Introduction to
Common Magick
It’s around the first of May and you’ve been invited to a gathering. There are some familiar sights, like people dancing around a Maypole and enjoying a feast. There are also some unusual activities. A person costumed as a horse and rider is chasing a gaggle of laughing revelers. Three couples wearing bells are ecstatically dancing. Someone dressed in green, leafy tree branches cavorts next to a bush covered by rags, trinkets, and flowers. Children carrying decorated boughs are chanting, “We bring back life to the village.” You have encountered a common magick gathering … or just another holiday celebration in a small British town.
Common magick is, quite simply, the magick of the common people. “Magick” is the process of using natural energies to create change or transformation on a physical, mental, or spiritual level. It is spelled with a K to differentiate it from stage magic performances. It is also called folk magick, folkloric nature spirituality or religion, earth spirituality or religion, “old-line” Paganism, traditional magick, traditional witchcraft, traditional folkways, or a folkloric magico-religion. Folk magick means that it uses folklore, or knowledge that was verbally communicated between generations. Nature spirituality is a belief system drawing upon entities, forces, and places that exist in our natural environment. A magico-religion is a practice that combines the use of magick with spiritual beliefs.
In this book we’ll focus on the common magick embraced by the people of the British Isles, including Cornwall, England, Ireland, the Isle of Man, Scotland, Wales, and what used to be called Brittany, an area in the north of France. Various magico-religious praxes (practices) were created by the regions’ original inhabitants. They were also created or influenced by the Celts, Romans, Norse, Anglo-Saxons, and other people who have lived in the British Isles over time. It is sometimes called Brythonic folk magick. It is not possible to know the origins of some current folkways, nor is it possible to know exactly what rituals our predecessors enacted, although new discoveries happen frequently.
People might think of folk magick as being primitive superstition, yet that is not true. People may also believe that Christianity completely supplanted witchcraft and Paganism in modern Europe, but that isn’t really true either. Many British ritualized dramas were photographed in the late 1800s. Older rites with Pagan origins were practiced right up until World War II. Since the 1970s there has been a tremendous resurgence of interest in traditional folkways. Some practices, such as folk arts and crafts, ritual theater, folk dances, folklore and storytelling, and folk magick are truly ancient. Other rituals are new creations, reconstructions, revivals, or even mergers with modern pop culture. Common magick remains a vibrant living tradition.
Many magico-religious folk customs are not at all hidden. They are highly visible, and they are everywhere. Some traditions became ingrained in society. We see and hear them in artwork, holiday celebrations, folk music, place names, ritualized actions like tossing a coin into a well or knocking on wood for luck, and other everyday activities. Some rites are even performed publicly to amuse tourists.
Folkloric magick is still relevant today. Writers fasten quartz crystals onto a computer’s power source to keep it from crashing. People use burning herbs for cleansing a place, perhaps in order to dissipate the feelings of unease caused by an argument. Some practices have entered the public consciousness, like divination, candle-burning rites, using talismanic items for good luck, dream interpretation, and mindfulness exercises. Other folkways have lost their usefulness on a physical level but can still be used in a modern context; for example, using sigils for protecting horses to protect your car. The main objective of most magickal workings is to create change for a purpose by using or directing energy. This includes transformation of the self.
Some folkloric ceremonies evolved into the holiday celebrations still enjoyed in present times. People enact these rituals to connect with the seasons and to ensure beneficial conditions, like an abundant harvest. Some events, including folk dances or ritual theater, are performed to entertain. Many people participate in common magick rites for community unification, a municipal identity, and fun. Others enjoy expressing their heritage. Yet these activities also accomplish the goals of raising energy and attuning ourselves with deities, ancestors, and/or nature.
Some of the British folk customs made their way to Australia, the United States of America, and other British colonies during mass emigrations. Other practices came to the US during the years when Gardnerian Wicca was brought to the public’s attention. In America, the British folkways were blended with other peoples’ traditions, including various European immigrants, African American enslaved workers, and Native American populations. However, British folkways do not require that the participants belong to any specific race, nationality, heritage, or ethnicity—people need not be Welsh, English, Irish, or Cornish to participate in common magick.
