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NARCISSUS
[ ναρκισσος ]
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In
the Homeric Hymn, Gaia produced this flower as a bait for Persephone
so that Hades could lure her away from her companions and have
her alone when he took her. Since the bulbous root is quite poisonous
in some species, and since the word "narkao" ("narcotic")
is the base word for "narkissos", some modern authors now view
it as a way of subduing Persephone, basically a kind of date-rape
drug (I am a little pissed off by that idea). The Hymn says Persephone
"reached out with both eager hands to take the lovely new toy".
Some authors interpret the flower as a phallic symbol, with its long straight
stalk, and therefore her behavior shows she was subconsciously reaching
for Hades all along (I rather liked that idea).
In magickal lore,
it is said to have properties of harmony, love and luck. Given the circumstances
of the flower being brought forth by another female, her own great-grandmother,
I think perhaps this is more what was intended.
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ROSE
[ ροδον ] |
One
of the flowers Persephone picked on Nysa, its name meaning simply "red".
Sacred to several other goddesses as well (especially Aphrodite), it symbolises
not only love but sexuality, blood, healing and
divination. A very versatile
plant. Another interesting idea is that Persephone is represented
by roses and Hades by diamonds, thus making them the origin of
the most common items of modern romance and marriage. Too cute.
Herbally,
it has countless uses, from cough syrup to eye lotion.
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CROCUS
[ κροκος ] |
One
of the flowers Persephone picked on Nysa, its name simply means
"yellow".
It has often been used to represent the
freshness
of Springtime, and in modern days is a common Easter flower. Magickally,
it is used to attract love, and burning it as incense can induce
visions.
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VIOLET
[ ιον ] |
One of the flowers Persephone picked on Nysa,
its name simply meaning "purple". Symbolically, it has often been connected
to Aphrodite and therefore represents love and lust. I suspect this was
the reason she was picking it, because she was a budding teenager and
thinking romantic thoughts.
Ancient Greeks also wore them to calm tempers
and induce sleep. Magickally, they are now used as protection against
evil, and to bring luck and fortune. They can also grant
wishes if you
gather the first violet of the Springtime. Herbally, the entire plant
is edible and very nutritious. It can be used to ease headaches,
healing
wounds, pain relief, and as a laxative. A highly useful plant.
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IRIS
[ ιρις ]
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One
of the flowers Persephone picked on Nysa. Named for the Goddess
of the rainbow, because of the multitudes of colours in which it appears.
In some myths, Iris was similar to Hermes in gathering souls of the dead,
but in her case she collected only women.
Symbolically the flower's three
petals symbolise faith, wisdom and valor, and therefore has been used magickally to bring these qualities. It is also used to
purify an area
before rituals. Herbally, it can be used to aid digestion, to cure
burns,
and many other uses relating to the internal system and skin.
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HYACINTH
[ ηυακινθος ] |
One
of the flowers Persephone picked on Nysa. Myth says it was named
for a slain hero named Hyakinthos, and therefore represents blood.
Its
bulbs are poisonous, like the narcissus. Magickally, it is often used
to ease pain and prevent nightmares. Smelling its flowers is used to
relieve
depression and grief, and also cure hypnotic spells. The flowers are also
used in love spells.
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POMEGRANATE
[ σιδη / ροα ]
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Obviously
the most important plant in the story. Some authors view it as solely
a "food thing", that to eat any food at all in the land of the
dead condemned one to remain. This is somewhat borne up by myths from
other cultures, wherein the dead would offer a feast to travelers in
hopes of tricking them into staying behind.
Greeks, in preparing funeral
feasts, did not eat it because it was considered "unclean".
At Eleusis, it was a forbidden food during the Greater Mysteries, but
indulged in during the Thesmophoria celebrations. The Eleusinian official
view of its symbolism was a representation of a blood oath. By taking
the seed presented by the god of death, it became symbolic of death
entering the body. Modern interpretations call it a fertility symbol representing
sex, because of its shape and the abundance of seeds inside a womb-like
cavity. In ancient times, it was also referred to as a symbol of "indissoluble
marriage". Small wonder it also is considered an aphrodisiac.
Stories
vary as to how many seeds Persephone ate, ranging from three to
seven. The amount doesn't seem to matter however, since there was never
a decisive number in the original Hymn text (it says she was given "the
seed of the fruit", which could mean singular or several). I feel that merely the act of eating was the point. Ovid and
later authors maintained specific numbers, in order to fully "explain"
the length of the seasons.
What I find most interesting is one particular
statement that "pomegranate seeds were eaten by souls in the Underworld
in order to be reborn", perhaps symbolizing birth in general,
literally becoming a new seed in a woman's womb.
