Wicca, Esotericism and Living Nature: Assessing Wicca as Nature Religion
by Jo Pearson The Open University This article was first presented as a paper at the recent International Association for the History of Religion (IAHR) XVIII Quinquennial Congress, held in Durban in August 2000. The theme of the congress was 'History of Religions: Origins and Visions'. For the first time, the IAHR congress included a series of sessions on Nature Religion, organised by Bron Taylor and also including papers by Graham Harvey, Tim Jensen, Bron Taylor, and Michael York. ABSTRACT 'Living Nature', whereby "Nature is seen, known, and experienced as essentially alive in all its parts, often inhabited and traversed by a light or hidden fire circulating through it", is one of the four fundamental characteristics of the Western Esoteric Tradition identified by Antoine Faivre (1994:11), and delineates a certain Hermetic view of the world. In this paper we consider Alexandrian and Gardnerian Wicca (as practiced in the UK) as a current manifestation of the Western Esoteric Tradition, outlining Wicca's magical heritage and indicating the affinities between Wicca and esotericism. We then proceed to an investigation of the application of central esoteric doctrines concerning nature in contemporary Wicca, in order to assess Wicca as nature religion. During the 1970s, environmentalism itself became a kind of religion, significant in that it points, according to Seyyed Nasr, 'to the need in the souls of human beings for the religious understanding of nature eclipsed in the West by modern science and neglected until quite recently by the mainstream religions' (1996: 194-5). This turning of environmentalism into religion has affected not only traditional religions but also the development of Wicca and Paganism, and so-called 'nature religions'. 'Nature Religion' is a relatively recent academic construct under which a variety of religions have been grouped including, for example, Paganism, eco-spirituality, and indigenous religions. It is also popular with Wiccans --103 out of the 120 (86%) Wiccans represented in my 1995 survey told me that they regarded their religion as 'nature religion'.
Yet at present, 'nature religion' is a contested designation, and is, like Wicca and Paganism, an emerging field of study. The current academic use of the term 'nature religion' stems most often from Catherine Albanese's usage in her book Nature Religion in America (1990), in which nature religion is defined as beliefs, behaviours and values which make nature a 'symbolic centre'. Whilst recognising the value of the construct in bringing to light the diversity of religious practices which do take nature as a symbolic referent, Albanese's term has been criticised as too broad to be of practical use. Bron Taylor suggests instead that we use phrases such as 'the natural dimension of religion', or 'nature influenced religion' to distinguish those religions which see nature as important but not sacred, and keep 'nature religion' exclusively for reference to religions which regard nature as sacred.
But what exactly do we mean by this phrase, 'nature as sacred'? What is 'nature as symbolic centre'? The questions so far seem to miss a whole dimension of the religious understanding of nature, and to dismiss the difference in perception between nature (small 'n') and Nature (capitalised); or, as Seyyed Nasr would have it, fail to grasp that 'nexus between the order of nature as ordinarily understood and the Divine Nature, Infinite and Eternal, that encompasses the order of nature and is yet ubiquitous at every point of cosmic manifestation' (1996: 104).
Wiccans do regard nature as sacred, as we shall see later in this paper. However, their response to nature is often confused, revealing both intimacy and distance as they shape nature with the Wheel of the Year, sacred circles and ritual to suit their own needs for relationship with the earth. The nature/culture duality thus persists in nature religion, reflecting a turn to nature as a source of revitalisation, attempting to re- engage with a nature from which participants feel estranged, to re-enchant the natural world which has been exploited and dominated. Since Wicca is not a salvation religion, it does not reject the world or the everyday reality of living in the world, but seeks rather to enhance life on earth. Earthly existence is not regarded as fundamentally sinful or binding, with a need for salvation or escape. But how much one takes this as a need to defend and protect the earth is open to question.