Nor does one have to follow any specific religious path to practice folk magick. Some participants acknowledge an “old-line” form of Paganism or traditional nature spirituality. Others practice forms of shamanism, connecting with the natural world as well as unseen realms. Still others are Christians who identify with their folkways’ ancient roots. Some folk magick and folkloric nature spirituality has been syncretized, or merged, with Christianity. For example, there are spells that use Bible verses. Other rites come from the folktales and folk beliefs of various cultures, such as the fairy faith. In recent years, British magico-religious folkways have been practiced in conjunction with Wicca, Druidry, Asatru, and other neo-Pagan religions.
This book will be useful for people who have an interest in magick, ancient religions, or folklore. They may like to read fairy tales, myths, and legends. They might have psychic abilities such as clairvoyance or healing touch. They could be involved in earth-based spirituality or feel an affinity with nature, a connection to animals, plants, stones, and other natural beings. Ritual theater might interest them. They may wish to use spells or other workings to create change in their surroundings. They may be aware of other magico-religious traditions such as Wicca, ceremonial magick, or neo-Paganism. Thus, common magick will be significant for these readers.
Folkloric magick is another way of using energy and interacting with ethereal beings. It taps into ancient powers—yes, really! Like other traditions, common magick can aid in personal growth and transformation. Folk magick takes some work, but it is also a lot of fun.
A Wee Bit o’ History
To understand where folk magick traditions come from (and where they are going), I’ll need to discuss just a little bit of the past.
In ancient times, people were concerned with basic survival in a harsh environment. Hunting, herding and slaughtering animals, fishing, and gathering food were crucial activities. Equally important were collecting enough fuel for warmth, creating adequate shelter, and providing a source of clean water. Human conditions of childbirth, puberty, sexuality, surviving an illness, and aging were not fully understood. Changes in climate made migrations imperative. Magickal rites, charmed objects, and ritualized activities were developed to facilitate these processes, linked with physical labor, or “acting in accord.” Shamanic workings and deities who represented motherhood and the hunt arose during this time.
During subsequent eras of human history, new events required new magick. Planting, growing, and harvesting food were a drastic change from hunting and gathering. Discovering the uses for bronze and then iron meant new ways of dealing with the material world. Working-class people including farmers, healers, skilled tradespeople, soldiers, artisans, sailors, and merchants frequently employed magick to help them in their pursuits. Workers used rituals, talismanic items, and symbolic drawings for their endeavors. Modern-day Masonic rites have their origin in the rituals and symbology of builders’ guilds.1 Deities were believed to facilitate activities such as smithcraft, dairying, and sailing large vessels. Laborers developed spells, or words of power, to manifest their intent. Some of their verbal chants may have come to us as work songs, sea chanteys, and spoken lore.
People learned to look for certain signs in nature to predict events, such as watching birds migrate, which indicated a change of seasons. Sayings like “Red sky at night, sailor’s delight” helped forecast the weather, which was important to farmers and seafaring people. From there, the common folks instituted other forms of divination in order to determine possible outcomes.
On the home front, homemakers were concerned with cooking and preserving foods safely, including animal products like sausage, lard, honey, and milk products. This was necessary before the advent of home canning and refrigeration. Housework employed ritual implements and spells to aid in cleanliness. Keeping babies and small children healthy and safe was critical. Sigils and magickal objects were used to protect the home and its inhabitants from evil. Herbal mixtures kept people healthy. There was also a concern about harmony between family members. Folktales entertained and instructed children. Nursery rhymes such as “Fishy in the Brook,” “Ride a Cock Horse to Banbury Cross,” and “Jack Be Nimble” may have originally been spells which were chanted or sung to bring about beneficial conditions.
Population shifts meant new forms of magick were brought to Britain by Celts, Romans, the Scandinavian Vikings, Germanic peoples, and Christianized Normans. For example, our beautiful Maypoles, ubiquitous on May Day in England, may have come from a merger between Celtic and Norse cultures.2 Ceremonial magick techniques such as tarot and horoscope came to the British Isles from elsewhere in Europe. Christianity did not make as much of an impact on our magickal practices as was previously thought. People still believed in fairies, put old shoes inside the wall to ward off harmful energies, drew protective sigils on their work tools, and held harvest dances, even during the worst of Puritan oppression.
All of these events contributed to our modern practice of common magick, and also to many other neo-Pagan traditions.
