T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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511.1 | Now where did I tether my he-goat? | AYOV29::ISMITH | Remember: Walpurgis Night, April 30th! | Thu Apr 28 1988 10:38 | 30 |
| .0�< Note 511.0 by VIA::RANDALL "I feel a novel coming on" >
.0� -< Walpurgis? >-
.0�
.0� All right, I'll bite . . .
.0�
.0� Ian, what is Walpurgis night, why should we remember it, and what
.0� should we do with it while we are remembering it?
Gosh, I thought you'd never ask. 8^) 8^) 8^)
Walpurgis night is the eve of the first of May when witches, according
to German popular superstition, rode on broomsticks and he-goats
to hold revel with their master the devil (especially on the Brocken
in the Harz Mountains). It is so called because May 1st is the day
of Saint Walpurga, abbess of Heidenheim, who died about 778. It
is pronounced 'Valpoorgis'.
I just happened across this one evening as I was browsing through
my Chambers 20th Century Dictionary (which does list 'priapism'
incidentally), and I thought I had better alert the world before
it was too late. ;^}
.0� Is this an excuse to party?
You need an excuse to hold a party??? Well, it does fall on a Saturday
this year...
Ian.
|
511.2 | will a he-cat do? | VIA::RANDALL | I feel a novel coming on | Thu Apr 28 1988 15:07 | 13 |
|
Thanks, that's interesting. I didn't realize Walpurgis was
derived from someone's name.
It sounds like the kind of activity one would perform after
excess imbibing and riding of he-goats. No, wait, that sentence
says they were drinking the goats. But I suppose I'd need
some walpurgating after drinking he-goats, too . . .
--bonnie
p.s. No, I don't need an excuse to party, but if I've got a good
excuse handy, I don't mind using it!
|
511.3 | depends on how that's pronounced ... | MARKER::KALLIS | loose ships slip slips. | Thu Apr 28 1988 16:47 | 11 |
| Re .2 (Bonnie):
> -< will a he-cat do? >-
Well, in some traditions, Hecat[e] was patroness of witches. :-)
There is an excellent portrayal of a Walpurgisnacht celebration
in the Walt Disney Film, _Fantasia_: the "Night on Bald Mountain"
sequence.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
511.4 | No witches in our cemetery! | COMICS::DEMORGAN | Richard De Morgan, UK CSC/CS | Fri Apr 29 1988 12:15 | 5 |
| We live next door to a cemetery - but the inhabitants appear to
be peaceful and we haven't had any trouble from witches round here
(Padworth Common - about a quarter of a mile from AWEA - formerly
known as AWRE (Aldermaston)). The only witches I can recall in the
area lived in Tilehurst.
|
511.5 | relax | MARKER::KALLIS | loose ships slip slips. | Fri Apr 29 1988 15:36 | 8 |
| Re .4 (Richard):
This probably belongs in another Conference, but Walpurgis Night
is called so only for Satanic witches. Other kind of witches (such
as pagan Saxon ones) don't celebrate the night under that name,
nor in cemeteries.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
511.6 | Swedish and Finnish traditions | TLE::SAVAGE | Neil, @Spit Brook | Fri Apr 29 1988 18:42 | 4 |
| The northern countries of Europe celebrate this night as 'Valborg's
Mass' (Valborgsm�ssoafton). If you are interested in the details
of Swedish and Finnish traditions, see Note 90 in the TLE::SCANDIA
conference.
|
511.7 | visitor from 496 | HERON::BUCHANAN | a man, a plan, a canal: Suez | Mon May 02 1988 23:28 | 8 |
| (1) When's Beltane, which I would have stuck in the favourite words note
(496), but unfortunately couldn't remember the date of?
(2) How should my goatly relationships be conducted then, compared to
Walpurgisnacht?
(3) Why has the phrase 'antic hay' suddenly floated into my mind?
Huxley? Marlowe?
|
511.8 | Is this the JOYOFLEX conference??? | MARKER::KALLIS | loose ships slip slips. | Mon May 02 1988 23:58 | 12 |
| Re .7:
(a) Beltane's also the 30th of April (May Eve).
(b) I don't know the aspects of your goatly ways [and would be just
as happy to keep things that way :-)] to answer that querstion.
(c) "What the Hell do you think I am? Some kind of fortune-teller?"
