~ NOS GALON-MAI: (Beltaine) ~
There is a great deal of misinformation circulated about
this festival; almost as much as with Halloween. Read the following information
and then go to the links to arm yourself with true information.
There are four great festivals of the Witch's calendar.
The two greatest of these are Nos Galon Gaeof (Halloween - the beginning of winter)
and Nos Galon Mai (May Day - the beginning of summer). These two festivals are opposite
each other on the wheel of the year, and divide the year into halves. Halloween
(also called Samhain) is the Celtic New Year and is generally considered the more
important of the two, though May Day runs a close second. Indeed, in some areas
-- notably Wales -- it is considered the great holiday.
Nos Galon Mai, also called May Day, Beltainne: (pronounced
Bel-tinna, also known as Beltain, Beltane, May Day etc.), is a Sabbat celebrating
fertility and the union of the young God and the Goddess. This is a wonderful celebration
of the love between the God and Goddess. It is their sacred marriage. (This is where
the God and Goddess concieve the spring for the following year born at Imbolc.)
Celebrated with your loved one, now is the time to lay in the fertile soil and germinate
those seeds you planted. In Celtic mythology this is the beginning of summer, or
the growing time. Colours for this sabbat: Red and White (red for Her womb and white
for His semen. It's a fertility thing), and green for the background.
At this time, life is renewing itself. Birds and animals
are mating. In the fields, newly planted seeds are beginning to grow. Great fires
are lit honoring the fertility God Belenos. Some leap the fires to show the exuberance
of the season. Maypoles are erected and bright ribbons are entwined around it. The
Maypole, a phallic symbol, represents the masculine. The soft, colorful ribbons
represent the feminine. The union of the two symbolizes the union of the God and
Goddess. This is the time to fertilize your dreams with action. It is legend that
children conceived at Beltane were gifted by the gods.
Nos Galon Mai ushers in the fifth month of the modern
calendar year, the month of May. This month is named in honor of the goddess Maia,
originally a Greek mountain nymph, later identified as the most beautiful of the
Seven Sisters, the Pleiades. By Zeus, she is also the mother of Hermes, god of magic.
Maia's parents were Atlas and Pleione, a sea nymph.
The old Celtic name for May Day is Beltane (in its most
popular Anglicized form), which is derived from the Irish Gaelic 'Bealtaine' or
the Scottish Gaelic 'Bealtuinn', meaning 'Bel-fire', the fire of the Celtic god
of light (Bel, Beli or Belinus). He, in turn, may be traced to the Middle Eastern
god Baal.
Other names for May Day include: Cetsamhain ('opposite
Samhain'), Walpurgisnacht (in Germany), and Roodmas (the medieval Church's name).
This last came from Church Fathers who were hoping to shift the common people's
allegiance from the Maypole (Pagan lingham - symbol of life) to the Holy Rood (the
Cross - Roman instrument of death).
Incidentally, there is no historical justification for
calling May 1st 'Lady Day'. For hundreds of years, that title has been proper to
the Vernal Equinox (approx. March 21st), another holiday sacred to the Great Goddess.
The nontraditional use of 'Lady Day' for May 1st is quite recent (within the last
15 years), and seems to be confined to America, where it has gained widespread acceptance
among certain segments of the Craft population. This rather startling departure
from tradition would seem to indicate an unfamiliarity with European calendar customs,
as well as a lax attitude toward scholarship among too many Pagans. A simple glance
at a dictionary ('Webster's 3rd' or O.E.D.), encyclopedia ('Benet's'), or standard
mythology reference (Jobe's 'Dictionary of Mythology, Folklore & Symbols') would
confirm the correct date for Lady Day as the Vernal Equinox.
By Celtic reckoning, the actual Beltane celebration begins
on sundown of the preceding day, April 30, because the Celts always figured their
days from sundown to sundown. And sundown was the proper time for Druids to kindle
the great Bel-fires on the tops of the nearest beacon hill (such as Tara Hill, Co.
Meath, in Ireland). These 'need-fires' had healing properties, and sky-clad Witches
would jump through the flames to ensure protection.
Frequently, cattle would also be driven between two such
bon-fires (oak wood was the favorite fuel for them) and, on the morrow, they would
be taken to their summer pastures.
Other May Day customs include: walking the circuit of
one's property ('beating the bounds'), repairing fences and boundary markers, processions
of chimney-sweeps and milk maids, archery tournaments, morris dances, sword dances,
feasting, music, drinking, and maidens bathing their faces in the dew of May morning
to retain their youthful beauty.
