Yew
Patriarch of Long-lasting Woods
by Mara Freeman
This article first appeared in Touchstone
In early times, the darkly glorious yew-tree was probably the only
evergreen tree in Britain. Both Druids with their belief in reincarnation,
and later Christians with their teaching of the resurrection, regarded it
as a natural emblem of everlasting life. Its capacity for great age
enriched its symbolic value. The early Irish regarded it as one of the most
ancient beings on earth. Yew is the last on a list of oldest things in a
passage from the fourteenth century Book of Lismore: "Three lifetimes
of
the yew for the world from its beginning to its end."
The yew's reputation for long life is due to the unique way in
which the tree grows. Its branches grow down into the ground to form new
stems, which then rise up around the old central growth as separate but
linked trunks. After a time, they cannot be distinguished from the
original tree. So the yew has always been a symbol of death and rebirth,
the new that springs out of the old, and a fitting tree for
us to study at the beginning of this new year. As the days now grow longer
with the beginning of a new solar cycle, we move into the future on the
achievements of the past, new creativity springs forth grounded in the
accomplishments of the year gone by.
In Irish mythology, the yew is one of the five sacred trees brought
from the Otherworld at the division of the land into five parts. Known as
the Tree of Ross, it was said to be "the offspring of the tree that
is in
Paradise", and it brought lasting plenty to Ireland. In the Brehon
Laws, it
is named as one of the Seven Chieftain Trees, with heavy penalties for
felling one.Ownership of a yew-tree is the cause of a great battle in the
twelfth century tale, Yew Tree of the Disputing Sons. The tree's high
status is also shown in an Irish tale from the Historical Cycle in which
a
swineherd dreamed he saw a yew tree upon a rock, with an oratory in front
of it. Angels ascended and descended from a flagstone at the threshold.
He
told a druid who interpreted the dream to mean that the rock would be the
seat of kings of Munster from that day forth, and the first king would be
he who kindled a fire beneath the yew.
Staves of yew were kept in pagan graveyards in Ireland where they
were used for measuring corpses and graves. In the tragic love story of
Baile and Ailinn from the Historical Cycle, Baile dies of grief for the
beautiful Ailinn. When he is buried, a yew-tree grew out of his grave, and
"the likeness of his head was in the branches." After seven years,
poets
cut down they yew and made writing tablets out of it.
Another use of yew-wood by poets is recounted in a tale of Conn of
the Hundred Battles, who with his druids and poets, lost his way in a mist
and came to a supernatural world where a druid was recording names of every
prince from Conn's time onwards on staves of yew. In the bardic schools,
poets used staves of yew to help them memorize long incantations. We hear
tell how the poet Cesarn "cut (the words) in Ogam into 4 rods of yew.
Each
was 24' long and had 8 sides.
Staves of yew were also used for carving Ogam letters for magical
use, according to the evidence of early literature. In The Wooing of
Etaine, the beautiful heroine was abducted from her husband, Eochaid, who
searched for her for a year and a day to no avail. Finally, he sought the
help of his druid, Dalla/n`who made four rods of yew and inscribed them
with Ogam. Through this means he discovered that Etaine was in the si/d
of
Bri Leith, with the faery king, Midir.
Veneration of the yew continued into Christian times where they
have always been associated with churchyards. An early medieval Irish poem
fragment refers to a yew outside an early Celtic Christian cell:
There is here above the brotherhood
A bright tall glossy yew;
The melodious bell sends out a clear keen note
In St. Columba's church.
Although from Ireland, this verse may refer to the Isle of Iona,
the sacred island of St. Columba off western Mull, Scotland, which is said
toderive its name from the Gaelic word for `yew-tree', Ioho or Ioha. The
island was once a powerful Druid centre, planted with sacred groves of yew,
and the traditions of Iona traditionally involve rebirth and reincarnation.
On mainland Scotland, St. Ninian, a priest in Roman Britain, planted
numerous yews in the churchyards, including the famous Fortingale Yew in
Perthshire where Beltane fires were lit each year in a cleft of the trunk.
A rhyme about this tree states:
"Here Druid priests their altars placed,
And sun and mooon adored."
For yew was one of the nine sacred trees for kindling Beltane
fires, and the old Scottish rhyme about the need-fire calls it "the
tree of
resilience." Another famous Scottish yew stood at the Tobar an Iuthair,
the
Yew Tree Well in Easter Ross. Its presence lent healing qualities to the
water, until someone cut the tree down. Whoever did the deed must have
regretted it, for an old curse stated:
Well of the Yew Tree, Well of the Yew Tree,
To thee should honour be given;
In Hell a bed is ready for him
Who cuts the tree about thine ears.
A similar fate awaited an individual at the church of St. Kevin of
Glendalough, in County Wicklow, Ireland, who was cursed because, as a rhyme
states:
He cut down the Sacred Yew
That holy Kevin planted.
After the Norman Conquest a spate of church-building led to the
planting of many churchyard yews. Some still thrive today, although over
900 years old. Fortunately their function as icons of everlasting life had
been forgotten by the 17th century, or they would have probably not
survived destruction by the Puritans. The yew trees were usually planted
in
a deliberate manner: one beside the path leading from the funeral gateway
of the churchyard to the main door of the church, and the other beside the
path leading to the lesser doorway. In early times, the priest and clerks
would gather under the first yew to await the corpse-bearers. The remains
of Anglo-Saxon churches suggest that the early English planted yews in a
circle around the church, which were usually built upon a central mound.
There is also a tradition that the Cross was a yew-tree, perhaps
because of its symbolism of immortality. A verse from a traditional carol
from Herefordshire, The Seven Virgins, runs:
Go you down, go you down to yonder town,
And sit in the gallery:
And there you'll find sweet Jesus Christ,
Nailed to a big yew-tree.
The famous yew-trees of Nevern in Dyfed, Wales, are said to bleed a
red substance every year in sympathy with the Christ. Branches of yew were
borne in Palm Sunday processions instead of palm or olive and the altars
of
many churches were traditionally decked with branches of yew on Easter Day.
The yew is also associated with another time of resurrection -- New Year's
Day, where in some parishes, villagers would gather beneath the churchyard
yew to see in the New Year.
In later times, only the death side of the Yew's symbolism remained
in the popular mind. Shakespeare wrote of "the dismal yew" and
his witches
bore "slips of yew slivered in the moon's eclipse." 19th century
naturalist
Gilbert White described the trees as "an emblem of mortality by their
funereal appearance." A dark-canopied grove of yews was often regarded
as a
place to be shunned, and a bough brought into the house portended a death
in the family. The cemetary is nowadays looked upon as a place of fear
rather than a sacred place of return to the ancestral realm. So let us
return to the wisdom of the Druids and remember at the turning of the year
the teachings of the sacred yew: that darkness is the matrix from which
light springs forth, and that out of death, life arises.
copyright Mara Freeman, 1996
Chalice Center: Mara
Freeman's beautiful new site.