Peter Lorre to Vincent Price in _The Raven_. Couldn't have said
it better myself. :-D
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
511.9 | VNS survives Walpurgis Nacht | COMICS::DEMORGAN | Richard De Morgan, UK CSC/CS | Tue May 03 1988 11:03 | 4 |
| Re .5: I do know the difference between "white" and "black" magic
- in fact I spent 11 years investigating these things - with a view
to writing a book. Unfortunately, I could not discover any repeatable
phenomena. Oh well, Walpurgis Nacht passed peacefully :-)
|
511.10 | Quiet as the grave | HERON::BUCHANAN | a man, a plan, a canal: Suez | Tue May 03 1988 11:24 | 3 |
| One of the most tranquil night's sleep I've ever had was in the churchyard
at Borley Rectory, reputedly 'the Most Haunted Place in England'. One hoped
for more.
|
511.11 | more about Borley Rectory | COMICS::DEMORGAN | Richard De Morgan, UK CSC/CS | Tue May 03 1988 11:58 | 14 |
| I've read all (I think - 4?) books on the haunting of Borley Rectory
(in Essex, England) - I've also visited it - seemed rather gloomy.
Unfortunately, although there is a lot of documented evidence about
hauntings, spreading over a 100 years or so, much of the evidence
would appear to have been marred by the "investigations" of Harry
Price. Price was caught out faking "phenomena" - he was a gifted
amateur magician. He employed (if I recall correctly) 96 people
in an investigation, but the text of their briefing was seriously
flawed in that it suggested the sort of "phenomena" that they would
be expected to observe.
I don't think I'd care to sleep in a churchyard - not even the one
next door - too many strange things about such as bats, cats (other
than ours) and "things that go bump in the night".
|
511.12 | JOYOFLEX or DEJAVU? | MARKER::KALLIS | loose ships slip slips. | Tue May 03 1988 15:18 | 16 |
| Re .10:
"To sleep, perchance to dream"? Also, there's likely to be a
story there. Care to share it?
Re .11 (Richard):
>I don't think I'd care to sleep in a churchyard - not even the one
>next door - too many strange things about such as bats, cats (other
>than ours) and "things that go bump in the night".
Not to mention the morning dew and inquisitive groundskeepers.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
511.13 | but history is my favorite part of the language | VIA::RANDALL | I feel a novel coming on | Tue May 03 1988 16:10 | 12 |
| re: spending the night in a cemetery:
The main thing going thump in the night in the cemetery near our
house is teenage couples looking for a place where their parents
won't interrupt.
re: Beltane
I've heard of Beltane, but what's the origin of the word? Is it
someone's name as well?
--bonnie
|
511.14 | 'Twas the night before Mayday, and all through the glenn ... | ERASER::KALLIS | loose ships slip slips. | Tue May 03 1988 17:43 | 12 |
| Re .13 b(Bonnie):
> ... teenage couples ...
I almost entered something similar, but resisted temptation.
>I've heard of Beltane, but what's the origin of the word?
The Scottish Gaelic "bealltainn," for the First of May in the old
Scottish calendar.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
511.15 | Candlemas, Beltane, Lammas, Hallowmas. | AYOV29::ISMITH | See those shores! What shores? | Wed May 04 1988 10:52 | 26 |
| .14�< Note 511.14 by ERASER::KALLIS "loose ships slip slips." >
.14� -< 'Twas the night before Mayday, and all through the glenn ... >-
.14�
.14� The Scottish Gaelic "bealltainn," for the First of May in the old
.14� Scottish calendar.
Steve, you are almost right there. Beltane is an ancient Celtic
festival held in the beginning of May, when bonfires were lit on
hilltops. It is one of the four quarter-days of Scotland, the others
being Lammas, Hallowmas and Candlemas. The Gaelic 'bealltainn'
translates as 'bright fire'.
As for the other quarter-days (before anyone asks ;^) )...
Lammas : The season of first fruits on the 1st of August, from
the Old English meaning 'loaf feast'.
Hallowmas : The feast of All Hallows or All Saints on the 1st of
November. Again Old English, meaning 'saints feast'.
Candlemas : The Roman Catholic festival of the purification of the
Virgin Mary, on the 2nd of February, when candles are
blessed. A simple combination of 'candle' and 'mass'.
