• A M I D S U M M E R CELEBRATION

    From Meghan Fitzgerald to ALL on Friday, November 07, 2025 06:12:33
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    A M I D S U M M E R CELEBRATION
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    by Mike Nichols (a.k.a. Gwydion)


    In addition to the four great
    festivals of the Pagan Celtic year,
    there are four lesser holidays as
    well: the two solstices, and the two
    equinoxes. In folklore, these are
    referred to as the four 'quarter-days'
    of the year, and modern Witches call
    them the four 'Lesser Sabbats', or the
    four 'Low Holidays'. The Summer
    Solstice is one of them.

    Technically, a solstice is an
    astronomical point and, due to the
    procession to the equinox, the date
    may vary by a few days depending on
    the year. The summer solstice occurs
    when the sun reaches the Tropic of
    Cancer, and we experience the longest
    day and the shortest night of the
    year. Astrologers know this as the
    date on which the sun enters the sign
    of Cancer. This year it will occur at
    10:57 pm CDT on June 21st.

    However, since most European
    peasants were not accomplished at
    reading an ephemeris or did not live
    close enough to Salisbury Plain to
    trot over to Stonehenge and sight down
    it's main avenue, they celebrated the
    event on a fixed calendar date, June
    24th. The slight forward displacement
    of the traditional date is the result
    of multitudinous calendrical changes
    down through the ages. It is
    analogous to the winter solstice
    celebration, which is astronomically
    on or about December 21st, but is
    celebrated on the traditional date of
    December 25th, Yule, later adopted by
    the Christians.

    Again, it must be remembered that
    the Celts reckoned their days from
    sundown to sundown, so the June 24th
    festivities actually begin on the
    previous sundown (our June 23rd).
    This was Shakespeare's Midsummer
    Night's Eve. Which brings up another
    point: our modern calendars are quite
    misguided in suggesting that 'summer
    begins' on the solstice. According to
    the old folk calendar, summer BEGINS
    on May Day and ends on Lammas (August
    1st), with the summer solstice, midway
    between the two, marking MID-summer.
    This makes more logical sense than
    suggesting that summer begins on the
    day when the sun's power begins to
    wane and the days grow shorter.

    Although our Pagan ancestors
    probably preferred June 24th (and
    indeed most European folk festivals
    today use this date), the sensibility
    of modern Witches seems to prefer the
    actual solstice point, beginning the
    celebration at sunset. Again, it
    gives modern Pagans a range of dates
    to choose from with, hopefully, a
    weekend embedded in it. (And this
    year, the moon is waxing throughout.)

    As the Pagan mid-winter
    celebration of Yule was adopted by
    Christians as Christmas (December
    25th), so too the Pagan mid-summer
    celebration was adopted by them as the
    feast of John the Baptist (June 24th).
    Occurring 180 degrees apart on the
    wheel of the year, the mid-winter
    celebration commemorates the birth of
    Jesus, while the mid-summer
    celebration commemorates the birth of
    John, the prophet who was born six
    months before Jesus in order to
    announce his arrival.

    This last tidbit is extremely
    conspicuous, in that John is the ONLY
    saint in the entire Catholic
    hagiography whose feast day is a
    commemoration of his birth, rather
    than his death. A generation ago,
    Catholic nuns were fond of explaining
    that a saint is commemorated on the
    anniversary of his or her death
    because it was really a 'birth' into
    the Kingdom of Heaven. But John the
    Baptist, the sole exception, is
    emphatically commemorated on the
    anniversary of his birth into THIS
    world. Although this makes no sense
    viewed from a Christian perspective,
    it makes perfect poetic sense from the
    viewpoint of Pagan symbolism.

    In most Pagan cultures, the sun
    god is seen as split between two rival
    personalities: the god of light and
    his twin, his 'weird', his 'other
    self', the god of darkness. They are
    Gawain and the Green Knight, Gwyn and
    Gwythyr, Llew and Goronwy, Lugh and
    Balor, Balan and Balin, the Holly King
    and the Oak King, etc. Often they are
    depicted as fighting seasonal battles
    for the favor of their goddess/lover,
    such as Creiddylad or Blodeuwedd, who
    represents Nature.

    The god of light is always born at
    the winter solstice, and his strength
    waxes with the lengthening days, until
    the moment of his greatest power, the
    summer solstice, the longest day.
    And, like a look in a mirror, his
    'shadow self', the lord of darkness,
    is born at the summer solstice, and
    his strength waxes with the
    lengthening nights until the moment of
    his greatest power, the winter
    solstice, the longest night.

