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            | Some Thing I Know About Nimue
 By Valerie Walker
 |  Originally published in Witch Eye Volume Nine Strangely enough, Nimue, the Maiden aspect of the Triple Goddess,   doesn't get written about very much by Feris, especially when contrasted   with her opposite number (and occasional Twin) the Blue God. This may   simply be that the majority of writers in Feri are gay men, who find the   concept of an adolescent boy-god much more appealing than that of a   little girl-goddess.  Another reason might be that the Maiden is closer   to the Crone than to the Mother: in the seasonal cycle, the Crone   becomes the Maiden in the spring, and in many myths (e.g., that of   Kore/Persephone) the Maiden goes to the Underworld to encounter the   Crone and become transformed.  
            
              |  "Nimue"
 by Valerie Walker
 Cover for Witch Eye Volume 15
 |  
 Both the Maiden and the Crone are spoken of among some Feris as being   "androgynous", but I feel that this is a mistake. They are, repectively,   pre-sexual and post-sexual; and for a religion that places so much   emphasis on sex, neither is a comfortable kind of deity. I have been   told that Nimue is "dangerous" to call upon, and the Faery Roads website   says: "... Imagine all the power of the Cosmos in the hands of a   six-year-old..."
 
 According to what I have been told, Victor Anderson regarded Nimue as   the Black Heart of Innocence incarnate. As the prepubescent girl, first   emanation of the Star Goddess, Nimue is the Holy Child, the protectress   and avenger of abused and mistreated children everywhere, fierce, wild,   and innocent. Her priestesses wore two green snakes in their hair, and   she was accorded a sacrifice of four red pigs, four white pigs, and one   black pig, showing her connection to the love and death aspects of the   Star Goddess.
 
 One of Nimue's titles is "the Kymari." Corvia Blackthorn is of the opinion   that this name most likely is a variant spelling of the Kumari of Nepal.
 
 "The Kumari is the prepubescent "living Goddess" of Nepal, where she is   believed to be the Great Goddess incarnate in the form of a girl child.    She rules until her first menstruation, when she is dethroned and a new   Kumari selected.
 
 "The Kumari is also associated with snakes, but red ones. When a   Nepalese woman dreams of a red snake, it's thought to be a sign that her   daughter may be the next Kumari. The Kumari is worshipped by both   Hindus and Buddhists.
 
 "One story of the beginning of the custom of the Kumari claims that a   king of Nepal had sex with a prepubescent girl. The encounter caused her   death, and the king established the cult of the Kumari as penance."
 
 Barbara Walker's   Encyclopedia of Women's Myths and Secrets gives a   couple of very interesting  connections to the name Nimue: one to   Nemesis, Retribution, and the other to Mneme, Memory. Although Walker's   scholarship is noted for requiring the proverbial grain of salt, still,   these two connections somehow rang an intuitive bell for me. Looking at   etymology, we find that the Proto-Indo-European root nem- signifies " to   divide, distribute, allot, to take." Some of the nem- words in   different languages include the Gothic  niman 'to take' ,  Old High   German nemen  'to take' Old Irish  nem  'gift'. Greek  nemo:  'I   distribute'; Avestan  nemah 'loan; obligation'.
 
 Nemesis/Nimue is the Goddess of That Which is Allotted. She gives with   one hand and takes with the other. At the same time, Mneme, Memory, the   shortened form of Mnemosyne, mother of the nine water-nymph Muses of   Roman and Greek Mythology, is also appropriate for Nimue, because the   Fetch is the seat of memory, and if there is a goddess for the Fetch it   would have to be Nimue.
 
 Nimue has been associated with Diana Nemorensis (Diana of the Woods).   Lake Nemi is a lake in Italy where the temple of Diana once stood,   surrounded by her sacred grove. The guardian of the sacred grove of   Diana was referred to as Rex Nemorensis, the King of the Woods, the   guardian of Diana's temple at Nemi. Thus Diana of the Woods is   associated with both the elements of water and earth, and in fact has   been spoken of as an early version of the Lady of the Lake.
 
 And speaking of the Lady of the Lake, let us not forget the familiar   temptress who was Merlin's Nemesis. In the Arthurian legend, the Lady of   the Lake was the foster-mother of Sir Lancelot, presented Excalibur to   King Arthur, became Merlin's scribe as well as his lover, and imprisoned   him in a glass castle, cave, or tree (accounts differ). On Arthur's   defeat and death in battle, she took back the sword Excalibur. She was   later one of the three Queens who escorted the King to Avalon.
 
 The Lady of the Lake is usually referred to by various spellings of the   names Nimue or Vivienne. The practice of offering money or weapons to   the water goddesses at wells and fountains continues today at wishing   wells, and the Lady of the Lake is remembered as "Lady Luck"!
 
 But this is taking us in the direction of thinking about Nimue as a   fully-grown woman. Let us return to Nimue the child. In literature, the   characters who exemplify Nimue for me are Pippi Longstocking, Neil   Gaiman's Delirium of the Endless, Alice in Wonderland, and the little   girl in Norah Jones' song, "Seven Years":
 ...That's how she comes to me, dancing. Not with a sword, but then I am   no hero. I think she comes to each one as the changeable creature that   she is, reflecting our true desires, our longing to be at one with our   Black Heart of Innocence. Taking with one hand, giving with the other,   in exotic or familiar guise, she is the essence of femininity as yet   untouched, of childhood as yet unmarred.Spinning, laughing, dancing to  her favorite song
 A little girl with nothing wrong
 Is all alone
 Eyes wide open
 Always hoping for the sun
 And she'll sing her song to anyone  that comes along
 Fragile as a leaf in autumn
 Just fallin' to the ground
 Without a sound
 Crooked little smile on her face
 Tells a tale of grace
 That's all her own
 Fragile as a leaf in autumn
 Just fallin' to the ground
 Without a sound
 Spinning, laughing, dancing to  her favorite song
 She's a little girl with nothing wrong
 And she's all alone
 A little girl with nothing wrong
 And she's all alone
 
 
 Sources:
 http://www.britannia.com/history/biographies/nimue.html
 Feri roads website [website and archive no longer available]
 Corvia Blackthorn gives the following weblinks for the Kumari:
 http://www.visitnepal.com/nepal_information/kumari.htm
 http://www.exoticindiaart.com/article/nepal/2/
 Norah Jones, Come Away With Me, ©Lee Alexander, Fumblethumbs music, BMI
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