home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- BELTANE
-
- This a Pagan Ritual file, of interest to Neo-Pagans, specifically
- Wiccan based religions.
-
-
- Equipment- see standard list
-
- Set up a candle in each of the four cardinal directions. Lay
- the rest of the tools on the altar cloth or near it. The altar can be
- on the ground, a table, a rock or a stump. The altar should be in the
- center or just north of center of the Circle. Light the six candles
- and the incense, start the music and begin the ritual.
-
- The Beltane ritual should start before sunrise or in the
- evening of April 30th. This is to welcome the sun in and to make
- effective use of the bonfire. The party or the ritual should finish
- some time after sunrise.
-
-
- THE RITUAL
-
- Facing North, the High Priest and Priestess kneel in front of the
- altar with him to her right. She puts the bowl of water on the altar,
- places the point of her athame in it and says:
-
- "I exorcise thee, O Creature of Water, that thou cast out from
- thee all impurities and uncleanliness of the world of
- phantasm; in the names of Cernunnos and Aradia"
-
- She then puts down her athame and holds up the bowl of water in both
- hands. The High Priest puts the bowl of salt on the altar, puts his
- athame in the salt and says:
-
- "Blessings be upon this Creature of Salt; let all malignity
- and hindrance be cast forth hencefrom, and let all good enter
- herein; wherefore so I bless thee,that thou mayest aid me, in
- the names of Cernunnos and Aradia."
-
- He then puts down his athame and pours the salt into the bowl of water
- the High Priestess is holding. The High Priest then stands with the
- rest of the Coven outside the Circle. The High Priestess then draws
- the Circle with the sword, leaving a gap in the Northeast section.
- While drawing the Circle, she should visualize the power flowing into
- the Circle from off the end of the sword. She draws the Circle in a
- East to North or deosil or clockwise direction. She says:
-
- "I conjure thee, O Circle of Power, that thou beest a meeting
- place of love and joy and truth; a shield against all
- wickedness and evil; a boundary between men and the realms of
- the Mighty Ones; a rampart and protection that shall preserve
- and contain the power that we shall raise within thee.
- Wherefore do I bless thee and consecrate thee, in the names
- of Cernunnos and Aradia."
-
- The High Priestess lays down the sword and admits the High Priest with
- a kiss while spinning him deosil and whispers:
-
- "Blessed Be"
-
- He then admits a women the same way. Alternate-male-female-male. Then
- the High Priestess finishes closing the Circle with the sword. She
- then names three witches to help strengthen the Circle. The first
- witch carries the bowl of consecrated water from East to East going
- deosil, sprinkling the perimeter as she/he goes. They then sprinkle
- each member in turn. If the witch is male, he sprinkles the High
- Priestess last who then sprinkles him. If female she sprinkles the
- High Priest last, who then sprinkles her. The bowl is replaced on the
- altar. The second witch takes the incense burner around the perimeter
- and the third takes one of the altar candles. While going around the
- perimeter, each person says:
-
- "Black spirits and white,
- Red spirits and grey,
- Harken to the rune I say.
- Four points of the Circle, weave the spell,
- East, South, West, North, your tale tell.
- East is for break of day,
- South is white for the noontide hour,
- In the West is twilight grey,
- And North is black, for the place of power.
- Three times round the Circle's cast.
- Great ones, spirits from the past,
- Witness it and guard it fast."
-
- All the Coven pickup their athames and face the East with the High
- Priest and Priestess in front, him on her right. The High Priestess
- says:
-
- "Ye Lords of the Watchtowers of the East, ye Lords of Air; I
- do summon, stir, and call you up to witness our rites and to
- guard the Circle."
-
- As she speaks she draws the Invoking Pentagram of Earth in the air
- with her athame:
- 1,6
- 4 3
- 2 7 5
-
- The High Priest and the rest of the Coven copy her movements with
- their athames. The High Priestess turns and faces the South and
- repeats the summoning:
-
- "Ye Lords of the Watchtowers of the South, ye Lords of Fire; I
- do summon, stir and call you up, to witness our rites and to
- guard the Circle."
