Saint Lucia (or Lucy)
by Francesco del Cossa
(1436-1487)
[Public domain via Wikimedia Commons]
|
'Tis the year's midnight, and it is the day's,
Lucy's, who scarce seven hours herself unmasks;
The
sun is spent, and now his flasks
Send
forth light squibs, no constant rays;
The world's whole sap is sunk;…
An extract from A Nocturnal Upon St Lucy's Day, Being the Shortest Day
by John Donne (1572-1631)
(You can read the full poem here.)
Here’s the blogpost equivalent of a little nosegay: a
beautiful painting, a rich and melancholy poem, and the moment of the year’s deepest
darkness …which is precisely where (of course) we find the light.
St Lucy’s day – which falls tomorrow – was for generations
considered the shortest day of the year. It may well indeed have been just
that, before the Gregorian calendar was introduced (though there
are various arguments about the precise dating of the winter solstice in different centuries, which I
won’t go into here). For Donne, certainly, this was the “deep midnight” of the
year.
No wonder, then, that Saint Lucy – or Lucia – whose name
derives from the Latin word lux (gen. lucis), meaning
"light", brings light into
the darkness. In Sweden, her day is a festival of light, involving the wearing
of headgear that would fall foul of many a healthy and safety regulation.
St Lucia in a Swedish church, 13th December 2006
by Claudia Gründer
[CC-BY-SA-3.0
(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
|
According
to The Golden Legend, Saint Lucia
lived in Syracuse, Sicily, sometime in the earliest years of the 4th
century AD. She refused to marry, and instead gave her dowry away to the poor.
Her spurned bridegroom, however, accused her of being a Christian and a
lawbreaker and had her dragged before the consul. Lucia answered the consul’s
accusations and threats robustly – “Do what you think best for yourself, and I
will do what I think best for me” – and, with divine help, withstood attempts
to drag her (using oxen) to a brothel, to burn her alive and to kill her with
boiling oil. She even managed to go on speaking after a dagger had been plunged
into her throat, and only gave up the ghost, finally, once priests had brought
her the eucharist.
The
Martyrdom and Last Communion of Saint Lucia (c. 1582)
by Paolo Veronese[Public domain via Wikimedia Commons] |
In the
Swedish festival, the young woman representing Lucia wears ‘light in her hair’,
plus a pure white robe and a red sash, signifying the virgin saint’s martyrdom.
But as so often with Church festivals, this Christian tradition is mixed with
something less straightforwardly holy. According to the website
http://sweden.se (“the official site of Sweden”) -
The Lucia tradition can be traced back
both to St Lucia of Syracuse… and to the Swedish legend of Lucia as Adam’s
first wife. It is said that she consorted with the Devil and that her children
were invisible infernals. Thus the name may be associated with both lux (light)
and Lucifer (Satan), and its origins are difficult to determine. The present
custom appears to be a blend of traditions.
In the old almanac, Lucia Night was the
longest of the year. It was a dangerous night when supernatural beings were
abroad and all animals could speak. By morning, the livestock needed extra
feed. People, too, needed extra nourishment and were urged to eat seven or nine
hearty breakfasts. This kind of feasting presaged the Christmas fast, which
began on Lucia Day.
Talking animals are clearly a feature of
noteworthy winter nights; in England, tradition has it that they acquire the
power of speech on Christmas Eve night. However, I must advise against creeping
up on the cat- or dog-basket (or hamster cage) to put this to the test, as it’s
supposed to be bad luck to eavesdrop on these once-a-year conversations. The
foolhardy types in folk tales who try it usually hear a foretelling of their
own imminent death, though in The Tailor of Gloucester Beatrix Potter softens
the tradition – Lilac-Fairy-like – to make it simply an auditory problem:
…it is in the old story that all the
beasts can talk, in the night between Christmas Eve and Christmas Day in the
morning (though there are very few folk that can hear them, or know what it is
they say).
And it’s not only talking that goes on: at the stroke of
midnight, when Christmas Eve becomes Christmas Day, cattle are said to kneel
spontaneously. In The English Year: A month-by-month guide to the nation’s customs and festivals, from May Day to Mischief Night, Steve Roud tells us
that this idea was well established from at least the 18th century,
and quotes an account that appeared in the 1849 edition of John Brand’s Observations on the Popular Antiquities of
Great Britain:
An honest countryman, living on the edge of St Stephen’s
Down, near Launceston, Cornwall, informed me, October 28th, 1790,
that he once, with some others, made trial of the truth of the above, and
watching several oxen in their stalls… at twelve o’clock at night, they
observed the two oldest oxen only fall on their knees, and as he expressed it,
in the idiom of the country, make ‘a cruel moan like Christian creatures’. I
could not but with great difficulty keep my countenance: he saw this, and
seemed angry that I gave so little credit to his tale, and walking off in a
pettish humour seemed to ‘marvel at my unbelief.’
A kneeling cow? It’s hard to tell. Certainly a very tolerant
one.