Whilst Wicca claims an almost primordial relationship with nature and markets itself as 'green religion', the disjunction between sign and signified remains very real. Nature, as Nasr reminds us, 'is not only a symbol of spiritual realities but is those realities not by a reduction of the spiritual essences to material forms but by an inner identity among those who share the primordial perspective between the symbol and the symbolized. Hence, in such worlds nature herself is the supreme cathedral. Her order is the Divine Order and her laws divine laws without there being in any sense a naturalism or animism in the pejorative sense of those terms ' (1996: 21). Do Wiccan attitudes and practices concerning Nature, then, reflect this perspective, a perspective reflected in esoteric influences or, as Wouter Hanegraaff has suggested with reference to the New Age, does Wicca 'produce merely shallow caricatures of profound teachings'? (1998: 31). The Categorisation of Wicca
As a brief aside, it might be worth touching on the ways in which Wicca is categorised at this point in the paper. Wicca occupies a somewhat ambiguous position vis à vis contemporary religiosity, yet it has appeared to be easily assimilable to the so-called 'sociology of the occult', the New Age Movement, and NRMs, as well as new designations such as 'revived religion' and 'nature religion', which may in time prove to be more applicable as terms of categorisation. There are forms of witchcraft which claim to predate the emergence of Wicca in England, most notably Traditional and Hereditary witchcraft. However, since there is no evidence to support these claims, we follow Ronald Hutton's assertion that Wicca is the classic, earliest known form of modern witchcraft (Hutton 1999). Concentrating on the combined Alexandrian/Gardnerian version of Wicca as it has emerged in the UK in the 1990s, I have assessed Wicca as a form of esoteric spirituality, which I regard as an appropriate category for this specific type. In particular, I engaged with the field of western esotericism as delineated by Antoine Faivre and, following him, Wouter Hanegraaff. It is as a means of taking this research further that this paper seeks to question the application of esoteric doctrines on nature within this specific branch of Wicca. Academic Understandings of Esotericism
Antoine Faivre, the foremost scholar in the field of western esotericism, defines esotericism as a form of thought expressed through exemplifying currents, rather than a specific genre (1994: 4). Faivre identifies six components of esotericism, which he has identified from the corpus of writings attributed to Hermes Trismegistus: correspondences, living nature, imagination and meditations, experience of transmutation, the praxis of concordance, and transmission (ibid.: 10-15). Of these, the first four are essential to a definition of a tradition as esoteric whilst the latter two Faivre considers to be 'relative' elements, frequently occurring in combination with the four fundamental characteristics but unnecessary to the categorisation of a practice as esoteric (1994: 14). Due to the constraints of time, this paper will engage only with the four fundamental characteristics, which contain esoteric doctrines concerning nature. Indeed, we should remember that the division of these characteristics into four is artificial, merely an academic device; rather, they need to be read as one.
Real and symbolic correspondences are believed to exist throughout all parts of the universe, both visible and invisible: '[t]hese correspondences, considered more or less veiled at first sight, are intended to be read and deciphered. The entire universe is a huge theater [sic] of mirrors, an ensemble of hieroglyphs to be decoded. Everything is a sign; everything conceals and exudes mystery; every object hides a secret' (Faivre 1994: 10). The fifth characteristic, the praxis of the concordance, is understood as a 'consistent tendency to try to establish common denominators between two different traditions or even more, among all traditions, in the hope of obtaining an illumination, a gnosis, of superior quality' (Faivre 1994: 14). This characteristic is taken to its extreme in the discourse of the perennialists who postulate the existence of a primordial tradition which overarches all other religious or esoteric traditions of humanity. This philosophia perennis became the 'Tradition', constituted by a chain of mythical or historical representatives including Moses, Zoroaster, Hermes Trimegistus, Orpheus, the Sibyls, Pythagoras and Plato. The sixth characteristic is transmission, which refers to the possibility or necessity of teaching being transmitted from master to disciple following a pre-established channel. Inherent in this characteristic is the insistence that 'a person cannot initiate himself any way he chooses but must go through the hands of an initiator', and that both the initiator and the initiate must be attached to an authentic tradition (Faivre 1994: 14-15). But, Faivre warns, the presence of correspondences alone does not necessarily indicate esotericism, for doctrines of correspondence can be found in many philosophical and religious currents.
