At the Field's Edge: A Pagan Podcast
Somewhere underneath the noise of modern life, there is a frequency that has always been there. This episode is about learning to hear it. Through the practice of the ancient Bards, through the voice of the natural world, and through the simplest threshold most of us cross without noticing: the quiet of early morning before the day begins. Includes a guided meditation to the still pool. A note on sources and honesty The material on the Bardic schools draws on sources that blend historical record with later interpretation. The twelve-year Irish curriculum is documented, though some detail may reflect later embellishment. The practice of seeking inspiration through sensory deprivation is attested in early Irish sources, though its exact form is debated. Gerald of Wales is a genuine twelfth-century source, but an outsider writing with his own agenda. The inner grove and still pool meditation are modern OBOD practices, rooted in older understandings of sacred landscape but not claiming ancient origin. Silence and the Bardic tradition The ancient Bards understood inspiration not as something produced but as something received in stillness: Imbas in Irish, Awen in Welsh. The Bardic schools survived in Ireland until the end of the seventeenth century, operating alongside the Church for over a thousand years, an extraordinary act of cultural continuity. The three melodies of creation The Welsh triad — the wind in the trees, the stream at snowmelt, the cry of a new-born babe — comes from a tradition of wisdom sayings used as teaching tools within the Bardic schools, memorised and carried in the body, so that the natural world could call them up unbidden. The still pool and the salmon The sacred pool of Conla's Well, surrounded by nine hazel trees, appears in early Irish mythology as the source of all wisdom. The image reaches into several traditions: the salmon of knowledge, the river goddess Boann, the Celtic understanding of water as a threshold to the Otherworld. Further reading: Philip Carr-Gomm, What Do Druids Believe? (Granta, 2006) Proinsias Mac Cana, Celtic Mythology (Hamlyn, 1970); Gerald of Wales, The Description of Wales, trans. Lewis Thorpe (Penguin Classics, 1978). Further resources at druidry.org. The still pool is always there, at the source. It is only the noise of the journey that makes it hard to find. At the Field's Edge is made by Rowan Lund. New episodes follow the wheel of the year.
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