Thursday, 20 November 2008

Return to Ithaka

Unfortunately I was away from this blog for several reasons and I regret this having occurred. New stimuli and new interests will certainly encourage me to pursue this endeavour and bring new life to this virtual cultural emporium.

I've changed the name of the blog for its old purpose, that was defending "His Dark Materials" from the vicious attacks of ignorance and bigotry, has become temporarily obsolete although it be renewed in the near future.
The new name borrows heavily and shamelessly from the renowned Cretan myth of Theseus' victory over the Minotaur - the thread and the torch are symbols of a greater purpose guiding us in the labyrinth of our times. Only by defeating the wildness, the aggressiveness and all of the hidden violence we have in us we can venture into the open daylight of a glorious day and leave behind the threshold between the world in which Pandora's escapees teem and the universal warmth of consciousness.
Labyrinths will be an ubiquitous symbol in my treatises and thus I feel obliged to honour them with the blog's title.

In my current studies I'm exploring several universes of interest: the Kabiric rituals in the Aegean, Alexandrian Ptolemaic cults, the iconology of Selene/Luna and looking forward to a Masters Thesis which will focus on a comparison between Viking colonization in Russia and the Ukraine in the early Middle Ages and Greek colonization in the Black Sea in the Archaic and Classical periods.
Furthermore, in my own private studies which are directed towards feeding the ever-voracious demands of my fantasy books I'm concentrating on Shamanism, Archaic Greek Magic, Initiation through metal-working, alchemy, Mayan cosmogony, Sacred Trees and much, much more.

I will not separate my thoughts about the world that surrounds me by setting up a parallel blog but I will share them together with all these ramblings and flickers of inspiration.

Blessings!

Read more...

Tuesday, 1 April 2008

My Selene


Yesterday (31st of March) would have been Luna's festival in Ancient Rome (also known as Selene in ancient Greece).

She's my beloved goddess despite me not being her true Endymion.

Selene was the daughter of Hyperion and Theia (in most versions):

Hesiod, Theogony 371 ff (trans. Evelyn-White) (Greek epic C8th or C7th B.C.) :
"And Theia was subject in love to Hyperion and bare great Helios (Sun) and clear Selene (Moon) and Eos (Dawn) who shines upon all that are on earth and upon the deathless Gods who live in the wide heaven."

She had many children: the Menai (the 50 months of the 4 Olympic years), Ersa (Dew), Pandia (all-gifts) and, accordingly, the four Horai (Seasons).

According to certain sources she nurtured the terrible Nemeian Lion:

Aelian, On Animals 12. 7 (trans. Scholfield) (Greek natural history C2nd A.D.) :
"They say that the Lion of Nemea fell from the moon (selene). At any rate Epimenides [C6th B.C. poet] also has these words : `For I am sprung from fair-tressed Selene the Moon, who in a fearful shudder shook off the savage lion in Nemea, and brought him forth at the bidding of Queen Hera.'"

Yet her most famous feat was to fall in love with the mortal Endymion:

Quintus Smyrnaeus, Fall of Troy 10. 127 ff (trans. Way) (Greek epic C4th A.D.) :
"That haunted cave [on Mt Latmos] of fair-haired Nymphai where, as Endymion slept beside his kine, divine Selene watched him from on high, and slid from heaven to earth; for passionate love drew down the immortal stainless queen of night. And a memorial of her couch abides still 'neath the oaks; for mid the copses round was poured out milk of kine; and still do men marvelling behold its whiteness. Thou wouldst say far off that this was milk indeed, which is a well-spring of white water : if thou draw a little nigher, lo, the stream is fringed as though with ice, for white stone rims it round."

Selene was worshipped at Thalamai (Lakedaimonia), Elis and on the Aventine Hill in Rome as Luna.

Finally, the Homeric Hymn to Selene:

(ll. 1-13) And next, sweet voiced Muses, daughters of Zeus, well- skilled in song, tell of the long-winged Moon. From her immortal head a radiance is shown from heaven and embraces earth; and great is the beauty that ariseth from her shining light. The air, unlit before, glows with the light of her golden crown, and her rays beam clear, whensoever bright Selene having bathed her lovely body in the waters of Ocean, and donned her far-gleaming, shining team, drives on her long-maned horses at full speed, at eventime in the mid-month: then her great orbit is full and then her beams shine brightest as she increases. So she is a sure token and a sign to mortal men.

(ll. 14-16) Once the Son of Cronos was joined with her in love; and she conceived and bare a daughter Pandia, exceeding lovely amongst the deathless gods.

