Official Publication of the Reformed Druids of Gaia, Inc. 1 Geimredh YGR 01 – Samhain / Yule 2006 – Vol.5 No. 1
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MUSINGS FROM THE ARCH-DRUID As I write this, we are getting the first real rainstorm of the season…and This has always been my favourite time of year, and I find myself naturally One thing that I am very pleased to report is that RDG is experiencing an influx of new members since the highly successful Mabon Gathering – including a handful from across the pond…and the best news is that Cylch Cerddwyr Rhwng y Bydoedd (the Mother Grove of RDG) has gained a new local member as well! A warm welcome to Darkcryst… 🙂 We are highly encouraged to make this an annual event, and I hope to meet more of you next year…there is nothing like a face-to-face encounter with those one has met online – it is an awesome feeling, and much deja’ vu was experienced that weekend… There was a proliferation of poetry submitted for this issue of the newsletter – I guess the Awen is flowing in many places at this time! Thanks to all who have contributed their beautiful and evocative writings – this newsletter is made brighter by their inclusion… 🙂 This issue focuses mostly on the Crone and on Power Places. I hope you all enjoy the insights and inspirations from the Cauldron of Ceridwen…and that you will be lovingly guided to the next step on your path – easily and without struggle or doubt. Our thoughts are especially powerful at this time of many Blessings of the Season of the Crone… |
“Still in bloom —
California flowers dance
to winter song.”
~~ Victor P. Gendrano
“To see a hillside white with dogwood bloom is to know a particular ecstasy
of beauty, but to walk the gray Winter woods
and find the buds which will resurrect that beauty in another May
is to partake of continuity.”
~~ Hal Borland
Elements Invocation
I I am the salt, purifier of the earth
~~ Source Unknown ~~ |
“Sometimes
our fate resembles a fruit tree in winter.
Who would think that those branches would turn green again and blossom,
but we hope it; we know it.”
~~ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe quotes
(German Playwright, Poet, Novelist and Dramatist. 1749-1832)
Bardic Writings of RDG Members
(The following three writings by Druid Jillbe were generously submitted to us for the purpose of sharing her talents and inspirations with the readers of this
newsletter)
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JOURNEY
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Calan Gaeaf Chantby Jillbe Badb
Time which is no time, threshold of the year Ceridwen summoned, prophetic power Dalon ap Landu died, resurrected This New Year, reflect on what’s come to pass
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Gaia Webby Jillbe BadbMirrors reflecting They say “As Above So Below” Four Realms holding the secret keys Trinity of Oak, Birch and Yew Within their fire a Drake appears |
(The following two writings by “honorary member” GeorgeAnne Smith were
generously submitted to us for the purpose of sharing her talents and inspirations with the readers of this newsletter.) If you like her poetry, visit her website at: http://www.freewebs.com/feedingthesoul/
Autumn in the Bluesby GeorgeAnne Smith
Open landscapes are now dotted by Dormant garden spots are withered; An autumn palette; a reminder that |
MIGHTY REDWOOD
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“In seed time learn, in harvest teach, in winter enjoy.”
~ William Blake quotes (English visionary Mystic, Poet, Painter and Engraver. 1757-1827)
Samhain Rite for Solitary Pagans
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* An Orange Altar Cloth * Cauldron * 1 Black Taper Goddess Candle * 1 Black Taper God Candle * 2 Carved Turnip Candle Holders * 1 Black Votive Candle * 1 White Pillar Candle * 1 Apple * A Bolline * A Plate of Fruit * Vegetables and Breads * Pictures or Mementos of Departed Loved Ones * Samhain Incense (Mint, Nutmeg, Apple) |
Preparation
Sweep area, moving in a deosil manner. Outline your circle with a black cord, fresh turned earth, or salt. Place the black taper Goddess Candle to the top left on altar. Place the black taper God candle to the top right on altar. Place the black votive candle in the cauldron, positioned on floor in front of the altar. Plate of Fruit, Vegetables, and Breads should be put in-between Goddess and God candles at top center of altar. Apple and Bolline should be placed in center of altar, on a Pentacle if possible. Arrange the rest of your tools and props according to personal preference. Bathe or shower for purification. If you have magickal jewelry or jewelry passed on to you by departed loved ones, this is the ritual to wear it all. Sit and meditate to ground and center. When ready to begin, play some appropriate soothing music for ambiance.
