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A 309 page illustrated volume of outstanding contemporary research
in Druidism.
Contents:
Introduction – Philip Carr-Gomm
Origins of Modern Druidry - Professor Ronald Hutton
Druidry: Exported Possibilities and Manifestations - Gordon Cooper
Phallic Religion in the Druid Revival - John Michael Greer
Question, Answer and the Transmission of Wisdom in Celtic and Druidic
Tradition - Caitlin Matthews
Universal Majesty, Verity and Love Infinite - Dr Adam Stout
Working with Animals - Professor Roland Rotherham
I Would know my Shadow and my Light - Philip Carr-Gomm
Entering Faerie: Elves, Ancestors and Imagination - James Warren
Maertens Ph.D
"While maintaining the highest standards of research and scholarship,
the lectures sparkle with enthusiasm, erudition and wit." From
review in Touchstone
“I have now read half the lectures in this
book and I have to say, their relevance to the Bardic grade is
astounding - one coincidence falls over the next one! I recommend
this book to anyone who is studying the OBOD course - it truly
opens the mind further to the ideas in the Gwers and fuels a deeper
understanding - especially when you are studying the elements and
the male/female principles! This book is a magical world of ideas,
passion and inspiration - a cauldron of a book!” Magma
"A search for 'Druid' on the internet throws up millions
of sites, on which Druids can be anything from mysterious characters
in children's books, via war-game avatars, to self-appointed teachers
of pseudo-occultism. In the mix are also hard data about
real Druids, ancient and modern, but (except for a handful of reliable
authors and researchers) the very word 'Druid' seems to inspire
boundless imagination based on few - or no - hard facts. This
may be a happy state of affairs for a reader seeking a lively novel,
but is of limited use to anyone wanting quantifiable, verifiable
information.
What a pleasure, therefore, to discover that the eight Mount Haemus
lectures (2000-2007) have now been published as a single volume. Eight
well-written, well-researched pieces on different aspects of Druidry
- each properly referenced and annotated without sinking into the
mire of almost-indecipherable academic prose - are more than welcome.
The breadth of subject matter makes it impossible to favour any
one lecture above the others. Adam Stout's biography of George
Watson Macgregor Reid is an important and lively history, while
Caitlin Matthews' fine piece on the transmission of wisdom is inspirational
as well as informative. Ronald Hutton's 'Origins of Modern
Druidry' provides a beautifully clear and sound basis for the subject,
and Philip Carr-Gomm's fascinating exploration of Michael Tippett's
opera 'The Midsummer Marriage' is illustrated with delicate black-and-white
photographs. Roland Rotherham's vast knowledge of world folklore
is harnessed in his lecture on power animals, while John Michael
Greer's compelling contribution focuses on 'Phallic Religion in
the Druid Revival'. James Warren Maertens' thought-provoking
item considers the place of Faeries and the Otherworld in our culture
of scientific materialism, and Gordon Cooper offers absorbing insights
into manifestations of Druidry in the latter half of the twentieth
century. Without exception, the lectures are interesting,
informative and conducive to later contemplation.
Highly recommended.
Kate Gooch, Avalon Magazine
A comment on the essay I Would
know my Shadow and my Light in the book, from
Ian Kemp, Michael Tippett's biographer and author of Tippett
- The Composer & His Music: "Some of the material
in these two essays covers familiar ground; but from his position
as a modern-day Druid Philip Carr-Gomm is able to apply highly
original interpretative insights denied the average commentator
on Tippett’s
opera. I don’t think Tippett himself was
aware either of the correspondences between Druidism and The
Midsummer Marriage but there they are. Carr-Gomm’s main
audience obviously comprises fellow Druids, which means that some
of his remarks are a closed book to non-initiates; but such obstacles
are quickly overtaken by the clarity and importance of what he
has to say. Two aspects of the opera are given particular emphasis,
its background structure and the revelations at its climax. His
elucidation of the narrative structure - the retelling of the Welsh
story of Taliesin, used both as an aid to initiation into the Druidic
mysteries and in the opera as a vivid basis for the experience
of struggle, rebirth and renewal - is exemplary and fearless. His
explanation of the Sacred Marriage at the climax is equally so,
notably his plea for its stage presentation in a joyful spirit
of eroticism. It may be hoped that the next producer of the opera
will have read Philip Carr-Gomm."
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