Chapter 8
To Have a Good Wine and Very Good Wine by the Aid of Diana
He who would have a good vintage and fine wine, should take a horn full of wine and with this go into the vineyards or farms wherever vines grow, and then drinking from the horn say
I drink, and yet it is not wine I drink, I drink the blood of
Diana, Since from wine it has changed into her blood, And spread itself through all my
growing vines, Whence it will give me good return in wines, Though even if good vintage
should be mine, I'll be free from care, for should it chance That the grape ripens in the
waning moon, Then all the wine would come to sorrow, but If drinking from this horn I
drink the blood - The blood of great Diana - by her aid - If I do kiss my hand to the new
moon, Praying the Queen that she will guard my grapes, Even from the instant when the bud
is born Until it is a ripe and perfect grape, And onward to the vintage, and to the last
Until the wine is made - may it be good! And may it so succeed that I from it May draw
good profit when at last 'tis sold, So may good fortune come unto my vines, And into all
my land where'er it be! This page was last updated
4/28/2005 LadyThunder.com
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But should my vines seem in an evil way, I'll take my horn, and bravely will I blow In the
wine-vault at midnight, and I'll make Such a tremendous and a terrible sound That thou,
Diana fair, however far Away thou may'st be, still shalt hear the call, And casting open
door or window wide, Shalt headlong come upon the rushing wind, And find and save me -
that is, save my vines, Which will be saving me from dire distress; For should I lose them
I'd be lost myself, But with thy aid, Diana, I'll be saved.
This is a very interesting invocation and tradition, and probably of great antiquity from
very striking intrinsic evidence. For it is firstly devoted to a subject which has
received little attention - the connection of Diana as the moon with Bacchus, although in
the great Dizionario Storico Mitologico, by Pozzoli and others, it is expressly asserted
that in Greece her worship was associated with that of Bacchus, Esculapius and Apollo. The
connecting link is the horn. In a medal of Alexander Severus, Diana of Ephesus bears the
horn of plenty. This is the horn or horn of the new moon, sacred to Diana. According to
Callimachus, Apollo himself built an altar consisting entirely of horns to Diana. The
connection of the horn with wine is obvious. It was usual among the old Slavonians for the
priest of Svantevit, the Sun god, to see if the horn which the idol held in his hand was
full of wine, in order to prophesy a good harvest for the coming year. If it was filled,
all was right; if not, he filled the horn, drank from it, and replaced the horn in the
hand, and predicted that all would eventually go well. It cannot fail to strike the reader
that this ceremony is strangely like that of the Italian invocation, the only difference
being that in one the Sun, and in the other the Moon is invoked to secure a good harvest.
In the Legends of Florence there is one of the Via del Corno, in which the hero, falling
into a vast tun or tina of wine, is saved from drowning by sounding a horn with tremendous
power. At the sound, which penetrates to an incredible distance, even to unknown lands,
all came rushing as if enchanted to save him. In this conjuration, Diana, in the depths of
heaven, is represented as rushing at the sound of the horn, and leaping through doors or
windows to save the vintage of the one who blows. There is a certain singular affinity in
these stories. In the story of the Via del Corno, the hero is saved by the Red Goblin or
Robin Goodfellow, who gives him a horn, and it is the same sprite who appears in the
conjuration of the Round Stone, which is sacred to Diana. This is because the spirit is
nocturnal, and attendant on Diana-Titania. Kissing the hand to the new moon is a ceremony
of unknown antiquity, and Job, even in his time, regarded it as heathenish and forbidden -
which always means antiquated and out of fashion - as when he declared (xxxi, 26, 27),
"If I beheld the moon walking in brightness...and my heart hath been secretly enticed
or my mouth hath kissed my hand...this also were an iniquity to be punished by the Judge,
for I should have denied the God that is above." From which it may or ought to be
inferred that Job did not understand that God made the moon and appeared in all His works,
or else he really believed the moon was an independent deity. In any case, it is curious
to see the old forbidden rite still living, and as heretical as ever. The tradition, as
given to me, very evidently omits a part of the ceremony, which may be supplied from
classic authority. When the peasant performs the rite, he must not act as once a certain
African, who was a servant of a friend of mine, did. The man's duty was to pour out every
morning a libation of rum to a fetish - and he poured it down his own throat. The peasant
should also sprinkle the vines, just as the Devonshire farmers who observed all Christmas
ceremonies, sprinkled, also from a horn, their apple trees.
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