Wordsmithing Magic from the Crossroads

Make Merry This Night, for the Green Hour is Upon Us

So drum beat and flute sound
Once more we’ll circle ’round
For the world turns and the wheel spins
And all ends that once begins.

This green hour, the heart knows,
Is brief as the budding rose.
Though wheel turn and bloom fade
The heart sings the birth of May.
Beltane Night by Jaiya

This is a lightly edited encore from last year, including an updated personal note, in view of the State of Things. Now, as I continue to face a profoundly difficult time, I want to thank you for spending these moments with me in our virtual sacred space.

The Wheel turns, no matter what.

As you go a-Maying, as you bow to the unfurling oak leaves, dance the ancient steps with the Shining Ones this night, revel in the sweet, swelling blossoms that will bear the fruit of Autumn long months from now…

As you wash your face in the early dew tomorrow, and listen to the call of the wood thrush, the robin, the fussy jays and wrens squawking to chase you from their nests, remember this:

Beltane returns each and every year. It may be have been usurped, for a while, by human agendas, to honor labor, or as a holiday to rattle sabers, and show off military might.

But tyrants rise and fall. Governments, wars, whole civilizations, and even existential challenges to Life itself have come and gone many times before this. In fact, for millennia.

Despite vast heartache, despite terror and pain across every continent, here in the Northern Hemisphere, the enchantment of May Eve and Beltane arrive just the same. And the old, old ancestral call of Samhain fills our Southern Hemisphere families’ hearts this eve.

These liminal moments arrive as an ancient, sacred blessing to all who receive them with grace, joy, and the ecstasy of the Earth Herself.

We are at an unprecedented moment in the history of humankind, with a most ominous future for civilization as we have known it, as well as for the living land and all who share this planet together.

Yes, that is all true.

But now, at this sacred threshold, no matter what is happening in the world of humanity, the Northern lands are flush with the joys of Springtime. The life force that now calls to us from the living planet is irresistible.

So if at all possible, I urge you to pause during this holy time. Put aside for a little while whatever sorrows and frustrations burden you, and receive the restoration that can only be given by the hand of the Holy One(s).

Listen closely and know that our Faery cousins truly dance nearby this night. The dew beads up on the grass and flowers tomorrow morning, promising its magical elixir (keep reading for more about all this).

Never forget: The Wheel of Time endures. The divine conspiracy of Love abides.

They always have, and we, the children of the Wise, know they always will.

Blessed be.

~ Beth


A Most Merry May Eve to All!

Stone carving of Sun God Belinos

Today is May Eve, Walpurgisnacht, or Beltane Eve!

The name Beltane means bright fire, bale fire, or Fire of Bel, referring to the Sun God, Bel or Belinos.

One of the most magical nights of the year, in Germany, Walpurgisnacht begins at sunrise on this date and ends at sunrise tomorrow, the first day of May.

At the Great Sabbat of Beltane, the young God is in the fullness of His manhood, and in love, gives Himself to the Goddess.

At this time, we honor the Horned God of the Celtic and Teutonic peoples. He embodies the vitality of animal life, in the ways that the Green Man embodies the vitality of all plant life.

Traditional bonfires and torches of rosemary and juniper are lit, bringing sweet purification and protection to all. Birch boughs are also placed on all doors and windows to protect the home from evil spirits and sorcery.

Merry Meetings

In days of old, when sexuality was joyful and without shame, the young people went out “a-Maying” into the woods and fields on May Eve, celebrating their pleasures with each other throughout the night. They would return home in the morning, laden with flowers and green branches.

Not only were these trysts tolerated, they were blessed, for they were rites of sympathetic magick that ensured fertility in the growing season.

Children born from the Maying were often called Jack, Jackson, Hodson, or Robinson since they were the children of the Jack in the Green, Hod (a woodland sprite) or Robin Goodfellow (or Robin Hood, another form of the Green Man).

While you might or might not be able to make love to someone out in the woods, fields, or back yard tonight, you can still bring the May into your life by bringing home green branches, flowers, and branches of flowering trees. (Be sure to ask their permission first).

Better yet, avoid cutting living plants, and plant your garden so that over time, you will transform your house into a garden bower. Make a wreath to hang on the door or to crown your Goddess images.

The Veil is Thin

Like the more somber Samhain, which our friends in the Southern Hemisphere are now preparing to celebrate, this is a time when the veils between the worlds are most thin and we may truly experience the quantum wave of other realities.

Pay attention, and you may find that other realms bleed through into ours, making divination strikingly clear, and encounters with non-ordinary beings more likely.

Traditionally, Samhain-tide is the season we can expect visitations with the Ancestors. But they might also come calling on this night as well, especially the ones with whom you have the most light-hearted relationships.

