This is a story of the origins of
Halloween from olden times up to the present.
THE WITCHING HOURS
Strange shadows dart stealthily across sparely lit streets, as dusk settles
heavily on quiet neighborhoods of tree-lined sidewalks and cheerful well-kept
homes. The eerie scream of a screechowl,more likely the brakes of a passing car,
echoes deep into the night. Looming ominously from nearly every window is the
menacing glare of smirking Jack-o-lanterns, while the often nervous refrain of
"Trick or Treat" rings out in repetitious peals. Halloween is here, and with it
the shivery remembrance of things that go bump in the night.
Halloween, a holiday once favored second to Christmas, is not as much fun as
it used to be. The last few Halloweens have brought tampering scares, such as
finding razors in apples and poisoned candy. A sick segment of society has
forced many parents to hold neighborhood parties, instead of allowing their
children to trick or treat. The tricks have been turned on the children, ruining
an a once magical evening.
Gone are the days when children, dressed up hideously, or gaudily beautiful,
could enter the home of a stranger, and be offered chilled apple cider with
cinnamon stick straws, and homemade gingerbread, or cupcakes with orange icing
and candy corn faces. No longer can mischievous children creep up on
neighborhood porches to toss corn kernels against the front door, or generously
soap window panes, without triggering house alarms and angering guard dogs kept
behind locked fences. The mystical lure of Halloween is becoming a commercial
interprise for the sale of candy, costumes and decorations.
Halloween is a Christian name meaning All Hallows, or All Saint's Day, but
the custom of Halloween dates back to the Celtic cult in Northern Europe. As the
Roman conquest pushed north, the Latin festival of the harvest god, Pomona,
mingled with the Druid god, Samhain. Eventually, the Christians adopted the
Celtic rites into their own observances.
Halloween signified the return of the herds from the pasture, renewal of laws
and land tenures, and the practice of divinations with the dead, presumed to
visit their homes on this day. For both the Celts and the Anglo-Saxons,
Halloween marked the eve of a new year. The Britains were convinced that
divinations concerning health, death and luck, were most auspicious on
Halloween. The devil, himself, was evoked for such purposes.
The Druid year began on November first, and on the eve of that day, the lord
of death gathered the souls of the dead who had been condemned to enter the body
of animals to decide what form they should take for the upcoming year; the souls
of the good entered the body of another human at death. The Druids considered
cats to be sacred, believing these animals had once been human, changed into
cats as punishment for evil deeds.
The Druid cults were outlawed by the Romans during their reign in Great
Britain, but the Celtic rites have survived, in part, to the present day. By the
time these ancient rites migrated to America, the mystic significance was lost,
and all that has remained is an evening when children can dress in outrageous
costumes, and collect candy from obliging neighbors; yet a tiny part of every
child still believes in witches, ghosts, and the nameless entities that creep
about on Halloween, relatives, to their young minds, of the monster that lives
under every child's bed.
In the ancient days, it was believed that Halloween was the night chosen by
witches and ghosts to freely roam, causing mischief and harm. Witchcraft existed
before biblical times, believed in by ancient Egyptians, Romans and American
Indians. The Christian Church held varying opinions on witchcraft, at one time
accrediting it to be an illusion, later accepting it as a form of alliance with
the devil. As late as 1768, disbelief in witchcraft was regarded as proof of
atheism.
Halloween customs varied from country to country, but all were related to the
Celtic rites. Immigrants to this country, particularly the Scotch and Irish,
introduced some of the customs remaining today, but there were many more that
are unfamiliar. On Halloween in Scotland, women sowed hemp seed into plowed land
at midnight, repeating the formula: "Hemp seed I sow, who will my husband be,
let him come and mow." Looking over her left shoulder, a woman might see her
future mate.
Apples and a six-pence were put into a tub of water, and whoever succeeded in
extracting either of them with his mouth, but without using his teeth, was
guaranteed a lucky year. In the highlands of Scotland in the 18th century,
families would march about their fields on Halloweem, walking from right to
left, with lighted torches, believing this would assure good crops. In other
parts of Scotland, witches were accused of stealing milk and harming cattle.
Boys took peat torches and carried them across the fields, from left to
right(widdershins), in an effort to scare the witches away.
The Scots strongly believed in fairies. If a man took a three-legged stool to
an intersection of three roads, and sat on it at midnight, he might hear the
names of the people destined to die in the coming year. However, if he tossed a
garment to the fairies, they would happily revoke the death sentence.
Scotland's witches held a party on Halloween. Seemingly ordinary women, who
had sold their souls to the devil, put sticks, supposedly smeared with the fat
of murdered babies, into their beds. These sticks were said to change into the
likenesses of the women, and fly up the chimney on broomsticks, attended by
black cats, the witchs' familiars.
In Ireland, a meal of callcannon, consisting of mashed potatoes, onions and
parsnips, was solemnly served on Halloween. Stirred into this concoction, was a
ring, a thimble, a coin, and a doll. The finder of the ring would marry soon,
the finder of the doll would have many children, the thimble finder would never
marry, and the one fortunate enough to find the coin would be rich.
