Tuesday, June 28, 2011

More Summer Rites From the Fellowship of Isis

Panthea, Initiations and Festivals of the Goddess

Fellowship of Isis Liturgy
by Olivia Robertson

Part II. The Star of Ishtar. Eight Seasonal Festivals

Festival of Opet
Lughnasadh. 23rd July - 3rd August

Ritual no. 9

ORACLE OF THE GODDESS MUTH


Priestess: (Invocation) Divine Muth, Mother of all beings, come to our hearts! Inspire us with wisdom and compassion, so that at the last we may dwell in Thy everlasting habitations overshadowed by Thy Wings.
Oracle: In verity the two lands of earth and after-life are one. They are only separated by the blindness of the ignorant. Day and Night are One. Sun and Moon are One, Man and Woman are One. The inner sun which shineth within the depths of the earth is One with the Sun in Heaven. Every heart is united with all hearts through the spheres with the warmth of Love, Yet every being and atom calleth to the others through unique quality that is its essence.
But discord destroys peace and joy through this very Love, when it becomes distorted into obsessive passion. It strikes through narrow devotion to family and nation, but it is at its most evil when it consumes the soul with religious fanaticism. Devotees so deluded will torture and kill those who will not accept the object of their worship.
My children of ancient Egypt saw Deity in the Many. They recognised innate divinity in cats and dogs and hippopotami, through beetles and crocodiles and rivers. As the intellect brought separation of man and nature, men found the Path of the One Light: they acknowledged the Many as emanating from the One. This satisfied mind and heart. Both ways of approaching reality have brought many to everlasting joy. Yet both have caused great evil, through abuse by overemphasis. Those who worshipped the Many in a mindless way degenerated. They became dissipated and lost strength of directed mind and purpose. After them came the followers of the One, whether the One God or Mind: these through unbalanced ideals killed millions of their fellows in the name of love and justice.
The Deities always provide an antidote to poison. And the antidote to obsessive devotion, whether to a person or to a country, to a religion or to an ideal, is to face the truth. This is not easy. If facts contradict long-held feelings and opinions, a man would rather die than accept them. Such people regard Truth as ugly and shun it. They are terrified of the unknown. For them the Goddess is shrouded in black night. Yet if they had the courage to unveil Her, they would see the beautiful countenance of Truth. Instead they pursue Love, thrusting aside all that stands in their way. Inevitably they are consumed by violence and insanity. Love must be approached with humility.
Let Love and Truth be brought into that Sacred Marriage which bringeth forth harmony.
At the gates.  Pharoah wears Amen-crown with 2 plumes of truth and justice.  He carries burning incense.  High Priest in gold headdress holds staff.  He and men Celebrants are in white and gold.
High Priest: We are assembled to celebrate the Mystical Marriage of the Sun God Ra and the Sky Goddess Muth. Sirius, Star of Isis. has its heliacal rising at the Egyptian new Year. The birth of their Son, the Moon God Khonsu is invoked.
Pharaoh: This incense embodies the life-giving warmth of Ra. To begin the Opet Festival, the statue of Amen Ra was carried from his Temple of Opet-Resyt in Karnak down the Avenue of Rams, into the Boat of Ra on the Nile. The Pharaoh, His son, with the High Priest of Amen and other Dignitaries came with the statue. The boat was rowed Southwards for the Holy Mile to the Temple of Luxor. Nobles and people accompanied the procession by the river bank, playing musical instruments and singing and dancing.
High Priest: The God was travelling to Luxor for his yearly stay with his Queen, the Goddess Muth, in Her Temple of Opet-Resyt. Within, standing by the statue of Muth, stood the great Queen of Egypt, daughter of Muth, awaiting the Pharaoh, her husband.
Pharaoh: For eleven days the Mystical Union of God and Goddess was celebrated in the Holy of Holies. On the eleventh day before expectant crowds assembled in the outer Court, the Queen appeared followed by the Pharaoh. She would walk in procession down the Avenue of Sphinxes to the bank of the Nile. There she would raise her arms and call down the power of the Sky Goddess, and bless the river. So was a successful inundation ensured, bringing a good harvest to feed the people. To end the festival the statue of Amen Ra would be carried by boat to his own Temple in Karnak. Let us make procession to the altar of Muth!
