Monthly Archives: June 2015

Bloomsday

Bloomsday

It is a big day for us English majors. Each 16th of June, folks all over the world (but especially in Dublin) follow the footsteps of Leopold Bloom, the main character in James Joyce’s novel Ulysses. It is Bloomsday, a literary celebration. Joyce’s novel takes place on the 16th of June, 1904.

For many, Bloomsday is a celebration of James Joyce himself, not just of the novel, and this is fitting, for Joyce chose June 16 as the date of his novel not randomly. It happened to be the day that he first went out with Nora Barnacle, the woman who would eventually become his wife.

You might celebrate Bloomsday with a reading of Ulysses. You might stop at the apothecary to purchase a bar of lemon soap. Certainly there will be stops to be made at pubs, and ale is known to play a big part in a good Bloomsday celebration.

James Joyce was first aware of people celebrating Bloomsday in 1924, just two years after the publication of Ulysses. In 1954, to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the events in the book, a more formal pilgrimage through Dublin was organized. Nowadays, you are likely to find Bloomsday enthusiasts ’round the globe, dressed in Edwardian garb and quoting James Joyce each 16th of June. How wonderful is that?

Image: Poets Patrick Kavanagh and Anthony Cronin on their 1954 Bloomsday Pilgrimage. National Library of Ireland on The Commons, 16 June 1954 [Public domain] via Wikimedia Commons.

 

The Backyard Saint

StAnthony

If you, like me, are of Italian heritage (I have mentioned once or twice in this blog that if you’ve seen the film Moonstruck, you’ve met my family), then chances are good you’ll associate June with San Antonio, St. Anthony of Padua. My grandmother would say novenas to St. Anthony every June, and so would every other Italian grandmother I remember from my childhood. Nine days of prayers to St. Anthony, seated before a statue of the saint in the backyard, prayer books and rosaries in their hands. It was as much a part of summertime as peaches in wine and dinner outside at the picnic table.

My mother did not know her grandparents for she was the first in her family born in the States. Her grandparents never came to America and even her older sister was born in the Old Country. But she remembers her mother saying the novena to St. Anthony together with Mamam, who lived next door and who was like a second mother to her. Mom recalls walking up to them, just to ask her mother a question perhaps, and then Mamam motioning to her to first of all be quiet, and then to sit and join them… which, as you might imagine, was not something a little girl wanted to do. And so she’d be stuck there while Grandma read the intercessions to St. Anthony and while Mamam, who couldn’t read, replied “Pray for us” to each one.

There probably are not many Italian grandmothers around nowadays who do this. If there are, I don’t know them. If you do, though, today is an important day for them, for it is the feast day of St. Anthony of Padua. Anthony was from Portugal but Italians have claimed him as their own for centuries. It was in Padua that he preached, deeply moved by his contemporary, St. Francis of Assisi. He died in Padua in 1231 and was canonized soon after. He is invoked for the finding of lost articles, mostly. An old children’s rhyme comes out of this tradition: Tony, Tony, come around, something’s lost and must be found.

Aside from her novenas in June and her statue of St. Anthony, which is still in the backyard at my family home, Grandma also kept, in a little gift box with a removable lid, a small loaf of bread, about the size of a dinner roll. The box, with the bread in it, is still in a drawer in her room. Who knows when it was baked, but it was certainly decades ago, at least the 1950s, maybe earlier. It was blessed when it came out of the oven by a priest and she called it St. Anthony’s Bread and she kept it in that box in her drawer in her room and took it out only in times of heavy storms, when she would open up the box and place it on a windowsill. Now it is Mom who takes out the St. Anthony’s Bread when it storms. It’s gotten us through every hurricane and tornado warning we’ve been through, and quite a few big thunderstorms, too.

This is the St. Anthony I know. A presence in the family, guardian of the backyard, protector of the home, retriever of goods lost, companion to grandmothers who sit and talk to him day after day, especially now, especially in June, as summer’s heat settles in and the days grow long, long enough to fool us into thinking they may never grow short again.

 

Image: St. Anthony of Padua as depicted in one of the stained glass windows at the 1913 St. Anthony Chapel at St. Ann Church in Downtown West Palm Beach.

 

Your June Book of Days

Fisherwoman

It’s the First of the month and here we come bearing our monthly gift to you: the printable Convivio Book of Days Calendar, this one for June 2015. It is full-on summertime across the Northern Hemisphere, anyway you slice it: First day of summer by the almanac come the summer solstice, but for the more traditional amongst us, it is Old Midsummer come St. John’s Eve on the 23rd, just a couple of days past the solstice. We approach the longest days of the year now, but with St. John’s Day the earth again shifts in its seat and begins tilting back toward the south and these days that have been lengthening little by little with each passing day since the winter solstice begin again to get gradually shorter in our planet’s constant rearrange. Each day slightly different than the one that preceded it, slightly different than the one that follows.

You’ll find at this month’s calendar that things are pretty quiet for the first couple of weeks of June, and in that slower spirit of summer we have not rushed to get the calendar to you, but taken our sweet time. We encourage you, too, to put up the “Gone Fishing” sign on your door and spend some time enjoying life in the sunshine. Seth and I have taken some time off from work to paint the house, but we even took some time off from that yesterday, too, so we could get to the beach. It is the gentler time of year; you should enjoy it.

Instagram! We mentioned last month that we are now on Instagram, and it’s really proving to be a lot of fun. Please join us there in our little photobook project that covers seasonal traditions, foodways, book arts, occasional cats and gardens, Lake Worth living… the kind of eclectic rovings you’ve come to expect from us: https://instagram.com/conviviobookworks or just find us at the Instagram app at “conviviobookworks.”

Image: My mom Millie spending the day on the water sometime in the early 1950s. She is one of many family cover stars on this month’s Convivio Book of Days Calendar.