It’s more likely, however, that at this time of the year, the Otherworlds that open are those of the Good Folk, who are now very active and close to us.Thomas the Rhymer by Katherine Cameron, Faery Queen and Thomas Rhymer in woods

It is said that on this night, the Queen of the Sidhe rides out on her snow-white horse, at the head of the Seelie Court, possibly looking for mortals to lure away to Faeryland for seven years.

Folklore says that if you sit beneath a tree on this night, you will see Her or hear the tinkling of Her horse’s bells as She rides by. If you hide your face, She will pass you by but if you look at Her, She may choose you.

Please keep in mind that as attractive as this may sound, the lands of the Shining Folk are not the wee, quaint places depicted by Disney or the Victorians.

It’s true that the Faery lands are intensely beautiful, but they are not human places and can be quite perilous for those who are not respectful or learned in the ways of the Lordly Ones.

Magical Dewdrops

The Fair Maid of May by Arthur Rackham young maiden washing face with May morning dewEven if you don’t stay up all night a-Maying, at least remember to get up early tomorrow, and wash in the magical dew of Beltane morn:

The fair maid who, the first of May
Goes to the fields at break of day
And washes in dew from the hawthorn tree
Will ever after handsome be.

Other sources suggest using the dew found under oaks or on ivy leaves. My teacher, the famed author and Celtic tradition expert RJ Stewart, suggests that this centuries-old tradition is the basis of modern-day Flower Remedy healing.

Similarly, you might make a special wish as you wash your face in the gathered dewdrops, or as you drink from a well before sunrise.

All Acts of Love and Pleasure Are My Rituals

For most of us, the actual cross-quarter day (that is precisely halfway between Equinox and Solstice) will be May 5 in most of North America.

Of course our ancestors did not limit their Beltane festivities to only one day, nor were they reckoned by some number on a calendar. They celebrated based on observation of the heavenly bodies, the cycles of their crops and animals, and a feel in the air. So you need not curtail your celebrations only to May Eve, or May Day, by the modern calendar.

Beltane’s energy, to those who are open to it, is warm, magical, sexy, and inspiring.

The doorways between our mundane, human realm and the real, primal worlds are flung open at this time. Answer the call to explore the hidden paths of enchantment that our ancestors knew.

Go out and allow the beauty of this lusty time to make your blood dance. Include an intimate loved one in your rites, if you are blessed with such a person and it is safe to do so. If not, no worries – listen with all your senses, and you’ll recognize you are not alone!

Surrender to the deep pleasures of this beautiful time of year, and let it be a healing balm to a world of hurt.

Most of all, enjoy the lovely finery that our beloved Gaia has cloaked Herself in, and allow yourself be seduced by Her.

Young Black man with flames of Beltane and flowers

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Comments on this entry are closed.

nofixedstars April 30, 2023, 2:41 pm

oh, your post is so timely for me. i was on the verge of not celebrating beltane at all this year…the state of things in my life just had not made me FEEL green or rosy or lively or celebratory. but you are so right…we are always part of the land on which and by which we live, no matter what weather is passing over us currently. and that carries both a duty of reverence and a promise of renewal. so i will turn my mind and heart to a kind of quiet observation of this holy time. after reading this post, i popped out into the soft, cold rain and cut a few green leaves to add to a vase. and do you know what greeted me? the first budding rose of the year. i didn’t cut it; i never cut the first rose (it’s best left for the fae?). it should open tomorrow on may day, given a bit of sun.

blessed be, beth. may you too find some moments of peace and even joy at this time, despite the heavy responsibilities and unpleasantness you are having to deal with.

Beth May 1, 2023, 9:48 am

Thanks! I think many, many of us are feeling depleted, distracted, disconnected.. I know I am in great danger of being so, too.

But just a walk, a tree hug, and washing our faces in the dew.. listening for the music the floats up from the Underworlds… There is magic still and always.. We just have to remember and receive .. at least I do!

Katie April 30, 2023, 2:59 pm

Beth, sorry to hear you are going through a difficult period. Thinking of you and sending love. Katie

Beth May 1, 2023, 9:49 am

Thank you! Your kind thoughts are keeping me afloat these days, so I really can’t begin to say how much you are appreciated, Katie! 💚

Raven Aisling April 30, 2023, 3:47 pm

Dear Beth, thank you for this. So unprepared for Beltane this year – not ritual or anything it seems to have arrived out of the blue, too fast. Your post is a good way of connecting with this festival even if I don’t do anything else this year except a walk on the land or a meditation to tune into the energy.. Hope things ease up for you at least a little soon. Thinking of you and sure you have it covered but please reach out if I can be of help in any way.

Beth May 1, 2023, 9:52 am

Beloved Raven.. just seeing your name and your beautiful face here heartens me more than you can imagine. And if this has been a little nudge to reconnect to your beautiful Land’s loving and celebratory presence, then I am honored.

Thank you for all your prayers and thoughts on my behalf. They truly have made all the difference at times when I have been in danger of drowning. I love you, my sister.

Art does not try to communicate;
it calls for communion.

~ Paul Reynaud

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