Music. Procession to altar which is draped in green and gold.  On it are 9 lighted candles.  Before it is a large silver vessel of water.  By it is a table with feast, a cup of water and bread in a cloth.  The Queen stands by it wearing the Muth headdress of stylised bird with long feathered wings.  High Priestess and women Celebrants in white and silver.
High Priest knocks twice on ground with staff.
High Priestess: Who seeks admittance to the Holy of Holies of the Goddess Muth?
High Priest: Her Husband, the God Amon Ra, Who would celebrate with Her the Festival of Opet.
Queen: He is welcome!
Pharaoh: I offer this incense, in which is ensouled the God-like fire of Amon Ra that bringeth life. Homage to Thee, O Amon Ra, Who resteth upon Maat and Who passeth over the Heavens. Every face seeketh Thee! Thou doth wax great as Thy majesty doth advance, and Thy Rays are upon all faces. Thou hearest with Thine ears and Thou seest with Thine Eyes.
High Priest: Millions of years have gone over the world: I cannot tell the number of those through which Thou hast passed. Thy heart hath decreed a Day of happiness, in Thy name of Traveller. Thou doth travel through untold spaces through millions of years. Thou passes through them in peace. Thou steerest Thy Way across the Watery Abyss to the Place which Thou lovest. Thou art in the heart of Thy Queen, the Goddess Muth.
Queen: I accept this incense in the name of Muth! (She circles incense left to right 3 times in the air. She sprinkles drops of water from fingertips onto incense.) I present this water of the Goddess who poureth Her rains upon the fruitful earth, replenishing hidden springs that are the source of the Nile. Homage to Thee, Thou mistress of The Gods, Thou Bearer of Wings. Thou art the Mighty One of enchantments in the Boat of Millions of Years, Who art Mother in the horizon of Heaven. Praise be to Thee, O Lady of Heaven. Words of adoration rise to Thee from the eight Gods.
High Priestess: Living souls risen from the coffins of death praise Thy Mystery. Thou art Mother of departed souls, Thou Source from Whom all spring. Thou makest for souls a place of repose in the Underworld of Amenti, and makest them strong in the abode of eternity. In the Name of Muth, Who maketh souls strong and Who maketh sound bodies, let us be blessed. Amon Ra reposes His fiery beams within thy widespread wings. So is our thirst quenched and our fields are made to bear rich crops!
Pharaoh: At this time of Opet it was the custom to perform a Divine Drama. Let the Mystery of the Sandal of Rhodope be enacted!
MYSTERY OF THE SANDAL OF RHODOPE
Actors: Modern Traveller, Arab Guide. Greek Chorus. Rhodope in white and wears gilt sandals. Priest of Helios. Helios in gold wearing gold rayed crown. Old Woman in black. Egyptian Soldiers. Pharaoh Amasis in Amen crown. Egyptian Dancers.
Traveller meets Guide.
Guide: Never have I seen such an exhausted traveller! Our country has three famous pyramids! Why then do you make a circuit of this third one which is smaller than the others and even neglected? I have seen you wandering by it day and night for weeks, hardly stopping to eat or rest!
Traveller: I have forgotten my home and my studies. I am a lost soul obsessed by a phantom. At the time of the golden moon of August, as it rose at sunset, I saw gliding by this very pyramid a naked woman most divinely beautiful. She saw me and she blushed a rosy red and gave me the smile of an angel! She beckoned to me and I drew near but then she evaporated like a mirage and seemed to enter the very stones. Since then I have longed for her as a starving man tongs for bread and the thirsty, for water. My soul is consumed with fire. I cannot leave this place.
Guide: Many men have seen this phantom at midday or at sunset, and through the centuries there are those who perished in their search for her. Some have worshipped her as Hathor of the stars of Taurus, Goddess of Love. Others believe she is the Spirit of the Great Sphinx. But most adore her as Queen Nitocris, who finished this pyramid of Mykerinos, causing it to be encased in red Syenite granite, which has magical properties.