Modern Manifestations
For our purposes, common magick can be divided into various beliefs and practices. I define a “theistic” belief as revering, aligning with, and utilizing the powers and capabilities of energetic beings such as god-forms or spirits. Earth-based spirituality and nature religions have components of theistic belief. I consider a “nontheistic” belief as performing esoteric workings to create change, independent of the belief in deities or other entities. The practice of what is now called witchcraft is often nontheistic. As a magico-religion, sometimes common magick incorporates both theistic and nontheistic elements.
Theistic Beliefs and Practices
Brythonic folk magick tradition usually draws upon esoteric beings that derive from the British Isles and the populations that inhabited these locations over history. There are many stories and considerable folklore about deities, heroes, and supernatural beings in British literature. Some entities are only seen in artwork or enacted in folkplays. Others are described in fairy tales or folktales but may have been “downgraded” from deific status to a hero or legendary figure.
Common magick practitioners sometimes revere or work with specific deities with whom we have an affinity. These god-forms may be personified, which I define as visualizing human traits in a nonhuman situation, such as winter. The deities may reflect a human condition such as war, poetry, or love. They may or may not be aligned with nature. The god of smithcraft, most often called Wayland, is aligned with human work but also has natural tendencies and powers, such as using fire and air to draw metal from rocks.
Attunement with nature and respect for natural beings, such as the spirits of the land, are important to many common magick practitioners. Many personify Nature with a capital N. This means that nature itself, along with natural beings and associated spirits, deities, and entities, are viewed as having a consciousness and experiencing thoughts and emotions.
Folkloric nature spirituality may incorporate some aspects of Animism, the belief that all natural things including animals, plants, landforms like mountains and lakes, and natural forces like the wind have a consciousness and spirit. An example is the being Aneira, the Welsh personification of snow, who is viewed as angry or gentle, depending on the type of snowfall.
Some practitioners may view spirit beings as separate and distinct from their location, as in the belief that a spirit dwells within an underground mine rather than the mine itself having a consciousness. An example is the Coblynau, a Welsh mining spirit. This entity was said to make knocking, creaking, or moaning noises to warn mineworkers that a tunnel was unsafe. The Romans, who left their stamp on the British Isles during 450-plus years of occupation, believed in genius loci, or a deity or spirit that occupied one particular location, like the goddess Sulis who dwelled in the hot springs in what is now Bath, England.
The fairy faith may be incorporated into common magick. This is a belief in beings known as “the Fae” or fairies, who may be viewed as a race of people, spirits of nature, supernatural or extra-natural entities, or the ghosts of the departed. The fairy tradition draws heavily upon folklore, folktales, and fairy tales.
Common magick users may practice a form of shamanism. The word shaman comes from the Tungusic language group.3 People who lived in early British civilizations had their own terms for these practitioners such as the old Welsh word dewin, which means “wizard,” or hudwr, “enchanter,” which also translates as “howler.” In vernacular Scots Gaelic, a magick user is sometimes called a “howdy,” which can mean a midwife or a howler, as in someone who wails or chants spells.
A shaman strives to work with the forces and beings found in nature for the purposes of spiritual attunement and discovering knowledge. In this instance, shamanism can be considered theistic. Some shamans use magick and/or altered states of consciousness, often for healing or for creating harmony with the natural world. These praxes can be theistic or nontheistic.
Nontheistic Praxes
These include the use of magick itself. Common magick utilizes energy to bring the will into manifestation, just like other esoteric traditions. There are rites of healing and protection. Like many other metaphysical practitioners, we often seek to develop our intuitive powers or expand our knowledge through the use of divination or visualization. Common magick users sometimes endeavor to communicate with the departed. We consider all of these beliefs and practices to be natural and wonderful.
Folk magick workers may incorporate the practice of traditional witchcraft. In the past, the words witch and witchcraft were often pejorative terms. In this book, witchcraft is defined as the craft and art of using energy for a designated goal, which may be independent of religion. Other witches feel it is a spiritual or religious praxis. One very recognizable form of witchcraft is combining ingredients while speaking words of power in order to bring one’s desires into reality. This is often called conjuring, doing a working, or casting a spell. Common magick practitioners often use everyday objects from the home or workplace, such as a spindle or pitchfork, or natural implements, like feathers or stones, for the purposes of spell-casting.