Jack-o-lanterns originated from Ireland, where according to newspaper editor and
writer, George William Douglas, " a stingy man named Jack was barred from Heaven
because of his penuriousness, and forbidden to enter Hell because of his
practical jokes on the devil, thus condemned to walk the earth with his lantern
until Judgement Day."
A more serious custom was the holding of the General Assembly(Freig) at Tara,
in Celtic Ireland, celebrated every three years and lasting two weeks. Human
sacrifices to the gods opened the ceremonies, the victims going up in
flames.
England borrowed many of the Scotch and Irish customs, adding them to their
own. Young people bobbed for apples, and tied a lighted candle to one end of a
stick, and an apple to the other. The stick was suspended and set spinning, the
object of the game being to bite the apple without getting burned by the candle.
This custom was a relic of the fires lighted on the eve of Samhain in the
ancient days of the Celts.
The only customs bearing no relation to the ancient rites is the masquerade
costumes of today, and Halloween parades. But the custom of masked children
asking for treats comes from the seventeenth century, when Irish peasants begged
for money to buy luxuries for the feast of St. Columba,a sixth century priest,
who founded a monastery off the coast of Scotland.
From the north of England comes the activity known as "mischief night",
marked by shenanigans with no particular purpose, or background. Boys and young
men overturned sheds, broke windows, and damaged property. Mischief night
prevails today, but is mostly limited to throwing eggs, smashing pumpkins, and
lathering carswith shaving cream. The custom of trick or treat is observed
mainly by small children, going from house to house. The treat is almost always
given, and the trick rarely played, except by teenagers, who view Halloween as
an excuse to deviate from acceptable behavior.
Children today, knowing little or nothing of the history and myths behind
Halloween, still get exited over the prospect of acting out their fantasies of
becoming a witch, ghost, devil, or pirate. It is still pleasurable for an adult,
remembering Halloweens past, to see the glow on a child's face as he removes his
mask and assures you that he's not really a skeleton. Watching the wide-eyed
stares of young children warily observing flickering candle-lit pumpkins, is an
assurance that even today, thousands of years beyond the witch and ghost-ridden
days of the Druids, a little of the magic of Halloween remains. Children need a
little magic to become creative adults; adults need a little magic to keep the
child in them alive. So if, on this Halloween, you notice a black cat slink past
your door, trailing behind a horde of make-believe goblins, it probably belongs
to a neighbor. And the dark shadow whisking across the face of a nearly full
moon is only the wisp of a cloud, not a witch riding a broom... probably.
By the pricking of my thumbs,
Something wicked this way comes.
Open, locks,
Whoever knocks!
-Shakespeare
I love this post, Micki!! It's just great!! I got kind of lost in your words. - and then... there's something I just have to ask you... your last sentence... how do you "know" it's not the sound of a witch riding a broom??
ReplyDeleteAfter all I'm zooming all over the place... whoops!! Now it's out!! LOL
Raani, you're such a crazy girl lol!! Loved your interview and can't wait for the book
DeleteVery atmospheric piece of writing, I enjoyed it.
ReplyDeleteThank you Jennifer and for visiting my blog. I hope yoiu can drop by again.
DeleteHi Micki,
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed this wonderful and imaginative explanation of Halloween and without wishing to insult you or your information sources I did notice a somewhat Christian interpretation to some of your points.
While you are correct that Halloween is a corruption of ‘All Hallows Eve’ and is most definitely a Christian invention however it does not mean All Saints Day which in actual fact the day after on November 1st. Pagans do not have Saints.
Also Samhain is not a Druid God but a Gaelic Festival marking the end of the Celtic year and a celebration of the end of the harvest season and it is quite wrong for anyone to suggest that ‘The devil, himself, was evoked for such purposes.’ Like the one God notion the Devil is a Christian invention and has nothing to do with Pagan festivals.
What our ancestors were afraid of at that time of year was the comingling of the Spiritual and Real worlds on that night allowing both Good and Evil spirits to visit this world.
Hence the Evil Spirits had to be TRICKED away from the dwellings and village with TREATS.
Just like the Devil, Witch’s and Witchcraft are I’m afraid to say also Christian inventions and stem from the ignorance and ego of the early church leaders. You see if you invent an ‘All Seeing God’ who sees all and knows all then you would expect your priest to know the answers to everything. These early priests or wandering evangelists were probably no better informed than your average peasant when it came to such things as the art of healing and so condemned it as magic performed by women obviously in league with the devil.
Back then it was quite common for the early Christian church to condemn all it did not understand bringing two words ‘Blasphemy’ and ‘Heresy’ into our language that were to be used to condemn Pagan rituals.
The rest, as they say is history.
Merlin
Merlin, Thanks for an enlightening addition to my piece.
ReplyDeleteFascinating post! I learned a lot about Halloween that I didn't know. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThanks Sandra, for stopping by and reading this long piece. Sharla is going to put it on her site with pictures which should really make it shine.
ReplyDeleteYou know how I love history, Micki! This was a fun and interesting piece. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteHello
ReplyDeleteYou know how your blog is one of my favorites and I’m always happy to read your new posts!
Therefore I hope you’re happy to find out you deserve the “Blog of the Year 2013″ Award.
I got you your first star:
http://lorissong.com/2013/11/30/blog-of-the-year-2013/
Enjoy it!!
Lori