The notion of correspondences was also, of course, popular in fin de siècle writings, for example, Baudelaire's sonnet, 'Correspondences' which, 'reassigns to the poet his ancient role of vates, of soothsayer, who by his intuition of the concrete, of immediately perceived things, is led to the idea of these things, to the intricate system of "correspondences"' (Fowlie 1990: 29). Freeman (1999: 139) points out that Arthur Symons, in London: A Book of Aspects (1909), works along similar lines, 'picking his way through what Baudelaire termed 'des forêts de symboles' in order to perceive deeper truths'. In accordance with the theory of correspondences, the cosmos is regarded as complex, plural and hierarchical, and nature, or living nature, thus occupies an essential place within it: 'Nature is seen, known, and experienced as essentially alive in all its parts, often inhabited and traversed by a light or hidden fire circulating through it' (ibid.: 11). This spiritual force permeating nature is exemplified in the Renaissance understanding of magia naturalis, a 'complex notion at the crossroads of magic and science' by which both knowledge of the networks of sympathies and antipathies that link the things of Nature and the concrete operation of this knowledge is indicated.
It is the imaginative faculty in humans that allows the use of intermediaries such as symbols and images 'to develop a gnosis, to penetrate the hieroglyphs of Nature, to put the theory of correspondences into active practice and to uncover, to see, and to know the mediating entities between Nature and the divine world' (ibid.: 12). The imagination is therefore regarded as far more than mere fantasy-it is the 'organ of the soul, thanks to which humanity can establish a cognitive and visionary relationship with an intermediary world', what Henry Corbin called the mundus imaginalis. The eventual consequence of working with the first three characteristics is the experience of transmutation. The alchemical term 'transmutation' is used to define the initiatory path of development by which 'the esotericist gains insight into the hidden mysteries of cosmos, self and God' (Hanegraaff 1995: 112). As transmutation implies a change in the very substance of a thing or person (As opposed to mere 'transformation', which implies a change more or less limited to outward appearance), there is, according to Faivre, no separation between knowledge (gnosis) and inner experience, or between intellectual activity and active imagination (1994: 13). The Importance of Historical Continuity
The six characteristics, according to Faivre, are not doctrinal but serve rather as receptacles into which various types of experiences are distributed. Although the six components can be positioned unequally, the first four must all be simultaneously present in order for something to be considered esoteric. Yet this alone is not enough. According to Hanegraaff (1995: 121), it is also crucial that we demonstrate how the original contents and associations of esotericism that originated in the Renaissance are reinterpreted. Following and developing Faivre's work, Hanegraaff defines an esoteric tradition as an 'historical continuity in which individuals and/or groups are demonstrably influenced in their life and thinking by the esoteric ideas formulated earlier, which they use and develop according to the specific demands and cultural context of their own period' (1995: 118). Hanegraaff outlines the historical perspective of esotericism as a 'container concept encompassing a complex of interrelated currents and traditions from the early modern period up to the present day, the historical origin and foundation of which lies in the syncretistic phenomenon of Renaissance hermeticism' (1999: 4). He goes on to trace this esotericism through the later developments of alchemy, Paracelsianism, Rosicrucianism, kabbalah, Theosophical and Illuminist currents, and 'various occultist and related developments during the 19th and 20th century' (ibid.: 4) many of which, I have argued, are the direct precursors of Wicca. So how has contemporary Wicca, after Hanegraaff (1995: 118), used and developed the esoteric ideas formulated earlier according to the specific demands and cultural context of their own period? And how did Wicca come to be regarded as Nature Religion in the first place? How did Wicca come to be regarded as Nature Religion?
