-Caveat Lector-

http://www.mysteriousbritain.co.uk/festivals/midsummer.html

Midsummer's Day

The festival is primarily a Celtic fire festival, representing the middle of
summer, and the shortening of the days on their gradual march to winter.
Midsummer is traditionally celebrated on either the 23rd or 24th of June,
although the longest day actually falls on the 21st of June. The importance
of the day to our ancestors can be traced back many thousands of years, and
many stone circles and other ancient monuments are aligned to the sunrise on
Midsummer's Day. Probably the most famous alignment is that at Stonehenge,
where the sun rises over the heel stone, framed by the giant trilithons on
Midsummer morning.

In antiquity midsummer fires were lit in high places all over the
countryside, and in some areas of Scotland Midsummer fires were still being
lit well into the 18th century. This was especially true in rural areas,
where the weight of reformation thinking had not been thoroughly
assimilated. It was a time when the domestic beasts of the land were blessed
with fire, generally by walking them around the fire in a sun-wise
direction. It was also customary for people to jump high through the fires,
folklore suggesting that the height reached by the most athletic jumper,
would be the height of that years harvest.

After Christianity became adopted in Britain, the festival became known as
St John's day and was still celebrated as an important day in the church
calendar; the birthday of St John the Baptist. Traditionally St John's Eve
(like the eve of many festivals) was seen as a time when the veil between
this world and the next was thin, and when powerful forces were abroad.
Vigils were often held during the night and it was said that if you spent a
night at a sacred site during Midsummer Eve, you would gain the powers of a
bard, on the down side you could also end up utterly mad, dead, or be
spirited away by the fairies.

Indeed St Johns Eve was a time when fairies were thought to be abroad and at
their most powerful (hence Shakespeare's Midsummer Night's Dream).

St John's Wort was also traditionally gathered on this day, thought to be
imbued with the power of the sun. Other special flowers (Vervain, trefoil,
rue and roses) were also thought to be most potent at this time, and were
traditionally placed under a pillow in the hope of important dreams,
especially dreams about future lovers.

The festival is still important to pagans today, including the modern day
druids who (barring any trouble) celebrate the solstice at Stonehenge in
Wiltshire. For them the light of the sun on Midsummer's Day signifies the
sacred Awen. For witches the summer solstice forms one of the lesser
sabbats, their main festivals being Beltane (1st May) and Samhain. Some
occultists still celebrate the ancient festivals around 11 days later than
our calendar; this marks the 11 days, which were lost when the Gregorian
calendar replaced the Julian calendar in 1751.

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