• Re: The Mists of Avalon query

    From David Dalton@21:1/5 to David Dalton on Wed Sep 7 04:51:25 2022
    XPost: alt.religion.druid, rec.music.celtic, rec.music.folk
    XPost: uk.music.folk, nf.general

    On Sep 7, 2022, David Dalton wrote
    (in article<0001HW.28C878CD0029904D70000E1E638F@88.198.57.247>):

    I loaned my copy of Marion Zimmer Bradley’s The Mists of Avalon
    to my niece Hazel quite a while ago and she hasn’t returned it,
    so I don’t have it handy.

    In the book, does the Great Rite love scene between the
    (I think horned) hero and heroine take place at full moon?
    I think that is when he gets dragon lines on his arms as well,
    but my memory is fuzzy, I haven’t read it since 1996.

    Some may be interested in my thread
    “Leading up to Harvest Moon”
    on alt.religion.druid .

    Perhaps the immunity will have kicked in by full moon.

    However the lines (from a song in Shakespeare’s The Tempest)

    “SPring come to you at the farthest
    In the very end of harvest
    Scarcity and want shall shun you
    Ceres blessing so is on you”

    might indicate the November 8 full moon, the closest full
    moon to SamHAin, since that is the very end of harvest
    (third harvest, where first is Lughnasadh and second
    is Mabon), at least in Vancouver, though it might be a
    bit late for here in Newfoundland. But I think the
    Great Rite mentioned above took place at Beltane
    or the full moon closest to it.

    But I suppose the Spring come to you at the farthest
    might mean that the production of the fall harvest
    will last until the spring, maybe even until Beltane,
    when new crops start to be available, though not
    yet here in Newfoundland, where summer is
    delayed a bit but fall is pretty good, due to the
    lag in the warming and cooling of the ocean

    --
    David Dalton dalton@nfld.com https://www.nfld.com/~dalton (home page) https://www.nfld.com/~dalton/dtales.html Salmon on the Thorns (mystic page) ³And the cart is on a wheel; And the wheel is on a hill;
    And the hill is shifting sand; And inside these laws we stand" (Ferron)

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