(ll. 17-20) Hail, white-armed goddess, bright Selene, mild, bright-tressed queen! And now I will leave you and sing the glories of men half-divine, whose deeds minstrels, the servants of the Muses, celebrate with lovely lips.

The Second Part of the Ostara article will be up relatively soon, followed by articles on Thessalian Witchcraft and The Christian Roots of our Ecological Crisis. STAY TUNED!


Read more...

Saturday, 22 March 2008

Happy Ostara! Part 1


Many of us know Easter to be one of the most renowned celebrations in the Christian world.
However, few know that its origins can be traced in the historical alcoves of Pagan spirituality.

Spring Equinox (or Vernal Equinox) is a crucial time in human consciousness and is placed in between the 19th and the 21st of March. The rebirth of Nature from the shadows of wintry gloom represented the archetype of the God’s rebirth and victory over the forces of Dark and the theme of the “harrowing of Hell”.

The latter is roughly translated into Greek (κατελθόντα εἰς τὰ κατώτατα) and Latin (descendit ad inferos) meaning the “descent of Hell” (also katabasis). This concept has been picked up by Christianity to describe Christ’s triumph over Hell and the release of its righteous captives. Yet it is clearly understood by an observation of the Moon’s cycle: the moon is not visible for three days (when the New Moon is born) and this is explained as being the Goddess’ 3-day sojourn in the underworld.
Thus Christ as a solar deity, doesn’t necessarily follow the tradition of the descent of the Lunar Goddesses in the underworld.

Yet the Vernal Equinox is certainly represented as being the victory of the God of Light over the God of Darkness. A perfect example can be found in the Welsh myth of Llew and Goronwy (http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Forum/7280/LLew.html) where Llew (the god of Light) kills Goronwy (the god of Darkness) with his spear (literally the hours of light start increasing whilst the hours of dark decrease).
The virgin Goddess (the Earth goddess) mates with the Sun God and conceives at the Vernal Equinox.

A more interesting myth is that of Cybele, the Phrygian fertility Goddess, and her companion, Attis. He was said to die and resurrect during the Vernal Equinox. Attis, born of a virgin, was a vegetation God just like Osiris, Dionysus or Orpheus and, like Nature, was reborn in this particular period.

Easter itself instead betrays its origins: Eastre (or Ostara) was a Saxon Goddess whose sacred animal was the hare, however Ostara, being a lunar Goddess, celebrates the Vernal Full Moon. This explanation arises from the writings of the Venerable Bede (De temporum ratione, XV):
Eostur-monath, qui nunc paschalis mensis interpretetur, quondam a dea illorum quae Eostre vocabatur, et cui in illo festa celebrabant, nomen habuit.

(Eostur-month, which is now interpreted as the paschal month, was formerly named after the goddess Eostre, and has given its name to the festival)

The name Eastre, betrays the root east-, thus suggesting a connection with dawn (and more specifically with the Greek Goddess Eos). In the northern hemisphere spring is the rebirth of Nature, a "dawn" of a new cycle with marks an important part of agrarian and rural societies.
For Northern people Ostara marked the beginning of the resurrection of light, of the victory of Sunna over the wolves - thus the people had to encourage this rebirth by specific rituals.

PART 2 WILL BE ADDED BY THE END OF THE WEEK

Read more...

Magic in the Ancient World

Take a look at my article on The Roman Forum about Magic in the Ancient World. It's been quoted on various websites and blogs:
What is Witchcraft?
Witchvox
About.com

The article is here

Read more...

Friday, 7 March 2008

Hypatia, Pagan Martyr


Alexandria, March 415 AD. The city has mixed feelings concerning the vicious lynching and subsequent death of one its highest (if not) highest representatives: Hypatia.

Her crime: being a Pagan in the growing turmoil of Christian persecutions, more specifically, a representative of the prestigious Neo-Platonist School founded by the philosopher Plotinus.

She was described by Socrates Scholasticus in the following way:
There was a woman at Alexandria named Hypatia, daughter of the philosopher Theon, who made such attainments in literature and science, as to far surpass all the philosophers of her own time. Having succeeded to the school of Plato and Plotinus, she explained the principles of philosophy to her auditors, many of whom came from a distance to receive her instructions. On account of the self-possession and ease of manner, which she had acquired in consequence of the cultivation of her mind, she not unfrequently appeared in public in presence of the magistrates. Neither did she feel abashed in going to an assembly of men. For all men on account of her extraordinary dignity and virtue admired her the more.