Ian.
|
511.16 | Hallowe'en | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Sliding down the razorblade of life | Wed May 04 1988 15:28 | 5 |
| At risk of stating the obvious, I'll just observe that Hallowmas
(or All Saints' Day, as we know it south of Hadrian's Wall) is
immediately preceded (on 31 Oct) by Hallowe'en.
b
|
511.17 | hm. and before that? | VIA::RANDALL | I feel a novel coming on | Wed May 04 1988 15:55 | 7 |
| I note with some interest that two of the feasts are totally
Christian, Lammas appears to be a blend (the name includes
"mass"), and Beltane is totally pagan.
What were the other feasts before they became Christianized?
--bonnie
|
511.18 | Possible typo? | PSTJTT::TABER | Reach out and whack someone | Wed May 04 1988 16:13 | 9 |
| Re:.13
> The main thing going thump in the night in the cemetery near our
> house is teenage couples looking for a place where their parents
> won't interrupt.
I think you left out the apostrophe in t'hump.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
511.19 | Mass <> Maesse | AYOV27::ISMITH | See those shores! What shores? | Wed May 04 1988 16:38 | 21 |
| .17�< Note 511.17 by VIA::RANDALL "I feel a novel coming on" >
.17� -< hm. and before that? >-
.17�
.17� I note with some interest that two of the feasts are totally
.17� Christian, Lammas appears to be a blend (the name includes
.17� "mass"), and Beltane is totally pagan.
^^^^
Bonnie,
I didn't explain fully because I didn't bother to note down the
Old English words these were derived from. The word for feast was
'maesse' or something very close, and was given as derivation for
Lammas and Hallowmas. Candlemas was the odd one out, and for this
reason I would like to see further proof of its etymology. I was
not really convinced myself by the 'Candle Mass' explanation, but
that's what my dictionary said.
Ian.
|
511.20 | m�sse confusion? | VIA::RANDALL | I feel a novel coming on | Wed May 04 1988 18:26 | 19 |
| re: .19
Yes, "m�sse" is the Old English word for feast, including the
feast of the Eucharist. It's usually assumed to derive from a
similar Latin word (which I've forgotten) that referred to the
priest dismissing the congretation. The same word is the origin
of the soldier's "mess."
But it does sound to me like "m�sse" is the older term for
a religious feast and came to be applied to the particularly
Christian religious feasts, rather than originating with the
Christian.
But it's interesting that candlemas, if it did indeed originally
refer to some older religious observance that featured candles
to the Lady, is totally absorbed in the Christian tradition,
while Beltane appears to have been left out totally.
--bonnie
|
511.21 | Beggars'night | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | showtime, Synergy... | Wed May 04 1988 20:24 | 3 |
| Hallowmass should come after halloween, as halloween is an abbreviation
for All Hallows Evening (hallowe'en)
|
511.22 | Mas, mess and mets | YIPPEE::LIRON | | Fri May 06 1988 00:20 | 16 |
| re .20
> Yes, "m�sse" is the Old English word for feast, including the
> feast of the Eucharist. It's usually assumed to derive from a
> similar Latin word (which I've forgotten) that referred to the
> priest dismissing the congretation. The same word is the origin
> of the soldier's "mess."
The Latin word you mean is probably "missa". The priest dismissed
the congregation with "Ite, missa est" - how do you translate that,
perhaps "Go, it's time to go away".
But I don't agree that it has something to do with the soldier's
"mess". According to my Bloch-Wartburg dictionary, this one derives
from French 'mes', which is an ancient spelling for 'mets', meaning dish.
roger
|
511.23 | _pre_ceded _by_ | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Sliding down the razorblade of life | Fri May 06 1988 11:07 | 6 |
| > Hallowmass should come after halloween,
Yup isn't that what I said in .16?
b
|
511.24 | missa | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Sliding down the razorblade of life | Fri May 06 1988 19:27 | 16 |
| Is this a violation of NOTES protocol, posting two replies in
succession? If so, I apologize; when I posted .23 I didn't have
time to say anything about `ite, missa est'.
The sentence said at the end of the Mass could have, I think, at
least three meanings: `go, the Mass is [i.e. that's all folks]',
`go, the anything_feminine_and_singular has been/was sent' and
`go, the several_things_neuter_and_plural have been/were sent'.
Immediately after the Second Ecumenical Vatican Council, the
English translation that got Westminster's imprimatur was
`Go, the Mass is ended'.
