Gray Rose Sabbats

Gray Rose Sabbats Bonfires dot the rolling hillsides, Figures dance around & around To drums that pulse out Echoes of darkness, Moving to the pagan sound...

Persephone returns,  and Hades left alone. Until the first leaves fall,  and he calls her home.Demeter rejoices,  a warm...
03/21/2022

Persephone returns,
and Hades left alone.
Until the first leaves fall,
and he calls her home.

Demeter rejoices,
a warming embrace,
puts a beautiful smile
on the Dark Queen's face.

But the darkness has faded,
and light has resurfaced.
Flowers are growing,
both fields and in forests.

The air is warmer,
the days getting longer.
Until Persphone goes under,
and Hades mourns no longer.

Until then we smile,
and welcome our Lady,
Make spring worthwhile,
and summer worth waiting.

03/21/2022

So many traditions recognize the Spring Equinox as an important holiday... did you know in ancient Slavic traditions the God Jarilo reunites with Goddess Morana on this day? As a result of their love and happiness, light, warmth and fertility come to the world. See any parallels with other belief systems? We sure do!

)o( Coexist!

01/18/2022

Found online:

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“It’s just that you’re not that feminine.”

I beg to differ.

I am feminine like a hurricane.

Feminine like the glint of a falcon talon.

Feminine like an arrow hitting it's mark.

Feminine like an ancient redwood.

Feminine like the claws of a grizzly bear protecting her cubs.

Feminine like mountain lions on the hunt.

Feminine like decaying bones.

Feminine like a dragon's fire.

Feminine like the eye of an old whale.

Feminine like a roaring river.

Feminine like an earthquake.

Feminine like a sheer cliff overlooking a forest.

Feminine like a wildfire.

Feminine like a desert wind.

Feminine like the soul's battle cry.

And yes.

Within my stones and bark and fur and fierce slit irises... I am as soft, loving and enveloping as any woman who’s blood ever beat red.

This is the Sovereigness.

I am her.
We are her.

We are an age of Woman who has come in, representing the Medicine of the Wilds.

We are built strong to bring in the voice of our Mother.

Which is why Earth herself screams in our veins.

So, if what you really mean is,
“Your femininity is overwhelming”,

Then I understand.

It is to me, too."

🐾💜🌍🌲🐉🌊🔥🌟

12/21/2021

Winter Solstice: History and Recipes

One of the most ancient of holidays, Winter Solstice has many traditions of food and festivity surrounding it.

Winter Solstice occurs on December 21 or 22 in the Northern hemisphere. It refers to "the shortest day of the year," when the least amount of sunlight reaches the earth. The term "solstice" derives from the Latin words sol (sun) and sistere (to stand), meaning that the sun has reached its northernmost ecliptic and appears to stand still.
Throughout history, many cultures and religions have marked this day with festivals and rituals. This is in celebration of the fact they have survived halfway through the winter (this holiday is sometimes called "Midwinter celebrations"). This was especially significant in northern European countries, where it was not always certain that food storage would last through winter months.

To many societies, Winter Solstice also symbolized the earth's regeneration or rebirth. From this day forward, the days would continually grow longer as sunlight increased. Worship of a sun god or goddess is frequently associated with this celebration, as for example the goddess Beiwe in Scandinavia. Beiwe is associated with health and fertility, and was believed to have traveled through the sky, helping plants to regain their green color.
In ancient Ireland, Celts celebrated Meán Geimhridh during the Winter Solstice. Each day between December 19 and 23, rays from the sunrise would shine through a sacred hallway and room built at just the right angles to capture the light.

