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In the Grove of the Druids is a major study of the work
of one of the seminal thinkers in Western Paganism. Ross Nichols
was Chief of the Order of Bards Ovates and Druids until his death
in 1975. He was a man who believed passionately in the power of
myth, poetry, ritual, and drama, and in the interconnectedness of
the world's great religious systems.
This fascinating and wide-ranging selection of Ross Nichol's work
contains writing on key themes including ritual, festivals, mythology,
symbolism, temple architecture, and archeology, and the links between
Druidry and other ancient wisdom traditions. It is the essential
resource for students of Druidry and lovers of Celtic spirituality.
Includes a biography of Ross Nichols, a Foreword by Professor Ronald
Hutton, rare archive photographs, sketches and letters of Ross Nichols,
a complete Chronology, Bibliography and Index. From the Introduction:
'Much of the pleasure of reading Ross lies in finding the gems embedded
within his work: a turn of phrase, an image, a connection between
two ideas or facts which you hadn't seen before...he is a weaver
of ideas, images, facts and details.'
264 pages including 8 pages of photographs.
Listen to Philip talking about Ross Nichol's life on Druidcast -
the Druid Podcast - Part One here Part
Two here
To read details about this, and other 'Druidcast' shows click here.
WATKINS MAGAZINE PUBLISHED THE FOLLOWING ARTICLE
ABOUT THE BOOK
In The Grove of the Druids presents the
life and thought of one of the twentieth century’s ‘hidden’ spiritual
teachers – Ross Nichols, Chief of the Order of Bards Ovates
and Druids. An incisive Foreword by Professor Ronald Hutton provides
the historian’s view of Nichols, evaluating his importance
to future generations, and Philip Carr-Gomm, who trained with Nichols
and now leads the Order, offers a picture of the man he knew, reviewing
his life and legacy.
The book then presents Ross Nichols’ work in four sections:
teachings on Druidism; essays on a range of spiritual and esoteric
subjects; letters and essays on Christianity; and finally his essays
on Mythology. Carr-Gomm introduces each contribution with background
information – offering glimpses into Nichol’s life,
and teasing out the themes and gems embedded in the text.
Ross Nichols was a poet and a painter, as well
as a Druid and a scholar – and his writings evoke rich imagery
and offer tantalising glimpses into the arcane knowledge of ancient
civilisations: in one breath he speaks of Persian Magi and Celtic
Druids, of Ancient Egypt and the mysteries of Stonehenge…
Philip Carr-Gomm writes: 'To complete ‘In The Grove of the
Druids’ I have just
emerged from several months’ immersion in a collection of
papers, photographs, watercolours, sketches, notes, and travel
diaries that I built up over ten years ago. They were all produced
by one man – the Druid Chief Ross Nichols – who was
my spiritual teacher in the 1970s. He died in 1975 and years later
I was asked to lead the Order that he founded. Since Ross was such
a prolific writer, out of the essays and the teaching discourses
that he wrote for his Druid students, I was able to create a course
in Druidry that has now reached many thousands of people across
the world.
As we entered the new millennium it felt right to make some of
these teachings available to a wider audience, and to also publish
some of Ross’ teachings and essays on a whole range of spiritual
topics. The result of this project is ‘In The Grove of the
Druids’, which combines a collection of his most inspired
writing with introductions by Ronald Hutton and myself to Ross’ life
and work. In this collection, in addition to a whole set of teachings
on Druidism, you will find essays, for example, on the use of ritual
gestures, a new vision of the Qabalah, the Zodiac of Glastonbury,
William Blake, the Arthurian Myth, and a devastating critique of
Christianity, but a reinterpretation of its value too.
Ross was a scholar and a historian, but because he was also a
poet and a painter, his writing can be powerfully inspirational.
Grounded in a knowledge of the details of history and myth, but
connected always to spiritual purpose and meaning, it manages to
reach deep into our souls. Here is an example of his writing. For
more, turn to ‘In The Grove of the Druids’.
