Easter

In the mailbox this morning…

Garrison Keillor posted an Easter history lesson: The word "Easter" and most of the secular celebrations of the holiday come from pagan traditions. Anglo Saxons worshipped Eostre, the goddess of springtime and the return of the sun after the long winter. According to legend, Eostre once saved a bird whose wings had frozen during the winter by turning it into a rabbit. Because the rabbit had once been a bird, it could still lay eggs, and that rabbit became our Easter Bunny. Eggs were a symbol of fertility in part because they used to be so scarce during the winter. There are records of people giving each other decorated eggs at Easter as far back as the 11th century.

Also, today is the 135th anniversary of the birth of Isak Dinesen, in Copenhagen, Denmark (1885). She wrote Out of Africa, and Babbett's Feast, among many novels and essays.

Previous
Previous

Quake

Next
Next

Days of note