Epiphany on Oak Street « The House of Vines

Epiphany on Oak Street « The House of Vines.

The stranger Eros comes,
alighting like a black crow on the branch
amid the early morning mist.
His eyes are blue as the first violets of spring,
his hair golden-brown as a jar of honey on the shrine of the nymphs,
his lips soft as satin sheets on bare flesh,
and I know that his kiss would be tart as a cherry
just before it reaches ripeness.
The others standing there
(too engrossed in their recriminations)
do not see him, but I do.
And he smiles at me,
a sad and longing smile,
before disappearing once more.
The couple clasp hands and cross the street,
their worthless argument forgot.

“Rose” is “Eros” in Pig Latin

The Meanings of Rose Colors
The Meaning of Rose Colors

Purple roses are one of the innovations developed by man to express another emotion. This particular color has various levels of meanings, and has always been a favorite among rose lovers.

Purple roses primarily stand for enchantment. The giver of the purple rose seeks to convey that he or she has fallen in love with the recipient at the very first sight. A deep magnetism and charm that makes the recipient almost irresistible is what the purple rose seeks to convey. The very first meeting has totally enticed the sender of these flowers, who simply cannot resist the object of his desire.

Though purple speaks of enchantment, the meaning of the purple rose nowhere suggests permanence. The enchantment can be transcendental and can also be fleeting. As the word “enchantment” suggests, the effect is almost magical, and can also die off without much warning.

The purple rose has certain other meanings. Opulence, glory and majesty are some other interpretations given to the purple rose. Purple being a color of elegance and grandeur, it only fits that the rose also pays tribute to these characteristics.

The most widespread meaning of the purple rose is enthrallment, especially at first sight. And though there is no indication of permanence in this attraction, there is definitely a deep impression created.

Hemara Gaia

©Josephine Wall

I’d make a more substantial post right now, but I’m feeling a tad on the uninspired side right now, and it may or may not have to do with the fact that my head is covered in wave clips and gel (it’s really the only way to make my hair hold anything for more than an hour). I’m going to celebrate Hemara Gaia the way any urbanite should: I’m going out to a nightclub.

…but, to do it, I’m taking in a bunch of bottle returns so I don’t have to take out cash, I’m getting myself a flower from the farmer’s market, and I’ll be walking there and back (unless, of course, I drink too much to walk three blocks, which is unlikely). Also, my hair dye is all-natural botanical and vegan, and my conditioner has placenta and gel have placental proteins in them, so even though I’m not vegan, I’m not letting that shit go to waste, nosiree.

Yeah, I could probably go out and do some more work in the garden, but it’s cold, and I will not be shamed about my lacking desire to plant saplings.

You keep Hemara Gaia in your way, and I’ll keep it in mine.

©Josephine Wall

I give thanks to Pan
God of the wild things
Of the forests and the streets
And to His companion Kybele
To whom Theban women sing
Mother of Earthly life
©2010 Ruadhan J McElroy

You’re free to use this small prayer I wrote in your ritual, but please re-print with credit, and do not publish formally without permission.

Ornithomancy

Divination by birds.

Author: * Jonus Hasdrubal
Date: Dec 8, 2003 – 19:44

Birds have always held a fascination for men, whether they are good or bad omens. Augur, which is another word for omen, comes from the Latin ‘augurium’ or, literally, ‘divinatory observation of birds’, which gave augur the meaning, ‘priest who provides favourable omens’.

Initially, the messages, predictions and divinations delivered by the augurs were systematically good. The word ‘august’ which means now ‘imposing and worthy of respect’ came to mean, in those days, ‘sanctioned by the augur’ in other words promised success by the gods.

From the word ‘august’ came the origin of our month of August, and the Christian name Augustus. Subsequently, ‘augur’ was to take on the meaning of good or bad prediction. But before that, the augur could only be good.