In Slavic areas known today as Russia, Bulgaria, and Ukraine, earlier societies believed that evil spirits were most powerful on the shortest day of the year. Darkness and the Black God defeated the sun on the Winter Solstice, after which a New Sun was born. The Old Sun, named Hors, was commemorated with a ritual dance.
Even today, many Chinese and other East Asians celebrate the Winter Solstice. It is called the Donghi festival and is a time for rejoicing at the longer light hours to come, symbolizing an increase in positive energy.
Still other cultures hold winter celebrations near, but not on, the day of Winter Solstice. These, too, often involve light, fires, greenery, and merry festivities. For example, Christmas was originally scheduled to fall on the Winter Solstice. Until 1582, when the Gregorian calendar replaced the Julian calendar, the solstice took place on December 25.
Scandinavians commemorate Saint Lucy on December 13, which is equivalent to the Winter Solstice in the Julian calendar. This saint's name refers to light (the name Lucy is derived from the Latin word for light, lux). In popular celebrations today, young girls dress up as Saint Lucy in honor of the holiday.
Throughout history and in many regions of the world, peoples have marked the Winter Solstice as a yearly cycle of life. It is a turning point, a time for reflection on the past and for hope in the future.
Food Traditions
Winter Solstice, occurring in Midwinter or on the shortest day of the year, has been associated with many cultures and traditions. Festivities surrounding this holiday are mainly meant to generate light and merriment in the midst of deep winter. Popular activities include burning bonfires, sacrificing animals to a sun god, singing, dancing, and feasting.

Among ancient Germanic peoples, Winter Solstice was known as Yule. Celebrations included burning a Yule log, singing Yule songs, and sacrificing and eating a Yule pig (this tradition has given rise to the popular Christmas ham), as well as a Yule goat.
Wassail, a hot and spicy beer, may also have originally been associated with the midwinter festival. Even today, many northern Europeans enjoy the drink during this time of the year.
In the United States, informal Winter Solstice gatherings often include a feast. Although there is no prescribed menu for these meals, the focus is often on fall harvest foods: berries and nuts, squash, potatoes, and hunted game.

Others indulge in a chocolate "yule log," reminiscent of the Germanic wooden log.
The feast of Saint Lucy occurs on December 13, the Winter Solstice according to the Julian calendar. This festival is perhaps most popular in Sweden. According to tradition, on this day the eldest daughter in a family puts on a white dress, a red sash, and a wreath adorned with candles. Wearing this costume, she carries a tray of coffee, lussekatter (Swedish for "Lucy cat," referring to a sweet bread roll) and pepparkakor (Swedish for "pepper cookies") to her parents.

Recipes

Easy Nonalcoholic Wassail

2 cups cranberry juice
2/3 cup white sugar
7 cups water
3 cinnamon sticks
1 tbsp. whole allspice
1 tbsp. whole cloves
1 (6 ounce) can frozen orange juice concentrate
2 (20 ounce) cans pineapple juice
6 fluid ounces frozen concentrated fruit punch

In a large pot over medium heat, combine the cranberry juice, sugar and water. Bring to a boil and stir until sugar is dissolved. Place the cinnamon, allspice, and clove into a cheesecloth bag and tie shut. Add to the liquid and simmer 20 minutes. Remove spice bag and add fruit juices. Serve hot.

Lussekatter (St. Lucy Saffron buns)

4 cups white flour
2 cups milk
1 ½ to 2 oz. yeast
1 egg
½ tsp. ground saffron
10 tbsp. butter
1 cup sugar

Raisins for decoration
Melt butter in a pan and add the milk and the saffron. Dissolve yeast in warm water with a pinch of sugar and let it sit for about five minutes before adding it to the milk mixture. Pour liquid into mixing bowl and stir flour in slowly, until a loose, thick, smooth batter forms. Blend in the sugar, egg, and then more flour, a little at a time. Knead vigorously, adding flour as needed until the dough is smooth, thick, and shiny and doesn't stick to the bowl. Sprinkle top of dough with a little flour and place a dishcloth over the bowl and leave it in a warm place to let rise until double in size. Pour out onto counter and break off pieces of dough and roll with hands into 4-inch long and ½- inch wide "snakes." Coil each end in, making a figure "S". Place one "S" cross-wise on top of another and place on a greased baking sheet. Press a raisin into the centre of each spiral.

