“Oh, do not tell the Priest our plight, or he would call it a sin;
But – we have been out in the woods all night, A conjuring Summer in !
And we bring you news by word of mouth- Good news for cattle and corn
Now is the Sun come up from the South, With Oak and Ash, and Thorn.”
The above is from A Tree Song by Rudyard Kipling , in it we see echoes of the importance our ancestors held for this time of year, having arrived at Summer Solstice or Litha as it is sometimes called. Our ancestors whose lives were more closely attuned to the earth , Her rhythms and cycles as well as the Celestial tides knew the importance of the Sun without which the crops would not grow and life would not be. At this time the Sun has reached it’s height and its power is seen as triumphant; with how important the Sun was in the lives of our ancestors it’s only natural that they would have a special reverence for this time of the Suns greatest strength, the longest day of the year when night is pushed back just a bit and only for a time in honor of this day of celebration. This was of old a fire festival of great popularity, widely celebrated and kept by the lighting of Bale fires with dancing around them and leaping over the flames to both bring good fortune and purify ills ; cattle was driven through the smoke of the balefires to purify them as well and fire carried from farm to farm, these are only a few of the customs kept at this time but which illustrates also the connection with the Sun to the element of fire and hearth-home. There were many and varied practices and customs to celebrate this special day and festival, another element we see in the above poem is the mention of Oak, Ash and Thorn and their link in the older folklore to the Fae and nature spirits, this was also a time when it was held that the veil between the world of the Fae and that of mankind was thin and the Fair Folk wandered freely in this world so too were there customs used to win their favor and ward off their wrath. In this we see the dual side of the longest day as even as that is celebrated it’s also accepted that we have reached the half way mark in the years progress and from here forward days will begin to grow gradually shorter as the tides shift and the dark half of the year grows closer; so while the one side of the coin may carry the bright shining face of the Sun the other side perhaps a bit darker holds the promise of longer nights and the march towards Winter that will now begin with the setting of the Solstice Sun.
We may no longer drive cattle though the smoke of the balefires or remain out in the woods all night in celebration and anticipation of the Solstice Suns rise to power but we do have echoes of these practices still in the dancing that takes place around the balefire, even if that is a candle inside a cauldron and not a great bonfire built carefully with select woods, and the blessing of the dancers for the remainder of the year. There are many ways to keep this great festival and each path and tradition has it’s own ways of doing this but none of this has to be terribly elaborate, it costs nothing to simply go for a walk or work for a bit in your garden and soak up the Suns warmth and remember and honor all that it meant to our ancestors and what it still means to us now. However this celebration is kept hopefully it will be a Blessed and Happy one for All. BB, Aren
Like this:
Like Loading...