Although the Roman priests were great and renowned soothsayers, paying particular attention to the signs revealed by birds, the divinatory arts made up from compilations of omens relating to birds were in common use and highly prized by the Egyptians, Chaldeans, Greeks, Celts, Gauls, Indians, Arabs and Chinese. In Greece this divinatory art took the name of ornithomancy, that is, divination by birds. But it was in Rome that each of the gods was awarded a protecting bird: the eagle to Jupiter, the dove to Venus, the owl to Minerva, etc.

The bird as a reflection of the soul.

It is true that very early on the bird represented in men’s minds the most precious and important thing in him; his soul! Also, any man who, in the eyes of his fellow creatures, was divine or supernatural often had the power to talk to the birds, and these used to come to him as if he were one of them That is why someone who can talk to the birds and understand their song is a symbolic representation of the man who has succeeded in taming his soul, often depicted as a snake or bird which you cannot catch. Merlin, the sorcerer, and St. Francis of Assisi, for example, lived amongst the birds and seemed to understand their language and converse with them.

With regard to the relationship and associations which exist between the bird and the snake, in the world of myths and symbols of Antiquity, there is the Greek legend of Cassandra and her brother Helenus, she became a prophetess and he became a seer, that is, a visionary and a soothsayer, after some snakes had licked their eyes and ears while they were asleep. Another Greek legend, in similar vein, tells us how the visionary Melampus, having had his ears licked by the snakes which he had reared himself, could hear and understand the universal language, that is to say, the language of symbols, which was often likened to the songs of birds.

From then on, it really did seem that the relationship or relation between the snake and bird was established, if not scientifically, then at least intuitively and metaphorically, by our ancestors who had a liking for omens and knew how to detect the mysterious links between different forms or revelations of nature. Nowadays palaeontologists are inclined to think that birds could be the descendants of certain kinds of carnivorous dinosaurs. Recently, in an area north of Peking, the fossil of a carnivorous dinosaur with feathers, christened Sinosauropteryx, was discovered. Expert palaeontologists did not consider it to be the direct ancestor of the bird, but they saw enough similarities to reveal a likely connection between the huge reptile and the bird.

Read the rest here.

Anita Lane – “The Next Man That I See”

[click for video —embedding disabled for some reason]

What you did was wrong
You had a boat rocking to a sad sad song
Wind through the flowers and words fall apart
But there is the Divine in all things
In my broken house,
my broken plates,
my broken fingernails
That’s a part of god, too

And I think that I’ll just
Make Love
To the next man that I see
The next man that I see
And I think that I’ll just..

You’re not here
That’s my atmosphere
I am a scream to the two teams
I long to leave my body
And stalk your dreams
And go and do my master work

The thinking of you
The creation of you
And who you’ll be
And how you will complete me

But I am
As I am
As I am
As I am

But I think that I’ll just
Make Love
To the next man that I see
The next man that I see
And I think that I’ll just…

All these broken things
They’re a part of god too
There is the divine in all that you feel
and all that you do
and I think I’ll just go and do what I do
and play in your memories

The thinking of you
the creation of you
and who you will be
and how you will complete me

But I am
As I am
As I am
As I am

And I think that I’ll just
Make love
To the next man that I see
The next man that I see
And I think that I’ll just…

Yeah I think that I’ll just
Make love….

And I think that I’ll just
Make love
To the next man that I see
The next man that I see
And I think that I’ll just…

Yeah I think that I’ll just
Make love….

(transcribed by hand from listening; I cannot find a comprehensive lyrics page for Ms Lane’s work anywhere)

Anita Lane

If you think her work sounds very Nick Cave-y, there’s a reason for that: She dated him for a while during his early Boys Next Door/The Birthday Party days, and she actually co-wrote a few of his songs.

Despite her clear talent and influence, the reason you’ve probably never heard of her is cos (word on the street, anyway) is that she’s got such intense stage fright that she barely made it through the few times friends have managed to convince her to perform live.