-
- She does the same pentagram and then faces West and says:
-
- "Ye Lords of the Watchtowers of the West, ye Lords of Water,
- ye Lords of Death and Initiation; I do summon, stir, and call
- you up, to witness our rites and to guard the Circle."
-
- She faces North with rest of the Coven and says:
-
- "Ye Lords of the Watchtowers of the North, ye Lords of Earth;
- Boreas, thou gentle guardian of the Northern Portals; thou
- powerful God and gentle Goddess; we do summon, stir and call
- you up, to witness our rites and to guard the Circle."
-
- The Circle is completed and sealed. If anyone needs to leave, a gate
- must be made. Using the sword, draw out part of the Circle with a
- widdershins or counter-clockwise stroke. Immediately reseal it and
- then repeat the opening and closing when the person returns.
-
- In this part of the ritual the Goddess becomes incarnate in the High
- Priestess. The High Priestess stands in front of the altar with her
- back to it. She holds the wand in her right hand and the scrounge in
- her left. She crosses her wrists and crosses the wand and scrounge
- above them while holding them close to her breast. The High Priest
- stands in front of her and says:
-
- "Diana, queen of night
- In all your beauty bright,
- Shine on us here,
- And with your silver beam
- Unlock the gates of dream;
- Rise bright and clear.
- On Earth and sky and sea,
- Your magic mystery
- Its spell shall cast,
- Wherever leaf may grow,
- Wherever tide may flow,
- Till all be past.
- O secret queen of power,
- At this enchanted hour
- We ask your boon.
- May fortune's favor fall
- Upon true witches all,
- O Lady Moon!"
-
- The High Priest kneels before the High Priestess and gives her the
- Five Fold Kiss; that is, he kisses her on both feet, both knees, womb,
- both breasts, and the lips, starting with the right of each pair. He
- says, as he does this:
-
- Blessed be thy feet, that have brought thee in these ways.
- Blessed be thy knees, that shall kneel at the sacred altar.
- Blessed be thy womb, without which we would not be.
- Blessed be thy breasts, formed in beauty.
- Blessed be thy lips, that shall utter the Sacred Names."
-
- For the kiss on the lips, they embrace, length to length, with their
- feet touching each others. When he reaches the womb, she spreads her
- arms wide, and the same after the kiss on the lips. The High Priest
- kneels again and invokes:
-
- "I invoke thee and call upon thee, Mighty Mother of us all,
- bringer of all fruitfulness; by seed and root, by bud and
- stem, by leaf and flower and fruit, by life and love do I
- invoke thee to descend upon the body of this thy servant and
- priestess."
-
- During this invocation he touches her with his right forefinger on her
- right breast, left breast, and womb, repeats the set and finally the
- right breast. Still kneeling, he spreads his arms out and down, with
- the palms forward and says:
-
- "Hail Aradia! From the Amalthean Horn
- Pour forth thy store of love;
- I lowly bend Before thee, I adore thee to the end,
- With loving sacrifice thy shrine adore.
- Thy foot is to my lip (he kisses her right foot)
- my prayer up borne Upon the rising incense smoke;
- then spend Thine ancient love, O Mighty One, descend
- To aid me, who without thee
- am forlorn."
-
- The High Priest stands up and steps backwards. The High Priestess
- draws the Invoking Pentagram of Earth in the air with the wand and
- says:
-
- "Of the Mother darksome and divine
- Mine the scrounge, and mine the kiss;
- The five point star of love and bliss
- Here I charge you in this sign."
-
- The High Priest says:
-
- "Listen to the words of the Great Mother; she who of old was
- also called among man Artemis, Astarte, Athene, Dione,
- Melusine, Aphrodite, Cerriwen, Dana, Arianhod, Isis and by
- many other names."
