Over 16,531,594 people are on fubar.
What are you waiting for?

The Myth of Cerridwen

cerridwen.jpg
It was in the beginning of Arthur's time there lived in Penllyn a man named Tegid Voeland his wife Cerridwen. There was born to him of his wife a son named Morvran ab Tegid, a daughter named Creirwy, and they had a brother, the most ill-favored man in the world, Avagddu. Cerridwen, his mother, thought that he was not likely to be admitted among men of noble birth by reason of his ugliness, unless he had some exalted merits or knowledge. So she resolved according to the arts of the books of the Fferyllt, to boil a cauldron of Inspiration and Science for her son, that his reception might be honorable because of his knowledge of the mysteries of the future state of the world. Then she began to boil the cauldron, which might not cease to boil for a year and a day, until three blessed drops were obtained of the grace of Inspiration. And she put Gwion Bach the son of Gwreang of Llanfair in Caereinion, to stir the cauldron, and a blind man named Morda to kindle the fire beneath it. She charged them that they should not suffer it to cease boiling for the space of a year and a day. She, herself, according to the books of the astronomers, and in planetary hours, gathered every day of all charm-bearing herbs. One day, towards the end of the year, as Cerridwen was culling plants and making incantations, it chanced that three drops of the charmed liquor flew out of the cauldron and fell upon the finger of Gwion Bach. By reason of their great heat he put his finger to his mouth, and the instant he put those drops into his mouth, he foresaw everything that was to come, and perceived that his chief care must be to guard against the wiles of Cerridwen, for vast was her skill. In very great fear he fled towards his own land. The cauldron burst in two, because all the liquor within it except the three charm-bearing drops was poisonous. The horses of Gwyddon Garanhir were poisoned by the water of the stream into which the liquor of the cauldron ran, and the confluence of that stream was called the Poison of the Horses of Gwyddon from that time forth. Thereupon came in Cerridwen and saw all the toil of the whole year lost. She seized a billet of wood and struck the blind Morda on the head until one of his eyes fell out upon his cheek. He said, "Wrongfully hast thou disfigured me, for I am innocent. Thy loss was not because of me." "Thou speakest truth," said Cerridwen, "it was Gwion Bach who robbed me." She went forth after him, running. He saw her and changed himself into a hare and fled. So she changed herself into a greyhound and turned him. He ran towards a river, and became a fish. She, in the form of an otter-bitch, chased him under the water, until he was fain to turn himself into a bird of the air. She, as a hawk, followed him and gave him no rest in the sky. Just as she was about to stoop upon him, and he was in fear of death, he spied a heap of winnowed wheat on the floor of a barn. He dropped among the wheat, and turned himself into one of the grains. Then she transformed herself into a high-crested black hen, and went to the wheat and scratched it with her feet, and found him out and swallowed him. As the story says, she bore him nine months, and when she was delivered of him, she could not find it in her heart to kill him, by reason of his beauty. So she wrapped him in a leather bag, and cast him into the sea to the mercy of God, on the twenty-ninth day of April. So, the great poet, Taliesin made an entrance into this world. The name, Cerridwen has been translated both as Cauldron of Wisdom and Fortress of Wisdom, caer meaning fortress and cerru meaning Cauldron. The powers attributed to Her show her nature as one imbued with great wisdom, prophetic foresight, and magical shapeshifting abilities. Mighty in magic, enchantment and divination, the ancient Cerridwen lived upon an island in a lake, a place known as The Land Beneath the Waves. It was on this island that She bore a son and named him Morfan, because he was black as a raven, but some also called him Afagddu, saying that his darkness was ugly, so that Cerridwen worried that the life ahead of him would not be one of ease or pleasure. Therefore, She decided to give her son a birth gift of the magical powers that She possessed hoping to make his years on Earth easier for him. Thus She prepared the Cauldron, known as Awen, the Cauldron of the Deep, from which She planned to give him three drops of the liquid which would provide him with those powers, which were his birthright. Into it She poured the waters of prophesy and inspiration and, carefully observing the movements of the Moon and the Sun and each and every star, She was able to add each herb, each root, even the foam of the ocean, all at the proper times. As the Cauldron brew began to boil, She arranged for a blind old man to keep the fire burning, and for a young lad named Gwion to stir the contents of Her Cauldron. Nine women stood by. Some say they were Druidesses who could take the form of any animals, who also could blow the seas into a rage with their perfect poetry, and could heal all wounds and illnesses and foretell the events of the future. All believe that these nine women breathed upon the magic Cauldron as it boiled night and day for one year. When the one day beyond a year's time arrived, which was the required time for the brewing, Cerridren placed young Morfan by the Cauldron to receive the legacy She had prepared for him. In her fatigue, after all She had done for her son, She fell asleep and while She was sleeping young Gwion, pushed young Morfan aside and quickly scouped three precious drops of the brew and placed his hand in his mouth. The remainder of the waters split the sides of the Cauldron apart and poured out upon the ground. The thundering noise of the Cauldron woke Cerridwen from her sleep and after realizing what had happened, She moved to punish Gwion. He quickly used the powers gained from the brew and changed himself into a hare and hopped off as quickly as his legs would carry him. Cerridwen took the form of a greyhound and followed in swift pursuit. But just as She was about to catch him, he changed into a fish and slipped into a river. Cerridwen quickly became an otter and continued after Gwion. About to be caught again, he once more changed his form, this time into a bird and flew off into the sky, only discovering the Cerridwen was close behind, having taken the shape of a hawk. Fearing for his life, Gwion noticed a pile of wheat on the land below and changing himself into the tiniest of grains, dropped into the pile. Cerridwen's sharp eyes saw what he had done and taking the form of a black crested hen, She pecked at the grain until She found and ate the seed that had been Gwion. But the tiny seed took root within her womb and began to grow. For nine months, Cerridwen proclaimed that on the day that Gwion would be reborn She would destroy him, but when that day arrived She relented. She placed him in a leather sack and threw him into the raging waters of the river, this just two days before the first of May. Taliesin, thought to be the wisest and most profound of all Gaelic poets, claimed that he had once been that Gwion, born of Cerridwen's womb, Her Cauldron of Transformation. Saying that his leather sack had been fished from the river on All Hallow's Eve, Holy Samhain, when the dead souls rise, he made it very clear to all who listened that Celtic wisdom, poetry, magic, and foresight, the riddles beneath which divine knowledge lies, had once been stolen from the Cauldron of the Ancient Cerridwen. The Powers of the Sacred Female were stolen, taken from Her, and that his powers came from Her and the Cauldron of Magical Inspiration.
Leave a comment!
html comments NOT enabled!
NOTE: If you post content that is offensive, adult, or NSFW (Not Safe For Work), your account will be deleted.[?]

giphy icon
last post
16 years ago
posts
4
views
1,266
can view
everyone
can comment
everyone
atom/rss

other blogs by this author

 15 years ago
Some Quotes I Like
 16 years ago
Miscellaneous
 16 years ago
Dedication Poems
 16 years ago
My Poetry
 16 years ago
Miscellaneaous Stories
 16 years ago
Quizzes
 16 years ago
Final Fantasy
 16 years ago
Vampires
 16 years ago
Poetry
official fubar blogs
 8 years ago
fubar news by babyjesus  
 13 years ago
fubar.com ideas! by babyjesus  
 10 years ago
fubar'd Official Wishli... by SCRAPPER  
 11 years ago
Word of Esix by esixfiddy  

discover blogs on fubar

blog.php' rendered in 0.0512 seconds on machine '6'.