Thursday, April 1, 2010

The Holy Fool

Representing a Secret Sun classic....

The jingling of bells during the dance is meant to frighten evil spirits and the clashing of sticks represent the fight between good and evil. The dancer who weaves in and out of the team of dancers is known as the Fool and whilst his dance seems to be that of a random nature, in fact his is a very intricate dance and represents the naivety of man. A dancer who is dressed as an animal character shows mans reliance on nature. Handkerchiefs emphasise the hand movements during the dance.- Crop Fertility Rituals

The Kalends of April are sacred to Venus, as is the entire month, and this day has been called the Veneralia. Public games, ludi, would be held in honor of the deity. This day was also known as All Fools Day to the Romans, and they would spend the entire day celebrating with comic hilarity, doing things backwards, wearing women's clothes, dancing in the streets, and generally carrying on in the most in the most foolish and congenial manner. This is one of the few Roman holidays that has preserved some of its original character, under the modern name April Fools Day. In Egypt, this day was celebrated as the Birthday of the god Hathor.- (link)


The Anglo-Saxons called April Oster-monath or Eostur-monath, the period sacred to Eostre or Ostara, the pagan Saxon goddess of spring, from whose name is derived the modern Easter.- Wikipedia

It's probably no coincidence that April Fools' Day is celebrated at the same time that two other similar holidays are celebrated. In ancient Rome, the festival of Hilaria was thrown to celebrate the resurrection of the god Attis. Hilaria is probably the base word for hilarity and hilarious, which mean great merriment. Today, Hilaria is also known as Roman Laughing Day. -How Stuff Works

Perhaps the biggest change came from the initiated version of the Tarot that the original Golden Dawn (and its later offshoots) used. In that deck, the Fool is represented as a naked child of indeterminate sex, who is accompanied by a wolf on a leash, who is reaching up for a rose. In Golden Dawn, the Fool represents the god Harpocrates, the Egyptian god Horus as a young child. - Associated Content

"The four magic symbols, the sceptre, the cup, the sword and the pentacle. The fool always carries them, although he has long since forgotten what they mean. Nevertheless they belong to him, even though he does not know their use. The symbols have not lost their power, they retain it in themselves. - P D. Ouspensky

4 comments:

Anadæ Effro said...

This goes right to my Live Feed on fb, Christopher, it's that good. The Italian designer of more than one Tarot deck, Ciro Marchetti, designed a truly magnificent deck, The Legacy of the Divine Tarot, which has an eight & a half minutes long, spellbindingly beautifully produced trailer viewable HERE! Its premise is that an intergalactic civilisation imparted to us through the Tarot's symbology the destiny of the human race. Hmmmm. Remind you of Timothy Leary's The Game of Life much? You totally rock, professor Knowles, you totally rock!

The Tarot Meister of Apple Mountain,
Anadæ Quenyan Effro Von Thüringen

Flossy said...

Slept in today having no work to head for and was awoken by a neighbour texting me that my car was being wheelclamped (it wouldn't be the first time - £150)) and so I rushed out to find nothing amiss and another neighbour saying "What's up, you look like you need a cup of tea".
Hello April Fool and The Hillaria-is-us.
Funny old time this, Eostra/oeostrogena etc.....
Ended up watching 'The Ten Commandments' on telly and Wow, those Cecil De Mille Egyptian Rulers look just like Aliens....Cyber-Beings with their headgear and shiny-kit.
Nothing I'm sure that most Secret Sun readers haven't noticed before.
Hey, what kind of Fools are we?

Spiffingly pertinent work, Mr Knowles.

Happiness to all this Spring.

Flossy said...

BTW.....Humanity save us from
Burning Bushes!!!!!!!

regal eagle said...

Somebody sheathed that sword with a fig leaf.

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