In the course of enacting common magick, practitioners may utilize all, none, or a combination of the aforementioned praxes: Animism, belief in spirits, belief in deities, witchcraft, and shamanism. We might combine praxes from a variety of British cultures and eras or stick with just one way of doing things. Common magick is a truly eclectic approach.
What Common Magick Is and What It Ain’t
British folk magick praxes do not have any specific sacred book or body of literature. Common magick users of the past were usually preliterate. Much of folkloric tradition has been handed down as an oral history within families or from neighbor to neighbor, kept alive by those who actually practiced the rites. Other praxes might have been discovered by working directly with deities and/or energies. Common magick can incorporate folktales, fairy tales, family recipes, and a great deal of experimentation. Yes, sometimes we make it up as we go along!
Common magick often utilizes “low magick” as opposed to “high magick.” High magick mostly comes from books of esoteric knowledge written by early philosophers and scientists. It is formulaic, stylized, and usually calls upon certain entities that are somehow bound to the mage. Low magick is also called earth magick or natural magick. Working-class people learned to perform earth magick through close contact with the land. They devised ways to deal with the unseen worlds, including the forces of birth, illness, and death, as well as how to interact with supernatural beings. They also learned practical skills, such as how to work metal, grow crops, and perform healing, by actual practice.
Much of nature spirituality centers on natural cycles. Common magick users realize that certain energies might be stronger at specific times of the day, month, or year. Almost all of our holidays have to do with the seasons, nature, planting and harvest, hunting, herding, preserving food, craftsmanship, and honoring personifications of death, birth, and life. These holidays may or may not include the “big eight” Sabbats of Wicca, the Celtic holidays observed in modern Druidry, or the Scandinavian and Germanic sacred days celebrated by Asatrur. Some observances were syncretized with Christian holy days. Folkloric magico-religions celebrated seasonal festivals with rituals, games, feasting, dancing, and decorating a place with symbolic items.
An affinity for the earth is true for urban adherents as well as rural folks. In the past, those who lived in cities maintained a balance with nature and grew kitchen herb gardens, kept chickens, and used natural omens for divination, such as the thickness of animal pelts. They had to prepare for winter by gathering a fuel supply and making clothing to withstand the cold. Rituals accompanied each action. Some common magick praxes seem to have no basis in nature, such as the Mari Lwyd, or “old horse” procession. However, this ritual is enacted to honor and appease an anthropomorphized Death during the winter months.
Since common magick users view all natural spaces as holy, most outdoor places are seen as already sanctified and pure. For some practitioners, energy is not always contained and released. Instead, the magick can be free-flowing. The individual person is often a conductor between the source of power and its intended endpoint. Many people use wards or shields to protect themselves from undesirable conditions rather than delineating a particular space to separate themselves from outside forces.
However, some folkloric traditionalists believe in creating a hallowed place, or outlining a circle, to protect an area for ritual use. Some folk magick users circumnavigate a tree, standing stone, or ritual space three times. Celebrations may take place within that area, and workings can be done. Others do not use a circular area in their rituals at all. Many seasonal rites are performed in house-to-house processions, as a folk dance on the town square, or as a skit in a private building such as a restaurant or pub. These include ritualized dramatizations, or folkplays, which are very open to the public.
In common magick, energetic beings and forces may or may not be viewed as associated with a particular direction or element. Some entities might be seen as elementals, such as fairies or earth spirits. They may be significant to a working or celebration. Beings can be greeted, called upon, or simply acknowledged, but not necessarily invoked or asked to participate. People may politely request the entities’ intervention in certain situations. The beings may be given offerings in reverence, supplication, or propitiation. Some people do not work with elements or their associated beings at all.
Common magick was and is practiced within a family or by individuals, communities of friends, or trade guilds. Rites are attended by a group of revelers, like-minded individuals from the same town, or an extended family or tribe, called a teulu in the Welsh language, or a tribh or tuath in Irish Gaelic. Some folk magick users practice as solitaries.
Groups who engage in folkloric traditions can have members who are all genders, sexual orientations, and expressions of sexuality. In the past, some witches, shamans, and old-line Pagans were gender-fluid or gender-nonconforming. This is still true today. When performing magick or participating in a folkloric ritual, intent often matters far more than biological sex or gender. However, in some rites, certain roles were traditionally given to specific people; for example, a young woman portraying a springtime goddess.
