Wednesday, March 24, 2010

April Fool 2010

Marty’s Muse
Something to think about …
April 2010
1 April
All fools’ day
I think I was crowned king
And such a court I had today
No other king in any Age
Could sport
Or match me
In my reign
-M.L. Gorsching, A Little Book of Poems, PublishAmerica LLLP, 2007

April, the Month of Fools and Lovers

Tradition. Ever notice how our long held religious events, beliefs and traditions grow out of some much older custom seemingly unrelated to the current celebration, from a different culture, or even from pagan rites and rituals? So why do we hold them so dearly and defend them so passionately?

Because, it’s Tradition. [Cue music: “Fiddler on the Roof,” Tevye sings.]

Easter, the religious event we sometimes observe in April, and the term Easter both arise from the Anglo-Saxon celebration of Oster-monath or Eostur-monath, the period sacred to Eostre, the pagan Saxon goddess of spring (see also: Ostara, Astarte, Aristarte and Astaroth). The good monks of the Christian mission to pagandom merely superimposed the celebration of the Christ’s resurrection over an existing holy day.

So where does All Fool’s Day (or, April Fool’s Day) come into this picture of religious celebration? And what does that have to do with the writing life? I’ll get to that.

As with many of our traditions, this one has a long, varied, and mostly obscure history. We’re not quite sure where it comes from. The tradition of the tradition is that in the 1500s, when the Greco calendar replaced the Julian, the celebration of New Year moved from the first of April to the first of January. Some people insisted on continuing to celebrate the arrival of the new year on April 1, and earned the sobriquet “April Fools.” On the first day of April, those with a prankish nature would drop in on these unsuspecting neighbors, trying to convince them that it was a New Year celebration visit; thus garnering gifts and a meal from their foolish neighbors, and thus giving birth to the plague of pranks which descend on this day.

However, there are other contenders for the title of Origin of April Fools Day Pranks:
· The fickleness of Mother Nature and her weather fool us into thinking spring is sprung; so we’re all April fools
· The day commemorates the fruitless mission of the rook (a crow), which was the first envoy sent out from Noah’s Ark
· It commemorates the Vernal Equinox
· It ties-in with Hilaria, Rome’s year-end celebration, or, the end of the Celtic new year festival

I like the Rites of Spring connection for “Fool for a Day.” Is there anything more foolish than a young man in springtime or in love? An April fool if there ever was one. So why celebrate “love” in February? April is by far a more romantic month. April is warm and snuggly compared to February. Heck, February feels like winter. February gets the honorific as the month of love because, according to Tradition, St. Valentine died on February 14th. Also, in the Roman world, Feb. 14 was the day the Romans kicked off their annual Feast of Lupercalia. Marriageable young men and women participated in a sort of love lottery. The boys picked the girls’ names from a jar, and the couple spent the day together getting to know one another. These pairings often resulted in marriage. From which arises our tradition of the Valentine Card.

Maybe.

That’s the trouble with tradition: it’s been going on so long, no one remembers why or how it all got started.

So what does all this have to do with writing? Well, you just read a 650 word essay about the month of April and the origins of April Fool’s Day. Get it?

[Use your favorite research application to find out more about the Feast of Lupercalia, St. Valentine and his Day, and why Easter sometimes is celebrated in March, sometimes in April.]

Just keep writing!
Marty “I’m-a-fool-for-you” Gorsching

1 comment:

  1. I always love reading anything you write. I can't wait for you to attend board meetings again for WOK.

    ReplyDelete