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Fiona Macleod was clearly a gentlelady of breeding and intellect.
She was almost 'one of us' - but not quite. It was this slight
difference that allowed her to deal with dark and frightening
characters and subjects in a way that gave them the glamour of the
Celtic Otherworld in an intriguing and believable manner. She
opened up a whole new world of language, ancient songs, poems and
proverbs that had never before been presented to the
English-speaking peoples south of the Scottish Highlands. She was a
darling of late Victorian literature and earnestly courted by the
fin-de-siecle 'Celtic Twilight' movement. Only after her 'death' in
1905 was it revealed that all the works attributed to her were
penned by the art and literary critic William Sharp. This
collection, edited and selected by Sharp's biographer Steve
Blamires, contains some of her more important, curious and obscure
pieces, annotated and explained where necessary, including
provocative dark tales, mystical parables, reveries of nature,
political polemics, delightful vignettes and some previously
unpublished fragments from William Sharp's notebooks.
William Sharp (1855-1905) was a prolific writer; friend and
confidant to the literati of the day; an active member of the
occult world of the late Victorian period; and a man who spent his
life cloaked in layers of secrets - the most important being that
he was the pen behind the writings of the mysterious Fiona Macleod.
He kept her true identity a closely guarded secret. Many famous
people - W.B. Yeats, "AE", MacGregor Mathers, Dante Gabriel
Rossetti - were involved in Sharp's short life; he was a member of
the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn and Yeats' secret Celtic
Mystical Order; and he and Fiona Macleod were involved with the
mysterious Dr. Goodchild whose ancient bowl was proclaimed by many
to be the Holy Grail. But the enduring legacy of these two
fascinating writers is the wealth of Faery magical lore contained
in the writings of Fiona Macleod. For the first time this book
reveals previously unknown secrets from the life of William Sharp
and shows clearly how to recover the Faery lore contained in Fiona
Macleod's literary output. These writings are not only about the
Realm of Faery, they are the first authentic first-hand accounts
from the Realm of Faery, revealing previously unknown Faery gods
and goddesses, Faery belief, lore and magic. The Little Book of the
Great Enchantment adds significantly to the corpus of serious
writings on this greatly misunderstood subject.
For a thirteen-year period, the reclusive Scottish writer Fiona
Macleod enthralled the Victorian reading public with a deluge of
stories, novels, poems and essays drawn from the wildly romantic
Highland and Island landscape. Although it was later revealed that
these works had issued from the pen of William Sharp, it was clear
that Fiona Macleod was more than a pseudonym; to Sharp she was very
much an autonomous entity. What's more, the wealth of previously
unknown and unheard of myths, names, traditions and beliefs in her
writings, while shone through a Celtic prism, show every sign of
having emanated from the Realm of Faery. Steve Blamires presents a
ground-breaking assessment of the Faery lore within Fiona Macleod's
literary output as part of his ongoing study of this enigmatic
writer. Building on the established groundwork of his biography of
Sharp, The Little Book of the Great Enchantment, he explores the
mythology and traditions of Faery, their symbolic and magical
significance, and the devices employed by Fiona in the transmission
of Faery teachings and inspirations. Using examples from Fiona's
rich and resonant body of work, his detailed interpretation will
enable the reader to tease out the Faery gems that are still to be
found woven into the lines and verse of her writings.
The Irish Celtic Magical Tradition explores the wealth of spiritual
philosophy locked into Celtic legend in The Battle of Moytura (Cath
Maige Tuired), a historical-mythological account of the conflict,
both physical and Otherworldly, between the Fomoire and the Tuatha
de Danann. This legend contains within it the essence of the Celtic
spiritual and magical system, from Creation Myth to practical
instruction and information. Alongside a translation of The Battle
of Moytura, Steve Blamires provides a series of keys to facilitate
understanding of the legend and sets out an effective magical
system based upon it, including interpretations of the symbolism,
meditation exercises and suggestions for its practical use. The
book offers a powerful and illuminating method of working with
ancient Celtic legendary material in the context of modern magic.
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