Cerridwen ("White Sow", or "White Crafty One")
is the Welsh grain and sow-goddess, keeper of the cauldron of inspiration and
goddess of transformation. Her son Afagddu was so horribly ugly She set to making
a brew of wisdom for him, to give him a quality that could perhaps overcome
his ugliness. Every day for a year and a day She added herbs at the precise
astrological times, but on the day it was ready the three magical drops fell
instead on the servant boy, Gwion Bach, who was set to watch the fire. Instantly
becoming a great magician, the boy fled from Her wrath, and as She pursued him
they each changed shape--a hound following a rabbit, an otter chasing a salmon,
a hawk flying after a sparrow--until finally the boy changed to a kernel of
wheat, settling into a pile of grain on a threshing-floor. Cerridwen, becoming
a black hen, found him out and swallowed him down.
Nine months later she gave birth to Taliesin, who would be the greatest of
all bards.
Called "the White Lady of Inspiration and Death", Cerridwen's ritual
pursuit of Gwion Bach symbolizes the changing seasons. Her cauldron contains
awen, meaning the divine spirit, or poetic or prophetic inspiration.
Her link as the Mother of Poetry is seen in Her reborn son Taliesin, and in
the Welsh word that makes up part of Her name, cerdd, which also means
poetry.
Cerridwen signifies inspiration from an unexpected corner. Plans may go awry;
projects may change. Do not be too quick to hold a project to its course--instead
let it take its shape as it will.
Variant spellings: Ceridwen, Caridwen, Kyrridwen