Showing posts with label All Hallows Eve. Show all posts
Showing posts with label All Hallows Eve. Show all posts

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Creepy Halloween

Creepy Halloween sounds so much more fitting than "Happy Halloween", doesn't it?  Halloween is supposed to be creepy, because that's what makes it fun, after all.

Whether or not you believe that the gate between the worlds of the living and the dead will swing open on All Hallows Eve, a cemetery can be an intriguing place...

Please allow me to share with you some of my favorite "haunts'...



                                                                     Cemetery in Bloomington, IN




                                                              SpringGrove Cemetery, Cincinnati, OH




                                                                New Orleans Cemetery, photo by Louis Martinie


The festival observed at this time was called Samhain (pronounced Sah-ween). It was the biggest and most significant holiday of the Celtic year. The Celts believed that at the time of Samhain, more so than any other time of the year, the ghosts of the dead were able to mingle with the living, because at Samhain the souls of those who had died during the year traveled into the otherworld....Virtually all present Halloween traditions can be traced to the ancient Celtic day of the dead. Halloween is a holiday of many mysterious customs, but each one has a history, or at least a story behind it. The wearing of costumes, for instance, and roaming from door to door demanding treats can be traced to the Celtic period and the first few centuries of the Christian era, when it was thought that the souls of the dead were out and around, along with fairies, witches, and demons. Offerings of food and drink were left out to placate them.  ( Jack Santino, The American Folklife Center)



                                       shop window in Richmond, VA




                                                                          St. John's Church, Richmond, VA



The oldest gravestones I've ever seen were here.  At this church, Patrick Henry uttered the famous words, "Give me liberty, or give me death."



                              This burial is so old you can no longer make out any words or carving at all.



                                                                                        A beautiful place.




                                                               SpringGrove Cemetery, Cincinnati, OH



                                                           SpringGrove Cemetery, Cincinnati, OH



All Hallows Eve
By Dorothea Tanning
Be perfect, make it otherwise.
Yesterday is torn in shreds.
Lightning’s thousand sulfur eyes
Rip apart the breathing beds.
Hear bones crack and pulverize.
Doom creeps in on rubber treads.
Countless overwrought housewives,
Minds unraveling like threads,
Try lipstick shades to tranquilize
Fears of age and general dreads.
Sit tight, be perfect, swat the spies,
Don’t take faucets for fountainheads.
Drink tasty antidotes. Otherwise
You and the werewolf: newlyweds.




Who knew Dorothea Tanning wrote such things? Enchanting!











Saturday, October 31, 2009

Happy All Hallows Eve, Samhain, All Souls' Night...

Happy Halloween, everyone!  Whether you choose to call it All Hallows Eve, Samhain, or All Soul's Night, the celebration has the same origin and meaning.  According to Barbara Walker (The Woman's Encyclopedia of Myths and Secrets):

    " All Souls' or All Hallows Day (Nov. 1) was the Christian version of Samhain, the Celtic Feast of the Dead, named for the Aryan Lord of Death, Samana, "the Leveller", or the Grim Reaper, leader of ancestral ghosts.  According to the pagan lunar calendar, festivals were celebrated on the "eve" rather than the day.  Therefore Halloween or All Hallows' Eve was the original festival, later displaced to the following day.  the name of the pagan deity remains in the Bible as Samuel, from the Semitic Sammael, the same underworld god."
 
                    
Ancestral Ground

"...divinations were the oracular utterances by the ancestral dead, who came up from their tombs on halloween, sometimes bringing gifts to the children of their living descendants.  The pagan idea used to be that crucial joints between the seasons opened cracks in the fabric of space-time, allowing contact between the ghostworld and the mortal one."

Callanish Stones on All Souls' Night


 Sehkmet and the Sphinx

So, with that in mind, I dug up (no pun intended) some of my older work that seemed most "Halloweenish", along with a very beautiful song by Loreena McKennitt, called "All Souls' Night".

This is a special day for another reason as well; my beautiful daughter, Caitlin, was born on All Souls' Day.  I believe that she is, indeed, an old soul.  Since she was tiny, she has been advising me what to do, as if she had been my mother in a past life!  She is definitely the best Halloween treat I ever received.  Happy birthday, Cait!


Me and my baby 

Have a booo-tiful day! (bad pun intended)