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HYPERBOREAN APOLLO
by Lykeia When Apollon departs
from Delphi to journey to the lands of the Hyperborea, we may ask how
do we
understand and interact with Apollon at this time of the year? So in
this essay
I am presenting my thoughts and experiences with Apollon in the winter.
This
comes strictly from personal experience growing up in the far north:
Alaska. In
this far northern land, natural sense of time is skewed and often
irregular.
Long daylight hours stretching far into the night during the summer,
and long
days of night during the winter. So when considering a far-northern
retreat of
Apollon, no matter what part of the world, you are dealing with a place
with
this irregularity that is common across that longitude. Apollo of Hyperborea Muses
sing their soft-lilting song, music stretching along the wings of faded
dawn, There
the ocean finds its port, a jagged harbor rising proud from the rocky
ground, In
this land on the edge of time Apollo wears his icy crown where shining
prisms
reside,
Not too many years ago I had wondered how on earth Apollon could be traveling north, this god of light, during the darkest time of the year. It made more sense to me that if he were to travel anywhere during the winter it would be the south, and maybe in the summer make a prolonged visit to the far-north since we had so much more light than anywhere else during that time of the year. However the more I thought about it, the more apparent it came to me that there were very important brightness of the light that shows its face in the north. The most spectacular light is the aurora borealis, or the northern lights. These lights are so connected to the sun, even though the exist during the darkest times of the year, that they were named after Aurora, the Roman goddess of the dawn; incidentally the other half is named for the Greek wind god Boreas. Scientifically we know the connections of the Northern Lights to the sun, since the source of the lights is believed by scientists to be created by a combination of particles from the solarwind coming from the sun entering into the earth's magnetosphere, the earth's upper atmosphere (wikipedia). Growing up seeing this light in its dancing display has been for me a potent memory, even now living in the south as I do, of Apollon's northern presence. Aside from the northern lights, the stars themselves are more visibly bright, and the moon itself is quite incredible in her light shining over the frozen land. During nights of the fullest moons the snow below captures that light and the night brightens considerably with such a beauty and purity. Even Apollon's music
is so much more potent during the northern winter, for the reason of
the
deadened silence. The waters are frozen completely solid, so there is
no river
talking. There are no dry dead leaves clinging to the trees, instead
they are
bear as bones and laden with snow. Just as the night yields such a
dazzling
light in the winter, so does this silence lend to the most beautiful
music.
That stillness allows you to hear to the soft impact of snow, the
tinkling song
of ice, and those winter song birds, their song is heard clearly for
some
distance. So it is this silence that carries and heightens the most
beautiful
of winter music. Now of course this does not equate with the stories of Hyperborea, a land of eternal spring, however I think we need to make some sort of geographic exceptions to the stories and focus on points of correlation rather than those that just don’t make sense since we logically know that you can go north as far as you like and just encounter the arctic. For one, in the far north there isn’t a real apparent spring or autumn, it is mostly summer and winter, but the summer itself is fair enough and mild enough in temperature that it may seem like a perpetual spring since it doesn’t have the killing heat of summer. And there are crops that do very well in the northern latitudes, particularly sun loving crops of grain and vegetables that grow abundantly and swiftly because of the long daylight hours in the summer. To another people who experience the intense heat and destruction of summer, the plentiful crops of vegetation and berries in tales of these lands would probably make them seem like some miraculous place. And what of this land of swans? Well in the north you actually have a rather prolific presence of swans. Mythically swans have played a rather extensive role in the Northern regions. Slavic creation tale has the creator in the form of a swan. The Norse had their swan-maidens, which were also part of Russian and Germanic folklore. In Celtic mythology the children of Lir are turned into swans by their stepmother who granted them the ability to sing beautiful music that could calm any heart. The swans of the European north were frequently viewed as shape-shifters of some sort, in Celtic mythology and the Nordic mentioned above the transformation of swans into humans is a common mythical theme. But of course swans appear in many cultures world-wide in their folk-tales and myths. Still in the summer in the north, swans are plentiful to see swimming in the lakes, and very distinct with the large bodies and very distinct profiles. In the cool summers the swans return to make their nests to hatch their young, for the returning generations Alaska boasts for the largest population of trumpeter swans which migrate from their homes throughout America. Alaska also has a large population of the Tundra or Mute swans. But the Trumpeter swan is the singing swan. He sings beautifully with clear notes that are likened the sounds produced by a French horn. During the summer Alaska and Canada is pretty well the lands of swans. It is easy to imagine that European swans have a similar migrating habit, which in fact they do migrating from their homes in Europe to Siberia, which would account not only for the regularity of their appearance in northern European myth but also to the legend of the numerous swans in Hyperborea. Though the American Trumpeter swan, cousin to the European whooping swan, is the only “singing” swan compared to the honking and whistling of his cousins. Most European fables, though, refer to the European Mute swan with his global range. A positive way to
keep Apollo in your mind during his time in Hyperborea would be to set
up or
adorn a previously existing shrine to Apollon with things to bring to
mind what
has been discussed above. A picture of the Aurora Borealis at the
shrine would
be appropriate. As would perhaps a glacier rock, most ancient ice
cutting deep
grooves and compressing the stones of the earth recalling the most
primal
beginnings of earth. Though swans migrate away from their summer homes
during
the winter, the time that Apollon travels to Hyperborea, I think it
would be
appropriate to include them as well in some form whether that be a swan
feather, or a figure of a swan. I would even suggest perhaps crystal in
order
to simulate the ice and snows of the far northern land. These things
will be
keep a visual reminder of Hyperborea and the connection with Apollon
there. Bibliography |