Tuesday, April 23, 2019

The Timeless Inspiration of Morgana Le Fay - A Pilgrim's Tale




Archetype - Legend - Woman 

I first encountered Morgana Le Fay in my adolescence, brought to vivid life by Marion Zimmer Bradley in The Mists of Avalon.  Of all the characters, I resonated most deeply with her strength, determination and evolution from a smart, precocious girl into a Woman of Power, a Priestess.  I escaped into “Morgaine” the Arthurian character and through her felt the agonies and ecstasies of serving the Goddess.  She opened a portal through which I could access Goddess consciousness like a long-buried story rising from the well of my soul, singing songs of past lives in Britain, serving Goddess. I felt her rage at the twilight of the Old Ways, when she saw Patriarchal Christianity overwhelm and send Avalon even further into the mists of time, memory, and eventually, legend.



Yet the essence of the woman she represents lingers on like a soft, consistent ripple of magic memory.  Decades have passed since I read the book and still her image permeates the mists between worlds, small and dark, she mirrors me. Definitely not a princess to be protected like Gwenhwyfar, she is a different sort of woman, a shape-shifter, warrior and healer.  Of mysterious origins; she is the subject of legend, song and story. She appears in dreams and thoughts but she also felt in nature, particularly near water. I have felt her breezing through the land on the paths of pilgrimage and drawing near in ceremony, like a whisper.  And the more I focus on her, the more embodied my exchange with her becomes.  The more this happens, the more circumstances seem to conspire to give it expression.
I have been inspired by this essence throughout a lifetime spanning the globe, fifteen years of which were spent based in Brazil.  When I brought the Gracious Iemanjá, Lady of the Seven Seas, to meet the Lady of the Lake at the Glastonbury Goddess Conference of 2016, I loved how their images played off each other - both dreamlike ladies in flowing robes - chalices, wells, waters, depths & mysteries. 

When I set my heart upon that ancient source of Avalon in 2015, I asked the Goddess to help lead my feet on the path of my heart‘s dream.  Luckily, the Glastonbury Goddess Conference opened the Mysteries of Avalon to me, and I’ve never been the same. Every year since 2015, I’ve returned to Avalon and its annual convergence of Goddess-loving souls.
There, I meet sources of wisdom and inspiration embodied by powerful Priestesses, Artists and Teachers.  I learn from visionaries like Kathy Jones, founder of the Conference and Avalon Priestess Initiator.  I listen to the songs of Heloise Pilkington, whose voice is my barge across the misty divide between ordinary and extraordinary realms.  I meet, dance, pray, sing and celebrate ritual with kindred spirits from all over the world who gather yearly to commune in Goddess. 
And in what is possibly the most important aspect of Pilgrimage, I open myself to the inspiration literally emanating throughout the land – its waters, forests and elementals – the veils between the worlds are very thin there and the very mists suffuse us in otherworldly frequencies.  Inspiration, downloads, sudden visions; these come with higher force and frequency on those ancient stone pathways.

And Morgana’s call is unmistakeable.  In 2017, I returned and surrendered to a yearning to visit the grave of Dion Fortune, the legendary occultist author. Arriving at the gravesite, I met a beautiful red-haired lady with whom I fell into easy conversation.  She told me that as a devotee of Iemanjá, I must read “The Sea Priestess” by Dion Fortune. So on my way back down to Glastonbury, I stopped and bought it, then read it within three days.
A “teaching novel”, it tells of a mysterious, seemingly ageless and very spiritually adept woman landing on the shores of Britain by boat.  She enchants the protagonist and teaches him rites of power from a well of magical memory going all the way back to ancient civilizations of the Sea.  “Vivian Le Fay Morgan”, as she is called in the book, is a dark-haired, petite lady who performs very clearly articulated rituals for purposes like clairvoyance.
But this character, this “updated” Morgana, had more to teach me.  Through her Dion Fortune tells a story of magical epistemology.  Scenes where the material and imagined, the legendary and the temporary morph in and out of each other offer knowledge of magical states. As they walk the rugged Cornish shoreline, its caves and shadows echo ancient legends while the mists seem to reveal and conceal  simultaneously, we feel the power of sacred landscapes to shape consciousness.  The rituals led by Vivian Le Fay Morgan suggest liminal states in which the very act of imagination ignites a magical fire and just the thought of something can make it so.

Here, on the misty and precipitous pathways between belief and disbelief, desire and detachment, is magic. Morgana’s hand parts the mist and joins us to the Goddess.  Her legends, her songs, images and her movements are all part of this call.  She is just legendary enough and just “real” enough to exert a pull on our wildest imaginings – a timeless Woman of Power who embodies the possibility of a magical life.
I read the book, then went off for a year to fight my life’s battles and make radical changes (like leaving Brazil for Ashland, OR).  When I returned to Glastonbury in 2018, the call was even stronger, and it felt like Morgana was vortexing around me and through me.  I decided to embody her in a photograph along the wooded pathways leading to the Tor.  Then, I found myself in a “Nine Morgens” workshop with Kathy Jones, which focused on role-play as a magickal tool. Soon afterward, Heloise Pilkington sang “Morgana Le Fay” at the Conference and I surrendered to the song. Haunting and evocative, it is a call to Sacred Dance that I’ve since choreographed into a Prayerformance based on the movement language of another great Adept, Isadora Duncan.
That dance, buoyed by the angelic voice of Heloise, is my expression of the possibility of a magical life for every woman through the inspiration of Morgana le Fay. Using the Universal Dance principles of Isadora Duncan, it depicts a woman in harmony with the forces of nature, heeding the call of the Goddess and offering herself as a bringer of Grace, Healing and Inspiration.


Me embodying Morgana, July 2018.  The "Excalibur" sword was borrowed from my friend Pete
and his lovely pixie-wife Rowan took the pic.

Movement has always been my medium and method, which is why my body of Goddess-work always culminates in dance or movement ritual.  When I trace the trajectory of the force of inspiration in my life, I find that embodiment through movement is always the chief result.  The awe and reverence we feel for the forces of the universe crystallize into archetypes.  The great souls inspired by the archetypes to do great works become the legends about whom stories are told, paintings painted and songs sung.  These works of art then become currents that reach into our souls and spark new expressions of that universal force.
Women of Power have been with us since time immemorial, yet history often erases them or contaminates their memory like with Morgana.  It certainly wouldn’t be the first time history blamed a woman for a man’s failures and it probably won’t be the last.

Which is why, to me, Morgana is more pertinent than ever.  To read about her, to feel her in the sacred landscape, to dance her, is to reclaim the birthright of feminine power in Goddess. It is to celebrate what is uniquely ours and to inscribe our own magickal story in the perilous times of the here and now.  To wield the power of a Priestess/King-Maker/Sorceress/Healer who went before us, we heal ourselves and in turn offer healing to all womankind encouraged to abdicate its full powers and fade into the mists of compliance and conformity.
Like I always say, “Enter the myth, and the myth enters you.”  The Dance of Morgana Le Fay is a portal to a mythic state in which we move with a legendary Woman of Power, a Priestess of Sea, Lake, Water…. a Chalice of the Goddess whose echoing call grows stronger every day.  It is my sincere hope, that if you’re reading this, you will one day join me in that dance, and together we will celebrate Morgana le Fay – Archetype, Legend, Woman.