An influential member of the community (and a close friend of Orestes, Prefect of the city) Hypatia was renowned for her rhetorical skills, her philosophy and her beauty.
A peculiar anecdote describes her reply to a young man who was much in love with her, she showed him her menstrual rags and said "Is this what you love?" (Do you love what perishes?) (this anecdote was told by Damascius, the "last of the Neoplatonists").

We have lost most of her works although we do know that she edited the third book of her father's commentary on Ptolemy's Mathematical Treatise and charted celestial bodies (with astrolabes), hydroscopes and hydrometers (to measure the density of liquids).

Yet she lived in troubled times; times that could not spare the lives and thoughts of the intellectual pagan élite.
Intolerance thrived - in 380 Theodosius made Christianity the official state religion of the Roman Empire which became enforced in Egypt around 392. Christians became persecutors (by far worse than the persecutors they had suffered in the early days), the property of Pagans was confiscated, temples were closed and destroyed and in Lower Egypt sacred texts were destroyed (whilst the Nag Hammadi texts were being hidden in Upper Egypt).
In Alexandria the intolerant Pope of Alexandria, Theophilus, (also a Saint of the Coptic Church) was responsible for the crisis that brought upon the street wars between Pagans and Christians and the destruction of the Serapaeum (the temple of Serapis, the Hellenistic-Egyptian God).

Responsible for Hypatia's vicious death (which will follow below) was the action of the bishop Cyril (nephew of Theophilus) openly detested a powerful pagan woman (thanks to the works of people like St. Augustine, the image of women was polluted) like Hypatia.
Her death was barbarous and the consequence of the distorted and intolerant minds of the Christian Mob:
Yet even she fell a victim to the political jealousy which at that time prevailed. For as she had frequent interviews with Orestes, it was calumniously reported among the Christian populace, that it was she who prevented Orestes from being reconciled to the bishop. Some of them therefore, hurried away by a fierce and bigoted zeal, whose ringleader was a reader named Peter, waylaid her returning home, and dragging her from her carriage, they took her to the church called Caesareum, where they completely stripped her, and then murdered her by scraping her skin off with tiles and bits of shell. After tearing her body in pieces, they took her mangled limbs to a place called Cinaron, and there burnt them.

Hypatia's legacy never truly died (she was admired by Voltaire, Vincenzo Monti, John Toland and also has a lunar crater to her name) but her death was but one of many, perpetrated by the hand of intolerance and religious folly.

Read more...

Sunday, 24 February 2008

On the Marionette Theatre by Heinrich von Kleist


One of the texts that inspired Pullmann's Dark Materials:

One evening in the winter of 1801 I met an old friend in a public park. He had recently been appointed principal dancer at the local theatre and was enjoying immense popularity with the audiences. I told him I had been surprised to see him more than once at the marionette theatre which had been put up in the market-place to entertain the public with dramatic burlesques interspersed with song and dance. He assured me that the mute gestures of these puppets gave him much satisfaction and told me bluntly that any dancer who wished to perfect his art could learn a lot from them.

From the way he said this I could see it wasn't something which had just come into his mind, so I sat down to question him more closely about his reasons for this remarkable assertion.

He asked me if I hadn't in fact found some of the dance movements of the puppets (and particularly of the smaller ones) very graceful. This I couldn't deny. A group of four peasants dancing the rondo in quick time couldn't have been painted more delicately by Teniers.

I inquired about the mechanism of these figures. I wanted to know how it is possible, without having a maze of strings attached to one's fingers, to move the separate limbs and extremities in the rhythm of the dance. His answer was that I must not imagine each limb as being individually positioned and moved by the operator in the various phases of the dance. Each movement, he told me, has its centre of gravity; it is enough to control this within the puppet. The limbs, which are only pendulums, then follow mechanically of their own accord, without further help. He added that this movement is very simple. When the centre of gravity is moved in a straight line, the limbs describe curves. Often shaken in a purely haphazard way, the puppet falls into a kind of rhythmic movement which resembles dance.

This observation seemed to me to throw some light at last on the enjoyment he said he got from the marionette theatre, but I was far from guessing the inferences he would draw from it later.

I asked him if he thought the operator who controls these puppets should himself be a dancer or at least have some idea of beauty in the dance. He replied that if a job is technically easy it doesn't follow that it can be done entirely without sensitivity. The line the centre of gravity has to follow is indeed very simple, and in most cases, he believed, straight. When it is curved, the law of its curvature seems to be at the least of the first and at the most of the second order. Even in the latter case the line is only elliptical, a form of movement natural to the human body because of the joints, so this hardly demands any great skill from the operator. But, seen from another point of view, this line could be something very mysterious. It is nothing other than the path taken by the soul of the dancer. He doubted if this could be found unless the operator can transpose himself into the centre of gravity of the marionette. In other words, the operator dances.