Traveller: I am in despair. You are a Guide. Can you help me?
Guide: I help those who ask for it. Indeed some call me Hermes, and others, Anubis. You have a choice between two ways. You can blot this vision from your mind, return to your own land, and immerse yourself in your studies. Or you may continue your search for love, and I will help you. But this way is dangerous, and has many pitfalls.
Traveller: I choose the Way of the Heart, even if it means madness or death.
Guide: So be it. Behold with your inner vision! (He makes the sign of the Ankh in the air and draws traveller to one side.) The ancient past unfolds itself. Watch what befalls in the Temple of the Sun God Helios in the Island of Rhodes.
Music.
Greek Chorus: Alas for Rhodope! Alas for ourselves. In headlong disobedience she denies the teachings of our Priests, and obstinately turns from their doctrine, preferring her own fantasies! Enter Priest from one side, Rhodope from the other.
Priest: From my own goodwill for you, Rhodope, my brightest pupil, will you not bend your will to our learning? This is a Temple of the Light of Reason and Philosophy. Why do you persist in believing your wild imagination?
Rhodope: Helios has appeared to me in a vision and spoken to me. He declares you draw the people away from faith in the Deities, and so bring spiritual death to this island.
Priest: So, you persist in spreading delusions to your companions! Hear the Judgment of the Hierarchy. You are excommunicated, and so are banished from this Temple. Because you are a Vestal, no man may lay hand upon you under pain of death! But no one may give you shelter or food or drink.
Greek Chorus: Rhodope, repent! Obey and be silent. If you leave us we shall lose our new-found ecstasy. And you will surely perish.
Rhodope: Never! I accept my doom.
Priest and Greek Chorus Leave. Music. Helios appears, Rhodope sinks on one knee.
Helios: Rhodope, My daughter. be of good heart. For long you have bravely trodden the path of truth. Now you need to find the way of Love. For this you need to discover my Sister, Queen of Night.
Rhodope: So be it. Where shall I find her?
Helios: Thou shalt find to the left of the House of Elades, a Well-Spring. And by the side thereof grows a white cypress. To this Well-Spring approach not near. But thou shall find another by the Lake of Memory, cold water flowing forth, and there shall be a Guardian before it. Say "I am a child of Earth and of Starry Heaven: but my Race is of Heaven alone. And lo, I am parched with thirst and I perish. Give me quickly the cold water flowing from the Lake of Memory." And the Guardian will give thee to drink from the Well-Spring. And behold, thou shalt receive the armour of Hermes! And thou shalt be emboldened to make Thy Profession of Faith with words inspired by Mnemosyne, Muse of Remembrance.
Guide: And Rhodope journeyed far and long and no one would give her shelter or food or drink. And though she sought far and wide, she found no well, nor cypress nor lake of memory. And she was cold and hungry and thirsty when she reached a small grove of cypress trees by a stream.
Enter Rhodope holding bread in cloth.
Rhodope: My feet are bleeding and aching! I shall bathe them in this stream. She takes off her sandals and as she has one foot in stream, Old Woman comes upon her.
Woman: Fair Maiden, give me to eat, for I starve! Soldiers slaughtered all my family, even the children. They burnt our home. Yet still I would live that I may offer gifts to the Goddess Persephone on behalf of their souls.
Rhodope: I see that others suffer more than I do. I weep with you. Take this bread, good Mother. It is all I have.
Rhodope gives bread from bundle. Old Woman throws off her cloak and reveals herself as the Goddess Muth.  Rhodope goes on one knee.
Muth: Rhodope my daughter, you have reached the stream from the Lake of Memory! You have successfully passed through the ordeal ordained by the Blessed Gods. You speak the Truth. What is your Profession of faith?
Guide: And Rhodope brought to mind the words given to her by Helios, and spoke them to the Goddess.
Rhodope: Inspire me, O Mnemosyne! Out of the Pure I come, Pure Queen of them below, for I avow me that I am of Your Blessed Race. And I have paid the penalty for deeds unrighteous, whether it be that Fate laid me low or the Gods immortal. I have flown out of the sorrowful weary wheel. I have passed with eager feet to the circle desired, I have entered beneath the lap of the Queen Below, Despoina of the Underworld: and now I come a suppliant to Thee, Holy Persephone, Divine Muth, that of Thy Grace Thou shalt receive me to the seats of the Hallowed.
