Jump to content

What I learned about the first of the month...


Michael

Recommended Posts

... and the tradition of trying to be the first person to remember say "Rabbit" to another person, mutiplied by the number of times of the number of the month, so, for example, saying "Rabbit, rabbit" on February 1, "Rabbit, rabbit, rabbit" on March 1, etc. Variants include "White rabbit," or just "Rabbit" once only on the first of each month.

From Jake Gardner, Modern Man: Churl, Villain, Or Jester?

>In Europe, through the Middle Ages until about Shakespeare's time, the economies of most countries, including especially those where the inhabitants were the ancestors of the English-speaking peoples, were continuing to emerge from the hunter-gatherer traditions that had marked the end of the Stone Age into the modern versions of these traditions that we see today. As hunters, men needed meat, as well as animal furs to protect them from the harsh winters of Northern Europe. The rabbit was sometimes useful for both purposes, but because the rabbit was viewed as a predator on the very fields that man himself was learning how to cultivate, the elimination of rabbits became a desirable purpose for man the farmer/hunter. In this case, man the hunter was generally man the trapper, and since rabbits were not his only prey, he soon noticed that the taking of a rabbit in a trap was usually a precursor to the taking of other small animals, such as foxes and badgers, that might use the same game trail. Cf. Shakespeare:

‘Tis not but a mere rabbit,

For where runs the rabbit,

There 'tis the habit Of running the fox.

-- All's Well That Ends Well, IV, iii, l.17-21.

Therefore, the rabbit was viewed as a sign of good luck to come; and the rabbit's foot, the part of the animal that was caught in the trap, came to seem especially lucky.

Many of these people were still influenced by fairly simple religions, like that of the Druids in Great Britain. For the priests or medicine men of these faiths, the monthly cycle of the moon usually assumed great importance; so any farmers or hunters who wanted to try to assure good luck in the coming cycle would repeat talismanic oaths in the way taught to them by their religious leaders. Therefore, on the first of the month, anyone wishing to pray to his or her primitive gods for good luck during the month ahead might repeat a simple charm, such as "Rabbit, rabbit, rabbit"; or "lucky rabbit, lucky rabbit;" or--because of the association of the color white with the sun and with virtue--"white rabbit, white rabbit, white rabbit." An interesting variant, which in our own time has given a title to novel by John Updike, came from people who for their own reasons could understand the plight of the trapper's prey: "Run, rabbit, run."

Even today, people cling to these superstitions; and an elder of the Fudd family, of the Beverly Hills west of Lincolnshire, who claims to be himself a warlock and one of the last surviving Druids, admits that it matters little which incantation one uses, since anything that anyone feels brings good luck is clearly a worthwhile habit so long as the luck continues.

This aging gentleman, known to his descendants as Grandfather Elmer, takes note that in his lifetime; the incantation "White rabbit, white rabbit, white rabbit" has been abbreviated to, "Wabbit, wabbit, wabbit."<

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It is also the day the welfare and social security checks arrive. Coincidentally, it also seems to be the day in which a higher number of heroine overdoses occur. Hmmmmmmm......

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It is also the day the welfare and social security checks arrive. Coincidentally, it also seems to be the day in which a higher number of heroine overdoses occur. Hmmmmmmm......

Which leads to a busy weekend in the ghetto......

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It is also the day the welfare and social security checks arrive. Coincidentally, it also seems to be the day in which a higher number of heroine overdoses occur. Hmmmmmmm......

Very long lines at the fast food joints too. "Let's go kids, dinner's on the taxpayers!"

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This thread is quite old. Please consider starting a new thread rather than reviving this one.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...