I said the operator's part in the business had been represented to me as something which can be done entirely without feeling - rather like turning the handle of a barrel-organ.

"Not at all", he said. "In fact, there's a subtle relationship between the movements of his fingers and the movements of the puppets attached to them, something like the relationship between numbers and their logarithms or between asymptote and hyperbola." Yet he did believe this last trace of human volition could be removed from the marionettes and their dance transferred entirely to the realm of mechanical forces, even produced, as I had suggested, by turning a handle.

I told him I was astonished at the attention he was paying to this vulgar species of an art form. It wasn't just that he thought it capable of loftier development; he seemed to be working to this end himself.

He smiled. He said he was confident that, if he could get a craftsman to construct a marionette to the specifications he had in mind, he could perform a dance with it which neither he nor any other skilled dancer of his time, not even Madame Vestris herself, could equal.

"Have you heard", he asked, as I looked down in silence, "of those artificial legs made by English craftsmen for people who have been unfortunate enough to lose their own limbs?"

I said I hadn't. I had never seen anything of this kind.

"I'm sorry to hear that", he said, "because when I tell you these people dance with them, I'm almost afraid you won't believe me. What am I saying... dance? The range of their movements is in fact limited, but those they can perform they execute with a certainty and ease and grace which must astound the thoughtful observer."

I said with a laugh that of course he had now found his man. The craftsman who could make such remarkable limbs could surely build a complete marionette for him, to his specifications.

"And what", I asked, as he was looking down in some perplexity, "are the requirements you think of presenting to the ingenuity of this man?"

"Nothing that isn't to be found in these puppets we see here," he replied: "proportion, flexibility, lightness .... but all to a higher degree. And especially a more natural arrangement of the centres of gravity."

"And what is the advantage your puppets would have over living dancers?"

"The advantage? First of all a negative one, my friend: it would never be guilty of affectation. For affectation is seen, as you know, when the soul, or moving force, appears at some point other than the centre of gravity of the movement. Because the operator controls with his wire or thread only this centre, the attached limbs are just what they should be.… lifeless, pure pendulums, governed only by the law of gravity. This is an excellent quality. You'll look for it in vain in most of our dancers."

"Just look at that girl who dances Daphne", he went on. "Pursued by Apollo, she turns to look at him. At this moment her soul appears to be in the small of her back. As she bends, she look as if she's going to break, like a naiad after the school of Bernini. Or take that young fellow who dances Paris when he's standing among the three goddesses and offering the apple to Venus. His soul is in fact located (and it's a frightful thing to see) in his elbow."

" Misconceptions like this are unavoidable," he said, " now that we've eaten of the tree of knowledge. But Paradise is locked and bolted, and the cherubim stands behind us. We have to go on and make the journey round the world to see if it is perhaps open somewhere at the back."

This made me laugh. Certainly, I thought, the human spirit can't be in error when it is non-existent. I could see that he had more to say, so I begged him to go on.

"In addition", he said, "these puppets have the advantage of being for all practical purposes weightless. They are not afflicted with the inertia of matter, the property most resistant to dance. The force which raises them into the air is greater than the one which draws them to the ground. What would our good Miss G. give to be sixty pounds lighter or to have a weight of this size as a counterbalance when she is performing her entrechats and pirouettes? Puppets need the ground only to glance against lightly, like elves, and through this momentary check to renew the swing of their limbs. We humans must have it to rest on, to recover from the effort of the dance. This moment of rest is clearly no part of the dance. The best we can do is make it as inconspicuous as possible..."

My reply was that, no matter how cleverly he might present his paradoxes, he would never make me believe a mechanical puppet can be more graceful than a living human body. He countered this by saying that, where grace is concerned, it is impossible for man to come anywhere near a puppet. Only a god can equal inanimate matter in this respect. This is the point where the two ends of the circular world meet.

I was absolutely astonished. I didn't know what to say to such extraordinary assertions.

It seemed, he said, as he took a pinch of snuff, that I hadn't read the third chapter of the book of Genesis with sufficient attention. If a man wasn't familiar with that initial period of all human development, it would be difficult to have a fruitful discussion with him about later developments and even more difficult to talk about the ultimate situation.

I told him I was well aware how consciousness can disturb natural grace. A young acquaintance of mine had as it were lost his innocence before my very eyes, and all because of a chance remark. He had never found his way back to that Paradise of innocence, in spite of all conceivable efforts. "But what inferences", I added, "can you draw from that?"

He asked me what incident I had in mind.

"About three years ago", I said, "I was at the baths with a young man who was then remarkably graceful. He was about fifteen, and only faintly could one see the first traces of vanity, a product of the favours shown him by women. It happened that we had recently seen in Paris the figure of the boy pulling a thorn out of his foot. The cast of the statue is well known; you see it in most German collections. My friend looked into a tall mirror just as he was lifting his foot to a stool to dry it, and he was reminded of the statue. He smiled and told me of his discovery. As a matter of fact, I'd noticed it too, at the same moment, but... I don't know if it was to test the quality of his apparent grace or to provide a salutary counter to his vanity... I laughed and said he must be imagining things. He blushed. He lifted his foot a second time, to show me, but the effort was a failure, as anybody could have foreseen. He tried it again a third time, a fourth time, he must have lifted his foot ten times, but it was in vain. He was quite unable to reproduce the same movement. What am I saying? The movements he made were so comical that I was hard put to it not to laugh.

From that day, from that very moment, an extraordinary change came over this boy. He began to spend whole days before the mirror. His attractions slipped away from him, one after the other. An invisible and incomprehensible power seemed to settle like a steel net over the free play of his gestures. A year later nothing remained of the lovely grace which had given pleasure to all who looked at him. I can tell you of a man, still alive, who was a witness to this strange and unfortunate event. He can confirm it, word for word, just as I've described it."

"In this connection", said my friend warmly, "I must tell you another story. You'll easily see how it fits in here. When I was on my way to Russia, I spent some time on the estate of a Baltic nobleman whose sons had a passion for fencing. The elder, in particular, who had just come down from the university, thought he was a bit of an expert. One morning, when I was in his room, he offered me a rapier. I accepted his challenge but, as it turned out, I had the better of him. It made him angry, and this increased his confusion. Nearly every thrust I made found its mark. At last his rapier flew into the corner of the room. As he picked it up he said, half in anger and half in jest, that he had met his master but that there is a master for everyone and everything - and now he proposed to lead me to mine. The brothers laughed loudly at this and shouted: "Come on, down to the shed!" They took me by the hand and led me outside to make the acquaintance of a bear which their father was rearing on the farm.

"I was astounded to see the bear standing upright on his hind legs, his back against the post to which he was chained, his right paw raised ready for battle. He looked me straight in the eye. This was his fighting posture. I wasn't sure if I was dreaming, seeing such an opponent. They urged me to attack. "See if you can hit him!" they shouted. As I had now recovered somewhat from my astonishment I fell on him with my rapier. The bear made a slight movement with his paw and parried my thrust. I feinted, to deceive him. The bear did not move. I attacked again, this time with all the skill I could muster. I know I would certainly have thrust my way through to a human breast, but the bear made a slight movement with his paw and parried my thrust. By now I was almost in the same state as the elder brother had been: the bear's utter seriousness robbed me of my composure. Thrusts and feints followed thick and fast, the sweat poured off me, but in vain. It wasn't merely that he parried my thrusts like the finest fencer in the world; when I feinted to deceive him he made no move at all. No human fencer could equal his perception in this respect. He stood upright, his paw raised ready for battle, his eye fixed on mine as if he could read my soul there, and when my thrusts were not meant seriously he did not move. Do you believe this story?"

"Absolutely", I said with joyful approval. "I'd believe it from a stranger, it's so probable. Why shouldn't I believe it from you?"

"Now, my excellent friend," said my companion, "you are in possession of all you need to follow my argument. We see that in the organic world, as thought grows dimmer and weaker, grace emerges more brilliantly and decisively. But just as a section drawn through two lines suddenly reappears on the other side after passing through infinity, or as the image in a concave mirror turns up again right in front of us after dwindling into the distance, so grace itself returns when knowledge has as it were gone through an infinity. Grace appears most purely in that human form which either has no consciousness or an infinite consciousness. That is, in the puppet or in the god."

"Does that mean", I said in some bewilderment, "that we must eat again of the tree of knowledge in order to return to the state of innocence?"

"Of course", he said, "but that's the final chapter in the history of the world."

Read more...

Wednesday, 23 January 2008

Here you can find the article I wrote on the controversy. It has been published on the English Rome-based magazine The Roman Forum (January Issue):

http://www.theromanforum.com/articolo.asp?ID=597

The Roman Forum serves the international community in Rome and has an approx. 30,000 readers a month. I hope I've convinced many to set aside the doubts and fears and enjoy almost 2 hours of pure entertainment.

Let me know what you think about it!

Read more...

  © Blogger template The Professional Template by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP