Author Archives: John Cutrone

St. David’s Day

Tacuinum of Vienna

Hopefully this doesn’t become a habit, but I’m beginning this Book of Days chapter with an apology, just as I did a couple of chapters ago. It’s the First of March, and you’d be right in expecting your Convivio Book of Days Calendar for March about now, but it will have to be delayed a day or two. Something about Adobe plug-ins. Something, too, about procrastination… but that’s another story.

March brings the feast days of a good many saints, many of which bring a little levity (and generally good food) to this somber time of lent. The first of them comes today with St. David’s Day, sacred to Wales, in particular. I’ve got scones baking in the oven as I write this, and that, I realize, is not a very Welsh thing, but it is, nonetheless, what popped into my mind as I awoke this morning. (The coffee is on and the scones are smelling pretty wonderful, by the way.)

The day is given mainly to leeks and daffodils, which may seem an odd combination until you ponder the words for both in Welsh: cenhinen for leek and cenhinen pedr for daffodil. Both leeks and daffodils are symbols of Wales, and some say this is because there has been so much confusion over the centuries about the two. Leeks became a symbol of Wales through an ancient battle in which the Welsh troops distinguished themselves from the Saxon troops by wearing leeks in their caps, and daffodils, perhaps just by linguistic association. Be that as it may, in Wales on this first day of March you’ll be sure to see folks wearing leeks and daffodils on their lapels (and perhaps in their caps). Any meal that involves leeks (and how delicious are leeks!) is sure to be fitting for this day.

The month of March is also a big month for weather lore. Perhaps this is because many folks in northern climes are growing very weary, by now, of winter. March is a month that brings great transition, and it is known to begin and end in opposites: in like a lamb, out like a lion, and then the reverse, of course, should it come in like a lion rather than a lamb. To be sure, generally foul weather is to be expected during this transition period as winter melts to spring. The first few days of March that follow St. David’s Day are given to saints who are ancient and largely forgotten here on Earth: St. Chad tomorrow and St. Winnal on the Third, and there is an old weather rhyme that many know but perhaps do not understand why these odd names come into play:

First comes David,
Next comes Chad,
Then comes Winnal,
Roaring mad.

Whether the Third of March is generally a stormy day I cannot say, nonetheless St. Winnal has developed a bit of a reputation. As for the shift away from winter’s darkness toward summer’s light, we come nearer and nearer to the equinox, which occurs later this month. Vernal for the Northern Hemisphere, autumnal for the Southern, but it is a time of balance for both as the Earth continues to shift in its seat, as it does, always. For today, enjoy the leeks, enjoy the daffodils, should they blooming where you are, and if they are not, rest assured they will be soon. Outdated Adobe plug-ins may stop some things from happening, but luckily for us, this planet operates on a rather timeless system, and that constant rearrange never needs updating.

 

Image: The gathering of leeks, an illustration from the Tacuinum of Vienna, a 14th century book. [Public domain] via Wikimedia Commons.

 

Our Second Annual Copperman’s Day Print

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Sometimes it takes us a very long time to complete even a simple project. This has been the case with this, our Second Annual Copperman’s Day print. It is a three-color print job, so it wasn’t exactly the simplest project (each color is a separate print run). Be that as it may, we would have liked to have had this one completed a few weeks ago.

This project was begun on Copperman’s Day, which is an old Dutch printer’s holiday that falls each year on the Monday after Epiphany, which this year was the 12th of January. Printers’ apprentices in Holland would get the day off on Copperman’s Day to work on their own print projects, which they would sell for a copper apiece. And while we began in a timely fashion, a series of unfortunate events kept the project from reaching completion until only a few days ago. And here, finally, is this year’s Copperman’s Day print.

As luck would have it, our message this year for Copperman’s Day of “Take Peace” comes right on the heels of Concordia, the ancient Roman feast of harmony and goodwill. The message itself continues the theme of our inaugural Copperman’s Day print from last year, which read “Take Joy.” These suggestions are direct from a Christmas Eve letter written by Fra Giovanni Giocando in 1513. In his letter, Fra Giovanni implores us to “take joy, take peace, take heaven.” These things are up to us to choose, all a matter of perspective.

This year’s Copperman’s Day print is made from historic wood and metal types, set by hand and printed on the Vandercook 4 proof press in our Lake Worth shop. Like last year, we are utilizing a variant of self determined pricing and splitting the proceeds with the Jaffe Center for Book Arts. We are raising money this year for the Jaffe Support Fund, which is the fund JCBA uses to purchase new books and broadsides from book artists around the globe for placement in JCBA’s permanent collection, an amazing resource for students and researchers in the book arts. The self-determined pricing allows you to purchase a Copperman’s Day print (or a set of them, should you wish to share the message with others) at varying levels of generosity toward the craftsmen and the Jaffe Center. You can purchase one for as little as a dollar (sorry, a copper is not worth what it once was!). And if our $8 flat shipping rate scares you, don’t worry, there are just two of us here operating Convivio Bookworks, and we have the ability to charge you considerably less for shipping if all you purchase today are diminutive prints like this. The $8 flat rate shipping is automatically attached to each order, but we will change it before we actually charge your credit card, and I assure you we will charge you a very fair price for shipping.

So a belated happy Copperman’s Day to you! Raise your glass with us tonight and take joy, then, and take peace. And we’ll give you three guesses as to what next year’s Copperman’s Day message will be.

 

Harmony & Goodwill

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It is perhaps a sign of our times (or of our natures) that the word concord does not get used very much these days, and even accord is a word we hear rarely; yet we are all too familiar with the word discord. Concord is agreement, harmony, unanimity, and discord: well, we all know about that.

The ancient Romans had a day to deal with these things, and it is today, the 22nd of February. It is the Feast of Concordia, a feast of goodwill and harmony, and the concept was simple: family and friends gather for a meal and at that meal, all disputes are settled. It is a day to make amends for wrongs done, a day to reconcile differences. To put discord to rest and to nurture concord. To do this over bread and wine is a simple, humble act.

If there is discord in your life, perhaps this is the ritual needed to turn that into concord, to activate peace and harmony. To be sure, the concord involves a willingness from both parties, and someone, of course, must have the courage to take the first step. But being willing to let go of bitterness and to activate concord is a dramatic change, and even if you find the other party unwilling, you have given yourself a great gift in releasing the power the discord has over you. That is the gift of this day, the gift of Concordia. And so we wish you harmony and goodwill.