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Fixed Stars, Not Fixed Fates!
by Nancy R. Fenn
"What hogwash!" he said, only he used a different word. "When
you screw up your life, you blame astrology, like you had no
choice because you were born at a certain time." Now he was
smiling. "The reason I do drugs and can't keep my fly zipped
isn't because of any stars! Like my old man knocked up my
mother when Scorpio was Rising and because of that I'm going
to jail? I don't think so! I'm going to jail because I'm bad
to the bone!"
This is a speech made by Edmund the Bastard in Act I, Scene ii
of Shakespeare's King Lear. I brought it up to date.
Edmund plots to turn his father against his half brother,
Edward, but the boys' father won't go for it. He excuses
Edward's recent strange behavior by "these late eclipses in
the sun and moon …."
Edmund says he was born under the Dragon's tail, the South
Node of the Moon. That could be in any sign. He's making a
play on words. To be born under any animal's tale is probably
a slur on Edmund's mother who was not married at the time of
his conception.
Edmund's "nativity" or horoscope is under Ursa Major, the
constellation where the Big Dipper resides. At the time of
this play, most of the stars in Ursa Major were in late
degrees of Leo and the first half of Virgo.
It's a funny coincidence (no such thing?) when Edmund
speculates, what if he were born under "the maidliest star" --
because that's exactly when he was born. If under Ursa Major,
then the influence of Virgo, the Maiden.
Edmund shows a mistake people sometimes make about astrology.
You can't be born "under something", you have to be born when
the Sun is "in something".
Edmund's character is used as a contrast to King Lear's very
evil daughters, Goneril and Regan. King Lear is destroyed by
their cruelty. While these girls are dark to the core, Edmund
is openly, carelessly and light-heartedly villainous. Back
then as now, some people are bad but some people are really
evil. M. Scott Peck wrote a good book to help with this
distinction, The Road Less Traveled.
Edmund actually has a pretty good handle on an important
concept in humanistic astrology -- way before Dane Rudhyar
(1895-1985) wrote his books. It is our character that
determines our fate, not our horoscope.
Thousands of people are born the same hour, day, year and even
minute all over the world; yet no two are alike. The energy of
the stars is neutral like electricity but there is a Soul
lying beneath the horoscope which uses the energy for good or
ill.
Charles Darwin was born on February 12, 1809 in Shrewsbury,
England. Abraham Lincoln was born on February 12, 1809 in
Larue County, Kentucky. It was a good day for men!
There's nothing evil about being born in Virgo. In fact many
Virgos are among the most gentle people. But 9 degrees of
Virgo is a degree of homicide. Alioth of Ursa Major in
Shakespeare's time was at about 7 degrees Virgo while Mizar
and Alcor were at 12 degrees Virgo.
I think, too, that Shakespeare refers to the importance Ursa
Major has always had in the northern hemisphere. It is one of
the first things children learn to pick out in the starry
night sky.
Ursa Major isn't part of the zodiac but its stars can be seen
vividly at night. There are seven main stars, Alkaid, Mizar,
Alioth, Megrez, Phecda, Merak and Dubhe.
The last two are special stars people use to site the North
Star (Polaris). Mizar has a fainter companion, Alcor. As
everyone knows, if you can see these two stars with your own
two eyes, you have good eyesight!
Beginning astronomy students are taught to start from Ursa
Major and "follow the arc to Arcturus"; then "spin on to Spica".
Arcturus is the second brightest star in the spring sky, a
fortunate star of the zodiac, while Spica is considered the
luckiest star of all. Are you lucky enough to have a planet at
23 Libra? Email me at parklanenancy@hotmail.com and I'll let
you know.
Mizar and Alcor have a love story in American Indian
mythology. Not everyone can see Alcor, but she is the 7th
sister of the Pleiades, the youngest sister, who fell in love
with a mortal man. One night the Windsong lifted him up into
the stars for her His name is Mizar and they have been
together ever since. All cultures speak of the Seven Pleiades,
but that is why you can only see six of them.
Astrologically, the constellation Ursa Major is said to give a
"quiet, prudent, suspicious, mistrustful, self-controlled
patient nature, but an uneasy spirit and great anger when
roused". Much like a bear, I suppose. The name Ursa Major (the
Big Bear) comes from a myth about Zeus, the king of gods. Zeus
raped a young nymph named Callisto. Callisto gave birth to a
son named Arcas. Zeus' wife was so angry she turned Callisto
into a bear. Callisto roamed the woods for 15 years. One day
she ran into her son, who had become a hunter. As he drew his
bow to shoot her, of course not recognizing that she was his
mother, Zeus took pity on Callisto and turned her son into a
bear as well. Then he took them both by the tail and swung
them up into the heavens which is why their tails are so long.
Zeus' wife became furious again and drug a promise out of the
ancient ruler of the sea that these two constellations would
never get their paws wet. To this day they do not set below
the horizon of the sea as other constellations do.
The constellation has had other meanings. In Arabic, Mizak and
Alcor are called the horse and rider. The rest of the
constellation is seen as a funeral procession ... perhaps
because of the slow and solemn motion of the figure around the
pole.
The Babylonians saw a chariot in these stars and the Romans,
seven oxen. In Ireland the constellation is called King
David's Chariot; in Denmark and Sweden the Stori Vagn or
Chariot of Thor. Similarly the Vikings, Poles, Germans and
Medieval Christians saw it as a chariot for their gods.
The Plough, as it is called in the UK, is the bucket shaped
figure on the back of the Bear, outlined by the stars Merak,
Dubhe, Phecda and Megrez. The Three Horses pulling the plough
are located in the tail.
Ursa Major has also been called the Wain by the Welsh, short
for Charlie Wain or Charlemagne, while Arcturus refers to King
Arthur.
The stars do not compel any more than there are chariots,
bears and funeral processions in the skies. Most individual
stars have Arabic names while the constellations in our
northern hemisphere have names derived from Greek and Roman
mythology. There was a time 2000 years ago when these worlds
were all one -- when shepherds sat alone on hilltops at night
and stared into the sky. There was a time when desert caravans
followed star maps reliably across the sands and sailors cried
"By Jiminy!" to the constellation of the twins to keep them
safe at sea. There was a time when astrology and astronomy
were twins as well and I'm one astrologer who likes to return
to those times every now and then.
About the Author
Nancy R. Fenn has been a professional astrologer in the San
Diego area for over 25 years. She's the astrologer who wasn't
born yesterday
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