![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiaFhviCErEnBfwT4SrkiZEGxbqfXchHvfR743d3JnFCmQXtHkRJOm7GSVchF0QX9_fVYKZTxzdOj916ZZPfoImiZRkK7ovnF3wFfH621ceQqUTjY_dpeWZF0RZ-V-SgNBT0bhMN2VP72o/s400/sagittarius-november-22-december-21-giclee-print-c10268299.jpeg)
Here's my take on Sagittarius: the qualities associated with the zodiac sign are much like Handel's Messiah. Handel wasn't a Sag himself, but his oratorio expresses the expansive energy of the season. (Though Handel originally composed it for Lent, it fits Advent a whole bunch better, as people recognized.)
Here's the gist of it:
Let's get together a whole bunch of people to have a jolly time, infused with hope for the future regarding Big Important Things, like salvation from sin or global warming. And to drink warm drinks. Hallelujah!
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi0U4qI-QXlXn30QBK6yLTBtw_oijuwKh6j1_J3-HCOpfpsJuA-fWBmqwTbkc2NcVEj8Qjd8y0HSoYpm3Qn7zMlu6nYLKZzGdWlqY9DrjuwzOfQE9EX2E-um_TAXxxln2xc8IF38_4KSHs/s320/Euphonium+Superb+1.jpg)
Or the "Ode to Joy" from Symphony No. 9, by Beethoven (who was a Sag--born Dec. 16, 1770--though an uncharacteristically grumpy one; but then, he had other things going on). He wrote this choral work to the poem by Friedrich Schiller:
Joy, beautiful spark of God
Daughter of Elysium,
We enter drunk with fire,
Heavenly one, your sanctuary!
(Sagittarius is a mutable fire sign.)
If you can't quite bring that piece of music to mind, here's a performance of it by Beaker, my favorite Muppet.
He embodies another aspect of Sagittarius: the way all that booming good cheer and jollity can make some of us anxious and agitated, actually increasing our feelings of worthlessness and decreasing our interest in pleasure: i.e., all the stuff that has people singing the blues in December.
[Sorry, I don't know who to credit for the wonderful image at the top of this post.]
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