Cast the circle and call Quarters…… invoke the Crone aspect of the Goddess by lighting the black taper Goddess candle and saying:
“Dark Mother, ruler of the night, Goddess of death and rebirth, Hear and behold Your child this night as I honor Thee and Thy realm. I stand humbly before Thee, asking for Thy blessing and favor. Lift, now, the Veil between the worlds, as this time-out-of-time begins, That I may commune with my ancestors as they journey to the Summerlands.”
Step back from the altar and concentrate on the Goddess candle’s flame. Should it rise and flicker, proceed. If not, silently project your wish to commune with your loved ones that have passed on. When you feel that your wish has been acknowledged, invoke the God by lighting the black taper God candle and saying:
“Dark Father, aged Consort of the Crone, Lord of the Underworld, Hear and behold Your child this night as I honor Thee and Thy realm. I stand between Thee and Thy Lady, asking for blessing and favor. As this time-out-of-time approaches, stand ever guard as the Veil lifts, Keep safe my ancestors, and all of my loved ones As they journey to the Summerlands”
Step back from the altar and concentrate on the God candle’s flame. If it rises and flickers, proceed. If not, silently project your wishes that your loved ones be kept safe on their journey. When you feel that your request has been acknowledged, step back up to the alter and pick up the apple, saying:
“Tonight as the barrier between the two realms grows thin, Spirits walk amongst us, once again. They be family, friends and foes, Pets and wildlife, fishes and crows. But be we still mindful of the Wee Folke at play, Elves, fey, brownies, and sidhe.”
Cut the apple crosswise with the Bolline to reveal the symbolic pentagram at the core. Take a bite of one half of the apple and set it back on the Pentacle. (This apple and others will be buried outside later, after the ritual is done) Continue:
“Some to trick, some to treat, Some to purposely misguide our feet. Stay we on the paths we know As planting sacred apples we go.”
Now take your wand in your projective hand to bless the “Feast of the Dead”. Wave it over the plate of fruits, vegetables, and breads, saying:
“This Feast I shall leave on my doorstep all night. In my window one candle shall burn bright, To help my loved ones find their way As they travel this eve, and this night, until day. Bless my offering, both Lady and Lord Of breads and fruits, greens and gourd.”
Replace the wand on the altar, step back and bow your head. Stay silent for a minute or two as the blessing is given. Proceed by lighting the black votive candle in the cauldron and saying:
“Dark Mother Your cauldron is a well of death and rebirth, Dark Father Your sword both protects and annihilates. Hear me now as the past year slowly dies, only to be reborn again. Today, the last of the Harvests is complete. This symbolic harvest is of my thought-seeds, Planted and nurtured throughout this past year. May the good come to pass and the bad be cast aside. With Your divine guidance and protection, I step into the New Year, May I have good health, prosperity, and happiness.”
With the flame of the black votive candle light the white pillar candle, saying:
“As the New Year is born, we are all reborn With new hopes and dreams.
Guide me in the future as in the past. Give me strength and courage, Knowledge and fulfillment, Assist me as I attempt to achieve my goals.”
Snuff the black votive candle and replace it. Remove the white pillar candle from the cauldron and place it in the center of your altar. Stare in to the flame and think about the goals that you are setting for the upcoming year. When done, say:
“Every beginning has an ending, And every ending is a new beginning. In Life is Death, and in Death is Life. Watch over me, my loved ones, and all of my
Brothers and Sisters, here and departed, Who, tonight are joined together again for Fellowship and celebration. Bless us all as we light our bonfires, our hearth fires, And the eternal fires in our hearts. Guide us and protect us,
Tonight and throughout the coming year. Blessed Be! Blessed Be!”
As you say “Blessed Be!” stretch out your arms over your alter as if to embrace all of your ancestors, your departed loved ones, and everyone on Earth. As you say “Blessed Be” again, embrace yourself with a reborn love and pride.
It is now time for meditation and spellworking. Associated spellworkings would include those for protection, self-confidence, and dissuading harm. If there is no spellworking, celebrate with Cakes and Ale, then release the Circle. Clean up. You are done. Leave the white pillar candle burning somewhere it won’t be disturbed. Some use it as the single candle in their window, but I leave it on my
altar and use an electric candle in the window to dissuade a fire!
***This Samhain Ritual and Planner are dedicated to MyztkM’jyk as she
begins her Year and a Day study. We wish her wisdom and fulfillment…
–Adapted by: Akasha Ap Emrys for all of her friends and those of like mind.–
Copyright © 1997-99 Akasha, Herne and The Celtic Connection wicca.com. All rights reserved.