Personally I prefer `that's all folks'.
b
|
511.25 | since you asked | HERON::BUCHANAN | a man, a plan, a canal: Suez | Sun May 08 1988 17:24 | 41 |
| > Re .10:
>
> "To sleep, perchance to dream"? Also, there's likely to be a
> story there. Care to share it?
Not much to tell. Three sophomores, including myself, after their
examinations were over in the Summer decided to take a trip somewhere
interesting and not too far away.
It was raining in the early evening when we arrived by bus in the
nearby town, so we took refuge in a local hostelry. About eight o'clock the
rain had stopped, and the skies were brilliant as the sun set. We walked the
couple of miles through the fields to Borley, and upon coming over the crest of
a little hill, saw a hundred yards ahead of us the stubby Saxon silhouette of
Borley church tower against the twilight sky.
There's a special feeling that comes when you finally visit a place that
you have pored over on a map, and that combined with the dramatic view, and the
uncertainty that comes from reaching this strange place after sun-down created
a very intense moment.
The rectory burnt down in 1946, and now a little row of houses exists
on the tract of land which was the rectory and the long garden. The thick
hedges that bordered the south side of the original garden (and which presumably
made it quite dark) remain. In fact in general, the area round the still tiny
village of Borley retains a large quantity of ancient hedgerows. Often in
Britain, this habitat has been obliterated by modern farmers. But I digress.
We had no tent, and since rain could not be ruled out, we settled in
the entrance to the church, where a wide roof would have protected twice our
number. We ate pork pies and Sainsbury's yoghurts, and then settled down for
the night. I had some trepidations that during the night my companions might
turn into ghouls, but as luck would have it they did not.
Phil and Paul really do say that their sleep was disturbed by strange
noises, but either my sensitivity to spectres is less acute than theirs,
or I was generating the noises myself as I slept.
This was eleven years ago.
Andrew Buchanan
|
511.26 | | YIPPEE::LIRON | | Mon May 09 1988 10:41 | 18 |
| re .24
For the Christian authors, "missa" was a noun meaning the Mass;
therefore the English official translation you mention (Go, the Mass
is ended) is certainly good.
However, you're right to mention that "missa" is also a form of
"mittere", to send [nb. I believe this Latin verb has nothing to do
with the name of the French Pr�sident].
When the Mass is ended, the Christians are SENT back to the world for
spreading the Good Word etc ... This idea is reflected in the official
translation used by the French Church (Allez, c'est l'envoi).
"That's all Folks !" is definitely the best translation.
What does this have to do with Walpurgis ? Don't ask me.
roger
|
511.27 | More to it? | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Sliding down the razorblade of life | Mon May 09 1988 16:41 | 18 |
| It seems to me that `Go, the mass is ended' makes sense for today's
devotees, but I have a feeling that `Ite, missa est' meant rather more
in the early days. `The mass is' is a pretty cryptic way of saying
`the mass is over', which suggests to me that there was something
rather special about the term `missa'.
When Christianity was effectively a secret society, trainees (or
`catechumens') weren't admitted to that part of the mass from the
offertory to the end. The first bit of the ceremony is known, when I
was at school, at least, as `the _Mass_ of the Catechumens'; but it
strikes me as possible that in early Christian times the word `missa'
referred only to the secret part of the ceremony. In that case `Ite,
missa est' would have told the Faithful that the ceremony (just the
Recession) was no longer secret.
I'll risk a quotation: the truth is seldom plain, and never simple.
b
|
511.28 | over, or beginning? | VIA::RANDALL | I feel a novel coming on | Tue May 10 1988 23:23 | 5 |
| That the ceremony was no longer secret, or that the secret part of
the ceremony was about to begin? "Go, those of you who aren't
catechumens, because the mass is [about to begin]"?
--bonnie
|
511.29 | Afterthoughts | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Danger was this man's speciality | Mon Jun 20 1988 15:33 | 0 |
511.30 | ! | MARKER::KALLIS | Don't confuse `want' and `need.' | Mon Jun 20 1988 20:34 | 5 |
| Re .29:
Apparently, secret afterthoughts.
Steve Kallis, Jr
|
511.31 | | ERIS::CALLAS | Waiter, there's a bug in my code | Mon Jun 20 1988 22:26 | 3 |
| Actually, he was going to tell us more, but he had afterthoughts.