Any grotto, cave or dolmen is a veil for the Unknown.
Any darkness in these places is meant to show forth a greater
splendour. You go through a dark tunnel or a black mirror to
a brighter sky to meet a brighter sun.
Respect always therefore the place of the dark, for it is
the fosterer of splendour.
Not all his writing is of this aphoristic inspirational nature,
though – much of it deals with the matter of the Western
Mysteries – with the power of number and symbolism, with
the uses of myth and archetypes. And certain themes continually
appear within his writing: he is fascinated by Ancient Egypt and
by the work of Jung, and his enquiring mind encompasses the work
of archaeologists and historians, classical scholars and the work
of his friends of the occult intelligentsia, such as Gerald Gardner,
the founder of the modern Witchcraft movement.
Illustrated with photographs and line drawings, and including
a full Chronology and Bibliography, together with excerpts from
his verse as well as his prose, this collection represents a treasure
trove – a distillation of the legacy Ross has left the world.'
REVIEWS
'A valuable contribution to the history of our tradition.' Druid's
Voice magazine.
'Carr-Gomm, who succeeded Nichols as Chief of the Order of Bards,
Ovates and Druids (OBOD), has produced a curious work which is part
eulogy, part magickal biography and part edited selection of Nichols’
writings. Being partly so many things it isn’t really any
one of them, which makes it somewhat difficult to review meaningfully
but perhaps we can sum it up as an appreciation of an individual,
a history of an order and an introduction to the ideas upon which
the latter was founded.' Review by White Dragon
For those readers to whom the name Ross Nichols is unfamiliar,
as it was indeed to me prior to reading this book, a few biographical
words are in order. Ross Nichols was a seminal figure in British
Druidry and also played a part in the creation of modern Wicca.
To earn his crust Ross Nichols was a poet, journalist, teacher
and administrator. He also inhabited that peculiar British environment
of dissent, which encompassed (during his lifetime, 1902 - 1975)
such ideologies as pacificism, vegetarianism, socialism, naturism,
theosophy and the occult. It is a matrix that is perhaps more familiar
to more mature readers of the journal as it is from this very milieu
that the British counter-culture of the 1960's sprang and which
forms part of the background to this very journal. Yet he also
remained a devout Christian throughout his life, and attended his
local Anglican churches religiously. However he was also attracted
to the more obscure variants of Christianity and was ordained an
Archdeacon of the Ancient Celtic Church in 1963, whilst simultaneously
also being deeply involved in Druidry. He joined the Ancient Druid
Order in 1954 which, on the death of the ADO Chief Robert MacGregor
Reid in 1964, he left and founded his very own "Order
of Bards, Ovates and Druids." He died in 1975 soon after finishing
his "Book of Druidry" which was finally published in
1990.
As for the book, Phillip Carr-Gomm needs congratulating in assembling
this collection of miscellaneous writings by Ross Nichols and arranging
them under the following themes: Druid Teachings; Esoterica; Christianity;
and Mythology. The blurb claims this a study of these works but
it is more a collection of writings with short introductions. To
which one can add Ronald Hutton's Foreword and a biographical essay
by Carr-Gomm. As to the quality of Nichols' writings, to say they
are uneven is an understatement. Some were polished pieces that
were published in journals such as "The Occult Observer" (of
which he was Assistant Editor) and the "New English Weekly".
Others were drafts for chapters in his book "The Land of the
White Bull" (which sadly was never published and much appears
to have been lost.) Whilst others are rough drafts or notes for
talks which were not intended for publication at all.
He was obviously widely read in many religions and mythologies
and in psychoanalysis as well as more occult arts. His attempts
at symbolic synthesis now read rather dated and confused. His take
on Christianity is more a statement of his inner conflicts than
necessarily stating more "universal" truths. Nichols
obviously found enough in the structure and teachings of mainstream
Christianity for some of his needs, but equally, it was insufficient
on its own and needed supplementing from a variety of outside sources.