“Many of the phenomena of Winter are suggestive of an inexpressible tenderness and fragile delicacy.
We are accustomed to hear this king described as a rude and boisterous
tyrant; but with the gentleness of a lover he adorns the tresses of Summer.”
~~ Henry David Thoreau
The Wide-Spun MomentEcstasy and Madness in Celtic Tradition© Mara Freeman 1998
(reprinted with permission)
Among the highest-ranking men in early Ireland were the Filidh, a title meaning both ‘poet’ and ‘seer.’ The word itself comes from the root ‘to see,’ for to the Celts, vision and poetry – the rapture of illumination and the inspired voicing of it – were inseparable; the in-breath and out-breath of the ecstatic experience. As in Eurasian shamanic cultures, the Fili was trained in mantic techniques In one story, for example, we hear how the great druid Mog Ruith embarks Mog Ruith’s skin of the hornless, dun-coloured bull was brought to him To enter an inspired trance dressed in bird costume was a common technique “Birds are psychopomps. Becoming a bird oneself or being accompanied by But this was only one of the many paths that took druids and filidh through the gates of the “They [the Bards] shut their Doors and Windows for a Days time, and lie on their backs with a Stone upon their Belly, and Plads about their Heads, and their Eyes being cover’d they pump their Brains for Rhetorical Encomium or Panegyrick; and indeed they furnish such a Stile from this Dark Cell as is understood by very few…” Special foods or drinks may have been consumed as a means to ecstatic consciousness. The Celts were from Indo-European tradition and most likely had their own version of the mysterious drink of the Vedic people: soma, If the juice of the barley kindled “fire in the head” of later poets, in earlier times the brew of inspiration may have been a mead made from hazels, the tree most associated with poetry and magic in the Celtic world. Many early Irish tales describe poets and seers as “gaining the nuts of wisdom” from hazels, Whether the Celts, like the Norse, drank an actual “Mead of Poetry” we will never know, but eating and drinking magical substances is also clearly a metaphor for imbibing the wisdom of the Otherworld. Early Irish literature abounds with tales of heroes who venture into the Otherworld and gain its wisdom by drinking from a wonder-working cup or well. And Welsh Bardic literature frequently refers to the “cauldron of inspiration” which contains a mysterious substance called awen, the Welsh equivalent of imbas. Awen literally means “flowing spirit” and is bestowed only by the generosity of Ceridwen, the poets’ muse and mistress of the cauldron. An early poem by a Welsh bard describes his experience “The Here the source of awen is in the depths of the sea, a traditional location for the Celtic Otherworld. But it emerges also from the depths of the poet himself, who may have drunk the “intoxicating mead” of the druids. The flowing drink from cauldron or cup sets into motion the flowing spirit from deep within. One class of Welsh people acted as oracles when filled with awen. In the 12th century, the traveling monk, Giraldus Cambriensis, met these Awenyddion on his journey through Wales. He recounts: “When you consult them about some problem, they immediately go into a trance and lose control of their senses… They do not answer the question put to them in a logical way. Words stream from their mouths, incoherently and apparently meaningless and lacking any sense at all, but all the same well expressed: and if you listen carefully to what they say you will receive the solution to your problem. When it is all over, they will recover from their trance, as if they were ordinary people waking from a heavy sleep, but you have to give them a good shake before they regain control of themselves… and when they do return to their senses they can remember nothing of what they have said in the interval… They seem to receive this gift of divination through visions that they see in their dreams. Some of them have the impression that honey or sugary milk is being smeared on their mouths; others say that a sheet of paper with words written on it is pressed against their lips…” As we have seen from the legend of Cader Idris, special places in the Such journeys take the inner traveler out of time, seeming to last for hundreds of years, when only a night has passed. Or as Irish writer James Stephens described it in his retelling of a story about Fionn McCumhaill: “In truth we do not go to Faery, we become Faery, and in the beating of a pulse we may live for a year or a thousand years. But when we return the memory is quickly clouded, and we seem to have had a dream or even seen a vision, although we have verily been in Faery. It is wonderful, then, that Fionn should have remembered all that happened to him in that wide-spun moment.” Fionn, who gained imbas by drinking from an Otherworld well or by eating the Salmon of Wisdom according to different accounts, was a true poet-seer who could alter consciousness at will, and bring full remembrance of the ecstatic state back into the everyday world. But there are others in Celtic tradition who were blasted open by forces so strong that ever after the gates to the otherworld hung loosely on their hinges, swinging wildly in the wind that blew through their minds. In Ireland these people were known as geilt, probably meaning “wild.” Many of them lived in Glenn Bolcan, a valley in County Kerry where “all the lunatics in Ireland” were supposed to be. They lived as wild men, foraging for roots and watercress, in kinship with the animals. Stories about the geilt and their British counterparts often recount how it was the horrors of war caused them to lose The most famous of these was Suibhne, once king of Dalriada, who, during “Huge, flickering, horrible aerial phantoms rose up, so that they were in cursed, commingled clouds tormenting him, hovering, fiend-like hosts constantly in motion, shrieking and howling.”