Cover and let buns rise until about double in size (until they feel spongy when pressed with finger). Gently brush a lightly beaten egg onto the buns and bake at 375°F. The buns should have a golden color and feel light when done. Remove and let cool.

Pepparkakor (Swedish ginger thins)

2/3 cup brown sugar
2/3 cup molasses
1 teaspoon ginger
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon ground cloves
3/4 tablespoon baking soda
2/3 cup butter
1 egg
3 1/2 cups sifted all-purpose flour

Place butter in a large bowl. In a medium saucepan, heat brown sugar, molasses, and spices just to boiling point. Add baking soda and stir. Pour this mixture over the butter and stir until it melts. Beat egg and add to mixture; add flour, a cup at a time, and blend well. Turn out onto a floured countertop and knead 1-2 minutes. Wrap in waxed paper and chill until firm (about an hour). Preheat oven to 325°F. Roll out to approximately 1/8-inch thickness on a floured counter and cut into desired shapes. Place on greased baking sheets and bake for 8-10 minutes

11/09/2021

The Devil that never did exist.
A Lucid Look at Lucifer

BY HARRELL RHOME

We have to literarily, philosophically and theologically deconstruct certain concepts before we can really understand them. This is a process where we look beneath and beyond the commonly assumed folklore.

Some readers may think Lucifer is a clearly designated biblical character, the same figure as Satan. Lucifer is the fallen angel in the Bible, in the Book of Genesis. Right? Of course, the answer is no on all counts.

Surprisingly, the word Lucifer appears only once in the Bible in Isaiah 14:12, translating the Hebrew word helel meaning shining one. In the Greek Septuagint translation, it was rendered as heosphoros (Ηωσφόρος) or light-bearer. This word comes from Hesperus, a Greek goddess of the dawn. When the Romans took over the Christian scriptures in the 300s, Jerome translated helel and heosphoros as Lucifer in his Latin Vulgate Bible. Whether in old Hebrew, Greek or Latin, the word was the common name for Venus, the brightest planet, the Morning Star, the Light-Bearer, the Day Star. So in the real meaning of Isaiah 14:12, Lucifer merely describes the vainglorious image that the arrogant King of Babylon would seek to affect.

Some Protestant translations from John Wycliffe and others followed the Vulgate. But the respected Protestant biblical exegete Matthew Henry (Matthew Henry’s Commentary, 1721) says nothing about Lucifer being Satan, focusing on the real meaning of the text, which has to do with the nation of Babylon and its rulers who oppressed the Old Testament Hebrews.

It goes without saying that a simple internet search will bring up mountains of material to the contrary, supporting the “traditional” view that Lucifer is the fallen angel, the Devil, the same as the Satan cited in Luke 10:18. But in truth, the very same term, Day Star, is also applied to the Christ himself in II Peter 1:19, Revelation 22:16, and in the ancient Latin Easter hymn, the Exultet.

In an interesting coincidence, an early Christian theologian and bishop back in the 300s was named Lucifer, so it was obviously not a negative name back then. What’s more, I’m pretty sure Jerome would have known of him since they were contemporaries in the early Church.

In some ways, the personification of Lucifer as Satan is crucial to certain versions of Christianity. Otherwise, if the so-called Fall of Lucifer does not account for the origin of Satan, then the Old Testament is silent on the matter. Regardless of that, only a few Bible versions follow Jerome’s translation. Early Protestants differed. The English King James version used Lucifer, but Martin Luther’s German translation did not. When Luther was in seminary, he studied the Vulgate, so he purposefully differed from Jerome by not using Lucifer. We begin with the King James version:

“How art thou fallen from heaven O Lucifer, son of the morning? How are thou cut down to the ground which didst weaken the nations!” (Isaiah 14:12, King James version)

“Quomodo cecidisti de caelo Lucifer, qui mane oriebaris corruisti in terram qui vulnerabas gentes?” (Jerome’s Latin Vulgate)