As for the Druid material, to me this is some of the weakest in
the book. That said certain themes will be familiar to those who
read International Times in the 1960's. (Indeed there
is a letter to IT which shows that Ross Nichols was familiar with
this younger generation of dissidents and seekers.) Historically
the material is questionable at times, for example, I'd like to
see more evidence of William Blake not only claiming to be a Druid
on one occasion but actually being Chief Druid for some 18 years!
Nichols also discusses the Glastonbury Zodiac at some length in
an article taken from The Occult Observer c.1949/50, which
is a classic of sorts. (I have to confess to having a two-pamphlet
set of Mary Caine's ruminations on the "Glastonbury Giants" which
drew upon the works of Katherine Maltwood, not to mention the collection
of articles by Anthony Roberts on Glastonbury published by Zodiac
House.) I doubt if many people take this material seriously these
days.
As for his discussions on esoterica, these are, to the uninitiated
(like myself) pretty incomprehensible. They reveal a mind that
was adept at piling symbolic systems on top of each other in some
form of equivalence. Some readers may find this type of material
of use, but it completely baffles me.
Personally I found his writings on mythology to be the most interesting.
Nichols was very aware of the power of myth, and longed for the
filling, he perceived, of the lack of a specifically English (Celtic-Scandinavian
in his terms) myth system to equal those of Ancient Greece and
Rome or even Scandinavia. He is dismissive of earlier attempts
and tried to address the problem himself in his magnum opus "The
Land of the White Bull" which, sadly, was never published.
The fragment and other essays on the theme that are presented here
show an awareness of the social construction of myth and how it
cannot be determined from the top down (either by the state or
by elements of the intelligentsia) but that it grows "organically" from
below from the people, responding to their needs, its authors anonymous.
(Here I note that Nichols' socialism means he is conversant with
Marxist writings on the matter, which he includes in his discussion.)
Nichols was also very determined that an English mythos should
restore the relationship between the land and the people, reconnecting
them with the cycle of the seasons in a meaningful manner (and
here we see why his religion took the form it did). To objections
that the Arthurian material could form the basis of such a mythos,
he carefully distinguishes between legend and myth. Here one can
usefully quote at some length the "Statement of Intention" that
Ross Nichols co-signed with James Kirkup (the same poet who caused
such a furore with his poem about Christ in Gay News.)
"Myth is understood as the presentation of imaginary figures
incarnating natural processes, or types expressing aspects of a
consciousness of man as nature and nature as man under various
aspects, both normally conveying a tragic sense of life and values.
Legend is understood as the use of figures originally human, to
which heroising transformation has been applied, rendering them
to a greater or less degree mythical, as distinct from the fantasy
wish-fulfilment of the Fairy tale..." (p.229)
But as Frank Kendon says (p.221) "Myths to be effective sources
of power must not yet be seen as myths. Once you have said ‘let's
pretend’ you have killed all the vital power ... "
Nichols also knew that the old gods could never be resurrected
on a mass scale, they had been shown to be deficient, and that
Christianity was unable to provide the symbolic format for his
purposes.
So he created his own religion: "The Order of Bards, Ovates
and Druids" which continues to prosper nearly 30 years after
its founder's death. Yet I doubt that the writings in this book
will do much to encourage people to join it. As a historic document
of a nexus of English alternative culture (in its broadest sense)
it is quite illuminating, showing that the 60's counter-culture
didn't spring up from nowhere (and neither was it a purely American
import) but that the seeds were sown in the 1940's and 1950's by
people such as Philip Ross Nichols, Gerald Gardner (who knew each
other very well) and their colleagues. Alternatively one could
argue that Nichols and his cohort, kept alive ideas and developed
them which have surfaced at various times in British history. But
his attempted synthesis of religions, mythology and psychoanalysis
fail to convince, however brave the attempt.
To conclude, this is a well-produced book, which for me, at least,
was worth reading more for its value as social history than for
its religious importance or contemporary relevance.
Review by Richard Alexander for Counter Productions
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