Perhaps the most obvious answer to this question lies in Wicca's associations with contemporary Paganism. 'Pagan' has often been taken to refer to 'country-dweller', an interpretation which seems to have developed mainly with the Romantic literature of the 19th century and Victorian urban growth. However, as Robin Lane Fox and Pierre Chuvin have pointed out, most town-dwellers were in fact pagan at the time the term 'pagan' was coined. Thabit ibn Qurra, a Sabian from Harran (835-901CE) praised ancient paganism to the Caliph of Baghdad with the following words, which clearly have nothing to do with a rustic existence: Who else have civilised the world, and built the cities, if not the nobles and kings of Paganism? They have filled the earth with settled forms of government, and with wisdom, which is the highest good. Without Paganism the world would be empty and miserable (Scott 1985: 105). Furthermore, Freeman (1999: 11) stresses that 'the majority of major Victorian poets and artists confronted the modern city with a marked lack of enthusiasm-it was a filthy and dehumanising environment and poor soil for their sensitive plants'. He cites Browning's willingness to provide representations of Renaissance urbanisation whilst largely avoiding the Victorian conurbation, and the artistic radicals of the 1860s (such as Swinburne, Rossetti and William Morris) who forsook their own time for a largely imaginary past.
According to the Census of 1851, the English urban population outnumbered the rural for the first time. Between 1821 and 1841, the population of London rose by 20%, Manchester, Leeds and Sheffield increased by 40%, while Bradford rose by an incredible 65% (Williams 1975: 188). As Nick Freeman has pointed out, 'no London memoirist from the Victorian period (or indeed, ever since) can resist lamenting the disappearance of the 'countryside' in and around the city' (1999: 13). The growing interest in the environment, and the urge to leave behind the towns and cities and enter once more into communion with 'nature' as 'the countryside' encouraged popular usage of the term 'pagan' as one who dwells in the rustic areas. Ronald Hutton, overstating the case somewhat, suggests that the growth of urban areas during the Victorian era caused 'an almost hysterical celebration of rural England' from the 1870s onwards. Pan as great god of nature became one of the most prevalent ancient images to be drawn upon. We might cite as examples Arthur Machen's 1894 novel The Great God Pan, and Saki's The Music on the Hill (1911), both of which feature Pan as a central figure, whilst Kenneth Grahame's The Wind in the Willows (1907), and J. M. Barrie's Peter Pan made Pan accessible to children. Russell (1990: 137) interprets Pan, god of wild nature, as a deliberately chosen symbol of opposition to Christianity among occultists, due to Christian associations of Pan's characteristics (cloven hooves, horns) with their image of the Devil. Certainly this is true of the infamous Aleister Crowley, whose Hymn to Pan provoked storms of outrage when it was read out at his funeral in 1947. At the same time, enthusiasm for Gaia as Mother Nature and Mother Earth was such that by 1900, 'the poetic vision of the English, when contemplating the rural world, was dominated as never before by the great goddess and the horned god' (Hutton 1996: 9), and the great goddess (Isis, Astarte, Diana, Hecate, Demeter) and the horned god (Herne, Pan, Cernunnos) have remained deities of central importance within today's Wicca and Paganism.
That there is little evidence for the kind of mass appeal Hutton describes does not detract from the engagement of poets and authors with the country/city opposition, and this certainly influenced the development of Wicca. However, we should not forget that it is the very growth of the city which accounts for what is primarily urban Wicca, at the same time as it provides a focus for discontent and an opposition to idealised nature. We can see in Wicca a nostalgia for something never known, and might do well to question the role of imaginative fiction in turning people on to nature. In an urbanised life, does Tolkein's description of the woods of Lothlórien in The Fellowship of the Ring (1954), for instance, provide a more real experience of the magic of a woodland than a walk in the real woods? It is, I think, a valid question but not one I intend to answer at the present time.
In terms of recent decades, Vivianne Crowley has outlined a change in emphasis within Wicca from nature veneration to nature preservation in her chapter 'Wicca as Nature Religion' in Nature Religion Today. Crowley asserts the centrality of the veneration of nature, which is 'considered to be ensouled, alive, 'divine' The divine [being seen] as a 'force' or 'energy' and as manifest in the world of nature' (1998: 170). She further points out that the processes of nature-'conception, birth, mating, parenthood, maturation, death'-are portrayed in the seasonal myth cycle known as the Wheel of the Year; thus, '[t]hemes and symbols drawn from nature are central to Wiccan belief and practice' (ibid.: 170).
Initially, we are told, Gardner's Wicca was described as a fertility cult rather than as 'nature religion' but, as the opening declamation of this paper shows, direct links existed between the Wiccan perception of the goddess and the world of nature. The late Doreen Valiente, Gardner's one-time High Priestess and collaborator, pointed out that Wicca is concerned, not so much with literal fertility as with vitality, and with finding one's harmony with Nature. 'What witches seek for in celebrating these seasonal festivals is a sense of oneness with Nature ... People today need this because they are aware of the tendency of modern life to cut them off from their kinship with the world of living Nature ... They want to get back to Nature, and be human beings again' (in Crowley 1998: 173-5).
This cutting off from nature as a part of modern life has certainly had its part to play in attracting people to Wicca in the last 30 years, largely as a result of environmental awareness. 'A nature religion implies a nature to worship', claims Crowley, and 'in the 1970s environmental pollution became the rallying cause. Nature was on the agenda' (1998: 176). With this influx of environmentally aware people, the ethos of Wicca began to evolve from nature veneration to nature preservation: 'Wicca had moved out of the darkness, the occult world of witchery, to occupy the moral high ground-environmentalism' (ibid: 177).
But going behind environmentalism, back to this need to feel again that contact with nature which, according to Valiente, makes us 'human beings', how does Wicca interact with nature? Both Crowley and Valiente point to the most obvious interaction, that of ritual, and particularly those rituals which make up the mythic cycle of the Wheel of the Year. Certainly, the Wheel of the Year with its eight sabbats reflects the turning cycle of nature, but to what extent does the Wheel turn the seasons instead of the seasons turning the Wheel? There are some Wiccans who celebrate Imbolc, for example, only once the first snowdrops have appeared; but chaotic nature has her own timing, and is not regarded as conducive to modern life and its responsibilities. The practicalities of getting a group of people together thus takes precedence over nature's timing of the seasons, and in order to facilitate Wicca a grid of external references-the eight-spoked Wheel of the Year-is dropped onto nature. Thus, Wicca imposes correspondences rather than allowing correspondences to emerge from living nature and then reading them back into it, and these correspondences become merely standardised lists, memorised information rather than any true gnosis gleaned from the hieroglyphs of nature through imagination and meditation.
Such formalisation may provide a means to increased intimacy with nature for some practitioners, but it surely operates as a distancing mechanism for many others, and it certainly removes from Wicca the influence of its esoteric heritage. If figurative language and ritual are used always to point to something beyond human experience-if a walk in the woods always necessitates a glimpse of dryads and nymphs, if rituals always necessitate a yearning towards the divine-does this then risk removing the awe and wonder from nature herself? The Wiccan circle, it is claimed, exists as a space 'between the worlds', between the divine realm and the human. An over-emphasis on that which lies beyond, that which is above, i.e. the divine, may therefore miss the means by which that beyond might be approached, decoded, and known (in the sense of gnosis), i.e. through nature, through that which is below. Too much 'heaven' and not enough 'earth' encompasses far more than a superficial response to the environmental crises affecting both us and nature. As Nasr goes to some lengths to point out: There is need to rediscover those laws and principles governing human ethics as well as the cosmos, to bring out the interconnectedness between man and nature in the light of the Divine, an interaction not based on sentimentality or even ethical concern related to the realm of action alone, but one founded upon a knowledge whose forgetting has now brought human beings to the edge of the precipice of annihilation of both the natural order and themselves (1996: 223). Activism, it seems, is not enough -- Wicca needs to go deeper and have a knowledge base of the natural order to which it so often only pays lip service. So, to paraphrase Hanegraaff's question posed earlier in this paper, does Wicca produce merely a shallow caricature of profound teachings? How is living Nature actually manifest in Wiccan understanding and practice?
