[older woman to older man]: 
One-eye, Wanderer, God of wisdom, 
Hunt-lord, hail, who leads the hosting! 
Nine nights hanging, knowledge gaining, 
Cloaked at crossroads, council hidden. 
Now the night, your time, is near us -- 
Right roads send us on, Rune-winner. 
[older man to older woman]: 
Every age your eye has witnessed; 
Cauldron-Keeper, hail wise Crone! 
Rede in riddles is your ration -- 
Wyrd-weaving at the World-tree's root. 
Eldest ancient, all-knowing one, 
Speak secrets to us, send us vision. 
[younger woman to younger man]: 
Lord of Life, hail Land-Master! 
God of grain that grows and dies 
And rises reborn, full of richness; 
Fallow fields shall yet be fertile -- 
Spring sap runs as stirs your phallus 
Bless barren earth, let it bear again! 
[younger man to younger woman]: 
Snow-shoes striding, hail swift Huntress! 
Wild one, free and willful Goddess 
Bow and blade you bear beside you, 
Finding food to fend off hunger -- 
Winter will not leave us wanting; 
Give good hunting, grant us skill. 
USHERING IN THE NEW YEAR: 
Welcome winter, waning season, 
Now with night the new year comes; 
Hail the horse's head with blessings -- 
Blessings be on those who bide here 
And indeed on all the world! 
SCRYING: 
Wide are the world gates, 
Sights to be sent us; 
Ready for rede-gifts, 
We wait for your wisdom. 
OFFERINGS/THANKSGIVING: 
Grateful, we give now, gifts of our own 
Heart-work and hand-work the hearth shall grace; 
Happiness, harmony,  health in the new year, 
Send to the world and we in it, we wish you. 
DISMISSAL/OPENING: 
To watching winds we wish fair traveling; 
To sleepless dead sweet rest we send; 
Gods and Goddesses, go with praises -- 
See: the circle is severed thus. [cut with sword at east] 
I wrote that ritual for  David, myself, and two friends who  are older than we.  It  was the first  ritual that I wrote  not based on  NROOGD material  in any way, but on entirely original structure and material. The  horse's  skull  is  a  primitive form  of  the  Mari  Lwyd  (Grey Mare/Mary),  a Welsh folk traditional hobby horse that goes from house to  house at  the calendar  New  Year, but  she's such  a bizarre  and macabre  beast  that  she  was almost  certainly  a  Samhain leftover. There's interesting material about her in Trefor Owen's WELSH FOLK CUSTOMS (which  is probably out of print, but I could provide photocopies for interested parties who provide copying costs...) 
Happy Samhain! 
Leigh Ann 
ThelemaNet of Berkeley
(L.a. Hussey   20 Nov 86  12:05:56)