Common magick traditions are passed on by observation and participation through extended families or by individuals imparting knowledge to peers. Elders and adepts teach younger people or newbies. Rites of passage were and are performed, but there are no formal dedications or “degrees” earned by learning and practicing. There might be an apprenticeship which lasts for the traditional year and a day. When initiation ceremonies took place, they were based upon passing from one state of being to another, such as becoming a journeyman blacksmith, attaining adulthood, or becoming a first-time parent.
In past times, there really weren’t any “clergy” within folkloric magico-religions. Some nature spirituality celebrations and workings have a designated leader, but few of them are expected to know everything—healing, divining, facilitating rites. Often people switch roles of leadership and participation. In a ritual drama, there are usually a narrator and performers rather than a specific leader. Sometimes musicians are the driving force for the rite and there is no narration at all. That said, modern people may want to gain legal clergy status for the purpose of officiating at weddings and for other reasons.
Many different methods of raising, storing, and directing energy are used within common magick. Anything that creates a physical change, including involving personal or natural life force, can bring about energetic change. Human actions such as dance, song, tying knots, sewing, physical work such as chopping weeds, and yes, lovemaking, can summon power. Natural forces, such as a thunderstorm or growth of crops, or a changing situation, such as sunrise or the first day of winter, can raise energy. Many practitioners simply tap in to existent natural forces, directing them from Point A, the source, to Point B, the desired outcome. Certain objects are believed to attract natural forces, including a wooden wand, a lodestone, a crystal, or a man-made representational item like a mask or drawing. While energy is not always contained in a magick circle, it can be stored in a power object such as a talisman or magickal tool.
In folk magick rites, altars are sometimes used, sometimes not. An altar is a place where magickal implements or venerated objects are stored and displayed. It can serve as a focal point for a ceremony. Natural places such as wellsprings, standing stones, tombs, and sacred trees were and are held in esteem. The workspace of a common magick user can be the hearth, the kitchen table, or a picnic bench in the backyard. Shrines dedicated to particular entities are also used.
Folkloric magick practitioners might put on distinctive garments, such as robes, to enact a ceremony. These outfits might be of a particular color related to the seasons or might represent a specific entity. The robe is viewed by some as a repository of energy and as a device to help people feel more prepared to perform rituals. Other folks feel more comfortable in ethnic or historic attire, or they might wear their everyday clothing, the uniform of their profession, or “fancy dress” as is worn to go to dinner or a job interview. For ritual dramas, people often constructed costumes from whatever was handy. Some costumes became very elaborate and were handed down from one generation to the next.
Some people prefer to work magick while “skyclad,” wearing nothing but their own skin. Some practitioners find this empowering and feel that it brings them closer to nature. Some believe energy is easier to access when unencumbered by clothing. Since I live in Michigan, where the air is often quite cold in winter and full of biting insects the rest of the time, I usually forgo being skyclad.
A concept many folkloric magico-religions have in common with other faiths is the idea that people will live during another lifetime after this current incarnation. The concept of life after death was found amongst pre-Wiccan folk traditions of the British Isles. There are many examples in Celtic literature about a land of the dead, Summerland, or otherworld where souls went after death. Celtic legends tell of those who were reborn as, or transmigrated into, animals, landforms, or supernatural entities. The Germanic tribes believed in the concept of wyrd, which is not quite the same as reincarnation but has overtones of predestination, not unlike the Greek belief in fate. Of course, some believe in Valhalla, heaven, or permanent residence in a Summerland.
Like many other Pagan religions or magickal folkways, common magick is governed by ethics in the use of power. We endeavor to work our magick responsibly and mindfully with consideration toward the consequences of our actions.
Common magick can easily be performed in conjunction with Wicca, Druidry, heathenry, and/or neo-Paganism, including casting a ritual circle, invoking elements and deities, toasting the gods, using an altar, and having leadership of a priestess and priest. Folkloric rites are best used as the “body” of a Wiccan ceremony or during the same holiday as a separate celebration outside of a Wiccan ritual circle. Folkloric rituals can also stand on their own.
Unique Concepts
Folk magick traditionalists have several ways of looking at the world, and of performing esoteric workings, that are different from other magico-religious practices. We have some distinctive concepts that may seem unfamiliar.
Common magick not only means the rituals of the common people, it also alludes to the common sources of power. Folk magick taps into the deep pools of energy created by rituals that have been performed over hundreds of years, or the reserves of power found in nature. The energy pools are somewhat like the “collective unconscious” written about by Dr. Carl Jung.4 Common magick also replenishes the energy taken from these reserves.
Folk magick users often believe in a concept called “priordination.” (Note: This concept is not the same as “preordination,” or the belief that events and circumstances are predetermined or destined by fate.) Priordination means manifesting a condition that had previously occurred by symbolically reenacting that situation during the present time. An example is doing a ritual hunting dance to create plentitude.
The spoken word is not always utilized in folk magico-religions. Ritual participants use imagery, movement, and music to bring about a desired situation, as much as or more than using words to speak their intent into reality. Many common magick ceremonies are acted out in the form of a skit or street theater called a folkplay. These rituals tap in to a deep wellspring of culture and heritage and connect participants with the divine. They are believed to cause priordination to occur. The folklorist Sir James George Frazer theorized that “ritual dramatizations” drew upon the concepts of sacrifice, death, and rebirth.5
However, common magick practitioners do sometimes use verbalization for spell work. This can include singing, chanting, and speaking words of power. Many of us believe that we can actually speak events into manifestation via a direct communication with a magickal source.
Many nature-spirituality adherents believe that various entities have a personal relationship with human populations as ancestors, deities, heroes, guides, or helpful spirits. Common magick users may employ what Jung called archetypes such as the Mother, the Hero, the Villain, or the Healer.6 These archetypes are akin to what Wiccans and neo-Pagans recognize as god and goddess forms. Like other magico-religions, folkloric spirituality traditionalists may practice “invoking” magickal entities or archetypes by talking to the beings and asking for assistance. “Aspecting” means that the individual strives to promote characteristics of the entity such as courage or nurturing. “Avataring” takes the process one step further. To avatar means temporarily contain the persona of a magickal entity, not only taking on their aspects, but allowing them to inhabit one’s physical body and take over one’s consciousness.
While performing in a ritual drama such as a folk dance or folkplay is incredibly fun, the action also presents a great opportunity to avatar a god-form or magickal entity. Doing so can bring about priordination of beneficial events and tap in to a reserve of magickal power. It can create an attunement with a deity and universal sources of energy. How to go about these processes will be explored within this book.
Of course, our preliterate forebearers did not actually use terms like archetype, theistic, avatar, or priordination. They were more likely to say, “I’m being Govannon now,” before picking up their magickally charged venerated object—a hammer—to put shoes onto their horses’ feet. Modern terms are used here simply as a method of explanation.
Folklore, Folktales, Legend, and Myth
Folkloric magico-religions are intimately connected to folk stories and legends. This is especially true of British common magick.
As mentioned, folkways contain information from a particular culture. Folklore is about peoples’ actions and practices and the reasoning behind their activities. This is important because we often no longer have village elders or wise grandparent figures who are willing to share information and then demonstrate how to use it. Folklore can give advice about the weather; tips for farming, cooking, hunting, or craftsmanship; and instruction on how to practice magickal rituals, spells, and workings.
Although our forebears were, of necessity, practical people, they also enjoyed a rich heritage of myths, legends, folktales, and fairy tales. Legends and myths are inspiring tales of gods and glorious heroes. Folktales and fairy tales often contain supernatural beings such as spirits, fairies, and elementals. The tales with morals or axioms to live by are called fables. Readers might instantly recognize fairy tales cataloged by non-English authors Hans Christian Andersen, Charles Perrault, and the Brothers Grimm, yet many stories originated in the British Isles. There are Irish tales that are similar to the German “Rumpelstiltskin,” Welsh sea maidens that resemble Andersen’s “Little Mermaid,” evil fairies like the one in “Sleeping Beauty,” and helpful beings that have similarities to the fairy godmother in “Cinderella.” Some fairy stories, such as “Goldilocks and the Three Bears,” “Jack and the Beanstalk,” and “The Three Little Pigs,” came from England.
One of the most popular epics worldwide involves King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. Much of the body of literature surrounding Arthur came from Celtic legend. The quests represented magickal journeys and dream workings, while the stories provided insight into proper behavior. The notion of chivalry arose from Celtic codes of ethics, including honor and bravery.
