Main Index
Index
Previous
Next


          



           
                                  A MIDSUMMER CELEBRATION

                             by Mike Nichols (a.k.a. Gwydion) 
           
           
                  In additionto the four greatfestivals of the PaganCeltic 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 astronomicalpoint and, due to the
          precession  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 mustbe 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. 
           







                                            45
          



              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. 
           
                  Inmost Pagan cultures, the sun godis 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 godof 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. 
           







                                            46
          



                  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. 








































                                            47
              




                  It isat this pointthat I mustdiverge from the opinionof 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 Welshmythology inparticular, thereis astartling 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. 
           
                  Puttingthis in theform of aBardic riddle, itwould 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. 



                                            48
          



           
                  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 nosurprise that, when it is time forLlew
          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 acelebration of the sun godat
          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! 






















                                            49