Jon
|
511.32 | | REGENT::EPSTEIN | Bruce Epstein | Mon Jun 20 1988 23:59 | 2 |
| One would hope that after thoughts one has NOTES, but it's obviously
not always the case ;-) ...
|
511.33 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | It's a dream I have | Tue Jun 21 1988 09:03 | 6 |
| re:.32
In many cases, it's obvious that some people have notes without
having had any thoughts beforehand.
--- jerry
|
511.34 | What a tangled web | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Danger was this man's speciality | Tue Jun 21 1988 17:19 | 31 |
| I did try to write the afterthoughts, honest, but they must have fallen
into the Atlantic on the way over. They were, in brief (much briefer
than the original), these: the fact of the position of the words `ite
missa est' after, rather than before, the secret part (`the Proper of
the Mass') makes the secrecy theory look weak. I see three
possibilities:
1 Before the Council of Trent the words in question may indeed
have come before the Proper; a research project that I'm not
volunteering for
2 In the Catacombs, where from time to time hundreds of priests
lived, they may have used the same system as was used at the
Benedictine abbey I used to frequent - consecutive masses on
one altar, to allow all the priests to celebrate mass every
day. In such a continuous loop, any punctuation - either
before or after the secret bit - would have served to
delineate it
3 In such a loop, the words may have been a conflation of two
ideas - with the `ite' referring back and the `missa est'
referring forward; they would then translate as `Go [because
one service has just finished. The next] mass is [about to
start'. Again, it'd take research of the Council of Trent
(and church practices beforehand) to confirm this.
A fourth possibility is that all this is just Ptolemaic; the secrecy
idea is just plain wrong. I don't think I said it was true - just
worth considering.
b
|
511.35 | yoo-hoo! | DOODAH::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Wed Jun 22 1988 17:16 | 11 |
| not re: .34
Bob, I've been trying to answer the mail you sent me a while back,
but your connection to the bottom of the Atlantic appears to be
permanent. I always get "remote node is not currently reachable"
errors. Even NMAIL has given up on reaching you.
Is there an alternate node you can receive mail at? Or should I
include a total non-sequitur about ice and salt and minks here?
--bonnie
|
511.36 | Why leave us hanging? | PSTJTT::TABER | Touch-sensitive software engineering | Wed Jun 22 1988 19:45 | 4 |
| > Is there an alternate node you can receive mail at? Or should I
> include a total non-sequitur about ice and salt and minks here?
Now you'll have to.
|
511.37 | nit | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Jun 22 1988 22:28 | 4 |
| re .34:
They must have falled in the English Channel (MARVIN:: is in Reading,
VISA:: is in Valbonne).
|
511.38 | MARVIN lives | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | Jeff Goodenough, IPG Reading UK | Thu Jun 23 1988 14:29 | 7 |
| MARVIN is perfectly reachable from here (about a couple of hundred
feet away). Check that your node database says it's 42.51.
Jeff.
PS: The MARVIN people are that funny breed of comms folk, so who
knows what could happen? :-)
|
511.39 | HEART? | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Another day, another document. | Thu Jun 23 1988 15:31 | 13 |
| re .35
Bonnie -
With Jeff's caveat (as the MARVIN folk specialize in comms, the
cluster's up and down like a yo-yo), MARVIN _should_ be reachable
(most of the time - except when some twerp hasn't switched it off to
save a few pence on the air conditioning). I've an account on the
HEART cluster too (with FORWARD set to MARVIN). I also sometimes
work on a 2-bit (probably 32-bit, come to think of it) workstation;
but the two bigger machines are more reliable. Thanks for trying!
b
|
511.40 | from one yoyo to another | DOODAH::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Thu Jun 23 1988 19:30 | 14 |
| Given what has been said about MARVIN and comms, I thought this
joke that came over the network this morning was fitting:
"[...]
"It's a pity I can't MAIL you the cartoon for this, but the caption
says it all.
"In a display of perverse brillance, Carl the repairman mistakes
a room humidifier for a mid-range computer but manages to tie it
into the network anyway."
--bonnie
|
511.41 | 5 years later: back to the topic | CALS::GELINEAU | | Tue Aug 03 1993 12:55 | 5 |
| for those familiar with Edward Albee's works, "Walpurgisnacht" is the name
of the second or third (?) act in "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf" - this
relates somewhat to George's 'exorcism' of Martha. Great piece of literature!
--angela
|