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Windmills Tilted, Scared Cows Butchered, Lies Skewered on the Lance of Reality ... or something to that effect.
Windmills Tilted, Scared Cows Butchered, Lies Skewered on the Lance of Reality ... or something to that effect.
Sunday, December 22, 2013
Xmas Countdown Xmas Stories
Mistletoe was highly sacred to the druids. As well as being a plant of the upper
world, it symbolized the green soul of the bare winter tree on which it
grew and the sacred tree (bile) was in turn representative of vegetal
growth and fertility, desirable powers to agrarian societies. A symbolic
branch of such a tree was borne by kings, and perhaps by druids, who
used oak branches in their rites. King
and tree would be connected, the king's life being bound up with that of
the tree, and perhaps at one time both perished together. But as kings
were represented by a substitute, so the sacred tree, regarded as too
sacred to be cut down, may also have had its succedaneum. The Irish bile
or sacred tree, connected with the kings, must not be touched by any
impious hand, and it was sacrilege to cut it down. Probably before
cutting down the tree a branch or something growing upon it, e.g.
mistletoe, had to be cut, or the king's symbolic branch secured before
he could be slain. This may explain Pliny's account of the mistletoe
rite. The mistletoe or branch was the soul of the tree, and also
contained the life of the divine representative. It must be plucked
before the tree could be cut down or the victim slain. Hypothetical as
this may be, Pliny's account is incomplete, or he is relating something
of which all the details were not known to him. The rite must have had
some other purpose than that of the magico-medical use of the mistletoe
which he describes, and though he says nothing of cutting down the tree
or slaying a human victim, it is not unlikely that, as human sacrifice
had been prohibited in his time, the oxen which were slain during the
rite took the place of the latter. Later romantic tales suggest that,
before slaying some personage, the mythico-romantic survivor of a divine
priest or king, a branch carried by him had to be captured by his
assailant, or plucked from the tree which he defended. These may point
to an old belief in tree and king as divine representatives, and to a
ritual like that associated with the Priest of Nemi. The divine tree
became the mystic tree of Elysium, with gold and silver branches and marvelous fruits. Armed with such a branch, the gift of one of its
people, mortals might penetrate unhindered to the divine land. Perhaps
they may be regarded as romantic forms of the old divine kings with the
branch of the divine tree.
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