-
- The High Priestess, who should be in a trance, says as the Goddess:
-
- "Whenever you have need of anything, once in a month, and
- better it be when the Moon is full, then shall ye assemble in
- some secret place and adore the spirit of me, who am Queen of
- all witches. There shall ye assemble, ye who are fain to
- learn all sorcery, yet have not won its deepest secrets; to
- these will I teach things that are yet unknown. And ye shall
- be free from slavery; and as a sign that ye be really free,
- ye shall be naked in your rites; dance, sing, feast, make
- music and love, all in my praise. For mine is the ecstasy of
- the spirit, and mine also is joy on earth; for my law is love
- unto all beings. Keep pure your highest ideal; strive ever
- towards it; let naught stop you or turn you aside. For mine
- is the cup of the wine of life, and the Cauldron of
- Cerridwen, which is the Holy Grail of Immortality. I am the
- gracious Goddess, who gives the gift of joy unto the heart of
- man. Upon Earth, I give the knowledge of the spirit eternal;
- and beyond death, I give peace and freedom, and reunion with
- those who have gone before. Nor do I demand sacrifice; for
- behold I am the Mother of all living things, and my love is
- poured out upon the earth. I who am the white Moon among the
- stars, and the mystery of the waters, and the desire of the
- heart of man, call unto thy soul. Arise, and come unto me.
- For I am the soul of nature, who gives life to the universe.
- From me all things proceed, and unto me all things must
- return; and before my face, beloved of Gods and men, let
- thine innermost divine self be enfolded in the rapture of the
- infinite. Let my worship be within the heart that rejoiceth;
- for behold, all acts of love and pleasure are my rituals. And
- therefore let there be beauty and strength, power and
- compassion, honor and humility, mirth and reverence within
- you. And thou who seekest to seek for me, know thy seeking
- and yearning shall avail thee not unless thou knowest the
- mystery; and if that which thou seekest thou findest not
- within thee,thou will never find it without thee. For behold,
- I have been with thee from the beginning; and I am that which
- is attained at the end of desire."
-
- This declamation can be said by the High Priestess, the High Priest or the
- Coven as a whole.
-
- "Hear now the words of the witches,
- The secrets we hid in the night,
- When dark was our destiny's pathway,
- That now we bring forth into the light.
- Mysterious Water and Fire,
- The Earth and the wideranging Air,
- By hidden quintessence we know them,
- And will keep silent and dare.
- The birth and rebirth of all nature,
- The passing of winter and spring,
- We share with the life universal,
- Rejoice in the magical ring.
- Four times in the year the Great Sabbat Returns,
- and the witches are seen
- At Lammas and Candlemas dancing,
- On May Eve and old Hallowe'en.
- When day time and night time are equal,
- When sun is at greatest and least,
- The four lesser Sabbats are summoned,
- Again witches gather in feast.
- Thirteen silver moons in a year are,
- Thirteen is the Coven's array.
- Thirteen times at Esbat make merry,
- For each golden year and a day.
- The power was passed down the ages,
- Each time between woman and man,
- Each century unto the other,
- Ere time and ages began.
- When drawn is the magical circle,
- By sword or athame of power,
- It's compass between the two worlds lies,
- In the land of shades that hour.
- This world has no right to know it,
- And the world beyond will tell naught.
- The oldest of gods are invoked there,
- The Great Work of Magic is wrought.
- For two are the mystical pillars,
- That stand at the gate of the shrine,
- And two are the powers of nature,
- The forms and the forces of the divine.
- The dark and the light in succession,
- The opposites each unto each,
- Shown forth as a God and a Goddess:
- This did our ancestors teach.
- By night he's the wild wind's rider,
- The Horn'd One, the Lord of the Shades.
- By day he's the King of the Woodland,
- The dweller in green forest glades.
- She is youthful or old as she pleases,
- She sails the torn clouds in her barque,
- The bright silver lady of midnight,
- The crone who weaves spells in the dark.
- The master and mistress of magic,
- They dwell in the deeps of the main,
- Immortal and ever renewing,
- With power to free or to bind.
