It has become a cliché of modern Pagan discourse to say that
at certain seasons “the Veil” between the world of mortals and the reality of
the spirits “grows thin”. As we approach the November Cross-Quarter Day
(whether it is Hallowe’en, Samhain, Beltaine in the southern hemisphere, or
whatever) It is recited commonly. Occasionally one hears the question “What do
you mean by that? What is the Veil” etc.
It’s a metaphor, that’s what. It is a poet’s description of
what it is like to see dimly, and with less detail than one would hope, as if
through thin cloth or mist. I suspect that modern people are less used to
seeing veiled faces, and to gazing out from behind veils, than people were in
earlier fashion ages. A single veil can reveal this, conceal that. Layers of
veils can be entirely opaque. For those who never saw a digital image ‘res up’
out of nothing, the thinning of layers of veils expressed the idea of
increasing clarity and revelation of what had been concealed.
We live in an era of jaded imagination... |
There is no Celtic original for the metaphor of the Veil. I suspect it arose
with spiritualism, in Victorian times. The metaphor used in Celtic lore is the
Mist. Heroes and magicians must pass through mist – through a space in which
the air itself precludes sight – before the mist thins and reveals the hidden
world. One of the Druidic wonder of the tales is the creation of a ‘hedge of
mist’ around that which they would conceal. The notion of the ‘Veil’ certainly
doesn’t insult this Celtic original; it simply expresses it in the technology
of a later age. There is a solid
Celtic explanation for why days such as Samhain are times when the
boundary-of-perception between mortal and spiritual realities grows more
passable and transparent.
Among ancient European peoples, and strongly among the Celts, magical power or
potential could be found in things, times and places that were ‘neither-nor’,
that were between one state, category or locale and another, that were ambiguously
located in time or space. Modern anthropology has referred to this as the ‘liminal’
quality, or as ‘limnality’. In this way we see that Celtic sacred spaces were
often built in the borders between tribal territories, indicated the sacred (and
politically neutral) Between nature of spiritual work. We find, in one of the
few examples of Celtic magical ritual that is preserved, the placing of
offerings to spirits in a doorway to partake of that access to the Otherworld.
The strand of the Sea, the tops of high hills, these are places of boundary
between Land, Sea and Sky, and so places where magic is easier to make
effective – places where the ‘veil’ between mortals and spirits is thin.
In keeping with Celtic patterns of sacred number, the primary division of the
calendrical year is into two – the light half and the dark half, summer and
winter. These two great halves are ‘hinged’ upon the two great feast days of
Bealtainne and Samhain. Both of those days are thus spaces Between major
categories. Samhain is neither summer nor winter. These great moments of
between-ness recur in Celtic story as times when spirits and mortals cross
between worlds, when visions are seen, and great deeds are done. They naturally
become times when modern Celtic Pagans and magicians seek to gather and express
magical power. In such seasons the magician (and, from the Other side, the
spirits) can more readily part the Mist, can see the turnings in the Forest,
can pass through the thinned Veil.
The spiritual world is no more uniform than the material world, I think. It is
true to say that a skilled magician can always find a thin place in the Border
if they know how to look. Yet in such seasons as this the effect is more
general, - all-encompassing, perhaps, by the time one gets to sunset or sunrise
on Samhain night. Let the Spirits walk, or dance, into a welcome as they come
to us through the Veil.
An Anglican/Episcopalian priest I know is fond of saying that "Mysticism begins in mist and ends in schism."
ReplyDeleteI think you're right about the growth of the ideas about the Veil out of Spiritualism. Thanks to Gordon White of Rune Soup fame, I found myself reading Mitch Horowitz's Occult America: the secret history of how mysticism shaped America. It really helped me dig into the idea that America's fascination with the occult did not begin with us; nor is paganism strictly a 30-year-or-so old phenomenon. It has much deeper roots than that. But the Veil does seem to belong more to the seance room than the druid striding across the heath. (It also bears much in common with the concept of the Veil of the Temple, the boundary between the Holy Place and the Holy of Holies that one sees in much Freemasonry work and in Golden Dawn stuff.
The question then becomes, are we to be an indoor people or an outdoor people? It's much easier to call up and evoke the thin mist in an outdoor rite than in an indoor one; and while I have found it interesting to leaf through a DJ's equipment catalog with magical rites in mind, I doubt that most druid groups either want or need to own a complicated fog machine for inner-city rental-hall rites. ;-)
It was good to meet you at brunch in Princeton a few weeks back.