Mara's (more or
less) Monthly Musings from Wales

May
30th, 2008
A Pause in the River of Time
Wayside shrines are an important feature of many landscapes
in countries as far apart as Japan, India and Ireland. They are
usually designed to provide a place of contemplation, a break
from the clamour and daily stresses of our goal-oriented lives,
a portal opening into silence, a pause for prayer. Modern
Western landscape planning has no time for this kind of window
onto the eternal, but there are still ancient places of
spiritual refuge for those who know where to look. Like pools in
the riverbank of Time, they offer still waters amid the
relentless onward flow of modern life.
I came across one of these a short while ago in South Wales,
only a few miles out of the busy county town of Carmarthen. I
was walking out of the village of Llansteffan down a path which
led to the sandy estuary shore of the River Towy. On a warm but
cloudy May morning, the path was bordered on one side with cool
green ferns, their fronds interspersed with the glow of
bluebells and the white stars of stitchwort. On the other side
an old grey stone wall followed the path, with a small wooden
green door set in it halfway down. There was something about the
latch on this door that invited entry. It opened easily, giving
way to stone steps that led steeply down into a tiny roofless
chapel - roofless that is, unless you count the profusion of
honeysuckle and wisteria that overhung the whole place.
A plaque on the wall identified it as the holy well of St.
Anthony – Ffynnon Shon Antwn in the Welsh. St Anthony was a
hermit who lived in the Egyptian desert for twenty years. He
returned to civilization as a man of great wisdom and inspired
others to live simple, ascetic lives in monastic communities.
Celtic Christianity was highly influenced by his example, and
the early Church was characterized by hermits and anchorites who
lived in caves and forest settings in the wilds of Ireland,
Scotland and Wales, often connected with a nearby monastery.
Unlike the medieval abbeys of the Roman church, these were
simply-fashioned huts of mud and wattle clustered around a
central oratory used for prayer and devotions. It is likely that
their way of life continued that of their predecessors, the
Druids, with whom they had much in common.
A carving of St. Anthony stared out from the wall with a
compelling gaze. Someone had placed wild flowers in his hand, in
remembrance of his affinity for nature. I knelt by the well
where white shells from the nearby beach had been cast. I found
out later that the well used to be visited by those in search of
healing, and in living memory has been used as a wishing well. A
white quartz pebble, cast into the water, was said to guarantee
your wish would be granted, so perhaps the white shells took the
place of the quartz. I responded to the invitation of a small
stone bench to sit and meditate for a while. My eyes were still
closed when, about ten minutes later, I clearly heard a voice
telling me to look up. When I obeyed, I saw the image of St.
Anthony lit with a single ray of sunlight, suffused with immense
beauty.
Foolishly, I wanted to hold on to the moment, and ran up the
steps and out of the chapel to find my husband who had the
camera. By the time I returned, even though it took less than a
minute, the light was gone. I had allowed 21st century
technology to invade this sacred space and had broken the spell.
The experience reminded me of the time I went to Nevern Church
in Pembrokeshire, famous for its high carved Celtic cross, ogham
stones and ancient yew trees. I had visited it as an awestruck
pilgrim in my younger days when I couldn’t afford a car and had
to walk through the woods and across fields, following the
tracks of centuries of pilgrims before me. Eager to see this
numinous place again now that I had moved to Wales, I decided to
drive there after a visit to the launderette in the nearby town
of Newport. But somehow, arriving with a load of crumpled
washing in the car spoilt the whole experience, turning it into
a mundane stop in the middle of a busy day, because I had not
slowed down enough to access the inner state of mind so
essential for visiting holy ground.
Wayside shrines are gateways inviting us to enter into a
timeless experience of the sacred – but only if we slow down and
open up to our own inner landscape first.
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March
20th, 2008
The Mount of Angels

It’s Spring Equinox and the national flower of Wales – the
daffodil – is in full bloom in all the banks and hedgerows,
their green stems emerging from drifts of snowdrops like
paddlers in sea-foam. The growing warmth of the sun inspired us
to make a pilgrimage down the coast to Carn Ingli, the Mount of
Angels. Here the 6th century Irish hermit, Saint Brynach,
communed with the angelic beings who give their name to this
rugged peak. Before his time, Celtic tribes built a
hilltop settlement
here, and
the remains of their hut circles
can still be seen among the
tumbled
rocks of the summit.