- So drink the good wine to the Old Gods,
- And dance and make love in their praise,
- Till Elphames's fair land shall receive us
- In peace at the end of our days.
- And Do What Thou Wilt
- shall be the challenge,
- So be it in love that harms none,
- For this is the only commandment,
- By magic of old, be it done!
- Eight words the Witches Creed fulfill:
- If It Harms None, Do What Thou Will!
-
-
- The High Priest faces the Coven, raises his arms wide and says:
- "Bagabi lacha bachabe Lamac cahi achababe
- Karellyos
- Lamac lamac
- bachalyas
- Cabahag sabalyos
- Baryolos
- Lagaz atha cabyolas
- Samahac atha
- famolas
- Hurrahya!"
-
- The High Priestess and the Coven repeat:
- "Hurrahya!"
-
- The High Priest and High Priestess face the altar. The High Priest
- continues:
-
- "Great God Cernunnos, return to Earth again! Come to my call
- and show thy self to men. Shepherd of Goats, upon the wild
- hill's way, Lead thy lost flocks from darkness unto day.
- Forgotten are the ways of sleep and night Men seek for them,
- whose eyes have lost the light. Open the door of dreams,
- whereby man come to thee. Shepherd of Goats, O answer unto
- me!"
-
-
- The High Priest and the rest of the Coven then say:
- "Akhera goittiakhera beitti!"
-
- And lower their hands on the second phrase.
-
- This is a ring dance as usual. This can be replaced or others added as
- desired. Everyone should take part. Use what music you feel
- comfortable with.
-
- Walpurgis Night, the time is right,
- The ancient powers awake.
- So dance and sing, around the ring,
- And Beltane magic make.
-
- Walpurgis Night, Walpurgis Night,
- Upon the eve of May,
- We'll merry meet, and summer greet,
- Forever and a day.
-
- New life we see, in flower and in tree,
- And summer comes again.
- Be free and fair, like earth and air,
- The sunshine and the rain.
-
- Walpurgis Night, Walpurgis Night,
- Upon the eve of May,
- We'll merry meet, and summer greet,
- Forever and a day.
-
- As magic fire be our desire
- To tread the pagan way,
- And our true will find and fulfill,
- As dawns a brighter day.
-
- Walpurgis Night, Walpurgis Night,
- Upon the eve of May,
- We'll merry meet, and summer greet,
- Forever and a day.
-
- The pagan powers this night be ours,
- Let all the world be free,
- And sorrow cast into the past,
- And future blessed be!
-
- Walpurgis Night, Walpurgis Night,
- Upon the eve of May,
- We'll merry meet, and summer greet,
- Forever and a day.
-
-
- The Coven spread themselves out around the Circle. They start a soft
- rhythmic clapping. The High Priestess says:
-
- "Now it is time for the Oak King to impregnate Our Lady. No
- longer will she be the Virgin Huntress and Maiden. She is now
- to be Hectate, the Queen of Elphame. But first she must catch
- him."
-
-
- This song is from Robert Graves "White Goddess". It is an old Scottish
- Craft song. In it, the High Priest turns into a variety of animals and
- the High Priestess chases him. Starting with the High Priest and
- Priestess, then followed by the other couples in the Coven, the men
- are chased by the women. The ladies use a scarf to signify the
- capture at the end of the song. The dancers should try to imitate the
- animals they are playing. The dance and the tune should be slow. After
- all the couples have done so, the High Priestess and Priest repeat it.
-
- High Priest:
- "O, I shall go into a hare
- With sorrow and sighing and mickle care,
- And I shall go in the Devil's name
- Aye, till I be fetched hame."
-
- High Priestess:
- "Hare, take heed of a bitch greyhound
- Will harry thee all these fells around,
- For here come I in Our Lady's name
- All but to fetch thee hame."
- Coven:
- "Cunning and art he did not lack
- But aye her whistle would fetch him back."
-
- High Priest:
- "Yet I shall go into a trout
- With sorrow and sighing and mickle doubt,
- And show thee many a merry game
- Ere that I be fetched hame."
