Showing posts with label Rowan tree in Celtic and Scottish Folklore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rowan tree in Celtic and Scottish Folklore. Show all posts

Thursday, February 27, 2025

The Rowan

 My neighborhood is filled with Rowan down most every street. We have a Rowan tree in our backyard which soon after we moved into our house began to grow.  Since I never pluck out anything that sprouts in my yard until actually realizing what it is the Rowan sprout ... now a tree remains. 

Rowan trees are absolutely gorgeous in the autumn.  There is also a folklore that surrounds them. 


The Rowan Tree in Scottish and Celtic Folklore

"Rowan Trees are favoured in Scotland and are held with high esteem in Scottish and Ancient Celtic folklore. It is a tree said to offer protection in more ways than one and it was once forbidden to cut one down in the case of bad luck. If items were harvested from the then they were only to be used for the means of ritual and nothing else."

The Rowan Tree Folklore 


by jeanne rené

photo: jeannerené

The Rowan

 
Late September
the Rowan guard stands in bold choir outside of school,
  yielding to a soft whistle and show of red dress.  


As blue-beaked thrush flits
branch to last berry,
ruddy leaves rustle against
the spirits,

and the bird
stops its drunken revelry
to join the Rowan’s song
“Oh, children,”

winging atop, it flees.
“Oh, children,” the whispering trees
return the melody.
“Pass under me.”

At noon I hear
a chorus of play
drift over fences into my open window.
“Oh, children,” the heart murmurs.


copyright jeannerené  08.22.08