The shattering of his mind sentences him to a life of stark alienation from society, but has also unlocked for him the gifts of poetry and seership. Like the druid Mog Ruith, he now is able to fly to the upper world like a bird, and he makes his home in a yew tree dressed in feathers reminiscent of the druid’s cloak. Here God speaks to him, granting him prophetic knowledge “every morning and He describes his life in the woods in verse of heartfelt intensity and poignant beauty. When he is told that his wife is sharing his bed with the pretender to his kingdom, he asks her to come and see him, and recites poems to her about their past life – poems that are considered among the most beautiful in Irish literature. But madness is never far away, and periods of exquisite clarity give way to insane visions: headless bodies and bodiless heads, streaming More than one scholar has compared Suibhne and the geilt to novice shamans Another famous mad poet-seer was Merlin, in early Welsh literature termed Like Suibhne, Merlin was a king who went mad at the horror of seeing so many of his friends and family slaughtered in a battle. He too becomes “wood-wild” and spends his days wandering through “Oh For a short while, he recovers his sanity when his brother-in-law, Rodarch, “Little by little as he played, he coaxed the madman to put by his wild mood under the sweet spell of the zither.” But when he returns to court with the minstrel and sees the crowds of people waiting to greet him, he “went mad; and once more his derangement filled him with a desire to go off to the forest, and he longed to slip away.” At length his sister Ganieda, realizing that nothing will persuade him to return to the life of the court, builds for him in the forest a house of glass. Here he wanders by night, gazing at the stars and singing the prophecies he learns from them. And unlike Suibhne, who meets with a violent end, Merlin at last recovers his sanity by drinking from a healing spring. In his prayer of thanks to God for this miracle, he rejoices that he is no longer plagued by an ecstasy that gave him no peace: “I was taken out of my true self; I was as a spirit and knew the history of people long past and could foretell the future. I knew then the secrets of nature, bird flight, star wanderings and the way fish glide. This distressed me and, by a hard law, deprived me of the rest that is natural to the human mind. Now I am myself again, and I feel strong in me that life with which my spirit had always filled my limbs.” For to live in the forest like these “wild men of the woods,” is to pay allegiance to the untamed You can buy Mara’s CD’s here Visit her website at: http://www.celticspirit.org/ Image: Filidh – http://elfwood.lysator.liu.se/art/j/c/jchan/filidh.jpg.html Image: faerygateway2 – http://elfwood.lysator.liu.se/art/u/k/uktara2/fairygateway2.jpg.html Image: Suibhne – http://www.celtic-twilight.com/ireland/suibhne/index.htm |
“Inthe depth of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible
summer.”
~~ Albert Camus
Tarot Blessing
This is a blessing to say when you are shuffling tarot cards, to make the reading work out better, and to see the meanings of the cards more clearly: “Silver moonlight, and Sunlight of Gold, Show me what the past, the present and future doth hold, ~~ Source Unknown ~~
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“The English winter – ending in July,
To recommence in August.”
~~ Lord Byron
BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND: Yes, it’s back, and the Samhain session of RD 101 is well under way, this time with 11 seekers. We’re trying something new this time: team teaching, with 4 experienced Druids teaching this session. Another new innovation is that we’re charging a $12 fee, which includes a personal copy of Stranger In A Strange Land. The fee is applicable to the student’s dues if s/he should later decide to join OMS. The next online RD 101 class begins November 16, 2006. This next class
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“The first fall of snow is not only an event, it is a magical event.
You go to bed in one kind of world and wake up in another quite different,
and if this is not enchantment then where is it to be found?”
~~ J. B. Priestley (1894 – 1984) English author, dramatist
The Charge of the Croneby Gypsy and Riverhawk Hear She it is who brings wisdom and But age has changed her, With age comes an understanding of the past, She is the Learned One, the Teacher, Only in ignorance is she scorned and reviled. It is fear that turns her age into abomination, But in the old days, we sat at her feet to learn the most ancient She was our teacher, our oracle, our promise of rebirth. |
“One kind word can warm three winter months.”
