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                          T H E   D E A T H   O F   L L E W 
                           A Seasonal Interpretation 
                          ================================= 
                                by Mike Nichols       

     *    *    *    *    *    *    *    *   *    *    *    *    *    *    *     
        Not of father, nor of mother
             Was my blood, was my body.
             I was spellbound by Gwydion,
             Prime enchanter of the Britons,
             When he formed me from nine blossoms.
                   --'Hanes Blodeuwedd'                 R. Graves, trans.     * 
     *    *    *    *    *    *    *   *    *    *    *    *    *    *  
                     In mostPagan cultures, thesun godis seen assplit betweentwo
     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 (the
     'dark of the world'?) was born (rather than died) at mid-summer.

                 Itis at this pointthat I must divergefrom 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.      

          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.    (John's
     earlier Pagan associations are treated in my essay on Midsummer.)  



                                                                             179


             So if births are associated with the solstices, whendo 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.

                 InWelshmythology inparticular, thereisa startlingvindication 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 thisin the form ofa Bardic 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, with one foot on the summer solstice
     and one foot on the winter solstice.    

          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 autumnal equinox is the  only time of the entire year when
     light (Llew) can be overcome by darkness (Goronwy).

                 Itshould now comeas no surprise that,when it istime 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.    (Curiously,   even  the  Christian     tradition  retains  this
     association, albeit in a  distorted form, by celebrating Jesus'  death near
     the time of the vernal equinox.)



                                                                             180


                 TheWelsh myth concludeswith Gwydion pursuingthe faithless Blod-
     euwedd through the night sky, and a path of white flowers springs up in the
     wake  of her passing,  which we today  know as the Milky  Way. When Gwydion
     catches  her, he transforms  her into an  owl, a fitting  symbol of autumn,
     just  as her  earlier association  with flowers  (she was  made from  them)
     equates her with spring.  Thus, while Llew and Goronwy represent summer and
     winter, Blodeuwedd  herself  represents both  spring  and fall,  as  patron
     goddess of flowers and owls, respectively.

                 Althoughit is far morespeculative than thepreceding material, a
     final  consideration would pursue this mirror-like life pattern of Llew and
     Goronwy  to its  ultimate  conclusion.   Although Llew  is struck  with the
     sunlight spear at the autumnal equinox, and  so 'dies' as a human, it takes
     a while before Gwydion discovers him in his eagle  form.  How long?  We may
     speculate 13 weeks, when the sun reaches the midpoint of the sign (or form)
     of the eagle, Scorpio -- on Halloween.  And if this is true, it may be that
     Llew,  the sun god, finally 'dies' to the upper world on Halloween, and now
     passes through the gates of death,  where he is immediately crowned king of
     the  underworld, the Lord of  Misrule!  (In  medieval tradition, the person
     proclaimed as 'Lord  of Misrule' reigned from Halloween to Old Christmas --
     or, before the calender changes, until the winter solstice.)

                 Meanwhile, Goronwy (withBlodeuwedd athis side) iscrowned kingin
     the  upper world, and occupies  Llew's old throne,  beginning on Halloween.
     Thus,  by winter  solstice, Goronwy  has reached  his position  of greatest
     strength  in  OUR world,  at  the same  moment  that Llew,  now  sitting on
     Goronwy's  old throne,  reaches his  position of  greatest strength  in the
     underworld.   However, at the moment  of the winter solstice,  Llew is born
     again, as a babe, (and as his own  son!) into our world.  And as Llew later
     reaches  manhood and dispatches Goronwy at the vernal equinox, Goronwy will
     then ascend the underworld throne  at Beltane, but will be reborn  into our
     world at midsummer, as a babe, later to defeat Llew all over again.  And so
     the cycle closes  at last,  resembling nothing  so much  as an  intricately
     woven, never-ending bit of Celtic knotwork.      

          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 power and
     still 1/4 of a year  away from his ritual death at the hands  of his rival.
     However, at  the very moment of  his greatest strength, his  dark twin, the
     seed of his destruction, is born -- just as the days begin to shorten.  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.   If we  have learned
     anything from this story from the  fourth branch of the 'Mabinogion', it is
     about the  power of myth --  how it may  still instruct and guide  us, many
     centuries  after it  has passed  from oral  to written  tradition.   And in
     studying it, we have barely scratched the surface. 



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