The White Witch
(From
the book "The
White Witch of Bala Lake")
By : Deborah Susan Jones : Editor
Ceridwen
(Keridoowen)
White Witch of Bala
Lake
A Welsh Goddess of
dark and prophetic powers.
A corn goddess, sometimes symbolised as a
sow, which is an animal of abundance and also fertility
representing the fecundity (the quality or power of
producing abundantly; fruitfulness or fertility) of the
underworld and strength of the mother figure. Often seen
as a Crone, and also a shape-shifting keeper of a
cauldron of wisdom called Amen, she has the ability to
shift from an old hag to a beautiful girl and and also
various types of animal.
Named from “ceryd”, a Welsh word for chiding
love and “gwen” for white and blessed. Mother and Crone
of the Triple Goddess (Maiden, Mother, Crone" a goddess
triad of certain forms of Neopaganism and representing
the Maiden, Mother, and Crone as the waxing, full, and
waning moon cycles) and a witch, called Hag of Creation
and "the Old One', as the Goddess of Sovereignty.
Under Bala Lake the White Witch lived, in a
tall spired castle, some say . . . . . . in the land of
the Cymri, with her bardic love, Tegid Foel, and her two
children . . . .
some say . . . . . .
First in the Simulacra series books by Peter
Andrew Jones.
The simulacrum is true,"
(Ecclesiastes)
Simulacrum (ˌsɪmjʊˈleɪkrəm)
(Plural = Simulacra)
(Singular =
Simulacrum)
Realer than real.
"The simulacrum
is never what hides
the truth --
it is truth that
hides the fact that
there is none.
The simulacrum is true,"
Read more in the book here!
Deborah Susan Jones

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