    Indirect evidence supporting this
    mirror-birth pattern is strongest in
    the Christianized form of the Pagan
    myth. Many writers, from Robert
    Graves to Stewart Farrar, have
    repeatedly pointed out that Jesus was
    identified with the Holly King, while
    John the Baptist was the Oak King.
    That is why, 'of all the trees that
    are in the wood, the Holly tree bears
    the crown.' If the birth of Jesus,
    the 'light of the world', is
    celebrated at mid-winter, Christian
    folk tradition insists that John the
    Oak King was born (rather than died)
    at mid-summer.

    It is at this point that I must
    diverge from the opinion of Robert
    Graves and other writers who have
    followed him. Graves believes that at
    midsummer, the Sun King is slain by
    his rival, the God of Darkness; just
    as the God of Darkness is, in turn,
    slain by the God of Light at
    midwinter. And yet, in Christian folk
    tradition (derived from the older
    Pagan strain), it is births, not
    deaths, that are associated with the
    solstices. For the feast of John the
    Baptist, this is all the more
    conspicuous, as it breaks the rules
    regarding all other saints.

    So if births are associated with
    the solstices, when do the symbolic
    deaths occur? When does Goronwy slay
    Llew and when does Llew, in his turn,
    slay Goronwy? When does darkness
    conquer light or light conquer
    darkness? Obviously (to me, at
    least), it must be at the two
    equinoxes. At the autumnal equinox,
    the hours of light in the day are
    eclipsed by the hours of darkness. At
    the vernal equinox, the process is
    reversed. Also, the autumnal equinox,
    called 'Harvest Home', is already
    associated with sacrifice, principally
    that of the spirit of grain or
    vegetation. In this case, the god of
    light would be identical.

    In Welsh mythology in particular,
    there is a startling vindication of
    the seasonal placement of the sun
    god's death, the significance of which
    occurred to me in a recent dream, and
    which I haven't seen elsewhere. Llew
    is the Welsh god of light, and his
    name means 'lion'. (The lion is often
    the symbol of a sun god.) He is
    betrayed by his 'virgin' wife
    Blodeuwedd, into standing with one
    foot on the rim of a cauldron and the
    other on the back of a goat. It is
    only in this way that Llew can be
    killed, and Blodeuwedd's lover,
    Goronwy, Llew's dark self, is hiding
    nearby with a spear at the ready. But
    as Llew is struck with it, he is not
    killed. He is instead transformed
    into an eagle.

    Putting this in the form of a
    Bardic riddle, it would go something
    like this: Who can tell in what
    season the Lion (Llew), betrayed by
    the Virgin (Blodeuwedd), poised on the
    Balance, is transformed into an Eagle?
    My readers who are astrologers are
    probably already gasping in
    recognition. The sequence is
    astrological and in proper order: Leo
    (lion), Virgo (virgin), Libra
    (balance), and Scorpio (for which the
    eagle is a well-known alternative
    symbol). Also, the remaining icons,
    cauldron and goat, could arguably
    symbolize Cancer and Capricorn,
    representing summer and winter, the
    signs beginning with the two solstice
    points. So Llew is balanced between
    cauldron and goat, between summer and
    winter, on the balance (Libra) point
    of the autumnal equinox.

    This, of course, is the answer to
    a related Bardic riddle. Repeatedly,
    the 'Mabinogion' tells us that Llew
    must be standing with one foot on the
    cauldron and one foot on the goat's
    back in order to be killed. But
    nowhere does it tell us why. Why is
    this particular situation the ONLY one
    in which Llew can be overcome?
    Because it represents the equinox
    point. And the equinox is the only
    time of the entire year when light
    (Llew) can be overcome by darkness
    (Goronwy).

    It should now come as no surprise
    that, when it is time for Llew to kill
    Goronwy in his turn, Llew insists that
    Goronwy stands where he once stood
    while he (Llew) casts the spear. This
    is no mere vindictiveness on Llew's
    part. For, although the 'Mabinogion'
    does not say so, it should by now be
    obvious that this is the only time
    when Goronwy can be overcome. Light
    can overcome darkness only at the
    equinox -- this time the vernal
    equinox.

    So Midsummer (to me, at least) is
    a celebration of the sun god at his
    zenith, a crowned king on his throne.
    He is at the height of his strength
    and still 1/4 of a year away from his
    ritual death at the hands of his
    rival. The spear and the cauldron
    have often been used as symbols for
    this holiday and it should now be easy
    to see why. Sun gods are virtually
    always associated with spears (even
    Jesus is pierced by one), and the
    midsummer cauldron of Cancer is a
    symbol of the Goddess in her fullness.
    It is an especially beautiful time of
    the year for an outdoor celebration.
    May yours be magical!



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