~~ Japanese Proverb
RD 202 – The ARDA Revealed We began a new class, Reformed Druidism 202 this season, whose purpose We’re charging a modest fee of $3, which includes your own personal The current session is now closed to new students, since it’s far enough along Another session will begin next year at about this same time. |
“Look!
the massy trunks Are cased in the pure crystal;
Each light spray, nodding and tinkling in the breath of heaven,
Is studded with its trembling water-drops,
That glimmer with an amethystine light.”
~~ William Cullen Bryant, A Winter Piece
“Each snowflake in an avalanche pleads not guilty.”
~~ Stanislaw J. Lec (1909 – 1966) Polish aphorist, poet, satirist
Earth Song
Listen to things more often than Those who are dead are never gone; Those who are dead are not ever
Listen (traditional song from Senegal) |
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“Have
you ever noticed a tree standing naked against the sky,
How beautiful it is?
All its branches are outlined, and in its nakedness
There is a poem, there is a song.
Every leaf is gone and it is waiting for the spring.
When the spring comes, it again fills the tree with
The music of many leaves,
Which in due season fall and are blown away.
And this is the way of life.”
~~ Krishnamurti
WOODS AND THEIR MAGICKAL USESOak The oak tree is the tree of Zeus, Jupiter, Hercules, The Dagda (The Chief of Occult Aspects: With the exception of the mysterious elder, the Birch is the earliest of the forest Occult Aspects: Hazel The Hazel is a tree of wisdom. In England, all the knowledge of the arts and Occult Aspects: Alder The Alder is the tree of fire. In the battle of the trees, the Alder fought in the very front line. It is described as the very “battle witch” of all woods, the tree that is hottest in the fight. From the alder, you can make three different dyes, red from its bark, green from its flowers, and brown from its twigs; this symbolizes the elements of fire, water and earth. The Alder wood is the wood of the witches. Whistles may be made of this wood to summon and control the four winds. It is also the ideal wood for making the magical pipes and flutes. To prepare the wood for use, beat the bark away with a willow stick while projecting your wishes into it. The Alder is a token of resurrection. Occult Aspects: Ivy / Vine The Ivy was sacred to Osiris as well as to Dionysus. Vine and Ivy come next Occult Aspects: Yew The Yew is known as the death tree in all European countries. Sacred to Hecate in Greece and Italy. Yew wood makes excellent bows, as the Romans learned from the Greeks. This strengthened the belief that Yew was connected Occult Aspects: Rowan The Rowan is seen as the tree of life. It is also known as Mountain Ash, Quickbeam, The Witch or Witch Wand. In the British Isles, Rowan is used as Occult Aspects: Ash The Ash is sacred to Poseidon and Woden. The Ash is considered to be the father of trees. The Ash is the tree of sea power, or of the power resident Occult Aspects: Pine External symbol of life and immortality. It is one of the few trees that are androgynous. It was also worshiped by the ancients as a symbol of fire because of its resemblance to a spiral of flame. It is regarded as a very Occult Aspects: Willow The Willow was sacred to Hecate, Circe, Hera, and Persephone, all death aspects of the Triple Moon Goddess, and was often used by the Witches in Occult Aspects: Elder A waterside tree, the Elder has white flowers that bloom to their peak in midsummer (as is also true for the Rowan) thus making the Elder another aspect of the White Goddess. The Elder is also said to be the crucifixion Occult Aspects: Hawthorn The Whitethorn or Hawthorn or May Witch takes its name from the May. It is a generally unlucky tree and its name, translated from the Irish Brehon Laws, Occult Aspects: Holly Holly means “holy”. The identification of the pacific Christ with the Holly is poetically inept, as it is the Oak king, not the Holly king that is crucified on a Occult Aspects: White Poplar The tree of the Autumn Equinox and of old age is the shifting leaved White Poplar, or Aspen, The shield makers tree. Heracles bound his head in triumph Occult Aspects: Redwood
Occult Aspects: Almond Almond has a very sweet natural being. Aids in self-protection. Occult Aspects: Apple It is an old English custom to drink to the health of the Apple tree with a good Occult Aspects: Coconut The Coconut is feminine and very fertile. The shell represents the womb, and Occult Aspects: Fig The Fig is androgynous. The fruit representing the feminine and the triple lobed leaves suggest the masculine force. Occult Aspects: Mistletoe The mistletoe was sacred to the Druids and to the Norse. It was considered to Occult Aspects: Palm Is regarded as particularly powerful because of its incredible durability and Occult Aspects: Peach The Peach is an emblem of marriage. Occult Aspects: ~~ Source Unknown ~~ |
“The trees down the boulevard stand naked in thought,
Their abundant summery wordage silenced, caught
In the grim undertow; naked the trees confront
Implacable winter’s long, cross-questioning brunt.”
~~ D. H. Lawrence, Winter in the Boulevard, 1916
The Ritualby Lone Wolf
Merry Meet and Merry Part So grab your wand and goblet Cast the Circle, set the table When moonlight sheds her glowing rays Joining do we hand to hand,
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“Green
thoughts emerge from some deep source of stillness
which the very fact of winter has released.”
~~ Mirabel Osler
The Druid’s Egg newsletter is supported by our online store:
Avalon Risen is proud to offer members of the Reformed Druids of Gaia a 5% rebate on any order over $30 from our “AG” collection. Members of the Order of the Mithril Star can save even more! We’re offering (Note: |
“So with the stretch of the white road before me,
Shining snow crystals rainbowed by the sun,
Fields that are white, stained with long, cool, blue shadows,
Strong with the strength of my horse as we run.
Joy in the touch of the wind and the sunlight!
Joy! With the vigorous earth I am one.”
~~ Amy Lowell, A Winter Ride
SAMHAIN
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“Winter
is the time for comfort, for good food and warmth,
for the touch of a friendly hand and for a talk beside the fire –
it is the time for home.”
~~ Dame Edith Sitwell
Samháin Colcannon© Dame Niamh )O( Gealach (reprinted with permission) For every person, a large potato. Shred a large head of regular cabbage, cut out the core. This is filling and goes well with everything. |
“Snowflakes
are one of nature’s most fragile things,
but just look what they can do when they stick together.”
~~ Vesta M. Kelly
‘Goddess of the Western Isle’The Goddess of the Western Isles is a deity of great wisdom and mystery, one of the most ancient of forms of the Goddess in our islands. She is the guardian and mistress of the underworld. It is through Her that we must pass to seek rebirth after death. She has great power but also much love and understanding. We feel her touch when the wind blows from the northwest, hear her voice in the waves of the western ocean. She has a secret name, is a changer of shape, her power is greatest at Samhain. To love her is to discover a profound sense of the real beauty in the mystery of the wheel of the seasons, creation and the great Goddess. The constellation of stars associated with the Goddess of the Western Isle is Corvus. |
“The tendinous part of the mind, so to speak, is more developed in winter;
the fleshy, in summer.
I should say winter had given the bone and sinew to literature, summer
the tissues and the blood.”
~~ John Burroughs, The Snow-Walkers
Dispatches from RDG’s Autonomous Collectives
In celebration of this very special Samhain, Rogue Rescue is opening a memorial section to those wishing to publish memorials of their departed beloved animal companions. Beginning October 31, these can be viewed at: http://home.earthlink.net/~roguerescue As many know, Rogue Rescue is a community service project of Clan of the Triple Horses – http://home.earthlink.net/~triplehorses/ – an RDG group based in southern Oregon. This memorial section will be permanent, and it is our hope it will give a crumb of comfort to those grieving, as well assure them they are not the only one who feels the deep bond that humans can make with animals. We will be welcoming submissions on an ongoing basis. Please feel free to send jpeg pictures, poetry or brief paragraphs about your departed pet to triplehorses@gmail.com |
The Mother Grove of the RDG will honor the Season of the Crone by holding its celebration on Friday, November 3rd, at the abode of the Arch-Druid Ceridwen and Scribe, El. At this time we will fully integrate our newest local member Darkcryst into the fold, as well as having our traditional “Dinner & Divination” with the other members in attendance. This will be followed by healing and magick, and any seasonal business |
“In a way Winter is the real Spring – the time when the inner things happen;
the resurgence of nature.”
~~ Edna O’Brien
Remembrance Cookies
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“Nature chose for a tool, not the earthquake or lightning to rend and split asunder,
not the stormy torrent or eroding rain,
but the tender snow-flowers noiselessly falling through unnumbered centuries.”
