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To the ancient Celts, the year had two "hinges".
These were Beltaine (the first of May) and Samhain, (the first
of November), which is also the traditional Celtic New Year.
And these two days were the most magical, and often frightening
times of the whole year.
The Celtic people were in superstitious awe of times and
places "in between". Holy sites were any border
places - the shore between land and water (seas, lakes, and
rivers), bridges, boundaries between territories (especially
when marked by bodies of water), crossroads, thresholds, etc.
Holy times were also border times - twilight and dawn marking
the transitions of night and day; Beltaine and Samhain marking
the transitions of summer and winter. Read your myths and
fairytales - many of the stories occur in such places, and
at such times.
At Samhain (which corresponds to modern Halloween), time
lost all meaning and the past, present, and future were one.
The dead, and the denizens of the Other World, walked among
the living. It was a time of fairies, ghosts, demons, and
witches. Winter itself was the Season of Ghosts, and Samhain
is the night of their release from the Underworld. Many people
lit bonfires to keep the evil spirits at bay. Often a torch
was lit and carried around the boundaries of the home and
farm, to protect the property and residents against the spirits
throughout the winter.
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Many Irish and Scottish Celts appeased their
dead with a traditional Dumb Supper. On Samhain Eve, supper
was served in absolute silence, and one place was set at the
head of the table "for the ancestors". This place
was served food and drink without looking directly at the
seat, for to see the dead would bring misfortune. Afterwards,
the untouched plate and cup were taken outside "for the
pookas", and left in the woods. In other traditions,
this is the night to remember, honor, and toast our beloved
departed, for the veil between the living and the dead is
thin, and communication is possible on Samhain Eve
Animals and food supplies needed special
protection during this time, too. Samhain marked the time
cattle, on which the Scottish Highland economy depended, were
brought in from their summer grazing to their winter fold.
The Gods were petitioned to protect the cattle during the
long, hard winter. By now, the winter store of food had been
harvested and stored.
Samhain is also the night of the Great Sabbat
for the witches (Ban-Druidh, in Scots Gaelic). On Hallowmas,
all the witches of Scotland gather together to celebrate,
prophesy, and cast their spells. Tradition has it that on
this night, they can be seen flying through the air on broomsticks
and eggshells, or riding black cats, ravens, or horses on
their wild Hallowmas Ride. The rural people did not dare step
outside their doors for fear this night. Some say the Queen
of Witches is the Irish Morrigan (also called Morgan le Fay).
In other traditions, the Blue Faced Hag of Winter - the Calleach
- rules this night.
A good example of a Scottish Highland ghost
story (as told to me by Clan Donald member, Kenneth Wiepert),
is about Clan Donald's own witch. He told me the following
tale:
" The MacDonald's of Glen Coe have
their own witch. Her name was Sidiethe, and she was a Water
Witch with fair skin and red hair. She was always seen in
a white robe with a black cape. Sidiethe often sings along
the banks of Loche Linhe, near Glen Coe and sometimes she
is weeping. Shortly before the massacre at Glen Coe in 1692,
she was seen washing clothes at the ford of the river while
she wept. (Ed. Note: often the bean sidhe (banshee), attached
to a great household is seen washing clothes or shrouds while
she weeps, prior to a tragic death or catastrophe.)
Sightings of this ghost go back as far as
the 1100's. She is also known as the White Witch of Glen Coe.
Loche Linhe is reported to have a kelpie, as well!"
Faeries migrated from the summer hillocks
to the winter barrows on Samhain night. If you had families
that were captured by fairies that year, this was the one
night you could win them back, be snatching them off their
faerie mounts as they rode by. The famous Scottish legend,
Tam Lin, is the story of a faithful young maiden that rescued
her lover from the faeries on this fateful night.
Many of the traditions of Halloween derive
from Pagan and Druid customs. It is a time of prophesies,
of disguising oneself to avert evil, of performing rites of
protection from the dead and Otherworldly spirits. The ancient
Druid practice was to circle the tribal Samhain bonfire with
the skulls of their ancestors, who would protect the tribe
from demons that night.
In modern Scotland, children have inherited
the ancient custom of disguising themselves in costumes. These
"guisers" wear masks, or blacken their faces. They
carve turnips in the shape of skulls and place a candle within,
creating an eerie effect. The children travel from door to
door, performing or singing for their treats. When they are
not rewarded for their antics, they resort to tricks.
Those with the Second Sight (Taibhsear,
in Scots Gaelic) were often sought this night for traditional
Halloween fortune telling. These persons were invited to gatherings
to entertain guests with their arcane arts. One method was
to prick an egg and let the contents drip into a glass of
clear water. The Taibhsear could read the shapes, much like
a crystal ball, and predict the supplicant's future.
Apples were the fruit of the Other World,
a land sometimes called Avalon or Avallach - the Isle of Apples.
They are often used for magic and fortune telling. A young
woman would peel an apple all in one paring, and throw it
over her shoulder on Samhain Eve. The peeling would take the
shape of the first initial of the man she would marry. Eating
an apple in front of a mirror while combing your hair will
conjure your true love's image in the mirror. Another tradition
is "dunking for apples". Apples are placed in a
tub or barrel of water, and dunkers will try to retrieve these
apples with their teeth. Those who succeed will have good
fortune the following year.
Hazel nuts were also used in matrimonial
divination. Two groups of "Sweetheart" hazel nuts
were placed within the hearth fire; one group was marked with
the names of the village's eligible maidens, and the other
with the eligible bachelors. As the nuts popped, the names
of the pairs were romantically linked. On a more somber note,
people sometimes placed a hazelnut with their initials on
them in the hearth fire. If the nuts were missing the next
morning, the unlucky person would not survive the year. Hazel
is a sacred tree in Irish and Scottish mythology. In Ireland,
nine hazel trees grew around the Well of Segais, where the
sacred Salmon lived. This was the source of all wisdom. Using
hazel nuts at Samhain availed seers of that sacred wisdom.
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