A guide to travel altars for Hekate. Please tell me if you want a certain deity covered!
In this guide, I’m assuming you’ve added a tea-light or LED candle. It isn’t necessary, but it’s not going to be included in any of these guides. I’m also going to be assuming you’ve added a photo of the deity and prayers. These guides will not include those, either.
Owl Figurines
Pentacles
Keys
Bones
Cat Figurines
Sage
Amethyst
Obsidian
Snake Figurines
Doll Heads
Small Athame or Dagger
Moon Keychains, Pins, Stickers, Etc.
Acorns
Dog Figurines
A Small Bottle of Your Favorite Herbs
See more deities here.
With elation Half divine, Pour libation, Oil and wine; While it blazes, Chant her praises, Crowned with daisies, Wreathed with pine.
—A Year of Pagan Prayer, compiled by Barbara Nolan
Morpheus is a Daimon of dreams. Excluding the universal offerings, some common offerings include:
Lavender
Poppies (Or Seeds, Bread, Etc.)
Sleep-Inducing Teas and Herbs
Dream-Inducing Teas and Herbs
Depictions of Butterflies
Blankets
Pillows
Feathers
Amethyst
Mugwort
Valerian
For devotional acts, some activities that can be done for him include:
Lucid Dreaming
Keeping a Dream Journal
Make (and Keep) a Nighttime Routine
Learn Lucid Dreaming Techniques
Drinking/Otherwise Using Dream-Inducing Teas/Herbs/Oils/Etc.
Make Dream Pillows (Pillows Stuffed with Herbs/Crystals/Etc.)
Do Dream Reflections
Learn How to Read Dreams
He is not celebrated in any Athenian holidays.
A collection of Black Books of Hours
Black Hours, ca. 1475 (Morgan Library, New York)
Horae beatae marie secundum usum curie romane, ca. 1458 (Hispanic Society of America)
Black Hours of Galeazzo Maria Sforza, ca. 1466-1476 (Austrian National Library)
priest, poet, occultist, alchimist, devotee. bronze age, hellenic, roman, celtic, medieval history.
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