In the words of Witchcraft writers Janet and Stewart Farrar,
the Beltane celebration was principly a time of '...unashamed human sexuality and
fertility.' Such associations include the obvious phallic symbolism of the Maypole
and riding the hobby horse. Even a seemingly innocent children's nursery rhyme,
'Ride a cock horse to Banburry Cross...' retains such memories. And the next line
'...to see a fine Lady on a white horse' is a reference to the annual ride of 'Lady
Godiva' though Coventry. Every year for nearly three centuries, a sky-clad village
maiden (elected Queen of the May) enacted this Pagan rite, until the Puritans put
an end to the custom.
The Puritans, in fact, reacted with pious horror to most
of the May Day rites, even making Maypoles illegal in 1644. They especially attempted
to suppress the 'greenwood marriages' of young men and women who spent the entire
night in the forest, staying out to greet the May sunrise, and bringing back boughs
of flowers and garlands to decorate the village the next morning.
One angry Puritan wrote that men 'doe use commonly to
runne into woodes in the night time, amongst maidens, to set bowes, in so muche,
as I have hearde of tenne maidens whiche went to set May, and nine of them came
home with childe.' And another Puritan complained that, of the girls who go into
the woods, 'not the least one of them comes home again a virgin.'
Long after the Christian form of marriage (with its insistence
on sexual monogamy) had replaced the older Pagan handfasting, the rules of strict
fidelity were always relaxed for the May Eve rites. Names such as Robin Hood, Maid
Marian, and Little John played an important par in May Day folklore, often used
as titles for the dramatis personae of the celebrations. And modern surnames such
as Robinson, Hodson, Johnson, and Godkin may attest to some distant May Eve spent
in the woods.
These wildwood antics have inspired writers such as Kipling:
Oh, do not tell the Priest our plight,
Or he would call it a sin; But we have been out in the woods all night,
A-conjuring Summer in!
And Lerner and Lowe:
It's May! It's May!
The lusty month of May!...
Those dreary vows that ev'ryone takes,
Ev'ryone breaks.
Ev'ryone makes divine mistakes!
The lusty month of May!
It is certainly no accident that Queen Guinevere's 'abduction'
by Meliagrance occurs on May 1st when she and the court have gone a-Maying, or that
the usually efficient Queen's Guard, on this occasion, rode unarmed.
Some of these customs seem virtually identical to the
old Roman feast of flowers, the Floriala, three days of unrestrained sexuality which
began at sundown April 28th and reached a crescendo on May 1st.
There are other, even older, associations with May 1st
in Celtic mythology. According to the ancient Irish 'Book of Invasions', the first
settler of Ireland, Partholan, arrived on May 1st; and it was on May 1st that the
plague came which destroyed his people. Years later, the Tuatha De Danann were conquered
by the Milesians on May Day. In Welsh myth, the perennial battle between Gwythur
and Gwyn for the love of Creudylad took place each May Day; and it was on May Eve
that Teirnyon lost his colts and found Pryderi. May Eve was also the occasion of
a fearful scream that was heard each year throughout Wales, one of the three curses
of the Coranians lifted by the skill of Lludd and Llevelys.
By the way, due to various calendrical changes down through
the centuries, the traditional date of Beltane is not the same as its astrological
date.
This date, like all astronomically determined dates, may
vary by a day or two depending on the year. However, it may be calculated easily
enough by determining the date on which the sun is at 15 degrees Taurus (usually
around May 5th). British Witches often refer to this date as Old Beltane, and folklorists
call it Beltane O.S. ('Old Style'). Some Covens prefer to celebrate on the old date
and, at the very least, it gives one options. If a Coven is operating on 'Pagan
Standard Time' and misses May 1st altogether, it can still throw a viable Beltane
bash as long as it's before May 5th. This may also be a consideration for Covens
that need to organize activities around the week-end. This date has long been considered
a 'power point' of the Zodiac, and is symbolized by the Bull, one of the 'tetramorph'
figures featured on the Tarot cards, the World and the Wheel of Fortune. (The other
three symbols are the Lion, the Eagle, and the Spirit.) Astrologers know these four
figures as the symbols of the four 'fixed' signs of the Zodiac (Taurus, Leo, Scorpio,
and Aquarius), and these naturally align with the four Great Sabbats of Witchcraft.
Christians have adopted the same iconograp-writers.
But for most, it is May 1st that is the great holiday
of flowers, Maypoles, and greenwood frivolity. It is no wonder that, as recently
as 1977, Ian Anderson could pen the following lyrics for Jethro Tull:
For the May Day is the great day,
Sung along the old straight track.
And those who ancient lines did ley
Will heed this song that calls them back.