How does Nature manifest itself in Wiccan understanding?
The veneration of nature in Wicca, the concern for the earth as deity, and the pantheism of seeing the divine in all of nature has led Wiccans to maintain an attitude of reverence for the wild, untamed countryside on the one hand, and of sadness or revulsion at human estrangement from this ideal, living in towns and cities away from the land, on the other.
For some Wiccans, veneration of nature and identification as 'Wiccan' and/or 'Pagan' manifests as a romantic attachment to the countryside, a dream of living away from the towns and nurturing a closer relationship with nature. For a few, direct action against the destruction of the environment-at road protests, proposed building sites, Manchester Airport's second runway, or simply to protect an old tree-is the favoured means of expressing their concern for nature and their belief that nature is divine, ensouled, or, at the very least, alive. Others, however, see nature as all-inclusive, regarding all that we do as 'natural' for we, as humans, are also part of nature. However, it remains a fact that most Pagans live in urban areas, and very few depend directly upon the land for their living: as Jeffrey Russell (1991: 171) pointed out, 'most are urban, as is usually true of those who love nature (the farmers are too busy fighting it)'.
Wiccan use of nature imagery appears to be on a cosmological scale rather than located in a particular environment. There appears to be a resistance to putting boundaries around nature, yet at the same time British Wiccans try to link themselves with the energy of the land at quite a local level. However, this only goes so far-few seem to involve themselves with road protests and other areas of environmental activism, and Wicca is thus not heavily represented at environmental protests. A Wiccan view was expressed by a priestess in her early 30s, who told me: I do resent the occasional implication that unless you've spent time up a tree to protect it, you are not a true Witch Craft is one thing, eco-activism is another I do not think they automatically go hand in hand (Hweorfa, 15th October 1998). Dalua, a Norwegian Gardnerian/ Alexandrian High Priest, told me (personal comment, October 1998), 'I personally prefer not to go as far as, for example, Starhawk has done, making the Craft into some sort of action group for political, environmental or humanitarian purposes (in most cases we have good choices outside of the Craft)'. Environmentalism as a part of Wiccan spirituality, then, is not high on the agenda. It seems to be regarded as quite distinct from religion.
However, the portrayal of nature in Pagan and Wiccan rituals is often nothing more than imagery-of idealised nature, or of cosmological nature. This romantic ideal on the part of urban Wiccans has little in common with the reality of living on the land, where nature is anything but romantic. The Pagan/Wiccan ideal of nature thus often seems to stem from a genuine desire to be in harmony with nature and, to an extent, to preserve nature, whilst at the same time the cosmology suggests that nature is but a reflection of a greater divine reality. This is in keeping with the Hermetic maxim 'As above, so below', yet the impact of environmental awareness and activism begs the question as to whether Wiccan attitudes towards nature are relevant to the esoteric concept of 'living nature', or whether they are merely a religious rendering of secular concerns. In any case, the concept of 'nature' is itself diffuse and fractured, and it may be for this reason that Wiccan attitudes to nature as sacred incorporates nature as the universe/cosmos, nature as deity, and also human as part of nature. The refusal to place boundaries around a constructed 'nature' necessarily leaves the observer with the impression of a confused and ill thought-out response to the natural world. Conclusion
To return to the role of imaginative fiction which I mentioned earlier, I would like to read you a passage from a book called Lolly Willowes, or The Loving Huntsman by Sylvia Townsend-Warner, published in 1926. In this book, Lolly has moved to Great Mop. She is a witch, not a Wiccan, since Wicca per se did not exist at this time (although Margaret Murray's book The Witch Cult in Western Europe (1921) certainly did, and Townsend- Warner may well have read this). Lolly doesn't attend the sabbats because they are not sophisticated enough, they don't give her what she needs, and instead she goes to the essence of witchcraft which, for her, is nature. In this passage, she has been joined in Great Mop by her nephew, Titus. It is a rather long passage, but I make no apologies for that: I think the whole passage is relevant and helps to illustrate the points I have made in this paper. When they went for walks together he would sometimes fall silent, turning his head from side to side to browse the warm scent of a clover field. Once, as they stood on the ridge that guarded the valley from the south-east, he said: 'I should like to stroke it'-and he waved his hand towards the pattern of rounded hills embossed with rounded beech-woods. She felt a cold shiver at his words, and turned away her eyes from the landscape that she loved so jealously. Titus could never have spoken so if he had not loved it too. Love it as he might, with all the deep Willowes love for country sights and smells, love he never so intimately and soberly, his love must be a horror to her. It was different in kind from hers. It was comfortable, it was portable, it was a reasonable, appreciative appetite, a possessive and masculine love. It almost estranged her from Great Mop that he should be able to love it so well, and express his love so easily. He loved the countryside as though it were a body.