St. Brynach was said to live in a cave not far from Carn Ingli
among the oaks of an ancient woodland believed to be haunted by
the Fair Folk, the Welsh faery race. We clambered over rocks
covered with emerald-green moss among the ancient gnarled trees
with their bare, twisting branches. Local folklore tells of a
time when there was a Druid college in the woods. Neophytes were
initiated at Pentre Ifan, the great stone dolmen that overlooks
the woods from a nearby hillside. It was once known as the Womb
of Ceridwen, the goddess of Welsh Druidry. Although it is now
open to the elements, it was said to have once been enclosed for
rituals of death and rebirth through the Goddess herself.
As the sun went down, we stood gazing through the pillar stones
of Pentre Ifan at the darkening outline of Carn Ingli. In the
surrounding fields, lambs frisked and gamboled around their more
sedate woolly mothers. Watching the unbounded energy and
joie-de-vivre of these young creatures, it made sense that the
Spring Equinox is the time when the Sun enters Aries, the sign
of the Ram. A new cycle of growth and creativity has begun and
here, in this most ancient of places, the Old Ones and the
newborn rejoice together.
February 7th, 2008
Candlemas Bells
The snowdrop, in purest white array,
First rears her head on Candlemas Day.
My first
winter in Wales has been illumined by the sight of drifts of
white snowdrops growing all along the banks and hedgerows of the
lane on which I live. These delicate flowers are also called the
“Fair Maids of February” and the “Purification Flower” in some
parts of Britain. Snowdrops are known as Candlemas Bells for the
old rhyme says that the snowdrop first raises her head on
Candlemas Day, February 2nd.
This also happened to be the day of the first event at the
Chalice Centre, so as you can imagine, their white bells graced
the green linen altar cloth on this day when a group of twenty
women gathered to celebrate the Festival of Bride with me.
It was on account of this occasion that the day before found me
standing in my wellies by the stream that flows along the bottom
of our valley. I was gathering rushes to make a traditional
Bridget’s cross, the way I’d learned on the Isle of Iona last
summer. This was not at all easy with cold wet fingers and my
first lamentable attempt fell apart and dropped in the mud. But
it got easier, and soon I was weaving the stalks in a sunwise
motion and the ancient living pattern of the sun’s circuit
miraculously took shape in my hands. Now this living symbol of
the return of the Light is raised high above the hearth-fire,
blessing and protecting our home for the coming year.
January 6th, 2008
Wassailing the Apple Trees
2008, numerologically speaking, is a ‘1’ year (2+8=10=1) and so
it’s a year of beginnings. This is certainly true in my life as
this is the first New Year in my new home in West Wales. I
haven’t lived in my native Britain for almost 30 years, and the
phrase that describes best how I feel about my return is
“passionately rooted” – it’s a deep visceral feeling of being
home that’s almost beyond words.
I’ve been particularly looking forward to
reconnecting with the land as it goes through its seasonal
changes, and walking through the Wheel of the Year the way our
earth-based ancestors did. So I started this morning by
observing the old Twelfth Night custom of wassailing the apple
trees. Wassail comes from the Old English, was
hel, ‘Be whole,’ and is a blessing ritual for the trees so
they give a bumper crop in the coming year. There are three old
apple trees, covered with moss and lichen, and one little pear
tree on our land. Much to our amazement, the pear tree actually
gave ten fine, sweet pears this autumn, but the apples only
managed one or two fruit.
So I cooked up a “wassail bowl” on the
kitchen range consisting of cider, ginger, nutmeg and cloves.
While it was simmering, I baked a couple of apples in the oven
till they burst their skins, and scooped the white fluffy flesh
known as “lambs wool” into the brew. Then I poured it out into
an old china wassail bowl and floated some toasted bread on
top.
Then, wrapping up warm, my husband David
and I, followed by our cat Prudence who loves taking part in
outside rituals, proceeded up the garden and sang hearty
traditional blessing songs to the trees, wishing them health for
the coming growing season and lots of apples for us. We poured
some cider on their roots as an offering and draped the by-now
soggy toast on the branches to attract good spirits to them – it
will probably attract the robins, too. We tuned into the spirits
of each of the trees, and introduced ourselves as their new
stewards. Their presence was palpable, each one with its own
distinctive character and energy. I think they were pleased to
be cared for again.
I also thought about the people throughout
Wales and the West Country who performed this custom for
centuries. They greatly depended on their orchards, with whom
they had a deep and abiding relationship. Every member of the
household, even young children and the sick, attended the
ceremony, because it was considered so important to give back to
the trees in return for the bounty given so freely. This sense
of giving back instead of continually taking puts us in right
relationship with the Earth, an attitude we would do well to
cultivate today.
Links:
For our wassail invocation, see:
A Ritual for January
A Huge Collection of
Wassail Bowl Recipes
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