“O Lucifer who didst rise in the morning! How art thou fallen to the earth, that didst wound the nations!” (Douay Rheims English translation of the Vulgate)

“Du schöner Morgenstern.” (You beautiful morning star.) (Luther Bible)

“O morning star, son of the dawn!” (New International)

“O Day Star, son of the morning.” (Revised Standard)

“Bright morning star.” (New Revised Standard)

“O Day Star, son of Dawn!” (New English Bible)

“O star of the morning, son of the dawn!” (New American Standard)

Lucifer or Dawn or Venus is also a figure in ancient Canaanite mythology, having nothing to do with Satan or an evil.

The dwelling of the gods and the riding of the clouds are both known to us from the Ras Shamra texts at Ugarit in N. Syria, and so too is Dawn a deity, of whom this figure is described as a son. The most high is Elyon, the title so often used of God…. All these elements may be paralleled in the Old Testament, suggesting how richly Canaanite religion and mythology have influenced Old Testament thought. (Interpreters One Volume Commentary of the Bible, 1971)

Old and new reference sources tell us more:

Lucifer Isa. 14:12. This word, signifying light bearer, occurs but once in our Bible, and then applies to the king of Babylon to indicate his glory as a morning star, or figuratively, a son of the morning. Tertullian and some others suppose the passage to relate to the fall of Satan; and hence the term is usually applied in that way; though, as it seems, without specific warrant. (The Union Bible Dictionary, 1842)

Its application, from St. Jerome downwards, to Satan in his fall from heaven, arises probably from the fact that the Babylonian Empire is in scripture represented as the type of tyrannical and self-idolizing power, and especially connected with the empire of the Evil One in the Apocalypse. (Smith’s Bible Dictionary, 1884)

In spite of this rendering, the proper name ‘Lucifer’ is not in the original Hebrew text. In Hebrew ‘Lucifer, son of the morning’ is helel ben shachar. It could be translated ‘shining one, son of the dawn.’ It is not a proper name, but an epithet for the king of Babylon. (Bryan Knowles, ‘Who Is Lucifer?’, www.godward.org)

Hence, Jerome’s use of Lucifer as a capitalised proper name is not correct. The Roman Church concocted the Lucifer-as-Satan myth after they took over emergent Christianity in the early 300s, as evidenced by references to both Tertullian and Jerome.

If Lucifer is so important, why is nothing else ever said? Light Bearer, Morning Star; nothing negative about that. Lucifer not only does not mean anything negative, as a matter of fact, it doesn’t really seem to mean anything at all, biblically speaking. Out of the over 800,000 words in the Bible and the Apocrypha, Lucifer appears once, and then in an ambiguous reference. Whatever the word means to certain Christian sects, theosophical and metaphysical groups, or secret societies, as you can clearly see it does not come from the Bible!

The Pagan Origins of Satan

Satan (Hebrew ha-Satan, in Arabic Shaitan) translates as adversary or accuser. In all three Semitic religions, Satan refers to the opposite of the good god, or the so-called Devil. This is, of course, a direct transplant from Persian Zoroastrianism into the ancient Hebrew religion and then into the Talmud, Kabala, the New Testament and lastly in the Qur’an. Zoroastrianism poses two gods, one responsible for good and another responsible for evil. The polyglot god traditions found in Genesis reflect this Persian pagan influence.

For some, the image and persona of the Satan is quite fascinating, indeed, perhaps even noble. As readers of English literature know, John Milton addressed this theme in his famous 1667 poetic magnum opus, Paradise Lost. Consider the following hypothesis, based on the multiple Semitic deities portrayed in Genesis.

El in Egyptian is also the Child, who in the early Sabean age, was Sut, the planetary type, Saturn. Later El was transformed into Satan, whom Job introduces as one of the sons of god. Satan was accounted a son and an Angel of God by all Semitic nations. The learned Kabalist, Eliphas Lévi, speaks of Satan thus:

‘It is the angel who is proud enough to believe himself god; proud enough to buy his independence at the price of eternal suffering and torture; beautiful enough to have adored himself in full divine light; strong enough to reign in darkness amidst agony, and to have built himself a throne on his inextinguishable fire.’

He further says that the true name of Satan is that of Jehovah reversed, for Satan is not a black god but the negation of Deity. The Devil of the early Christians, with horns, hoofs and tail was introduced from Babylon through the Jewish Talmud. The Christian religion transforms Satan into an enemy of God, whereas in reality by Satan the highest divine spirit or Occult Wisdom on earth is meant. (E. Valentia Straiton, Celestial Ship of the North)

Eliphas Lévi explains the symbolism of Lucifer:

What is more absurd and more impious than to attribute the name of Lucifer to the devil, that is, to personified evil. The intellectual Lucifer is the spirit of intelligence and love; it is the Paraclete, it is the Holy Spirit, while the physical Lucifer is the great agent of universal magnetism. To personify evil and exalt it into an intelligence which is the rival of God, into a being which can understand but love no more – this is a monstrous fiction. To believe that God permits this evil intelligence to deceive and destroy his feeble creatures is to make God more wicked than the devil. By depriving the devil of the possibility of love and repentance, God forces him to do evil. Moreover a spirit of error and falsehood can only be a folly which thinks, nor does it deserve indeed the name of spirit. The devil is God’s antithesis, and if we define God as He who is we must define His opposite as he who is not. (Eliphas Lévi, The Mysteries of Magic)

Alexander S. Holub in his The Gospel Truth: The Heresy of History (2004), notes:

The Yahwists and Elohists reflected a very early stage of the Israelite religion. This is when it was still essentially a nature/fertility religion much the same as the other pagan religions of the same time and region. It contained things like angels (in the text called Elohim), talking animals, dreams, and the idea of an anthropomorphic deity. This deity brought forth both good and evil as any anthropomorphic deity does. There was no Satan to bring the natural disasters. It was God. It was God also when (he was) displeased with someone simply ‘removed’ him by taking his life. So it was necessary to propitiate and worship this deity in order not to anger him in any way. It was later, after the Babylonian ‘captivity’, that this God became patient, just, and merciful, just like [the Zoroastrian good god called] Ahura Mazda.

When we deconstruct the words, symbols and images, it turns out that Lucifer-Satan-Devil, the source of all evil, is originally neither a Hebrew, Christian nor a Muslim concept, springing directly from much earlier Persian pagan roots. Naturally, all this biblical revisionism is not popular with the priests and preachers. If they couldn’t scare you with Lucifer, the Devil and visions of burning with Satan in Hell, there might be fewer donations. We can’t have that!

Lucifer in Theosophy and Secret Societies

Now that we understand more about the real origins of the word as misused in the Vulgate Bible, we see that various metaphysical groups, Illuminati orders and secret societies essentially created their own deity centred on the image of Lucifer as Light Bearer. Madame Blavatsky, like Eliphas Lévi, said the Holy Spirit and Lucifer are the same entity.

Lucifer, or Luciferus, is the name of the angelic Entity presiding over the light of truth as over the light of day… to the profane [the uninitiated] the Astral Light [universal Soul, the Matrix of the Universe] may be God and Devil at once…. Lucifer is divine and terrestrial light, the “Holy Ghost” and “Satan” at one and the same time…. The Fall was the result of man’s knowledge, for his “eyes were opened.” Indeed, he was taught Wisdom and the hidden knowledge by the “Fallen Angel”…. And now it stands proven that Satan, or the Red Fiery Dragon, the “Lord of Phosphorus,” and Lucifer, or “Light-Bearer,” is in us: it is our Mind – our tempter and Redeemer, our intelligent liberator and Saviour from pure animalism. Without this principle – the emanation of the very essence of the pure divine principle Mahat (Intelligence), which radiates direct from the Divine mind – we would be surely no better than animals. (Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, The Secret Doctrine, 1888)

For those wanting to explore beyond this, all the sources cited, and lots more, are not hard to find. Neither have we dealt with the myriad of modern belief systems called Satanism, yet another complex and diverse topic, but that will have to be at another time. For now, read the quotes on page 63 and see what the secret initiatic orders and their high adepts have to say about their god/demigod/demon-god/holy spirit.

Lucifer in Summary

Several conclusions present themselves. Firstly, the Lucifer of the Bible is a minor character at best, mentioned only once, not really standing out or signifying much of anything. The real character portrayed in the Isaiah text is an arrogant Babylonian monarch who oppressed the Hebrew people. Secondly, the mystical interpretations about Lucifer as Satan were added by Kabalistic rabbis, Catholic priests, Islamic mullahs, and Protestant preachers, all with clearly vested self-interests. Thirdly, various occult philosophers and metaphysicians explored and enlarged the Lucifer paradigm, creating an odd sort of god-demigod figure. Lastly, on the outer fringes of this magic and mysticism are the secret societies and Illuminati initiatic orders, especially Freemasons of one kind or another.

Remember, there are secret lodges, degrees and rituals, unknown outside the upper level adepts of the Illuminati orders. Their peculiar Luciferian doctrines and dogma always have had and still do have a significant impact on world history and geopolitical affairs. Not so much because of the rituals themselves, but because of the people who practice this strange cultic religion. Like any belief system, its dogma and doctrines, its morals and values, colour the decisions made by its truly devoted believers. Certain ones are in very high positions in government, the churches and the social order.

I hope some of you will continue your explorations into the occult underground and its impact on the world around us. If my deconstruction of the Lucifer legends and lore has been a literary Light Bearer, then let it be!
This article was published in New Dawn Special Issue 10.
If you appreciate this article, please consider a contribution to help maintain this website.

© New Dawn Magazine and the respective author.
For our reproduction notice, click here.

So I came across something I wrote about Samhuine almost two decades ago. It's based on the idea of finding modern meani...
10/30/2021

So I came across something I wrote about Samhuine almost two decades ago. It's based on the idea of finding modern meaning in the ancient traditions of the sacred times.

In the old days, Samhuine was the time for slaughtering cattle, salting meat, they believed that fairies known as the Puka tainted the crops in the fields so everything had to be gathered before Samhuine night. For the Irish, Samhuine was a Between time, a time outside of time, after the ending of the old year but before the beginning of the new year. They believed that this was one of the nights that the veil Between Worlds was thin, easy to tear, and the world of the faeries and the dead could bleed over into ours.

Many cultures celebrated this time of year with a dumb feast dedicated to those who had passed, and they celebrated wildly and with great abandon in defiance of winter and death. It was a time for divinations, for lighting the sacred fires, and sometimes it was a time for the harsh figure of the Winter King to set ablaze an effigy of a man, sometimes this represented his brother the Summer King who he loved deeply.

Here are some ideas for interpreting the symbolism of these events, expressing them and modern language and modern context.

-
EXTRAPOLATIONS FOR SAMHUINE
==================================

THE SLAUGHTER OF THE CATTLE
Be rid of that which will become a liability in the coming hard times.

THE SALTING OF THE MEAT
Preserve through purification that which will sustain you, remnants of better times.

THE PUKA IN THE FIELDS
Gather and make use of that which is at hand, before it is taken up by waste or time.

THE BETWEEN TIMES
Tear down the old ways, build up the new ways, and celebrate the time of chaos and emptiness between.

THE VEIL IS RENT
Know that the dark and hidden and weird places are now open and enterable; do not enter them casually.

THE FEAST OF THE DEAD
Honor and welcome your dead, invite them into your thoughts and your homes, and provide them warmth, food, and memories.

THE MISCHIEF NIGHT
Do not surrender to disorder, but instead look the primordial chaos in the face, to discern the seeds of the new order. Laugh in the darkness, even defy it, to show your faith that the darkness cannot fully or really take you.