She had not loved it so. For days at a time she had been unconscious of its outward aspect, for long before she saw it she had loved it and blessed it. With no earnest but a name, a few lines and letters on a map, and a spray of beech-leaves, she had trusted the place and staked everything on her trust. She had struggled to come, but there had been no such struggle for Titus. It was as easy for him to quit Bloomsbury for the Chilterns as for a cat to jump from a hard chair to a soft. Now, after a little scrabbling and exploration,he was curled up in the green lap and purring over the landscape. The green lap was comfortable. He meant to stay in it, for he knew where he was well off. It was so comfortable that he could afford to wax loving, praise its kindly slopes, stretch out a discriminating paw and pat it. But Great Mop was no more to him than any other likable country lap. He liked it because he was in possession. His comfort apart, it was a place like any other place.
Laura hated him for daring to love it so. She hated him for daring to love it at all. Most of all she hated him for daring to impose his kind of love on her. Since he had come to Great Mop she had not been allowed to love in her own way. Commenting, pointing out, appreciating, Titus tweaked her senses one after another as if they were so many bell-ropes. He was a good judge of country things; little escaped him, he understood the points of a landscape as James his father had understood the points of a horse. This was not her way. She was ashamed at paying the countryside these horse-coping compliments. Day by day the spirit of the place withdrew itself further from her. The woods judged her by her company, and hushed their talk as she passed by with Titus. Silence heard them coming, and fled out of the fields, the hills locked up their thoughts, and became so many grassy mounds to be walked up and walked down. She was being boycotted, and she knew it. Presently she would not know it anymore. For her too, Great Mop would be a place like any other place, a pastoral landscape where an aunt walked out with her nephew. (Townsend-Warner, [1926], 2000: 159- 162).
Now, I do not intend to suggest that there is a male/female divide in responses to nature, though for all I know that may be the case. Neither do I want to suggest that all Wiccans respond to nature in the way that Titus does. Rather, the passage highlights two different responses to nature, perhaps one to nature with a small 'n', and one to Nature with a capital 'N'. Undoubtedly, some Wiccans respond to nature as Titus does, and some do not. It is a vexing but nevertheless exciting fact that Wiccan covens and practitioners are extremely different from each other, and therefore generalisations are not easy to either discover or to sustain. Yet, in studying particular forms of Wicca, we cannot help but take note of those questions which do not appear to be being asked, of those areas which seem to be taken for granted. Nature, I would argue, is one of these areas. As I have suggested, the Wiccan response to Nature is often ill thought-out and confused, and as academics we must ask those questions which are not always necessarily welcome. In this paper, I have asked far more questions that I have provided answers. In so doing, I hope to have opened up another area for debate, and to perhaps answer some of my own questions where time and space allows, in published form.
References Cited
Albanese, Catherine (1990), Nature Religion in America: