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The Druid Plant Oracle won't be published
in the USA until 5 August 08 (and in Australian/NZ editions and
French, German, Dutch & Czech translations in April 08). But
you buy it here (by clicking the link above) and it comes with
a first edition card of black and white drawings by Will and signed
by all three of us.
Listen to an interview with the artist of the Plant Oracle cards:
Will Worthington
Read
an article about the 13 uses of plants in the Druid tradition,
including using them in The Druid Plant Oracle.
REVIEWS
At last we have enterprising Druids who do the field work
which was the essence of Ancient Druidry. Philip and Stephanie
Carr-Gomm and Will Worthington have actually gone forth and smelled,
touched and appreciated real plants! The results of their careful
research, and understanding of the plant world they share to us
in this book, combined with their Druid Animal Oracle insight is
provided not only to the use of plants for healing but also the
inter-relation with the spiritual realm that provides Oracles.Olivia
Robertson, The Fellowship of Isis
The book shows spreads, including a Bridhid’s Cross spread,
and of course gives the meanings of the cards, upright and reversed.
The reversed cards here are not bad omens, but they may show us
that the way ahead may be challenging, so we will hone our skills
to resolve our problems. The Oracle offers guidance and advice,
rather than predictions. There are blank cards in the deck, which
can be used to create our own additions with plants that are, or
become, significant to us. The Oracle may also be consulted by
drawing a card for ‘on the spot’, synchronistic divination.
I am looking forward to using the cards out in nature, sitting
by trees, in a field or by a stream. I may have to wait until the
weather improves. However, Will Worthington’s cards are such
luscious and inviting doorways, it is not difficult to step into
them and journey, as Mary Poppins stepped into the chalk pavement
pictures!
The Druid Plant Oracle, like the many drawers of an apothecary’s
chest, offers aid and restoration. It is also a useful tool for
problem solving, journeying, and re-connecting with nature. It
is not just for Druids, I have given it as presents to a keen gardener,
a counseller and a homeopathist and I am getting very positive
and highly excited feedback! Caroline Wise in review for 'The Mirror
of Isis'
If you are one of those for whom plants are people, complete with
Spirits that are part of the Great Soul of Nature, this book is
for you. Lovingly illustrated byWill Worthington, the book and
card deck are worthy companions to The
Druid Animal Oracle...The illustrations are magnificent. As I write
this review we are waiting for the season's first serious snow storm
and the cards glow before my eyes like a warm summer's day. The paintings
are egg tempera (pigment mixed with egg yolk) on wooden panels and
the artist has skillfully blended detailed botanical portraits of
each herb with views of archaeological sites, ancient villages and
mystical Celtic symbols. Ellen Evert Hopman, review for 'Eolas'
magazine.
An article about the oracle from Pagan
Dawn Magazine
Philip and Stephanie Carr-Gomm’s The
Druid Plant Oracle has just been published by Connections. In 1994 Connections published
their Druid Animal Oracle and a decade later their DruidCraft
Tarot appeared which soon became one of the most popular Pagan tarot
decks due to Will Worthington’s extraordinary evocation of
another world in his artwork and the way in which the authors’ weave
Druid, Wiccan and Tarot lore seamlessly together. Here Philip Carr-Gomm
talks about how the third in this trio of oracles was created.
Not of father nor of mother
Was my blood, was my body.
I was spellbound by Gwydion,
Prime enchanter of the Britons,
When he formed me from nine blossoms,
Nine buds of various kind;
From primrose of the mountain,
Broom, meadow-sweet and cockle,
Together intertwined,
From the bean in its shade bearing
A white spectral army
Of earth, of earthly kind,
From blossoms of the nettle,
Oak, thorn and bashful chestnut -
Nine powers of nine flowers,
Nine powers in me combined,
Nine buds of plant and tree.
Long and white are my fingers
As the ninth wave of the sea.
HANES BLODEUWEDD
translated by Robert Graves
I first became interested in the Druid path about forty years
ago. I used to visit a friend of my father’s, the old Chief
Druid Ross Nichols at his home in London and he began training
me. He would make two cups of tea for us and then would read to
me from a set of teachings he had prepared, and I remember so clearly
how it was the sections on trees or plants that really inspired
me. He was a poet and was able to write in a lyrical way about
Nature. The scholarly failings of Robert Graves’ White Goddess
had not yet been revealed and he had absorbed Graves’ work
avidly, and had built upon that.
As the years rolled by, and I learnt more and more about the Druid
tradition, I became disappointed that there was so little plant
and herblore within the tradition. Scholars would point out that
we only had Pliny’s references to four of the Druids’ favourite
plants and that was it.
I was writing about one of these four - Vervain - for the revised
version of the Order’s Ovate teachings when it suddenly struck
me that perhaps, as with the traditional animal lore that Stephanie
and I had researched 13 years ago for The
Druid Animal Oracle,
the plant lore of the ancient Druids and their contemporaries was
not totally lost but simply had to be looked for in a different
way.
We began researching traditional plant lore - and to our delight
we started to feel that we were beginning to piece together much
of the old herb-lore that would have been used in those far-off
times. We did this by drawing on information from five sources:
the relatively new science of archaeobotany; the information given
in the old herbals that were written at the time of the ancient
Druids; accounts of the practices of later herbalists; the clues
left to us in the old Irish and Welsh legends and in folklore;
and the findings of botanical pharmacology.
In other words, if we found that a plant had been growing in the
territory of the ancient Druids, and if its healing powers had
been discussed in one of the old herbals that were written by their
contemporaries (such as Dioscorides) we deduced that it was highly
likely that the Druids would have used it. If, in addition, the
plant was mentioned in one of the old legends and if it appeared
in folklore then it was clearly entrenched in tradition and was
even more likely to have been used by the ancient Druids. The other
sources of information were sometimes able to help us too with
supporting evidence.
By researching in this way we identified over 40 plants that we
reckon were almost certainly used in those far-off times. Now,
of course, it is perfectly possible to argue that Druidry is a
living tradition and that if - for example - a Druid wishes to
use or recommend the taking of Gingko Bilboa then the fact that
the ancient Druids would not have used this is irrelevant. Even
so, while fully accepting that Druid herblore today can be as eclectic
and universal as it likes, the fact that we can identify those
plants they are likely to have used inspires us, and we took that
inspiration one stage further. We realised that each plant had
a set of traditional associations, meanings or stories surrounding
it. Just as there was a discernible body of sacred animal lore
so too there was a similar body of lore around plants.
When we read the old stories about plants or animals we couldn’t
help asking the questions “What do these stories mean? What
are they trying to tell us?” ‘They’ are both
the stories themselves and the Ancestors, who collectively have
created this ‘lore’ over the centuries. By putting
the stories, the images, the associations into the cauldron and
stirring it a little we have been able to come up with oracular
interpretations for a number of plants, just as we did earlier
for the animals, and Will Worthington has managed to create beautiful
pictures of them to accompany our interpretations.
As we began creating the oracle together we realised that we could
ask the publisher to make the cards the identical size to The
Druid Animal Oracle so that the two decks could be shuffled together,
so that guidance could be received from both the plant and the
animal realms.
The result? Will seems to be able evoke an enchanted world in
his paintings - the images are on the one hand very realistic and
yet something shines through them and invites us into them. The
images are filled with resonances - moonlight glinting on arrow-heads,
standing stones in the distance. We think they’re wonderful.
As for the accompanying book it would be immodest to wax lyrical
about that wouldn’t it?
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