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anakephalaiosis posted an update 6 years, 8 months ago
Thank you. Very interesting, indeed. Never heard of this Druidic man from Ireland, speaking true words. I am aware of traditional approaches, through lineages and apprenticeship. Though mine is different.
My Harry Potter approach to Druidry, is humorously more about finding horcruxes, by means of deduction in Baker Street. It means, that I invent Druidry, as I go along.
Riding the dragon, from the dungeons of the goblins, into fresh air, is not a thing that can be planned. One improvises, forever fighting, always breaking new boundaries.
Harry Potter’s hallows are the king’s token: 1. the sprouting scepter-wand, 2. the orbicular apple, with seed of resurrection, and 3. cloak of invisibility, that green leaves provide, in a helmet, that is a tree’s crown.
The eight horcruxes (hours essential) are the eight canonical hours, derived from the compass, being an ancient sun clock. This is still in use Iceland today. Druidry was there, and still is there, dormantly.
Monarchy needs to control its own power of definition, to maintain power. Assuming, that a definition of king, should arise from the Runes, then the alley cat is out of the bag, roaming the streets of leaky cauldron.
It becomes more difficult, for any monarch, to rally the uniformed pawns on the chessboard, when there is another competing definition of king out there, that disputes present monarch’s claim to throne.
My imaginary kingship in Britain is just a poetic idea, of bringing surprising ideas together, like Guy Fawkes inventing a jerrycan and a zippo lighter. Of course, I will never set foot on British soil.
I predict, that monarchy will fall, because of a single word: “fodder”, meaning cow’s dinner. The word has dual meaning in Old English, as well as Old Norse.
When bringing eggs to market, one wraps their fragility in grass or hay, being the fodder of a cow. Thus the word “fodder” becomes general concept of wrapping fragility.
To use the word “fodder” as sheath, when wrapping a sword, is a logical deduction, because it provides protection of the carrier’s fragility, avoiding to cut oneself accidentally.
To unfold the fodder, as sheath, is to draw a sword, that metaphorically is a sprouting apple seed, expressing the king’s token, in the hallows of J. K. Rowlings.
Thus King Arthur and the Runic poem make a perfect match. The consequence will cause the downfall of present monarchies, since they are all parts of the same cobweb.
The English have fox hunt, and the Norwegians have quisling hunt, instigated by monarchs. Breaking the Seventh Seal is becoming part dragon, part man. One choses, what part to act upon.
That is Pendragon, Druidically.
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/s/cc61o55cym87pby/druid-king.jpg
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