Muth: Holy and Blessed One, thou shalt be Goddess instead of mortal? (gives Rhodope water from cup.) Receive this water from the Lake of memory, that thou mayest acknowledge thy True Self. (Rhodope drinks.) But there is a further trial for thee to endure! Flee, Rhodope, for soldiers come upon thee! (Rhodope puts on right sandal.) Delay not one second but fly for thy life! Muth wraps cloak about her and leaves and Rhodope flees leaving left sandal. Enter Egyptian soldiers headed by Captain.
Captain: (picks up sandal) This is strange indeed! A woman of unsurpassed beauty flees across the desert, her hair flying like the night, leaving behind this tiny gold sandal! Surely this is an omen as the Festival of Opet approaches. I shall bring it to the Pharaoh, who is no mean magician!
Guide: And the Captain was as good as his word. He brought the sandal to the Pharaoh Amasis, who had left his capital in Memphis for Thebes in the South, to celebrate Opet.
Enter Amasis and Captain.
Captain: Your Majesty, I found this sandal by a stream where a maiden of divine loveliness was washing her feet in a stream. When she saw us in the distance, she fled, leaving behind her sandal. He presents sandal, ribbons tied.
Amasis: This sandal forms a Golden Ankh! I have seen it in a vision, held in the hand of a smiling Goddess, hair loosened and falling about her like a cloak. She filled my heart with flame. I am determined that at any cost I must find this maiden. I shall make her my Queen. Let the owner of this sandal be searched for and brought before me! I offer a rich reward.
Guide: And the owner of the sandal was sought for all over the land of Egypt, but no woman's foot filled it exactly. And seekers, eager for the rich reward, travelled further and finally they found Rhodope searching for berries to eat, by the Ionian sea, And she, too weak to protest, was brought by ship and land to Thebes. There she was brought before the Pharaoh.
Rhodope: What would the Pharaoh have of me?
Amasis: I know thee, Bearer of the Ankh! I would learn the Mystery of the Wells of Persephone.
Rhodope: If the Goddess wills it, so be it.
Amasis: What may I offer you in return?
Rhodope: Thou hast come to me as Helios. I would learn the secret name of Ra.
Amasis: If the God wills it, so shall it be. Rhodope, you have my love. Will you be my Queen?
Rhodope: You are in my heart, Amasis. I shall be your wife.
Music. Muth appears.
Muth: This Sacred marriage has been ordained by Amen Ra and myself, The Goddess Muth. Know that thou, Rhodope, are in verity the Princess Nitocris, sister of the Pharaoh Metesouphis. After his assassination, thou wert conveyed as a baby to the Temple of Helios in the island of Rhodes, birthplace of your Ionian mother. Thou, Amasis, hath restored Truth and Justice to Egypt and so shall be blessed with offspring through this union. Together you shall celebrate Opet with your marriage! In recompense for your abandoning your Vestal Vows, Nitocris, thou shalt finish the building of the Temple of Mykerinos in My honour. Thy Spirit shall bless all those who in Truth seek for Eternal Love.
Amasis and Rhodope hold hands palm to palm, then turn to bless Omnes. Egyptian music and dance.
Guide: Return, O Traveller, in Time to your present existence! Leave this pyramid having obtained its good, and journey to your own country and resume your studies. From now on, in every woman, whether ugly of beautiful, old or young, wise or foolish. you shall see the Goddess! And so in you they shall recognise the God.
Traveller: I give you thanks. My mind and heart are One. I know myself. I am Ra the Traveller, and the Day of Happiness has come! I rest in the Heart of Muth.
Gong is struck once.
End of Mystery
Queen: (anoints each brow saying) True Vision is within your brow.
Pharaoh: (offers incense to each saying) In your heart is the hidden sun.
Priestess Hierophant: Fellow Celebrants, let us contemplate the Mystery of Rhodope's Sandal.
Contemplation
Rays of harmony are sent forth. Reports.  High Priest and High Priestess give thanks to Muth and Amen Ra. Feast is enjoyed.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Festival of Astarte and Adonis Summer Solstice. 21st - 24th June