THE RAGE AND THE DEFIANCE
As long as you can, remain defiant towards the forces of darkness, despair, cynicism, and bitterness.

THE GREAT RITE
While you live, throw your life up in the face of shadow – feast, f**k, dance, dine. Do all the things that only the living can do, since you are given that gift where others are not.

THE TIME OF DIVINATIONS
It is often easier to guess the future accurately, to see the coming patterns, when times of trouble have lent you a grim practicality and realism.

SAMHNAGAN – THE SAMHUINE FIRE
Every family or community in dark times needs a common passion and light, a central warmth to unite and preserve them in the darkness.

THE BURNING MAN
Recognize the times when it is necessary to draw hard lines, to coldly cut away that which is problematic or dangerous, to punish wrongdoers, to lay judgement on trespassers, to be brutal and ruthless and practical and made of stone.

THE WINTER KING
Recognize that there are times when even the beloved, the prized, and the precious must be sacrificed for the good of the greater community.

BUT YOU ARE THE MAN IN BLACK
There is some knowledge that should not only be left unspoken, but should actually be ignored or suppressed. Sometimes the truth of a thing is NOT the reality of it. And sometimes, freeing information destroys safety.

THE LAST HARVEST
What has been given up, make the best of life without it; what must be given up for lost, take what good you can from it before it fades. Use every scrap of what will not be sustained.

10/30/2021

It welcomed the coming of the ‘dark part of the year’ when the barriers between the physical and spirit world broke down to allow a connection with the Otherworld.

BFS 2015(https://youtu.be/IFCK4D6lwNU)
05/01/2021

BFS 2015

(https://youtu.be/IFCK4D6lwNU)

Beltane Fire Festival 2015 - Calton Hill, Edinburgh - short document from Beltane fire celebration. Hope you enjoy it.

The bowers of Beltane are a key component of the May Day celebrations.  If nothing else a bower must be made for the May...
05/01/2021

The bowers of Beltane are a key component of the May Day celebrations. If nothing else a bower must be made for the May Queen and the Green Man, even if it is no more than a small covered altar. Others may create bowers for themselves, as well, tents bedecked with garlands and lights, oils and incense, hidden spots where couples can go to be alone together in sacred enjoyment.

A woodland bower, and a fair maid beckoning...

Beltane Roles: THE MAY QUEENOther names: Brigid, Flora, Bloddeuwedd, Kore, Persephone, WalpurgaThe maiden of Imbolg has ...
05/01/2021

Beltane Roles: THE MAY QUEEN

Other names: Brigid, Flora, Bloddeuwedd, Kore, Persephone, Walpurga

The maiden of Imbolg has grown through the Vernal Equinox to become the young woman queen of Beltane. She is Brigid turning the Hag to stone and bringing summer and life back into the world, she is Persephone returned to the world of the living so that life can seed and sprout and grow. She is the flower goddess who marries the green vegetation god, she is the goddess of cows, the goddess of cats, the goddess of light and flame.

At Beltane we find the May Queen, we anoint her and crown her, she dispels winter and conquers her rivals, and she marries the god of the land. In some traditions she gives merry or mischievous commands to her subjects, in some she gives dances or kisses to bless and heal them.

2016 BFS May Queen

Beltane Roles: THE RED LADYOther names: The Puka Queen, Magdelen, Fire Woman, She is the temptress, the passionate one, ...
05/01/2021

Beltane Roles: THE RED LADY

Other names: The Puka Queen, Magdelen, Fire Woman,

She is the temptress, the passionate one, the seductress, the dancing woman. She leads the Red Tribe, the Puka drummers, the firebringers. She is the counterpart to the Red Man or Hob Horse. In some pageantry, she seeks but always fails to seduce the Green Man away from the May Queen. She has a place at Imbolg as the Mother, Beltane as the Puka Queen, and Midsummer as the Fire Woman, and will take power alongside the Red Man at Samhuine, ready to serve the Black Court of Winter.

The Red Lady of the Puka

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