As well, it seems to
have a triple aspect to its symbolism relating to three goddesses who
are often depicted with the fruit: Hera, as the symbol of eternal marriage;
Aphrodite, as the fertile lover; and Persephone, in the form of
death and rebirth. I see it that way, and my personal
opinion is that the seeds were meant
to be a combined symbol, sex, death, and renewal, all of which are intrinsically
connected. As a further note of interest, there are even authors who maintain
that the pomegranate is the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge from the Garden
of Eden.
In modern magickal uses, it now represents
protection from evil and the attraction of money (both are angled toward Hades), and the
juice has been used as a ritual substitute for blood, for those who are squeamish.
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ASPHODEL
[ ασφοδελ ]
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The main flower described as growing throughout the Underworld.
A member of the lily family, it grow wild across the world. It is said
to represent death and also immortality. In ancient times, white asphodel
was planted on graves, and considered to be a food of the dead. It could
also be used in ritual bathing of the dead. As an herb, it is used for
treating infections and as an anti-spasmodic.
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WILLOW
[ ιτεα ] |
This
tree is most interesting, being sacred to several other goddesses (mostly
moon-related, such as Hekate). Myth states that the trees grew along the
banks of several Underworld rivers. It has a healing quality that I find
appropriate to Persephone's powers, in that its bark has medicinal
properties resembling aspirin.
Also, many witches construct their wands and broomsticks from
this wood. Burial mounds near lakes were often lined with willows to symbolise
death. Magickally, its uses include divination, love, and
protection as
well. Herbally, its bark is used in teas and pills for pain relief.
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WHITE
& BLACK POPLAR
[ λευκη / αχερωις ]
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There
are two kinds of poplar associated with the Underworld, the black and
the white. The black, sacred to Persephone, is said to grow in
the Elysian Fields. The white is the tree from which Leuke came. Another
Greek name (actually the scientific name) for the white poplar is Acherois,
coming from the name of the River Acheron.
The black
poplar has been called specifically a "funeral tree". Other cultures used
the wood to make coffins, or decorate corpses with masks of the wood. Its
leaves, trembling in the wind, are said to send messages to spirits.
Used in magick,
poplar leaves represent money (appropriate to Hades), and also
are used in flying spells. Herbally, the bark is used for
fevers, infections,
sore throats, and digestion troubles.
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CYPRESS
[ κυπαρισσος ] |
Sacred
to Hades, the grove of trees around Lethe were believed
to be white cypress. This evergreen tree is symbolic of death and
resurrection,
eternity and immortality, sometimes also healing
and protection. It is
closely connected to the "dying god" myths in many cultures,
and may explain some modern writers' views that Hades and Dionysos
were one and the same, the younger replacing the elder. In ancient Greece,
branches of the tree were used in funeral processions.
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PARSLEY
[ μαιντανος ]
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This is not well-known, but is specific to Persephone. The plant
was used in ancient Greece, woven into wreaths to decorate tombs and as
protection against ghosts. It was also used in purification baths for
the Mystery initiates, along with thyme, marjoram and salt. The salt-water-and-herb
baptismal bath was later borrowed, changed only slightly, by Christianity.
Magickal
uses include promoting lust and preventing drunkenness, making the plant
a shared sacred item with Dionysos. Herbally, it is useful for healing
insect bites, to ease coughs, and for minor urinary complaints.
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POPPY
[ παπαρουνα ]
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These
are generally seen more as a sacred flower of Demeter, but some claim
it belongs also to Persephone. Both the flower and the seed pod
are found in designs at Eleusis, and on even more ancient statues identified
as Persephone. Being another narcotic plant (some varieties
produce morphine, heroin, and opium) its hypnotic and death-like qualities
are appropriate to Underworld gods. Ancient Etruscans and Minoans featured
poppy capsules in funeral rituals.
Yet, because
of the poppy's multitude of tiny seeds, it is additionally considered to
be a fertility symbol. Those varieties that contain no narcotics are very
nutritious seeds. Magickal
uses include love, sleep, money and ironically enough, invisibility
(which suits Hades).
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GRAINS
& SEEDS
[ σιτα / κοκκος ]
FUNGUS / MUSHROOMS |
Referring to any grains -- barley, wheat and rye most prominently, but
also corn. These all have a strong significance to Demeter as well as
Persephone.
They all symbolise resurrection in a very profound
way, for each year they are stored carefully away and then replanted and
reborn. They were literal life for the mortal population in the form of
necessary food. In the Eleusinian Mysteries, Persephone herself
was actually called "the grain" to show that she too would arise
every year, and that she was the saviour of their eternal souls. Cakes
were made in honor of the "Two Goddesses" and eaten as part
of initiation rituals -- a ritualised "eating of their flesh"
just as later Christian culture does with their Communion wafers.