Panthea, Initiations and Festivals of the Goddess
 
Fellowship of Isis Liturgy
by Olivia Robertson
 
Part II. The Star of Ishtar. Eight Seasonal Rites
 
Festival of Astarte and Adonis
Summer Solstice. 21st - 24th June
 
Ritual no. 8
 
ORACLE OF THE GODDESS ASTARTE
 
Priestess: (Invocation) Divine Astarte, Queen of Heaven, Virgin of the Sea, we invoke Thee! Thou Who art Venus Urania, Goddess of Fertility and Love, replenish our hungry earth. Bring us hidden knowledge for our use from past aeons, Who art Mother of the Titans.
Oracle: Restlessly you look backwards and forwards in time and outwards to the stars for a world of power and love, whereas it is all around you now! The lost Paradise is as near as head and heart and is enjoyed by children and simple people living in woods and wild pastures. The gifts of the Tree of life shine within the earth and within each creature. Yet you have lost the Power to use them. For experiment as you will with the forces known to your five senses, the greater part of the physical world, the Etheric Plane, is lost to you! Yet it is from there that all health and energy come. Etheric Power comes from greater planes to animate the earth and your own bodies, through the Power Centres within the earth and yourselves. In Paradise the felled forest still stands and the parched river beds flow with life bringing waters. Nature Spirits enjoy the lovely land of Ether which is visited by beings from beyond the sun and by the Adepti.
You can have little real effect on earth through dreaming in the astral realm of gentle love and beauty, until you can understand and experience the etheric part of the physical plane. It is from thence that Apparitions of the Goddess manifest to Saints and the Gods show themselves to Hermits. From that plane miracles are mightily manifested through the Life Force which animates all existences on earth. Yet this very part of the physical world may be a place of fear to you when your souls leave your bodies on death. Not understanding its true nature, the etheric realm may become a limbo for earthbound spirits. However, know that any evil force in this realm is very Transient because it cannot subsist there on its own, but has to draw its existence from plasm produced by unpleasant emotions. But force for good can exist there because it draws its Power from Spheres of Light and Power.
Every day a dawn and dusk each of you should become aware of your own etheric Body of light, with its many-coloured centres and flowing lines of life force. Pray to Me to help you, for I am Mistress both of the rising Earth Force and of the descending Light emanating from greater planes. When these two forces meet within yourself, Love and Truth are one in Harmony and you will attain Illumination. Even in your first attempts you should gain health and happiness, understanding and a kindly love for all. As you progress you will become a beacon Light for all who accept your rays of goodness.
Each woman can be her own original manifestation of the Goddess: and every man individually should show forth the God. But first you must surrender selfishness and arrogance. Be receptive with humility to the Deities, and then you yourselves can give forth the Light.
At the gate. Priestess wears star crown and blue robe, Priest with gold headdress and crimson robe. Midsummer Maiden with wreath of roses and white robe, Midsummer Youth with leafy wreath and green robe and bears green branch. Children with flower-wreaths and bright clothes. Celebrants attired likewise. At gate is a pot with plant near and statuette or cloth doll. Other potted plants include roses and baskets of cakes and wine or fruit juice.
Priest: Friends, we assemble to celebrate the Festival of Astarte and Adonis, as did the ancient Phoenicians, Assyrians, Babylonians and Cypriots. The Gardens of Adonis are planted to this day in Sardinia for their Midsummer Festival. On Aphrodite's Day, April the First, a youth presents himself to a girl and requests her to be his "comare", sweetheart.
