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June: Midsummer Magic
Falling midway between Beltaine and
Lúnasa
/ Lammas is the Summer Solstice, marking
the peak of the
sun’s influence on Earth.
The spiral
of the year has expanded to its widest point and now the hours
of light are as long as they will ever be. After June 20th
or 21st , the sun’s power will begin to wane and the
days grow shorter.
The sun has
touched the northernmost point along the horizon and is about to
embark upon the long journey back south, ending at the Winter
Solstice in December.
Ancient Celebrations
The summer solstice
was an
event of tremendous importance to the early inhabitants of the
British Isles and Ireland, who built a number of magnificent
megaliths aligned to the sunrise on this day.
In southwest
England, an unbroken thread of tradition connects the
5,000-year-old temple of Stonehenge with ritual activities
through the Bronze Age, the Iron Age, and into modern times.
Northern Lights
Another great stone temple to the Summer Solstice is at
Callanish on the island of Lewis, in the Outer Hebrides.
Here, four rows of stones lead into a circle from the four
directions, forming a Celtic cross in the landscape, and the
stones form an astronomical observatory aligned to the solstice
sunrises and sunsets, as well as to the equinoxes.
Callanish is so far north, the
sky never actually darkens on a midsummer night. This is also
the case at the mysteriously beautiful stone circle, the Ring of
Brodgar, on Orkney, which was known for centuries by local
people as the Temple of the Sun, aligned as it is to the
midsummer sunrise.
The
Bonfire Dance
Up until recently, this moment of the triumph of the light, and
yet also the beginning of its decline, was celebrated with great
bonfires when the whole community gathered once again on the
hilltops to celebrate life through feasting, dance, ritual and
song,
to rejoice
in the sun at the height of its power – and perhaps also to pray
that it not die too soon.
In later years, these celebrations usually took place the night
of June 23rd, which was called St. John’s Eve, as the
Christian Church dedicated the ancient pagan festival to Saint
John the Baptist, the prophet born six months before Jesus
Christ.
Herbs of Blessing
This was an especially good time to cull magical and healing
herbs: fern seed gathered on midsummer’s eve could make one
invisible;
elderberries warded off enchantment; stonecrop, vervain, and
yarrow were hung in special places around the house for
protection against the evil eye and death.
Above all, this was the time for plucking St. John’s wort, the
golden, star-shaped flower that was first of all herbs to be
gathered on St. John's Eve. Called the ‘blessed plant’ in Wales,
it was renowned throughout the Celtic lands for bringing peace
and prosperity to the house, health to the animals and a
bountiful harvest.
It was
cast into the midsummer bonfires in Scotland, and placed over
the doors of houses and farm buildings for its protective
powers. For these magical plants were filled with the energy of
the sun at its peak, now transformed into green blessings for
the human kingdom.
A Midsummer Herbal Bouquet
1. Choose
any nine of the following sacred plants and
leaves, as availability allows:
roses
foxgloves
St. John’s wort
elderflowers
wild hop
agrimony
rue
|
fennel
clover
oak leaves
broom
meadowsweet
wormwood
hedge mustard
mugwort |
yarrow
rowan leaves
mistletoe
vervain
valerian
sage
mallow
elecampane |
2.Don’t let them come
into contact with iron.
3.Tie them with
ribbons of the following colors and symbolism
from Cornish tradition:
|
Color |
Symbolism |
|
White |
strength |
|
Green |
wisdom |
|
Blue |
love |
|
Red |
sacrifice |
|
Yellow |
the sun |
4.Give them to
friends, display on your altar or hang over the
door. |

Summer! Summer!
The milk of the calves,
And ourselves brought the summer with us,
The yellow summer,
and the white daisy,
And ourselves brought the summer with us.
-
Irish Song

The Stones of Calanais (Callanish)
Lewis, Outer Hebrides

The
Midsummer Bonfire

Midsummer Faeries

Solstice Flowers
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