Dark Side of the Sun: A Brief Guide to Midsummer Lore in Britain & Ireland

By by simonwakefield - https://www.flickr.com/photos/simonwakefield/3149066878/ (cache of original license), CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=6029740

Each morning the sun rolls across the sky. In Estonia it was the hatched egg of the enchanted swallow bird, an emu’s egg bursting into flames in Australia, and a golden piece of bacon for the Nama people of South Africa. In the evening, it descends into the sea, as a bridegroom or warrior, golden rays transformed into spears or robes of light, hissing with heat as the waters close over it, before swimming back to the east. Sometimes in gloom-shrouded nights, we may imagine it will never return and we will be plunged into unyielding darkness, but still it rises and always will, at least for the next five billion years or so!

Hunting for Unicorns

The Legend of the First Unicorn by Lari Don and Nataša Ilinčić

Scotland is one of the few nations to have chosen a mythological creature rather than a real one as her national animal, and probably the only nation to have chosen an animal that no one believed actually lived there…

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