Youth walks over to maiden and offers twigs from his branch.
Priestess: As May ends, the Maiden makes a pot from cork-tree bark and sows wheat and barley within it. She waters the plants in the sun so they are well grown by old Midsummer's Eve. For the festival she places a statuette or doll in the pot which is now called 'Emre'.
Maiden places doll in pot and holds it. Accompanied by the Youth she heads the Midsummer Eve procession followed by gambolling and rollicking children who carry pots of flowers and plants. Children pick up their pots, women bear baskets with fruit, men, wine.
Priest: Let us make procession to the Altar of the Goddess!
Procession through house and garden to altar, covered wtih saffron coloured cloth and on it, burning Incense and if indoors, 7 white candles.  Gong (or bell) nearby.
Priestess: (offers incense) We offer incense to Thee, the Goddess Urania Astarte. Mother of the Titans, who doth bestow fertility to the whole earth. Bless the land at this auspicious time of Midsummer.
Priest: (offers incense) We offer incense to Thee, the God Uranus, Consort of Urania Astarte. Mighty God, Thy Body is in the cloud-filled firmament that encircles the Pleiades, who are Astarte's doves and the shining moon and the Morning and Evening Star, all sacred to the Queen of Heaven. Thy shadow falls across the earth bringing shade to trees and plants. Bring us nobility and far-reaching purpose that strengthens the good in all things.
Priestess: Let the Midsummer Maiden present the Emre to the Goddess!
Maiden: (places Emre on altar) I present this Emre to Astarte! May we be blessed with earthly abundance and generosity of soul.
Priest: Let all present their gifts.
Youth: I offer this tree branch to Uranus. May we reach far and wide in our life's adventures, yet keep our feet firmly planted on the earth! Children and Celebrants present their gifts, each making a wish or prayer.
Priest: At this joyful time let the Players show forth the mystery of Astarte's Cone.
MYSTERY OF ASTARTE’S CONE
Players: Columba wears white veil and gown, Adonis green. Pleiades wear star crowns and white silver dresses. Men and women woodlanders are in green and russet. Cone-shaped star crown and silver robe lie at hand. Gong is struck twice.
Alcyone: Draw near, Electra, Taygete and Celeno, and come to me, Thy sister Alcyone! Come, Asterope and Maia, Mother of Pan, and bring the far wandering Merope. I would that you pity a mortal maiden, sweet Columba, who weeps on her wedding eve. Behold the Midsummer Bride, who may be in mourning weeds at midnight!
Columba: Adonis, it is no wonder thou wast born from the trunk of a tree, so unbending and stubborn art thou! And all for some fantasy born of black night. Thou didst vow to wed me tomorrow, a Midsummer Noon. Art thou forsworn?
Adonis: Never, lovely Columba! I am faithful to thee and to my word. But a solemn oath made to a Goddess must and shall also be honoured. Know that in the depths of the night that has passed no less than a Goddess came to me, shining in the silvery rays of the moon. Her countenance was too bright for human eyes and I covered my face.
Columba: What Goddess was this, so to dazzle your eyes?
Adonis: She spoke these words and Her voice was clear and pure and ran through my heart like a sword: "I am Astarte of the Cone. Adonis, I have chosen thee for an heroic task. Repair thee at the hour of midnight to my ancient Cone in the desert. dedicated to Me thousands of years ago by a great and noble race. Now it is deserted, the fertile lands that once surrounded it, desert, deprived of flowing rivers and high reaching trees. No man dare approach the Cone because of its ever-living Power. At the full of the moon on Midsummer's Eve its Force is replenished by an inverted Cone of White Light that descendeth up it. Forthwith, like a rising cobra, fire shooteth up from the heart of the earth. When the White Light and the Golden Fire Meet within the matrix of the Cone, they form a six-pointed star and bright rays shoot forth across the desert on every side."