-
- High Priestess:
- "Trout take heed of an otter lank
- Will harry thee close from bank to bank,
- For here come I in Our Lady's name
- All but for to fetch thee hame."
-
- Coven:
- "Cunning and art he did not lack
- But aye her whistle would fetch him back."
-
- High Priest:
- "Yet I shall go into a bee
- With mickle horror and dread of thee,
- And flit to hive in the Devil's name
- Ere that I be fetched hame."
-
- High Priestess:
- "Bee, take heed of a swallow hen
- Will harry thee close, both butt and ben,
- For here come I in Our Lady's name
- All but to fetch thee hame."
-
- Coven:
- "Cunning and art he did not lack
- But aye her whistle would fetch him back."
-
- High Priest:
- "Yet I shall go into a mouse
- And haste me unto the miller's house,
- There in his corn to have good game
- Ere that I be fetched hame."
-
- High Priestess:
- "Mouse take heed of a white tib-cat
- That never was balked of a mouse or a rat,
- For I'll crack thy bones in Our Lady's name:
- Thus shall thee be fetched hame."
-
- Coven:
- "Cunning and art he did not lack
- But aye her whistle would fetch him back."
-
- The High Priestess finally catches the High Priest at the last
- refrain. She drapes a scarf over his neck to signify her catching him.
- The Maiden and the Coven say:
- "The Queen of Elphame has caught her Son who is also her
- Consort. They must mate so that the Earth may bear it's
- fruits and that man and animal may live. "
-
- The High Priest and High Priestess, and the rest of the couples in the
- Coven, kiss with vigour. The men should wilt and fade back to the edge
- of the Circle. The women gather around the unlit bonfire or the
- cauldron with the candle in it. The High Priestess says:
-
- "The OakKing is dead. He has died of his love for the Lady
- that the Earth may live. So has it been for year after year,
- since time began. But the OakKing, the God of the Waxing
- year, must live so the crops in the Earth can come forth. "
-
- The Coven shouts:
- "Kindle the Beltane fire. May the Oak King live again. May the
- Earth bring forth her fruits, may the animals bear their
- young and the land be fruitful again."
-
- The High Priestess lights the bonfire using a taper lit from the altar
- candle. She then says:
- "Come back to us, Oak King, that the land may be fruitful."
-
- The men gather around the fire, next to their partners, and the say in
- unison:
- "I am the stag of seven tines;
- I am a wide flood on the plain;
- I am a wind on the deep waters;
- I am a shining tear of the sun;
- I am a hawk on a cliff;
- I am fair among flowers;
- I am a god who sets the head afire with smoke."
-
- The High Priestess and High Priest lead a ring dance around the
- bonfire. Start out with "A Tree Song" from Rudyard Kipling's "Weland's
- Sword" story in "Puck of Pook's Hill". The dance should be joyful.
-
- Or he would call it sin;
- But we shall be out in the woods all night,
- Aconjuring summer in!
- And we bring you news by word of mouth
-
- For women, cattle and corn
- Now is the sun come up from the South
- With Oak, and Ash and Thorn!"
-
- Continue the dance with this song and/or any others that sound
- appropriate. This chant goes to the tune of the old folksong, "The
- Lincolnshire Poacher":
-
- Come join the dance, that doth entrance,
- And tread the circle round.
- Be of good cheer, that gather here,
- Upon this merry ground.
-
- Good luck to we that faithful be,
- And hold our craft so dear,
- For 'tis our delight of a shiny night,
- In the season of the year.
- Oh, 'tis our delight of a shiny night,
- In the season of the year.
-
- While stars do shine, we pledge the wine
- Unto the Gods of old,
- Nor shall there fail the witch wassail,
- Nor shall their fire grow cold.
-
- Good luck to we that faithful be,
- And hold our craft so dear,
- For 'tis our delight of a shiny night,
- In the season of the year.
