Author Archives: John Cutrone

Be Mine

Valentine

I am generally not a sappy guy, but a little sappiness is okay once in a while, and especially if it is Valentine’s Day. The valentines in the photo above were made for us by our niece, who was 5 at the time. That was just a couple of years ago, but I can easily picture us saving these two glittery paper hearts for many years to come. These are the things you save for a long time if you have even a quarter ounce of sappiness in you. And while we do try to keep things simple and not hold on to too much stuff, a handmade Valentine from your 5-year old glitter-crazy niece can be pretty difficult to part with, and there’s nothing wrong with that.

The tradition of giving sweet little somethings on Valentine’s Day goes back a long way. The day is named for a saint, even though we rarely use that “saintly” descriptor nowadays, but there is no real connection between St. Valentine and these gifts. There have been two St. Valentines in history, and no one is quite sure which of the two is celebrated today. Our celebration is most likely a combination of them both. There was a Roman priest named Valentine who was martyred on February 14, 269, for giving aid to persecuted Christians before becoming a Christian himself, but there was another Christian martyr named Valentine who scratched a message on the wall of his prison cell before his death. The message was to his beloved, and he signed it “Your Valentine,” and perhaps this is where the romance of Valentine’s Day comes in.

The day itself has long been considered the day that birds choose their mates for the year. Robert Herrick alludes to this belief in this poem from 1648:

Oft have I heard both youths and virgins say
Birds choose their mates and couple, too, today
But by their flight I never can divine
When I shall couple with my Valentine.

Up until the 19th century, the celebration of Valentine’s Day often began the evening before, at least in England and Scotland. Young men and women would take part in a sort of lottery on St. Valentine’s Eve, drawing names out of a box. The person that luck gave to you in this lottery would be your Valentine, and small tokens would be exchanged. Many weddings were known to come out of this St. Valentine’s Eve sport.

There are a few traditions of romantic divination that have come down through the centuries for Valentine’s Day, as well. The first unmarried person you’d meet on Valentine’s morning might just be destined to be your bride or groom, for instance, as the case may be. John Gay describes this in his poem “The Shepherd’s Week: Thursday; or, The Spell”… which happens to be a burlesque on the pastoral poems of another poet of the same era (early 17th century).

Last Valentine, the day when birds of kind
Their paramours with mutual chirpings find;
I early rose, just at the break of day,
Before the sun had chas’d the stars away,
A-field I went, amid the morning dew,
To milk my kine (for so should housewives do)
Thee first I spied––and the first swain we see,
In spite of fortune shall our true love be.

I don’t necessarily believe in divination, but I do believe in love, and I do believe that no kind of love is better than any other kind. What matters is being open, so that where love takes root, we let it grow.

 

This is a reprint of a Convivio Book of Days chapter posted originally on Valentine’s Day, 2014. Now our niece is a couple of years older yet. She still likes glitter, which makes me glad. Happy Valentine’s Day.

 

Pancakes for Our Supper

The Pancake Bakery

Pancakes for supper? Yes, please. Carnevale is concluding and today it is Mardi Gras. The day is better known in some places as Shrove Tuesday, and tradition would have us eat pancakes for our supper tonight. That alone is cause for celebration. It is a supper designed to use up the last of the eggs, the last of the butter, the last of all that was restricted in earlier days as we enter the somber season of Lent, which begins tomorrow with Ash Wednesday. Lent back then was much more restrained than it is now, where we pass on meat on Fridays. In earlier times, the restraint was a matter of necessity as much as of observance, for by this time of year, the stocks of food from the harvest were usually quite depleted. If folks were to make it through to the first harvests of spring and summer, a little restraint now was an important thing.

But that is tomorrow. Tonight we eat pancakes for supper and we remember the importance of appreciating each and every day.

Image: “The Pancake Bakery” by Peter Aertsen. Oil on Panel, 1560. Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam. [Public domain] via Wikimedia Commons.

 

Year of the Monkey

LanternNite

Welcome to the Year of the Monkey. We are at the start of Lunar New Year, or Chinese New Year. Twelve animals represent the years in the Chinese tradition, and each animal comes around every twelve years. And just as the weekend culmination of Carnevale snuck up on me yesterday, so has Lunar New Year. Each year I think to myself, Seth and I are going to stop in at Joy Noodles in West Palm Beach; we’re going to sit down with Joy and get the details on this fascinating holiday. Joy is from Thailand but she is of Chinese descent, and I know I can learn a lot from her. But we go, we eat our noodles, we order the special mochi that she makes for dessert during the New Year and Joy is always so busy, it’s impossible to get her to sit down. And so I still don’t know much about Chinese New Year.

What I know is the New Year celebration begins in earnest today, and it goes on for many days, and there are different facets to it. Some days are meant to be more family oriented, some more public. And since it has snuck up on me, I hope our friend Shin Yu Pai won’t mind me using her imagery again. She shot this photograph at Lantern Festival, which is part of the Lunar New Year festivities. Shin Yu is a wonderful poet; we got to work with her on a book of poetry called Works on Paper (Convivio Bookworks, 2007). We completed the work on that book during Lunar New Year, in fact. It was the Year of the Boar.

Here’s a link you can click on:

Lantern Festival by Shin Yu Pai

I am no tech wiz, so all I will tell you is this: If you click on it, you will download a 6-second video that Shin Yu shot during that same Lantern Festival. It’s a joyful six seconds. And that’s what I wish for you and all of us: Joy. (Huh. I just realized that has been a constant theme throughout this writing. I love when that happens.) Happy New Year.