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LAMMAS: The First
Harvest
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Once
upon a Lammas Night When corn rigs are bonny,
Beneath the Moon's unclouded light, I
held awhile to Annie...
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Although in the heat of a Mid-western
summer it might be difficult
to discern, the festival of
Lammas (Aug 1st) marks the end of summer and the beginning of fall. The
days now grow visibly shorter and by the time we've reached autumn's end
(Oct 31st), we will have run the gamut of temperature from the heat of
August to the cold and (sometimes) snow of November. And in the midst of
it, a perfect Mid-western autumn.
The history of Lammas is as convoluted
as all the rest of the old folk holidays. It is of course a cross-quarter
day, one of the four High Holidays or Greater Sabbats of Witchcraft,
occurring 1/4 of a year after Beltane. It's true astrological point is 15
degrees Leo, which occurs at 1:18 am CDT,
Aug 6th this year (1988), but tradition has set August 1st as the day
Lammas is typically celebrated. The celebration proper would begin on
sundown of the previous evening, our July 31st, since the Celts reckon
their days from sundown to sundown.
However, British Witches often refer
to the astrological date of Aug 6th as Old Lammas, and folklorists call it
Lammas O.S. ('Old Style'). This
date has long been considered a 'power point' of the Zodiac, and is
symbolized by the Lion, one of the 'tetramorph' figures found on the Tarot
cards, the World and the Wheel of Fortune (the other three figures being
the Bull, the Eagle, and the Spirit). Astrologers know these four figures
as the symbols of the four 'fixed' signs of the Zodiac, and these
naturally align with the four Great Sabbats of Witchcraft. Christians have
adopted the same iconography to represent the four gospel-writers.
'Lammas'
was the medieval Christian name for the holiday and it means 'loaf-mass', for this was the day
on which loaves of bread were baked from the first grain harvest and laid
on the church altars as offerings. It was a day representative of 'first
fruits' and early harvest.
In Irish Gaelic, the feast was
referred to as 'Lugnasadh', a feast to commemorate the funeral games of
the Irish sun-god Lugh. However, there is some confusion on this point.
Although at first glance, it may seem that we are celebrating the death of
the Lugh, the god of light does not really die
(mythically) until the autumnal equinox. And indeed, if we read the Irish
myths closer, we discover that it is not Lugh's death that is being
celebrated, but the funeral games which Lugh hosted to commemorate the
death of his foster- mother, Taillte. That is why the Lugnasadh
celebrations in Ireland are often called the 'Tailltean Games'.
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The time
went by with careless heed Between the late and early, With small
persuasion she agreed To see me through the barley...
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One common feature of the Games were
the 'Tailltean marriages', a rather informal marriage that lasted for only
'a year and a day' or until next Lammas. At that time, the couple could
decide to continue the arrangement if it pleased them, or to stand back to
back and walk away from one another, thus bringing the Tailltean marriage
to a formal close. Such trial marriages (obviously related to the Wiccan 'Handfasting')
were quite common even into the 1500's, although it was something one
'didn't bother the parish priest about'. Indeed, such ceremonies were
usually solemnized by a poet, bard, or shanachie (or, it may be
guessed, by a priest or priestess of the Old Religion).
Lammastide was also the traditional
time of year for craft festivals. The medieval guilds would create
elaborate displays of their wares, decorating their shops and themselves
in bright colors and ribbons, marching in parades, and performing strange,
ceremonial plays and dances for the entranced onlookers. The atmosphere
must have been quite similar to our modern-day Renaissance Festivals, such
as the one celebrated in near-by Bonner Springs, Kansas, each fall.
A ceremonial highlight of such
festivals was the 'Catherine wheel'. Although the Roman Church moved St.
Catherine's feast day all around the calender with bewildering frequency,
it's most popular date was
Lammas. (They also kept trying
to expel this much-loved saint from the ranks of the blessed because she
was mythical rather than historical, and because her worship gave rise to
the heretical sect known as the Cathari.) At any rate, a large wagon wheel
was taken to the top of a near-by hill, covered with tar, set aflame, and
ceremoniously rolled down the hill. Some mythologists see in this ritual
the remnants of a Pagan rite symbolizing the end of summer, the flaming
disk representing the sun-god in his decline. And just as the sun king has
now reached the autumn of his years, his rival or dark self has just
reached puberty.
Many commentators have bewailed the
fact that traditional Gardnerian and Alexandrian Books of Shadows say very
little about the holiday of Lammas, stating only that poles should be
ridden and a circle dance performed. This seems strange, for Lammas is a
holiday of rich mythic and cultural associations, providing endless
resources for liturgical celebration.
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Corn rigs and barley rigs,
Corn rigs are bonny!
I'll not forget that happy night
Among the rigs with Annie!
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[Verse quotations by Robert Burns, as
handed down through several Books of Shadows.] |