The Adoration of the
Shepherds (1622)
by Gerard van Honthorst
[Public domain via
Wikimedia Commons]
|
Scoffing antiquarians were no doubt bad enough, but Roud
points out that this belief in animals’ miraculous awareness of the date at
Christmas was put under yet more strain by the change from the Julian to the
Gregorian calendar (which happened in England in 1752). Had anyone informed the
animals of the new system? In 1847, Bentley’s Magazine reported a rather neat
solution:
It is said, as the morning of the day on which Christ was
born, the cattle in the stalls kneel down; and I have heard it confidently
asserted that, when the new style came in, the younger cattle only knelt on
December 25, while the older bullocks preserved their genuflections for Old
Christmas Day, January 6.
[quoted in The English Year by Steve Roud, p.503]
[quoted in The English Year by Steve Roud, p.503]
But let’s return to Saint Lucia. You’ll notice that as well
as her palm branch, which she carries as a symbol of martyrdom (representing
the victory of the spirit over the flesh), she is often depicted carrying eyes on a plate or cup (or, as in the del
Cossa picture at the start of this post, on a rather elegant stalk).
Saint Lucia (1635-1640)
by Francisco
de Zurbarán
[Public domain via Wikimedia Commons]
|
There is no
mention of eyes in The Golden Legend – which was written in the 13th
century – but two centuries later, gouging had begun to feature in Lucia’s
tale, either inflicted on the orders of the bloodthirsty consul, or by Lucia
herself, in response to a suitor’s admiration. In some versions of
Lucia’s story, her eyes are discovered to have been miraculously restored when
her corpse is being prepared for burial.
Light and
sight go together, of course – perhaps it was because of this association that eyes
became a feature of Lucia's legend, and she herself began to be venerated as the
protector of sight.
My fellow History Girl Michelle Lovric, an expert in all things Venetian, tells me that Saint Lucia’s body is in Venice, having been sent
there by the blind Doge Enrico Dandolo after he looted
Constantinople in 1204. Today Lucia’s mummified body lies in state, her face covered by a silver mask. There used to be a
little box, Michelle says, in the Church of Santa Lucia where people could throw the spectacles they no longer needed because of Lucia's miraculous interventions.
Well, I won't be chucking out my spectacles just yet, but I do wish one and all a light-filled Saint Lucia's Day tomorrow.
Finally, a personal postscript. I took this photo in
December 1980, when I was ten. I had a Polaroid instant camera (the joys of
which are hard to explain to children raised in the digital age) and I spent
many happy hours taking blurred, bad photos with it.
Despite the obvious aesthetic drawbacks of this one, I’m so glad I took it.
The paper figures shown have become very precious in my memory, both because I loved making them, and because I loved the finished figures themselves.
During Advent that year, a relative had sent my siblings and me a book of
paper figures to make – Christmas figures from around the world. There was a
Santa Claus, a Baboushka, a Saint Nicholas in full bishop’s regalia, a
smattering of wise men, and various other figures that fulfil (or so the book
told us) the present-giving role in different countries: a witch, a gnome-type
chap with a lantern, a shepherd, and so on. The figures came complete with
names and stories, and the whole thing fascinated me.
And one of the figures, as you can see from the photo, was the Swedish
version of Saint Lucia. It was my first meeting with her – and always, still, I
associate her with this beautiful set of paper figures, which I loved so much.
Despite numerous searches on the internet and in the shops, I have never
seen anything like them in all the years since. If anyone else ever has, please do
let me know; I would be more grateful than I can say.
H.M. Castor's novel VIII - a new take on the life of Henry VIII, for teenagers and adults - is published in the U.K. by Templar, in the U.S. by Simon & Schuster, in Australia by Penguin, and in France by Hachette.
H.M. Castor's website is here.
H.M. Castor's website is here.
5 comments:
I love the traditions. Growing up in America we didn't get talking animals or kneeling ones that I know of. But my dearly departed dog really did speak English. Or at least he understood it.
Um. Peering hard. Yes, I do remember that book! (I may even have the remnants of the pages stashed away somewhere, though where, heaven knows.) The figures were just right - the quietly charming side of folksy without being twee, with something "European" in the design - and the range of stories and legends was unusually good. Glad that the figures brought you such delight.
I am sure I have that book, I too made them in the late 70's and loved the crown of light, as well as babushkas colours! but I found a copy of the book in a second hand shop in the nineties, I will need to hunt it out and get the details for you:-)if I a right they hadn't even made the figures the book was immaculate! of course 4 cats and 3 children later I do hope I put the book away!
Fascinating post, Harriet. I love Carl Larsson's pictures of his family celebrating Saint Lucia's day & Christmas and it's good to know the background. Also, I might just sneak a look in the stable that's near to us to see what the horses are up to at midnight on Christmas Eve!
Thank you all! Yes, I love Carl Larsson's pictures too, Mark. And Ruan - that is immensely kind. It's lovely to hear from you & Penny that you recognise the figures. And Petrea, your much-missed dog sounds absolutely lovely.
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