At the Field's Edge: A Pagan Podcast
In this episode we explore one of Britain's most mythologised trees, the hawthorn, through its connections to Beltane, fairy lore, sacred boundaries, and the legend of the Glastonbury Holy Thorn. Part of what this show tries to do is be honest about where traditions come from. Not every piece of folklore is ancient, and not every "ancient" practice is quite what it seems. Where it matters, I've tried to flag that below. "Ne'er cast a clout till May is out"The interpretation that "May" refers to hawthorn blossom rather than the month is widely repeated, and plausible: the hawthorn was commonly known as the May tree, and its flowering was a genuine marker of the season. However, the original meaning of the saying is debated, and we can't be certain this is what it always meant. Treat it as a compelling possibility rather than established fact. The Beltane and May Day traditionsMay Day folk customs: maypoles, May Queens, going a-maying, have genuine roots in early modern British and European tradition. However, much of what we think we know about their origins was filtered and romanticised by Victorian folklorists and writers. The direct connection to pre-Christian Beltane is real but more complex and layered than it's often presented. Ronald Hutton's The Stations of the Sun (1996) is the essential guide here: scholarly, readable, and genuinely illuminating on what is and isn't demonstrably old. The indoor blossom tabooThe belief that hawthorn blossom was unlucky to bring indoors is well-documented across Britain and Ireland. The specific explanation, sometimes given as the blossom smelling of death or decay due to a chemical compound called trimethylamine, is a modern rationalisation added after the fact, not part of the original folk tradition. The taboo itself is real; the explanation is a later gloss. Fairy thorns and sacred treesThe tradition of leaving solitary hawthorn trees undisturbed for fear of fairy displeasure is well-attested in Irish and British folklore, and persisted well into living memory in rural communities. The story of the Clare road diversion is documented and widely reported, though accounts vary. For a serious and sympathetic treatment of fairy belief as a genuine tradition rather than mere superstition, look at Eddie Lenihan's work. particularly Meeting the Other Crowd (2003), compiled with Carolyn Eve Green. The Glastonbury Holy ThornThe legend of Joseph of Arimathea planting his staff at Glastonbury, from which a miraculous hawthorn grew, is medieval in origin, not ancient. It developed as part of a broader effort to establish Glastonbury as a major site of Christian significance. The tradition of sending a sprig to the monarch at Christmas is real and ongoing. The trees on Wearyall Hill and in the Abbey grounds today are grown from cuttings, not the original tree. For the full, carefully researched story of Glastonbury's layered mythologies, Hutton's Witches, Druids and King Arthur (2003) is worth your time. Further reading: * Ronald Hutton — The Stations of the Sun: A History of the Ritual Year in Britain (1996) * Ronald Hutton — Witches, Druids and King Arthur (2003) * Eddie Lenihan & Carolyn Eve Green — Meeting the Other Crowd: The Fairy Stories of Hidden Ireland (2003) * Richard Mabey — Flora Britannica (1996) — an extraordinary survey of British plant folklore, written with both rigour and warmth At the Field's Edge is a podcast about alternative spirituality, rooted in the British landscape. Hosted by Rowan Lund.
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