Columba: What good could come of such fearful Force?
Adonis: Much good. Harken to Astarte's words: "These Rays, when they illumine the souls of worthy custodians, bring fertility to the land, and glory and power to those who do the Goddess's work. But in these degenerate times the Rays bring madness or death to those who venture to use the Power. It is My Will that Thou, Adonis, shouldst repair to the Cone at the fateful time when the six-pointed Star shineth forth this Midsummer Eve! There shalt thou receive My love and Power. If thou canst survive the light and heat, thou shalt labour to restore My lands. Rivers shall be released from the depths and the desert shall bear grain and fruit to feed all creatures."
Columba: A dire command! What answer made you her?
Adonis: I swore to the Goddess that I would undertake the task, even asked a boon, that in return I should become as Orion who strideth across the sky and that name should be honored throughout the wide earth!
Columba: Alas! To make a bargain with the all-powerful Goddess! Surely you shall perish. Did She grant your petition?
Adonis: She replied that whatever the outcome, I shall gain immortal fame! There were lightnings and thunder and She left me like unto the moon obscured by storm clouds.
Columba: Is it for this that I abandoned my home in fair pastures? I preferred thee to my loving parents and friends. I have constantly attended thee as thy companion in thy wild exploits, though I have to indulge in peaceful shade. For thy sake I wander entangling trees and rocks, my robe tucked up in the manner of Artemis. I have wept to see thy hounds tear asunder fleet hares, timorous does and the stag exulting in his lofty horns. Indeed, I have also feared for thee when thy foes are fierce boars and ravenous wolves, bears armed with claws, and lions red with the slaughter of herds!
Adonis: Fear not for me, sweet Columba, and keep thy compassion for hares and does! When I have received the Power of the Cone I shall be a greater hunter than Orion or indeed than Artemis Herself.
Columba: Impious words! Artemis hears all. Harken to my council, Adonis, who truly loveth thee. Beware the might of the Mother of Nature. Thou hast slaughtered Her children, not for need but for thy pleasure. She shall be avenged. Do not provoke Her. Those charms that have impressed my heart will little avail against Astarte. She lures you to death, who accepted Her challenge with ambition, and not to plant Her lands.
Adonis: Loving Columba, when I have triumphed and have married thee according to my vow. Thou mayest plant grain to feed our sons, and roses to please our daughters, as befits a woman. I shall have greater tasks in subduing new lands. The evening draws nigh. I must prepare myself for my ordeal.
Alcyone: Woe to those proud mortals who challenge the Great Goddess! Gentle Columba retreats to her grassy glade, there maybe to spend the night in prayer for her lover. Adonis bids farewell to the woodlands and as darkness falls, he sets forth for the desert alone. The full moon is rising, showing herself in all her beauty. Come, my sisters, let us perform the Dance of the Moon.
Music. Moon Dance by Pleiades.
Adonis: Now cometh the ominous midnight hour. The moon shines her white light upon craggy rocks that are as Titans imprisoned in stone, their majestic faces sharply marked with hollow eye sockets and heavy lines of age. The desert sand is like a still silvery lake and the sky is as pate as the soft grey of doves. (Solemn music with drum beats) But what is this blackness that blots out both sand and rocks? As I approach it rises higher and higher, swallowing up the pale sky and eclipsing the moon. It is the Cone! No mortal men could have wrought this mighty work, but rather the Titans, offspring of Astarte and Uranus! What a pygmy creature am I, dwarfed by this Pylon. Is the mockery of my friends of more avail than death? Yet I cannot retreat and live dishonoured. Maybe the descent of the Power is a fable invented by women to keep their sons from venturing into the dangerous desert. Astarte, I await your Force. come what may! I shall keep mine oath.