- Oh, 'tis our delight of a shiny night,
- In the season of the year.
-
- Throughout, about and round about,
- By flame that burneth bright,
- We'll dance and sing, around the ring,
- At witching hour of night.
-
- Good luck to we that faithful be,
- And hold our craft so dear,
- For 'tis our delight of a shiny night,
- In the season of the year.
- Oh, 'tis our delight of a shiny night,
- In the season of the year.
-
- Near the end of the dance, the High Priestess should call out the name
- of either a person or a couple. They should then jump over the fire
- while making a wish. They should then rejoin the ring and another
- couple or person do it. When ready, stop the dance and sit down about
- the fire. After a break, perform the Great Rite.
- The Coven, except for the High Priestess and High
- Priest,arrange themselves around the perimeter of the circle, man and
- woman alternately as far as possible, facing the center.
- The High Priestess and High Priest stand facing each other in the
- center of the circle, she with her back to the altar, he with his back
- to the South.
- The High Priest kneels before the High Priestess and gives her the
- Five Fold Kiss; that is, he kisses her on both feet, both knees, womb,
- both breasts, and the lips, starting with the right of each pair. he
- says, as he does this:
-
- "Blessed be thy feet, that have brought thee in these ways.
- Blessed be thy knees, that shall kneel at the sacred altar.
- Blessed be thy womb, without which we would not be.
- Blessed be thy breasts, formed in beauty.
- Blessed be thy lips, that shall utter the Sacred Names.
-
- For the kiss on the lips, they embrace, lengthtolength, with their
- feet touching each others. When he reaches the womb, she spreads her
- arms wide, and the same after the kiss on the lips. The High Priestess
- then lays herself down, face upwards, with her arms and legs
- outstretched to form the Pentagram.
-
- The High Priest fetches the veil and spreads it over the High
- Priestess's body, covering her from breasts to knees. He then kneels
- facing her, with his knees between her feet.
- The High Priest calls a woman witch by name, to bring his
- athame from the altar. The woman does so and stands with the athame in
- her hands, about a yard to the West of the High Priestess's hips and
- facing her.
-
- The High Priest calls a male witch by name, to bring the chalice of
- wine from the altar. He does so and stands with the chalice in his
- hands, about a yard to the East of the High Priestess's hips and
- facing her.
-
- The High Priest delivers the invocation:
- "Assist me to erect the ancient altar, at which in days
- past all worshipped;
- The altar of all things.
- For in old time, Woman was the altar.
- Thus was the altar made and placed,
- And the sacred place was the point within the center of
- the Circle.
- As we have of old been taught that the point within the
- center is the origin of all things,
-
- Therefore should we adore it;
- Therefore whom we adore we also invoke.
- O Circle of Stars,
- Whereof our father is but the younger brother,
- Marvel beyond imagination, soul of infinite space,
- Before whom time is ashamed, the mind bewildered, and
- the understanding dark,
-
- Not unto thee may we attain unless thine image be love.
- Therefore by seed and stem, root and bud,
- And leaf and flower and fruit do we invoke thee,
- O Queen of Space, O Jewel of Light,
- Continuous on of the heavens;
- Let it be ever thus
- That men speak not of thee as One, but as None;
- And let them not speak of thee at all, since thou
- art continuous.
- For thou art the point within the Circle, which we adore;
-
- The point of life, without which we would not be.
- And in this way truly are erected the holy twin pillars;
- In beauty and strength were they erected
- To the wonder and glory of all men."
-
- The High Priest removes the veil from the High Priestess's body, and
- hands it to the woman witch, from whom he takes his athame.
- The High Priestess rises and kneels facing the High Priest, and takes
- the chalice from the man witch. (Note that both of these handingsover
- are done without the customary ritual kiss. The High Priest continues
- the invocation:
-
- "Altar of mysteries manifold,
- The sacred Circle's secret point
- Thus do I sign thee as of old,
- With kisses of my lips anoint."