Symbolically,
all grains represent the Great Mother's blessings upon her people and
this holds true in many cultures. As well, the Eleusinian Mysteries featured
the sacred drink kykeon, made from barley, honey, water and pennyroyal mint,
which was drunk by initiates to purify and prepare for initiation.
Some
very well-researched authors declare that the barley was purposely tainted
with the hallucinogenic fungus ergot (a black patch which grows on the
grain, then drops off and re-sprouts as a tiny mushroom), and therefore
the initiates experienced uncanny drug-induced visions. Ancient writings seem
to bear this out, with their descriptions of the physical effects of drinking
the kykeon -- shaking, sweating, nausea, etc. Demeter herself requested
this drink when searching for Persephone, possibly in an attempt
to have a vision of her missing child.
In modern magickal uses, grains
are considered protection against evil. Barley is also used in spells
for healing, anti-negativity, and love. Corn is good for luck and divination.
Rye is used in fidelity spells. Wheat is used for fertility and also for
attracting money.
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MYRTLE
[ μυρτος ]
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These bushes are described as being in groves in the Elysian Fields, and
were carried in the processions to Eleusis every year. It is also sacred
to Hades due to a deal he struck with Dionysos. When the younger
god came to the Underworld to retrieve the soul of his mortal mother Semele, Hades required a life for a life. So Dionysos offered a living
plant, one sacred to himself, and gave Hades the myrtle.
It symbolises youthfulness, enduring love, peace, and even as a magical way to
communicate
with the dead. The wood is used in funeral rites as well. Myrtle berries
ripen to a brilliant red, and are also reputed to be a sexual symbol,
as they are similar in shape to the clitoris.
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FIG
[ συκη ]
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Entrances to the Underworld were believed to be hidden by fig trees, and
people in ancient Greece would not sleep beneath them. The fruit was forbidden
at Eleusis during some ceremonies.
Of course this is a very sexually symbolic
fruit as well, the red moist interior being reminiscent of female genitalia,
and the word "sykon" ("fruit of the fig") being a
euphemism for "vagina". Dionysian fertility rituals in Greece
and Rome featured a phallus made of fig wood. Satyrs, because of these
beliefs, were seen as being very attracted to fig trees.
Magickal uses
include divination, overcoming impotence, and love charms, as well as
safe travelling and safe homes. This is yet another fruit claimed to be
on the "Tree of Knowledge" in Eden.
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BEANS
[ κυαμος ]
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Mostly based on the story of Demeter's condemnation of the earth and how,
even though she killed everything else, beans still grew. She was furious
at this and it came to be seen as a metaphor for Hades (hence his
unusual title "Kyamites" = "he of the beans").
Beans
were eaten at funerals, symbolising the seed that would eventually grow
into a new life. Romans believed ancestral spirits lived inside beans,
and they held a yearly ceremony to honour them.
Magickally, they are used
for protection, exorcism, potency, love, and also to reconcile misunderstandings.
The latter may come from the ancient Greek method of using coloured beans
to draw lots (as in the story of the Olympian brothers themselves).
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PENNYROYAL
MINT
[ βλεχον / γλεχον ]
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Not at all based on the concept of much later Roman mythology, which
claims a nymph named Minthe became Hades' lover, and was then
killed by either Demeter or Persephone.
The sacredness of this
plant is based entirely on the contents of the far more ancient kykeon
drink taken by initiates at Eleusis. The mint used was specifically
pennyroyal, called "blechon" or "glechon" in Greek.
The Greek word for ordinary mint is either "sisymbron", or
sometimes "dysosmos" (which means literally "ill-smelling").
I cannot emphasise this strongly enough:
The word "mint" comes from Latin only, in the form of the nymph's name, and is therefore a much later addition, not at
all part of the origins of the Hades' and Persephone's tale.
Pennyroyal oil in very large
amounts can kill, and has been used as an abortive drug. Leaves
boiled into the kykeon merely enhanced flavour and added a slight amount
of hallucinogenic power to an already potent drink.
Other types of ordinary
mint (spearmint, etc.) usually symbolise freshness and purification,
and were sometimes used in funeral rites to prevent decay (or at least odours). Herbally, most other types of mint can be used for
soothing
the stomach in teas or medicines. Magickally, pennyroyal is used in
spells for strength of body, protecting against evil and making business
deals (how very ironic), but also for protection and peace. Other types
of mint have magickal uses that include prosperity and money spells
(another Hades thing) and protection, and also to call forth
good spirits. Sometimes it has been used to magickally promote lust,
and I think perhaps this stems from the myth of Minthe pretty directly,
even though it's totally erroneous.
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