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Mystickal
Realms Wishes All
Members and Friends Who
Celebrate the Sabbats
A Blessed and Happy Samhain!


Dance
the ring,
luck to bring,
When the year's aturning.
Chant the rhyme
at Hallowstime,
When the fire's burning.


History of Samhain
Samhain
marks one of the two great doorways of the Celtic
year, for the Celts divided the year into two
seasons: the light and the dark, at Beltane on
May 1st and Samhain on November 1st. Some believe
that Samhain was the more important festival,
marking the beginning of a whole new cycle, just
as the Celtic day began at night. For it was understood
that in dark silence comes whisperings of new
beginnings, the stirring of the seed below the
ground. Whereas Beltane welcomes in the summer
with joyous celebrations at dawn, the most magically
potent time of this festival is November Eve,
the night of October 31st, known today of course,
as Halloween.
Samhain
(Scots Gaelic: Samhuinn) literally means “summer's
end.” In Scotland and Ireland, Halloween is known
as Oíche Shamhna, while in Wales it is Nos Calan
Gaeaf, the eve of the winter's calend, or first.
With the rise of Christianity, Samhain was changed
to Hallowmas, or All Saints' Day, to commemorate
the souls of the blessed dead who had been canonized
that year, so the night before became popularly
known as Halloween, All Hallows Eve, or Hollantide.
November 2nd became All Souls Day, when prayers
were to be offered to the souls of all who the
departed and those who were waiting in Purgatory
for entry into Heaven. Throughout the centuries,
pagan and Christian beliefs intertwine in a gallimaufry
of celebrations from Oct 31st through November
5th, all of which appear both to challenge the
ascendancy of the dark and to revel in its mystery.
In
the country year, Samhain marked the first day
of winter, when the herders led the cattle and
sheep down from their summer hillside pastures
to the shelter of stable and byre. The hay that
would feed them during the winter must be stored
in sturdy thatched ricks, tied down securely against
storms. Those destined for the table were slaughtered,
after being ritually devoted to the gods in pagan
times. All the harvest must be gathered in --
barley, oats, wheat, turnips, and apples -- for
come November, the faeries would blast every growing
plant with their breath, blighting any nuts and
berries remaining on the hedgerows. Peat and wood
for winter fires were stacked high by the hearth.
It was a joyous time of family reunion, when all
members of the household worked together baking,
salting meat, and making preserves for the winter
feasts to come. The endless horizons of summer
gave way to a warm, dim and often smoky room;
the symphony of summer sounds was replaced by
a counterpoint of voices, young and old, human
and animal.
In
early Ireland, people gathered at the ritual centers
of the tribes, for Samhain was the principal calendar
feast of the year. The greatest assembly was the
'Feast of Tara,' focusing on the royal seat of
the High King as the heart of the sacred land,
the point of conception for the new year. In every
household throughout the country, hearth-fires
were extinguished. All waited for the Druids to
light the new fire of the year -- not at Tara,
but at Tlachtga, a hill twelve miles to the north-west.
It marked the burial-place of Tlachtga, daughter
of the great druid Mogh Ruith, who may once have
been a goddess in her own right in a former age.
At
all the turning points of the Celtic year, the
gods drew near to Earth at Samhain, so many sacrifices
and gifts were offered up in thanksgiving for
the harvest. Personal prayers in the form of objects
symbolizing the wishes of supplicants or ailments
to be healed were cast into the fire, and at the
end of the ceremonies, brands were lit from the
great fire of Tara to re-kindle all the home fires
of the tribe, as at Beltane. As they received
the flame that marked this time of beginnings,
people surely felt a sense of the kindling of
new dreams, projects and hopes for the year to
come.
The
Samhain fires continued to blaze down the centuries.
In the 1860s the Halloween bonfires were still
so popular in Scotland that one traveler reported
seeing thirty fires lighting up the hillsides
all on one night, each surrounded by rings of
dancing figures, a practice which continued up
to the first World War. Young people and servants
lit brands from the fire and ran around the fields
and hedges of house and farm, while community
leaders surrounded parish boundaries with a magic
circle of light. Afterwards, ashes from the fires
were sprinkled over the fields to protect them
during the winter months -- and of course, they
also improved the soil. The bonfire provided an
island of light within the oncoming tide of winter
darkness, keeping away cold, discomfort, and evil
spirits long before electricity illumined our
nights. When the last flame sank down, it was
time to run as fast as you could for home, raising
the cry, “The black sow without a tail take the
hindmost!”
Even
today, bonfires light up the skies in many parts
of the British Isles and Ireland at this season,
although in many areas of Britain their significance
has been co-opted by Guy Fawkes Day, which falls
on November 5th, and commemorates an unsuccessful
attempt to blow up the English Houses of Parliament
in the 17th century. In one Devonshire village,
the extraordinary sight of both men and women
running through the streets with blazing tar barrels
on their backs can still be seen! Whatever the
reason, there will probably always be a human
need to make fires against the winter’s dark.


Correspondences
Tools, Symbols & Decorations
Black
altar cloth, Halloween items, jack o’ lanterns,
oak leaves, acorns, straw, balefire, besom, black
cat, black crescent moon, cauldron, divination
tools, grain, magic mirror, mask, bare branches,
animal bones, hazelwood, pictures of ancestors
Colors
Black
(ward off negativity), orange (good luck), indigo,
homemade apple or mint scented herbal candles
to light jack-o-lanterns or for altar candles
Customs
Ancestor
altar, costumes, divination, carving jack o’ lanterns,
spirit plate, the Feast of the Dead, feasting,
paying debts, fairs, drying winter herbs, masks,
bonfires, apple games, tricks, washing clothes
Animals/Mythical beings
Bats,
cats, dogs, pooka, goblins, medusa, beansidhe,
harpies
Gemstones
Black
stones, jet, obsidian, onyx, carnelian
Herbs
Allspice,
broom, comfry, dandelion, deadly nightshade, mugwort,
catnip, dittany of Crete, ferns, flax, fumitory,
mandrake, mullein, dragon’s blood, sage, straw,
thistles, oak(leaf), wormwood (burn to protect
from roving spirits)
Incense/Oil
Frankincense,
basil, yarrow, lilac, camphor, clove, wood rose,
wormwood, myrrh, patchouli, apple, heliotrope,
mint, nutmeg, sage, ylang-ylang
Rituals/Magicks
Foreseeing
future, honoring/consulting ancestors, releasing
the old, power, understanding death and rebirth,
entering the underworld, divination, dance of
the dead, fire calling, past life recall
Foods
Apple,
pumpkin pie, pomegranate, pumpkin, squash, hazelnuts,
corn, cranberry muffins, bread, ale, cider and
herbal tea


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