Gong is struck 12 times. Adonis covers his face and sinks to ground.
Adonis: What dreadful Light is this, what burning fire! It consumes my body and rages like a torrent through my blood. My eyes see no more. I am overcome. This is my Fate, to die. Lies still.
Alcyone: Sisters, behold the nemesis of presumptuous mortals. Yet we pity fair Adonis. As Aurora strokes her rosy fingers across the sky of dawn, let us call forth the soul of Adonis with the Dance of the Spirits. Mystical Music.  Dance. Woodland folk surround Adonis.
1st Woman: Weep, weep for Adonis! He hath perished, the lovely Adonis! Let us all take up the chant. Let Echo follow. Women repeat chant.
1st Man: Let us lament for our friend Adonis, the great Hunter! Let the woodsmen lament for Adonis born of a tree. Let Echo follow. Men take up chant.
1st Woman: Let us call upon Columba, the bereaved Bride. Weep for thy dead lover, Columba. Cut off thy lovely hair and pour ashes upon thy head. Tear thy veil in twain. Weep with us for Adonis and let Echo follow. Come, let us adorn his body with roses and lilies.
Music.
Columba: (shows herself wearing star crown and silver robe) Know that I am Astarte, Goddess of Love! (She bends over Adonis and puts her hands on his head and heart) Adonis. awake! You have slept too long. It is now close on midday. Keep thy vow!
Gong is struck 12 times. Adonis slowly rises.
Omnes: Adonis has returned to life. Urania weeps no more.
1st Woman: Women, rejoice! The rivers will flow in the desert and we shall have grain and fruits to feed our little ones. Hunger shall be no more.
1st Man: Our woodlands are saved from the encroaching desert, through the love of the Goddess for a mortal man.
Astarte: Do you call yourselves mortal? Let your souls shine forth like the Pleiades! Adonis, know thyself. Thou who didst aspire to be Orion art in verity the God Uranus-El-Adon, My Husband, concealed in human form. Thy penumbra doth pervade the wide-spread sky and earth and thou art the Master of all magic. My Light and Power need Thy strength and purpose that the desert of earth may again blossom. Now our true Nature is known in this land, we must leave for the Heavens, lest We eclipse those who strive on earth. My children, learn from our story that too great a Power blinds and burns when won through magical arts unhallowed by care for every creature, Yet the courage of Adonis and his loyalty to his Bride both as Goddess and woman have been rewarded by renewed life for all.
Alcyone: Blessings flow from the Marriage of Urania-Eloh-Astarte and Uranus-El-Adon.
Gong is struck once.
Priestess: Fellow celebrants, let us contemplate the Mystery of Astarte's Cone.
Contemplation
Rays of vitality are sent forth. Reports. Priest and Priestess bless cakes and wine which are enjoyed.
Thanksgiving
Thanksgiving to Astarte and Uranus.

Sources: “A New Translation of Ovid’s Metamorphoses into English Prose”, translated by Joseph Davidson, London 1748, re-printed 1754, published by J. Robinson, London, 1759. “Bullfinch's Mythology: the Age of Fable, the Age of Chivalry and the Legends of Charlemagne”, Thomas Bullfinch, Spring Books, London, 1967. “Manual of Oriental Antiquities”, Ernest Babelon, H. Grevel & Co., London, 1906. “Favourite Greek Myths”, Lilian Stoughton Hyde, Heath & Co., Boston, 1914. “Juno Covella, Perpetual Calendar of the Fellowship of Isis”,Lawrence Durdin-Robertson, Cesara Publications, Clonegal Castle, 1982. “The Goddesses of Chaldea, Syria and Egypt”, Lawrence Durdin-Robertson, Cesara Publications, Clonegal Castle, Ireland, 1975.

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