-
- The High Priest kisses the High Priestess on the lips, and continues:
-
- "Open for me the secret way,
- The pathway of intelligence,
- Beyond the gates of night and day,
- Beyond the bounds of time and sense.
- Behold the mystery aright The five true points of
- fellowship...."
-
- The High Priestess holds up the chalice, and the High Priest lowers
- the point of his athame into the wine. Both use both of their hands
- for this. The High Priest continues:
-
- "All life is your own,
- All fruits of the Earth
- Are fruits of your womb,
- Your union, your dance.
- Lady and Lord,
- We thank you for blessings and abundance.
- Join with us, Feast with us, Enjoy with us!
-
- Blessed Be.
-
- Then, draw the Invoking Pentacle of Earth in the air above the plate
- with the athame.
-
- "Here where Lance and Grail unite,
- And feet, and knees, and breast, and lip."
-
- The High Priest hands his athame to the woman witch and then places
- both his hands round those of the High Priestess as she holds the
- chalice. He kisses her, and she sips the wine; she kisses him, and he
- sips the wine. Both of them keep their hands round the chalice while
- they do this.
-
- The High Priest then takes the chalice from the High
- Priestess, and they both rise to their feet.
-
- The High Priest hands the chalice to a woman witch with a
- kiss, and she sips. She gives it to a man with a kiss. The chalice is
- passed around the Coven, man to woman, with a kiss each time, until
- the entire Coven has sipped the wine. The chalice can be refilled and
- any one can drink from it without repeating the ritual once the
- chalice has gone around once.
-
- The woman lays down her athame and passes the cakes to the man with a
- kiss,he passes them back with a kiss and they are passed around the
- Coven the same way the wine was. Be sure to save some of the wine and
- some cake for an offering to the Earth and the Little Folk. After the
- meeting,leave the offering outside of the house if working indoors, or
- behind in the woods or field, when you leave if you are working
- outdoors.
-
- The High Priestess faces East,with her athame in her hand. The
- High Priest stands to her right with the rest of the Coven behind
- them. If any tools have been consecrated, they should be held by the
- person furthest to the back. The Maiden stands near to the front to
- blow out each candle in turn. The Priestess says
-
- "Ye Lords of the Watchtowers of the East, ye Lords of Air; we
- do thank you for attending our rites; and ere ye depart to
- your pleasant and lovely realms, we bid you hail and
- farewell....Hail and farewell."
-
- As she speaks, she draws the Banishing Pentagram of Earth inthe air in
- front of her thus, each time:
-
- 2 7
- 4 5
- 6 1 3
-
- The rest of the Coven copy the Pentagram and chorus in on the second
- hail and farewell. The Maiden blows out the candle and the Coven faces
- the south and the High Priestess says:
-
- "Ye Lords of the Watchtowers of the South, ye Lords of Fire;
- we do thank you for attending our rites; and ere ye depart to
- your pleasant and lovely realms, we bid you hail and
- farewell....Hail and farewell."
-
- She turns to the West and says:
-
- "Ye Lords of the Watchtowers of the West, ye Lords of Water;
- ye Lords of Death and Initiation; we do thank you for
- attending our rites; and ere ye depart to your pleasant and
- lovely realms, we bid you hail and farewell ....Hail and
- farewell."
-
- She turns to the North and says:
-
- "Ye Lords of the Watchtowers of the North, ye Lords of Earth;
- Boreas, thou gentle guardian of the Northern Portals; thou
- powerful God, Thou gentle Goddess; we do thank you for
- attending our rites; and ere ye depart for your pleasant and
- lovely realms, we bid you hail and farewell ....Hail and
- farewell."
-
- This ends the Circle. The party following this should be a loving one.
- If there is a May Pole available, circle the May Pole. Beltane is also
- a time for forfeits. The High Priestess picks out the people and
- their forfeit, except the High Priest picks out the last one to play
- on the High Priestess. Beltaneis also a time for "green wood
- marriages" and other unbridled sexuality and such.
-
- (Distributed in the public domain via Seastrider)
-