~~ John Muir
WELCOME TO THE YEAR OF THE GAIAN REFORM 01 Back at the beginning of the Reform, the students at Carleton decided that their movement was significant and important enough to mark it with it’s own epoch, and thus was born the 4 month calendar of the RDNA. On this new calendar, 1963 was year “1” or YR (Year of the Reform) 01. Years prior to that were designated “BR” or “Before the Reform” and ran backwards, so 1960 was BR 03, 1959 was BR 04 etc. The first day of the new calendar was Beltane of 1963, and this coming Beltane of the secular year (or c.e. (common era)) will begin YR 45.
The Reformed Druids of Gaia was born this past Mabon. It was decided that this event marked the beginning of a new Druid epoch, a significant turn in You can keep track of the new Reformed Druid calendar at: http://rdg/mithrilstar.org/calendar.htm
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“The
stag bells, winter snows, summer has gone
Wind high and cold, the sun low, short its course
The sea running high.
Deep red the bracken; its shape is lost;
The wild goose has raised its accustomed cry,
Cold has seized the birds’ wings;
Season of ice, this is my news.“
~~ Irish poem, 9th Century
THE STATE OF THE REFORM As of today 295 Druids have registered with the RDG: During B.G.R. 01, we experienced a net membership gain of 143 Total Groves chartered: 2 (+ 2 new Proto-Groves) |
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“I prefer winter and fall, when you feel the bone structure in the landscape
–
the loneliness of it – the dead feeling of winter.
Something waits beneath it – the whole story doesn’t show.“
~~ Andrew Wyeth
Regenerationby Alison Katherine Jones
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“Turn down the noise. Reduce the speed. Be like the somnolent bears,
or those other animals that slow down and almost die in the cold season.
Let it be the way it is. The magic is there in its power.“
~~ Henry Mitchell
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The Nineby
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“Sharp is the night,
but stars with frost alive
Leap off the rim of earth across the dome.
It is a night to make the heavens our home
More than the nest whereto apace we strive.
Lengths down our road each fir-tree seems a hive,
In swarms outrushing from the golden comb.
They waken waves of thoughts that burst to foam:
The living throb in me, the dead revive.
Yon mantle clothes us: there, past mortal breath,
Life glistens on the river of the death.
It folds us, flesh and dust; and have we knelt,
Or never knelt, or eyed as kine the springs
Of radiance, the radiance enrings:
And this is the soul’s haven to have felt.“
~~ George Meredith, Winter Heavens
ASTROLOGY FOR PAGANS Ceridwen currently has four Advanced sessions and one Intermediate session Ceridwen is, however still offering PRIVATE TUTORING sessions! Because of the increased “personal attention” these entail, there will be a sliding scale fee required… If you wish to take advantage of this offer, or need more information about it, send an email to: Ceridwen Subject line: AstroPagan private tutoring You will then be contacted immediately and a private database and schedule will be set up that will conform to your own personal needs – NO WAITING! All of the pertinent charts and tables will be calculated and sent to you, as you need them. Each lesson will be offered whenever YOU are ready for it – no homework deadlines! – and if you need to take time off at any point for personal business or holidays or whatever reason, your schedule will be adjusted accordingly! OR.. If you are interested in a private consultation about your Astrological chart, please visit her home page at: |
“Of
winter’s lifeless world each tree
Now seems a perfect part;
Yet each one holds summer’s secret
Deep down within its heart.”
~~ Charles G. Stater
ALMANAC Today is Samhain, or November 1, 2006 CE. It is the 1st the day of the 1st Year of the Gaian Reform, the 1st day of It is also Wednesday, in the common tongue, or Dydd Mercher in Welsh. It is the Druidic day of the Hazel. NEW MOONS occur on 20 Geimredh, 50 Geimredh and 79 Geimredh. The birthday of Co-Founder El Arseneau, occurs on 15 Geimredh. The Sun enters Sagittarius on 22 Geimredh. The birthday of Celtic Bard and Honorary RDG Druid, Robin The birthday of CAW founder and Honorary Reformed Druid, Oberon Me·n Geimhridh (December) begins on 31 Geimredh (a Friday – Dydd Yule / Alban Arthuan, or the Winter Solstice occurs on 51 Geimredh. The Sun enters Capricorn on 51 Geimredh. Deireadh Geimredh (January) begins on 62 Geimredh (a Monday – Dydd The Sun enters Aquarius on 81 Geimredh. The Season of Earrach, the first day of MÌ na hOimelc, |
“.. . there is a wonderful joy in leaving behind the noisy city streets
and starting out
along the white road that leads across the hills. With each breath of
the sharp, reviving air
one seems to inhale new life. A peace as evident as the sunshine on the
fields takes possession
of one’s inner being. The trivial cares which fretted like a swarm of
mosquitoes are driven away
by the first sweep of wind that comes straight from the mountains. . .