Legends, myths, folktales, and fairy tales are important because they connect people through common experience. The tales are relatable—in any society, people need to feel brave, to assuage loneliness, or to acquire wisdom. Folktales can also provide a touchstone for cultural heritage. Reading or hearing these stories helps to foster understanding between communities. Myths and legends are still relevant today, including newly created tales such as those viewed in superhero movies.
There is some disagreement between folklorists, historians, and anthropologists about the “real” meaning of certain folktales … just as there are amongst modern Wiccans, witches, and Pagans. Our folklore naturally changed over time as certain portions were forgotten and others embellished. This is called mutation of a folkway. Some practices and beliefs merged with those of host cultures or invading populations. This is called syncretization. Some legends were translated from their native languages into Latin and then into English, losing certain parts of the plot or theme in the translation. Some tales were written down by Christian monks, and later by academics. Many writers were well-meaning and respectful, while others were disdainful of the common people and their folkways. Some authors of older anthropology books used terms like rude, primitive, illiterate, vulgar, rustic, and quaint to describe folk practices. However, if one reads between the lines, one can discover a wealth of folk customs, beliefs, and stories that contain genuine examples of magick.
Fairy tales are vital to a culture because they connect humans with the uncanny, the divine, or the spiritual world. They provide a sense of wonderment. Fairy tales can give insight into the behaviors of magickal beings. Many of them contain common magick beliefs, advisories about dealing with the unseen world, and even some spells and rituals.
My Own Personal Testimony—and a Disclaimer
I am very lucky to have been part of a family that still practiced some of the older folkloric magico-religious traditions of the British Isles. Some early memories include chasing an uncle who was wearing antlers on his head in commemoration of a sacred hunt. As a disabled child, this gave me a profound sense of empowerment. I fell asleep listening to the music of fiddles and dulcimers, which brought good dreams and a feeling of peace. My grandmother prepared traditional foods like oatcakes, venison, and cabbage rolls, which nourished our young bodies and minds. Although we lived in a modern house during the winter, we did things like setting wards and driving pins into the window frames, which imparted a sense of security. When seeing spirits, my grandfather gave suggestions about how to interact with them. So many people of my generation were told that speaking to the departed was a figment of the imagination, or worse, a psychotic condition. Members of an old-line Pagan tradition were often schooled in divining the future and dealing with spirit people, right alongside their arithmetic and geography lessons.
My family’s folkways come from the folk traditions of the southeastern portion of Wales, bordering the western counties of England, which was called the Marches. People who emigrated from this region settled in Michigan’s northern Lower Peninsula and the Upper Peninsula and became farmers, lumber workers, sailors, fisherfolk, and miners. Some of them were forcibly removed from the British Isles as convicts during land grabs, others came as indentured servants, and still others moved to the US willingly. Their Cymric (Welsh) traditions merged with Cornish, Finnish, and Germanic folkways and the praxes of indigenous tribes in the region. These folks practiced some authentically older customs including hunting ceremonies, folk healing, honoring spirits of the land, seasonal celebrations, sweat cleansing, traditional dances and music, and folk magick. I have endeavored to pass on these folkways to my own descendants and to seekers at various events and gatherings.
So, Is Magick Real?
People sometimes wonder if magick actually works. They may think that practitioners are deluding themselves or seeking a correlation that isn’t really valid. They attribute a ritual’s fantastic outcome to the person’s own subconscious or to coincidence. Some people even consider magick a type of scientific reaction that we do not yet understand. And I cannot argue, because they might be right. As of yet, we don’t really understand what makes magick function. All that I know for certain is that magick does work. I will share some instances of successful workings and rites, although keep in mind these are subjective, as they cannot be proven.
