirring of the seed
below the ground. Whereas Beltane welcomes in the summer with joyous
celebrations at dawn, the most magically potent time of this festival
is November Eve, the night of October 31st, known today of course, as
Halloween.
Samhain (Scots Gaelic:
Samhuinn) literally means “summer's end.” In Scotland and Ireland,
Halloween is known as Oíche Shamhna, while in Wales it is Nos
Calan Gaeaf, the eve of the winter's calend, or first. With the rise
of Christianity, Samhain was changed to Hallowmas, or All Saints' Day,
to commemorate the souls of the blessed dead who had been canonized
that year, so the night before became popularly known as Halloween,
All Hallows Eve, or Hollantide. November 2nd became All
Souls Day, when prayers were to be offered to the souls of all who the
departed and those who were waiting in Purgatory for entry into
Heaven. Throughout the centuries, pagan and Christian beliefs
intertwine in a gallimaufry of celebrations from Oct 31st through
November 5th, all of which appear both to challenge the
ascendancy of the dark and to revel in its mystery.
In the country year,
Samhain marked the first day of winter, when the herders led the
cattle and sheep down from their summer hillside pastures to the
shelter of stable and byre. The hay that would feed them during the
winter must be stored in sturdy thatched ricks, tied down securely
against storms. Those destined for the table were slaughtered, after
being ritually devoted to the gods in pagan times. All the harvest
must be gathered in -- barley, oats, wheat, turnips, and apples -- for
come November, the faeries would blast every growing plant with their
breath, blighting any nuts and berries remaining on the hedgerows.
Peat and wood for winter fires were stacked high by the hearth. It was
a joyous time of family reunion, when all members of the household
worked together baking, salting meat, and making preserves for the
winter feasts to come. The endless horizons of summer gave way to a
warm, dim and often smoky room; the symphony of summer sounds was
replaced by a counterpoint of voices, young and old, human and
animal.
In
early Ireland, people gathered at the ritual centers of the tribes,
for Samhain was the principal calendar feast of the year. The
greatest assembly was the 'Feast of Tara,' focusing on the royal seat
of the High King as the heart of the sacred land, the point of
conception for the new year. In every household throughout the
country, hearth-fires were extinguished. All waited for the Druids to
light the new fire of the year -- not at Tara, but at Tlachtga, a hill
twelve miles to the north-west. It marked the burial-place of Tlachtga,
daughter of the great druid Mogh Ruith, who may once have been a
goddess in her own right in a former age.
At
at all the turning points of the Celtic year, the gods drew near to
Earth at Samhain, so many sacrifices and gifts were offered up in
thanksgiving for the harvest. Personal prayers in the form of objects
symbolizing the wishes of supplicants or ailments to be healed were
cast into the fire, and at the end of the ceremonies, brands were lit
from the great fire of Tara to re-kindle all the home fires of the
tribe, as at Beltane. As they received the flame that marked this time
of beginnings, people surely felt a sense of the kindling of new
dreams, projects and hopes for the year to come.
The
Samhain fires continued to blaze down the centuries. In the 1860s the
Halloween bonfires were still so popular in Scotland that one traveler
reported seeing thirty fires lighting up the hillsides all on one
night, each surrounded by rings of dancing figures, a practice which
continued up to the first World War. Young people and servants lit
brands from the fire and ran around the fields and hedges of house and
farm, while community leaders surrounded parish boundaries with a
magic circle of light. Afterwards, ashes from the fires were sprinkled
over the fields to protect them during the winter months -- and of
course, they also improved the soil. The bonfire provided an island of
light within the oncoming tide of winter darkness, keeping away cold,
discomfort, and evil spirits long before electricity illumined our
nights. When the last flame sank down, it was time to run as fast as
you could for home, raising the cry, “The black sow without a tail
take the hindmost!”
Even
today, bonfires light up the skies in many parts of the British Isles
and Ireland at this season, although in many areas of Britain their
significance has been co-opted by Guy Fawkes Day, which falls on
November 5th, and commemorates an unsuccessful attempt to blow up the
English Houses of Parliament in the 17th century. In one Devonshire
village, the extraordinary sight of both men and women running through
the streets with blazing tar barrels on their backs can still be seen!
Whatever the reason, there will probably always be a human need to
make fires against the winter’s dark.
|
| ... |
Divination at Halloween
|
| |
Samhain was a significant
time for divination, perhaps even more so than May or Midsummer’s Eve,
because this was the chief of the three Spirit Nights. Divination
customs and games frequently featured apples and nuts from the recent
harvest, and candles played an important part in adding atmosphere to
the mysteries. In Scotland, a child born at Samhain was said to be
gifted with an dà shealladh, “The Two Sights” commonly known as
“second sight,” or clairvoyance.
Apple Magic
At the heart of the Celtic Otherworld grows an apple tree whose fruit
has magical properties. Old sagas tell of heroes crossing the western
sea to find this wondrous country, known in Ireland as Emhain Abhlach,
(Evan Avlach) and in Britain, Avalon. At Samhain, the apple
harvest is in, and old hearthside games, such as apple-bobbing, called
apple-dookin’ in Scotland, reflect the journey across water to obtain
the magic apple.
Dookin' for Apples
Place a large tub, preferably wooden, on the
floor, and half fill it with water. Tumble in plenty of apples, and
have one person stir them around vigorously with a long wooden spoon
or rod of hazel, ash or any other sacred tree.
Each
player takes their turn kneeling on the floor, trying to capture the
apples with their teeth as they go bobbing around. Each gets three
tries before the next person has a go. Best to wear old clothes for
this one, and have a roaring fire nearby so you can dry off while
eating your prize!
If you do manage to capture an apple, you might want to keep it for a
divination ritual, such as this one:
The Apple and the Mirror
Before the stroke of midnight, sit in front of a
mirror in a room lit only by one candle or the moon. Go into the
silence, and ask a question. Cut the apple into nine pieces. With your
back to the mirror, eat eight of the pieces, then throw the ninth over
your left shoulder. Turn your head to look over the same shoulder, and
you will see and in image or symbol in the mirror that will tell you
your answer.
(When you look in the mirror, let your focus go "soft," and allow the
patterns made by the moon or candlelight and shadows to suggest forms,
symbols and other dreamlike images that speak to your intuition.)
Dreaming Stones
Go to a boundary stream and with closed eyes,
take from the water three stones between middle finger and thumb,
saying these words as each is gathered:
I will lift the stone
As Mary lifted it for her Son,
For substance, virtue, and strength;
May this stone be in my hand
Till I reach my journey’s end.
(Scots Gaelic)
Togaidh mise chlach,
Mar a thog Moire da Mac,
Air bhrìgh, air bhuaidh, ‘s air neart;
Gun robh a chlachsa am dhòrn,
Gus an ruig mi mo cheann uidhe.
Carry them home carefully and place them under your pillow. That
night, ask for a dream that will give you guidance or a solution to a
problem, and the stones will bring it for you.
© Mara Freeman, 1999
Reprinted from the Chalice Center |
|