. The intense silence
that broods over the snow-bound land is a conscious blessing. The deep
blue of the sky and
the purple shadows cast by the trees and plants are a feast to the eye.
The crunch of the snow-rind
beneath our feet and the varied hum of the telegraph wires overhead are
music to our ears.”
~~ Frances Theodora Parsons
Brugh na Bóinne
|
“The
winter comes: the frozen rut
Is bound with silver bars;
the white drift heaps against the hut;
and night is pierced with stars.“
~~ Coventry Patmore, 1823-1896
A new online conference has been launched to provide a meeting place
|
“There
is nothing in the world more beautiful than the forest clothed to its
very hollows in snow.
It is the still ecstasy of nature, wherein every spray, every blade of
grass, every spire of reed,
every intricacy of twig, is clad with radiance.”
~~ William Sharp
Minnesota DruidsBy Well east coast Druids are hip The Southwest’s deserts’ druids I wish they all could be Minnesota The west coast has the sunshine I been all around this great big world I wish they all could be Minnesota I wish they all could be Minnesota |
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Yule Blessingsby Yusef
Blessings Blessings Blessings May Source:
|
“To shorten winter, borrow some money due in spring.”
~~ W.J. Vogel
Solstice Firesby Ian R Thorpe Solstice fires burn But of each Source: |
“Winter,
a lingering season, is a time to gather golden moments,
embark upon a sentimental journey, and enjoy every idle hour.”
~~ John Boswell
Aspects of Yuleby:
Time of deepest darkness The ground, an icy wasteland, Snow lies on her shoulders The sun is growing brighter. Stag King, his mighty antlers He knows his time has ended
New fawn takes Source: |
“O thou,
Who chariotest to their dark wintry bed
The winged seeds, where they lie cold and low,
Each like a corpse within its grave, until
Thine azure sister of the spring shall blow
Her clarion o’er the dreaming earth.”
~~ John Davies, 1570-1626, Ode to the West Wind.
May
wonder ever illumine your souls as the candle
does a room on a long, winter’s night,
May
joy blow through your heart with the
intensity of the north wind in a blizzard,
May
peace cover your lives like a blanket of
fresh fallen snow.
Blessed Solstice!
The Mother Grove wishes all of you
a most inspiring Samhain, a joyous Yule,
and abundant blessings throughout the season!
May you never thirst!
Arch-Druid Ceridwen Seren-Ddaear,
Managing Editor/Webmaster
El Arseneau, Scribe
Jillbe Badb, Contributing Editor
Cylch Cerddwyr Rhwng y Bydoedd Grove
NEXT ISSUE WILL BE PUBLISHED ON
Imbolq – 1 Earrach YGR 01
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The Druids Egg — 1 Geimredh YGR 01– Vol. 5 No. 1
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All submissions become the property of RDG.
Triquetra Chalice – http://avalonrisen.mithrilstar.org/chalices.htm#rc25 Censor – http://avalonrisn.mithrilstar.org/misc_tools5.htm#ibhansT Two-handled Chalice – http://avalonrisen.mithrilstar.org/chalices.htm#17 Filidh- http://elfwood.lysator.liu.se/art/j/c/jchan/filidh.jpg.html faerygateway2- http://elfwood.lysator.liu.se/art/u/k/uktara2/fairygateway2.jpg.html Suibhne – http://www.celtic-twilight.com/ireland/suibhne/index.htm firedrake- http://www.mysticrpg.net/modules.php?name=Races&file=viewrace&id=77 Crone- http://www.daylightartworks.com/portfolio.html Spirithowl- http://www.ravenmedium.com/TotemAnimals.htm 05Reading_the_Gilded_Tarot- http://www.macworldexpo.com/live/20/HP920840 three of cups – http://tarot.com/about-tarot/decks/browsedecks.php?newdeck=goddess newgrangex- http://andycharles1.tripod.com/id5.html Winter Goddess – http://adriannwelch.com ME Layton’sYule Blessings – http://artfulfantasies.lunagrove.com |
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Published four times each year by The Mother Grove of the
Reformed Druids of Gaia, Inc.
Cylch Cerddwyr Rhwng y Bydoedd Grove
Eureka, California USA
“Nature is groovy”
Copyright © 2006
No portion of this newsletter may be reproduced by anyone for any purposewithout the express written permission of the
Arch-Druid, Ceridwen Seren-Ddaear