In 2010 I was diagnosed with ovarian cancer. Lab tests revealed anomalies, and doctors assigned an elevated rating on the scale to measure such things. While I underwent the recommended surgery, I refused all of the prescribed drugs, chemotherapy, and radiation. Although ovarian cancer has a very high mortality rate and chance of recurring less than five years after surgery, as of this writing (2019) I am still surviving. Why? Myself and loved ones performed numerous ceremonies. I wore healing amulets, drank nasty-tasting herbal concoctions, did daily meditations, and thanked my gods. My familiar kitty slept with me and offered me comfort. Now, of course I do not recommend that anyone else refuse medicines or treatments prescribed by a knowledgeable healthcare provider in favor of charms and rites. This was a decision based on my own personal aversion to conventional Western medicine, the expense, and having to sit in bed rather than be outdoors. I knew the risks, which could have included pain and death. Other people may make a very different decision in regard to healthcare, and I respect their choices. Yet I feel magick helped me to heal.
Another incident involved my husband, who had to drive forty miles to work at three o’clock in the morning on dangerous country roads through swamps and forests. Some Michigan back roads are not plowed well during the winter and can accumulate deep snow and slippery ice. My husband had several accidents where he hit a deer, had one unfortunate encounter with a sloppy drunk driver, and had a large tree fall onto his truck during a wild thunderstorm. He escaped unscathed from each accident, although our insurance agent was quite displeased with him. Quitting his job was not an option; it was during the recession, employment was scarce, and he had to get to work. We implored the god of the woodlands for protection, put talismans in my husband’s vehicle, and did a ceremony each morning before he left to drive to his job. The accidents stopped, and he was soon transferred to a closer work location. Again, I believe that magick was the reason.
I have witnessed people use magick for a healthy childbirth, to give them confidence in a job interview, to attain good grades in school, to protect their homes and workspaces, to keep them safe while serving in the military, to guard them while travelling, to win justice in a court case, to release an elder who desired to leave this life for the next, and to attract the perfect marriage partner. Some of these incidents might be explained by coincidence, self-hypnosis, or acting in accord. However, some of them have no tangible explanation other than magick. I have seen a person do a rite to calm the air spirits during a tornado, and their house was the only one on the block that remained undamaged. If that is a coincidence, it is a pretty amazing one.
Does magick always work? Not every single time we make a wish, or we’d all win the lottery and our pets would live forever. Magick cannot go against natural law, add numbers to a circumstance where the odds are zero, or make someone act against their own free will. The gods might have their own ideas about what lessons a person needs to learn or which course of action is best. Magick can increase the probability that something will occur. It can broaden possibilities. Energetic workings can change difficult circumstances for the better. Magick can also augment success in a current situation. Especially when we act in accord.
Attunement with the natural world and communication with spirits also have a very beneficial result. I have seen people perform divination and predict events that they could not possibly expect, given current conditions and use of ordinary logic. Mediums whom I have encountered gave insights into situations that they could not realistically have known about otherwise. Military veterans have used meditation and shamanic techniques to control post-traumatic stress. Trauma survivors have used magickal rites to raise confidence and to feel empowered. Again, can ceremonies fix everything? Not always, but I believe they certainly can help.
The Quest
This book explores the whys and wherefores of some British-based folk traditions and showcases many folkloric practices. Readers can bring these delightful folkways to their own spiritual practice. I list natural objects used in magick, tools that people can find in their home, garage, workplace, in nature, or at a local store; energetic beings such as fairies, animal spirits, and deities; some appropriate times and locations for esoteric rites; and many methods and techniques people have used for magickal workings. There is an outline of steps to take in performing spells and rituals and cautions about what not to do. People are perfectly capable of writing their own personalized spells, and because these workings are unique, they’ll have much more power than anything I can discuss, whether it’s ancient or not.
It’s also suggested that people go outdoors, open themselves to the powers of the earth, do some divination, develop their own psychic interaction with magickal entities, and put the nature back in nature spirituality. Have fun on the quest!
1. “History of Freemasonry,” Masonic Service Association of North America, accessed March 30, 2020, http://www.msana.com/historyfm.asp.
2. Prudence Jones and Nigel Pennick, A History of Pagan Europe (New York: Routledge, 1997).
3. Berthold Laufer, “Origin of the Word Shaman,” American Anthropologist New Series 19, no. 3 (July–September 1917): 361–71, https://doi.org/10.1525/aa.1917.19.3.02a00020.
4. C. G. Jung, The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious, vol. 9, Collected Works of C. G. Jung, trans. R. F. C. Hull (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1969).
5. James George Frazer, The Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings, vol. 1 of The Golden Bough: A Study in Magic and Religion (London: Macmillan, 1976).
6. Jung, Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious.