
Orion The Hunter returns, and in the northern hemisphere can once again be seen in the east at sunrise. So when we say return, where has he been, then? The answer is, he has been invisible, hidden in the glare of the sun since May. But now he is back and will rise earlier each day until he is visible all evening during the winter months.
Orion is only the 26th largest constellation, sitting on the celestial equator, facing the constellation next door, the oncoming, charging, Taurus the Bull. So itโs far from being the biggest, and itโs smaller than another Greek hero, Perseus but Orionโs got more brilliant stars, commanding the impression of its vastness.
(The biggest constellation of all is Hydra, and the biggest constellation of the twelve included in the Zodiac is Virgo.)
Orionโs two brightest stars are the blue-white star Rigel, representing the Hunterโs left foot, and the red supergiant Betelgeuse, Orionโs right shoulder. Theyโre both thought to be to be about ten million years old, which makes Betelgeuse quite young to be a red supergiant, but itโs evolved faster due to its enormous mass. It is expected to go supernova in the next million years and when it does will be brighter than the Moon and the brightest supernova ever to have been visible from Earth.
Orionโs third brightest star is Bellatrix, his left shoulder, and Orionโs Belt is one of the most easily recognized asterisms with its three stars. You can read them east to west or left to right; Alnitak (girdle), Alnilam (string of pearls) and Mintaka (area) They have many other names across the world; The Magi, the Three Maryโs, and the Mayans called them The Fire Drill, invoking them in an annual fire ceremony to delay the onset of the end of the world.
โNo other constellation more accurately represents the figure of a man,โ said Germanicus Caesar
Orion is identified as a human figure in every culture at every latitude, with countless variations of different names and legends. Orion, also called Nimrod, was the son of Poseidon and was the most handsome man ever to walk the earth. He was a great hunting buddy and friend of Artemis. Her twin brother, Apollo glowered, seeing that Artemis fancied Orion something rotten, although she had taken a vow of perpetual chastity.
Orion could be a bit of a sex pest, chasing the Pleiades, so much so, Zeus posted them to the sky at their own request, for their peace and quiet. And a fat lot of good it did them, because when Orion was killed by a scorpion (THE scorpion) Artemis in her grief, asked Zeus to post Orion upstairs to the heavens, which he did, right next door to the Pleiades, who also represent the celestial bull pen of Taurus. Thanks Zeus, said the Seven Sisters. Thanks a bunch. You didnโt think that one through, did you?
Should Taurus ever break free of his pen, said an ancient Arabic legend, it will be the end of all things. Letโs hope heโs happy up there, and that Orion doesnโt chase the Pleiades away, guarding the gates of his starry enclosure.
Orion hunts the celestial hare, Lepus, bravely striding out as Taurus glares down at him. But though he killed the scorpion that also killed him, Orion still fears it, and dreads its appearance, fleeing west as the autumn wears on and Scorpius rises (Scorpio.)
The imaginary cosmic stand off between Orion and Taurus the Bull, its red eye, the royal star Aldebaran (meaning in Arabic, The Follower) glaring down at him, daring him to come nearer, does not fit the Greek legend of Orion. A question has been raised in some quarters over the identity of Orion, and whether he has become confused with Herakles/Hercules at any time in his identification with this star constellation. The reasons are likely historical. The constellation as recognized by the Greeks originated with the Sumerians, who saw in it their great hero Gilgamesh fighting the Bull of Heaven. The Sumerian name for Orion wasย URU AN-NA, meaning light of heaven and Taurus wasย GUD AN-NA, bull of heaven.
Gilgamesh was the Sumerian equivalent of Heracles, the greatest hero of Greek mythology, and one of the Labours of Heracles was to catch the Cretan bull, but Orion was never in a fight with a bull. Heracles, it has been suggested, deserves a magnificent constellation such as this one, but has been consigned to a much more obscure area of sky. So has there been a mix-up, or perhaps we could see it as a mash-up, Orion and Heracles in mutual disguise?
Orion and the Tarot
The Tarot card most commonly associated with Orion is The Fool. The most numinous card in the deck, its element is Air and it is ruled by the planet of revolution, Uranus. Before the discovery of Uranus, the Fol was associated with Saturn, the classical ruler of Aquarius.
It is the portal of the number Zero. The Fool or as some called him, The Jester, is both beginnings and ending.
In a real life reading it may detect or forecast a birth of a child, or a new offer or a launch or opportunity of some kind. And change happens all the time but this is always major or significant in scope. But although is not associated with Death, unlike the famous Death card, it can mean a death too, representing infinity, the ouroboros.
The Fool lives in the moment. He may be fun, he may be joy, or he may be frightening. Thereโs every reason a lot of people are scared of clowns as the living embodiment of The Fool. He represents the wisdom of innocence, or mistakes made through impulsiveness or ignorance rather than stupidity.
But he may represent a threat, whether direct or existential, clearly sensed but not as yet clearly identifiable. This fear is visceral, not lightly to be dismissed. This is where we are at right now, collectively speaking, feeling that we are poised on a brink.
The Fool may be a shamanic, gnostic figure; the stranger, the outcast, the wise Fool or the Fool on the Hill. He dances to his own tune. He takes chances, risks, and sometimes these pay off, but sometimes he steps over the edge of the cliff, heedless of his dogโs most urgent warning.
The dog in the card is not biting the Fool, but desperately trying to get his attention. If someone asks the Tarotโs advice and then I draw this card reversedโฆ.someone needs to draw back from the precipice and look again before they leap. I may bark like the Foolโs dog, but will they act on this advice? CAN they? Will they even really hear it, let alone find a way to use it? We are who we are, and we do what we do, based on who we are. It is a rare person who can step back and see things anew once they are committed to Opinion A or B or they are emotionally invested in outcome A or B.
Advice, to be heard, must be sufficiently timely, before the paint dries.
Everywhere the Fool goes, his dog follows, just as Orion is followed in the skies by his two hunting dogs, Canis major and Canis minor. Sirius, the Dog Star is in the constellation of Canis Major and is THE brightest star in Earthโs night sky.
The only objects that outshine Sirius in our skies are the sun, moon, Venus, Jupiter, Mars and Mercury โ and Sirius will usually outshine Mercury too.
All Mankind is Orion
We were hunters at the dawn of man (The Fool) And gatherers too, but we were never gorillas, and never herbivores on our ancestral line.
โWe were risen not of fallen angels but risen apes, and they were killer apes besidesโ โ Robert Ardrey, in African Genesis. -โThe miracle of man is not how far he has sunk but how magnificently he has risen. We are known among the stars by our poems, not our corpses. Man beset by anarchy, banditry, chaos and extinction must at last resort turn to that chamber of horrors, human enlightenment. For he has nowhere else to turn.โ
Hunting was what brought us together in teams, then communities. Co-operation meant compassion. Feeding a fellow-hunter and nursing him for many weeks while he recovered from a broken femur.
Fatboy Slim tells a version of that story here (except that we were apes but not on the gorilla branch).
Wait for the appearance of Orion in the final frame of the video.
The rise of Orion in August 2024 speaks to this dangerous point in time.
Thank you for reading.
Until next time.
Katie Ellen
My heart breaks for what has taken place in your beautiful and historic land. Other than that I have no proper words.
Thank you for your posts.
My favourite time of year, as Orion, once again breaks the eastern horizon at dawn. Excellent.