Cornucopia: Horn of Plentyby Selena Fox
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Here are some ways to work with a Cornucopia as a ritual tool: Fall Equinox Offerings: As part of a Fall Equinox ritual, ceremonially fill one or more Cornucopias with assorted vegetables, fruit, herbs, nuts, and other produce offerings as an expression of thanksgiving for agricultural bounty and/or the "harvest" of abundance in various aspects of life. In a personal rite, speak a thanksgiving as you place each item in the Cornucopia. In group rituals, each participant can verbally or silently express thanks while placing an offering item in the Corncuopia. After the ritual, leave the ritually filled Offering Cornucopia in a natural place overnight and later return to the Earth whatever contents have not already been consumed by wild creatures and Nature Spirits. In addition to serving as an offering receptacle during a ritual, the Cornucopia used in this way can also serve as a symbol of the harvest for the rest of the festival celebration. See the photograph on this page and the one on the cover of this issue for examples of Fall Equinox Offering Cornucopias. Sign of the Season: A Cornucopia can be used not only at Fall Equinox, but throughout the year to celebrate the seasons. Fill your Cornucopia with natural materials and symbols associated with a particular seasonal festival or sabbat. Some suggestions are included in the box on this page. As you fill your Cornucopia with associated seasonal symbols, spiritually attune it, yourself, and your home to the season, and then place the Cornucopia as a sacred seasonal decoration on your personal altar or elsewhere in your home. You also can use a Sign of the Season Cornucopia as a seasonal focal point on a festival altar and/or feast table. If you work with a Sign of the Season Cornucopia year round, the act of changing its contents can aid you in aligning yourself and your home with seasonal changes. Ritual Feasting: Fill the Cornucopia
with a particular type of edible ingredients, such as apples, berries,
popcorn, crackers, chocolates, or other food to be served at a feast
within or after a ritual. Set the filled Cornucopia in the center
of the feast table not only as a decoration but also as a serving
container. For juicy or sticky food, line the Cornucopia with lettuce,
comfrey, other broad-leafed greens, tissue or wax paper. |
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Prosperity Magic: Place a Cornucopia on your personal altar as part of prosperity rituals. Fill it with dried sprigs of sage, cinquefoil, rosemary, thyme, mugwort, parsley, and/or other sacred plants, such as acorns, associated with well-being, prosperity, and good fortune. Dedicate the Cornucopia as a tool of abundance, and then place deep with it a written wish for a particular type of abundance. Envision the wish coming true. After the ritual has ended, keep the Cornucopia in a protected, yet visible place so that you see it every day. Follow-up by taking actions that can help your wish come true. After you have achieved your goal, give thanks by offering the contents to a sacred fire or by burying them in the ground. Deity Invocation: Use a Cornucopia as an invoking tool in calling and/or aspecting a Goddess and/or God during a ritual. A Cornucopia is a suitable tool for working with various deities associated with Abundance, Good Fortune, Agriculture, Crops, Harvest, and Plants. In using your Cornucopia for Deity work, first fill it with associated vegetation and symbols. For example, for work with Flora, fill the Cornucopia with fresh flowers and for work with Pomona, fill it with fruit. House Blessing: You can use a Cornucopia to bless your home or the home of a loved one. Fill a Cornucopia with herbs, flowers, fruit, vegetables, crystals, and other items associated with well-being and a happy home. After spiritually cleansing the home with incense and other tools, carry the filled Cornucopia clockwise around each room of the house as you focus on well-wishes. Then, place the Cornucopia in the main room of the home for at least a day and a night. After they have lost their freshness, bio-degradable ingredients can be removed and returned to Nature. The Cornucopia later can be used in other sacred ways in the home, such as a Sign of the Season or for Prosperity Magic. |
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References:
Funk & Wagnalls Standard Dictionary of Folklore, Mythology, and Legend, edited by Maria Leach. New York: Funk & Wagnalls Publishing Company, 1972. page 252, 246.
Dictionary of Classical Mythology, by J. E. Zimmerman. New York: Bantam Publishing, 1971. pages 70, 18-19 [keep]
Bulfinch's Mythology. Feltham, Middlesex, UK: The Hamlyn Publishing Group, 1964. pages 127-129.
The New Book of Goddesses and Heroines, by Patricia Monaghan. St. Paul, Minnesota: Llewellyn, 1997. pages 126-127.
Man, Myth & Magic: an illustrated Encyclopedia of the Supernatural, edited by Richard Cavendish. Volume 4. New York: Marshal Cavendish Corporation, 1970. page 518.
Mythology: Timeless Tales of Gods & Heroes, by Edith Hamiliton. New York: New American Library, 1953, page 287.
New Century Dictionary of the English Language, edited by H. G. Emery & K. G. Brewster. Volume 1. New York: D. Appleton-Century Company, 1946. page 327.
New Larousse Encyclopedia of Mythology, edited by Felix Guirand; translated by Richard Aldington & Delano Ames. New York: The Hamlyn Publishing Group -- Prometheus Press, 1968. pages 91, 149, 154, 158.
Selena Fox is high priestess of Circle Sanctuary. This article is
part of a work in progress and reflects her work in combining classical
and contemporary Paganis. She began exploring Pagan cultures as a teenager
and was a high school and college honors student in Latin and the classics.
She led her first public ritual in 1971 as president of Eta Sigma Phi,
the Classics honor society at the College of William and Mary in Virginia.
She is interested in hearing from others who use a Cornucopia as a ritual
tool. Contact her: Selena Fox, Circle Sanctuary, P.O.Box 9, Barneveld, WI 53507; (608) 924-2216; circle@mhtc.net.;
home page: www.mhtc.net/~selena