The Eve of All Saints' Day
This night is known in some places as Nutcrack Night, or
Snapapple Night. Supernatural influences are pretended to
prevail and hence all kinds of superstitions were formerly
connected with it. It is now usually celebrated by children's
parties, when certain special games are played.
ALL-HALLOW-EVE MYTHS
BY DAVID BROWN
As the world grows old and wise, it
ceases to believe in many of its superstitions. But, although
they are no longer believed in, the customs connected with them
do not always die out; they often linger on through centuries,
and, from having once been serious religious rites, or
something real in the life of the people, they become at last
mere children's plays or empty usages, often most zealously
enjoyed by those who do not understand their meaning.
All-hallow Eve is now, in our country towns, a time of
careless frolic, and of great bonfires, which, I hear, are
still kindled on the hill-tops in some places. We also find
these fires in England, Scotland, and Ireland, and from their
history we learn the meaning of our celebration. Some of you
may know that the early inhabitants of Great Britain, Ireland,
and parts of France were known as Celts, and that their
religion was directed by strange priests called Druids. Three
times in the year, on the first of May, for the sowing; at the
solstice, June 21st, for the ripening and turn of the year; and
on the eve of November 1st, for the harvesting, those
mysterious priests of the Celts, the Druids, built fires on the
hill-tops in France, Britain, and Ireland, in honor of the sun.
At this last festival the Druids of all the region gathered in
their white robes around the stone altar or cairn on the
hill-top. Here stood an emblem of the sun, and on the cairn was
a sacred fire, which had been kept burning through the year.
The Druids formed about the fire, and, at a signal, quenched
it, while deep silence rested on the mountains and valleys.
Then the new fire gleamed on the cairn, the people in the
valley raised a joyous shout, and from hill-top to hill-top
other fires answered the sacred flame. On this night, all
hearth-fires in the region had been put out, and they were
kindled with brands from the sacred fire, which was believed to
guard the households through the year.
But the Druids disappeared from their sacred places, the
cairns on the hill-tops became the monuments of a dead
religion, and Christianity spread to the barbarous inhabitants
of France and the British Islands. Yet the people still clung
to their old customs, and felt much of the old awe for them.
Still they built their fires on the first of May,—at the
solstice in June,—and on the eve of November 1st. The church
found that it could not all at once separate the people from
their old ways, so it gradually turned these ways to its own
use, and the harvest festival of the Druids became in the
Catholic Calendar the Eve of All Saints, for that is the
meaning of the name "All-hallow Eve." In the seventh century,
the Pantheon, the ancient Roman temple of all the gods, was
consecrated anew to the worship of the Virgin and of all holy
martyrs.
By its separation from the solemn character of the Druid
festival, All-hallow Eve lost much of its ancient dignity, and
became the carnival-night of the year for wild, grotesque
rites. As century after century passed by, it came to be spoken
of as the time when the magic powers, with which the peasantry,
all the world over, filled the wastes and ruins, were supposed
to swarm abroad to help or injure men. It was the time when
those first dwellers in every land, the fairies, were said to
come out from their grots and lurking-places; and in the
darkness of the forests and the shadows of old ruins, witches
and goblins gathered. In course of time, the hallowing fire
came to be considered a protection against these malicious
powers. It was a custom in the seventeenth century for the
master of a family to carry a lighted torch of straw around his
fields, to protect them from evil influence through the year,
and as he went he chanted an invocation to the fire. The chief
thing which we seek to impress upon your minds in connection
with All-hallow Eve is that its curious customs show how no
generation of men is altogether separated from earlier
generations. Far as we think we are from our uncivilized
ancestors, much of what they did and thought has come into our
doing and thinking,—with many changes perhaps, under different
religious forms, and sometimes in jest where they were in
earnest. Still, these customs and observances (of which
All-hallow Eve is only one) may be called the piers, upon which
rests a bridge that spans the wide past between us and the
generations that have gone before.
|