Friday, July 29, 2005

Triumph of the Moon


Okay, so what do I think? Is modern Witchcraft a survival of ancient Pagan practices? Was the Witchcraft of the Burning Times such a survival? Could it be said that the Cunning Men and Women of the 18th and 19th centuries were Witches? Well, if you read this work by Prof. Ronald Hutton you may be unpleasantly surprised...

When I was first coming to an understanding of what Witchcraft is I believed what most folks of the time, who cared about such matters, believed: I believed in the “Murray hypothesis”…that the Witchcraft of the Burning Times was a Pagan survival and that the Devil that Witches were supposed to worship was actually an ancient pre-historic god. With the work of people like Ronald Hutton we realize that this is not necessarily the case. We learn that modern Witchcraft and the modern Witch religion, Wicca, is more likely the invention of people like Gerald Gardner.

What one may be surprised to learn in this book is that this fact does not invalidate Wicca and the modern practice of Witchcraft. What it does do is acknowledge the many influences on this “New Religious Movement.” We learn of the influences of Classicism/romanticism, of Naturalism, of Folklore, and of the Ceremonial Magickal tradition. We also learn of the many people involved in the shaping of modern Witchcraft.

I think personally that it could be said that it doesn’t really matter that so many of the earlier ideas about the origins of Wicca and Witchcraft are not “true” for every religious movement has its own origin myths. Folks like Robert Graves and Robin Skelton have written of the value of "Poetic Truth". I think the truths of modern Wicca and Paganism in general are very much poetic truths.

Also, any argument that Wicca is an invalid religion because it is “made up” does not hold water for me…all religions, after all, are made up.

I find it interesting how Prof. Hutton, who is English, explores the English roots of modern Witchcraft (he says that Wicca is the only religion that England has given the world!!). It’s interesting how he talks of the influence of the “California Cosmology” and how it compares to British Witchcraft. I found it particularly interesting that early modern Witchcraft was founded by fairly conservative, although definitely eccentric, individuals…as compared to the very left leaning liberalism of the California influences like Starhawk, and Z. Budapest.

I highly recommend this book…I intend to occasionally post notes to this blog about the various people and publications he mentions in this book. I will now view the Wind in the Willows with different eyes. :^)

Good Reading!

Thursday, July 28, 2005

Lavendar Green Magic


From time to time I will post information on popular fiction or music that has been influenced by a positive outlook on Witchcraft.

I have just finished reading this book and I have to say that I am stunned by its simple beauty. I have a feeling that Andre Norton was, like so many other science fiction and fantasy writers, quite simpathetic toward Witches and modern Paganisms in general.

I went to see if she has a web-site and found this link...

http://www.andre-norton.org/

I was a little stunned to see that she has passed away.
Brightest blessings on her journey wherever that may lead.

I will be taking on her WitchWorld series as soon as I can. Maybe after I have explored more of her works in this vein...perhaps "Red Hart Magic". There seems to be an entire series of books aimed at a "young adult" audience. Kind of Harry Potterish long before Harry Potter. Lavender-Green Magic was written and takes place in the early '70's.
Blessed be.

Sunday, July 24, 2005

Another Elder passes into Witchdom



Elizabeth Pepper, the founder of the Witches' Almanac has passed into the Summery halls and meadows of Witchdom.
Her loss will be dearly felt, I'm sure, by many who have found guidance in the Almanac and in her many other publications.

Blessed Be, Lady Pepper...

I encourage you to visit this site...
http://www.thewitchesalmanac.com/guestbook.html
...and leave a message of condolence.

As an aside, I'd encourage all Witches, if they haven't already, to get their hands on a copy of Witches' All...it is a sort of "best of" edition of the Witches' Almanac.

Wednesday, July 20, 2005

Magister Robin


I wish to pay respects to Robin Skelton...

I lived in Victoria, B.C., for quite a stretch before Magister Robin passed over into Witchdom. (I suspect "Magister" is not a term he would have used for himself, but I will use it just the same for any male Witch I hold in high regard.) He left his body eight years ago on August 22. Come this August 22nd I shall light a candle for him. I regret that I never met him...he was a champion of the arts, a prolific writer, a brilliant poet, an inspiring and attentive professor, and a powerful Witch...perhaps Canada's only well-known one, at that.

While I never did meet him in life. I did have the good fortune of partaking of some of his essence when I was initiated into the "Skelton lineage". My initiator had himself been initiated by Magister Robin, and knowing that I was a practising Witch without formal outside initiation, he was happy to initiate me without the usual required training time of a year and a day. Following this I initiated my wife.

I highly recommend his writings on Witchcraft, Spellcraft, and Talismans. His poetry is marvelous "reading aloud" material--particularly "Words for Witches" which can be found in one of his latest publications, One Leaf Shaking.

Hail and Blessed Be, Magister Robin!

links:
http://ring.uvic.ca/97sep05/skelton.html
http://www.canadapagan.com/CanInfo/articles/poetry.htm

ps. I highly recommend checking out his daughter's web site: http://www.alisonskelton.com/index.htm

Sunday, July 17, 2005

Jumpin'




Jumping from one to the next
Was what She was trying to tell me
As I skidded through the sun-bleached dust
But me never seeing as She saw kept jumping blindly
I remember now
And see with irredescent eyes
And now I sit and see
In a world without up or down
And from here I can jump
And I will be nourished
I will be my nature
She is my Teacher.

Steeping Thoughts

I have struggled many years with being a Witch. With coming to terms with being one. With accepting that I am one.
I have, over the years, been really quite fickle in the spiritual department. My wife likes to refer to any "path" I follow at any given time as the "flavour of the month." You could say that I have essentially ignored the Charge of the Goddess, written by Doreen Valiente those many years ago...

"Know that your seeking and yearnings will avail you not unless you know the mystery,
For if that which you seek you find not within yourself you shall never find it without,
For behold I have been with you from the beginning and I am that which is attained at the end of desire."

A beautiful, inspired piece of writing...much like most of Valiente's work (may she be dwelling blissfully in the Summery Halls and Meadows of Witchdom)...

This is the start of an electronic accounting of one man's treading of the Witch Way. In it I hope to explore the history (both mythical and factual) of Witchcraft. I also hope to write about Witch practices, cultural phenomena, broader religious/spiritual/magickal phenomena, and pretty much anything else that comes to mind.

Blessed Be,
JumpinSpider