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Jethro Tull – Cup Of Wonder Lyrics 11 years ago
'Beltane's flower' = fire (the Bel fire), representing the sun which, at Beltane, is stirring plants to renewed life.

'May Day' is the modern name for the ancient pagan festival of Beltane.
'The old straight track' may be a reference to the ritual causeways that led to ancient standing stone circles (not all circles have these causeways).

'Those who ancient lines did lay' may refer to the designers and/or builders of the causeways and standing stone circles.

The 'cup of crimson wonder' is a cup or chalice which represents the womb for the purposes of the Beltane ritual. It represents the womb of women, of animals, of the earth. In other words, that which nurtures and gives life to all that lives. It is crimson ('fills with red') to represent blood: the blood which nurtures the unborn, the blood which is spilled at birth, and the blood which runs in the veins of all animals, without which they could not live. Blood = life and life-giving. (Hence also, 'pass the lady' as the cup represents Woman, and women's life-giving potential.)

The Green Man is an ancient nature spirit / god. He is often represented either as a face peering through foliage, or, more commonly, as a face which is almost entirely composed of foliage, with vines emerging from his mouth. He is also sometimes represented with deer horns. He is the god of green and growing things: the Year King who sleeps/dies through winter only to return or be reborn with the spring. Where horned, he is also the god of the hunt, where he is both the hunter and the hunted.

'The old grey standing stones that show the sun its way to bed' are the ancient monoliths of the UK, of which the best-known example is Stonehenge. Some are arranged in circles while others are not. Many standing stones are calendars, aligned with the sun's path at certain times of the year, often solstices, such that the rising sun on a particular day each year passes over a certain stone and/or lights a specific point on another stone. Standing stones may be aligned with, or intended to highlight, another specific point in a ritual landscape at a particular time of year. The Neolithic Callanish (Calanais) Stones, for example, are oriented towards a range of hills which, from that angle within the stones, look like a reclining woman. Callanish plots the progress of the moon, rather than the sun. At a specific point every 19 years, the rising moon appears to emerge from between her thighs, which is interpreted as the moon being born.

'The lines of Nature's palm' are ley lines.

'Stir the cup that's ever filling with the blood of all that's born': The cup is again a clear reference to the womb, and possibly also a reference to menstruation. 'Stir' probably refers to having sex, which is a traditional Beltane activity, and also to fertilisation of the womb (causing it to stir to life).

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