Ashes are placed on the heads
Of worshipers on Ash Wednesday,
Either by being sprinkled or
More often the traditional way
By being marked as a visible cross
On their foreheads on the day
Ashes are placed on the heads
Of worshipers on Ash Wednesday,
Either by being sprinkled or
More often the traditional way
By being marked as a visible cross
On their foreheads on the day
Since before the Christian era
Shrove Tuesday or
Pancake Day
Was celebrated far and
wide
And was originally a
pagan holiday
Changing seasons was a
struggle
Between Jarilo the God
of brightness
Vegetation, fertility
and springtime
And the evil spirits
of cold and darkness
So they had to help
the God Jarilo
And victory meant
spring had begun
So they cooked and ate
pancakes
Hot and round
symbolizing the sun
Part of the traditional English Shrovetide
Falling on the Monday
before Ash Wednesday
Merry Monday, is a
Christian observance
Which more importantly
precedes Pancake Day
Part of the traditional English Shrovetide
Falling on the Monday
before Ash Wednesday
Rose Monday, is a
Christian observance
Which more importantly
precedes Pancake Day
Part of the traditional English Shrovetide
Falling on the Monday
before Ash Wednesday
Shrove Monday, is a
Christian observance
Which more importantly
precedes Pancake Day
Hall Monday or Shrove Monday evening
Was a time for boys to
commit petty crime
Now we don’t have it
on one special night
Instead now it appears
to happen all the time
Black Monday or Shrove Monday evening
Was a time for boys to
commit petty crime
Now we don’t have it
on one special night
Instead now it appears
to happen all the time
The third day of Shrovetide,
Once known as Collopy
Monday,
Was named after
Collops of bacon
A traditional dish of
the day
Which was served with
eggs.
It’s the forgotten
Shrove Monday
The second day of Shrovetide
Shrove Sunday or
Quinquagesima
Celebrated in the
Christian church
As the fiftieth day
before Easter
The first day of Shrovetide
Is Shrove or Egg
Saturday
An Oxfordshire
tradition
Sometimes called egg feast
day
Shrovetide begins on Egg Saturday
Heralding the coming
of lent
And deciding what to
give up
Is normally the way it
is spent
The palm branches blessed on Palm Sunday,
Are the following year,
burnt and blessed again
And placed on the heads
of the participants
To the accompaniment
of the familiar refrain
"Remember that
you are dust, and to dust you shall return”
And the Lenten season
has begun once again
Ashes are placed on the heads
Of worshipers on Ash
Wednesday,
Either by being
sprinkled or
More often the
traditional way
By being marked as a
visible cross
On their foreheads on
the day
Since before the Christian era
Shrove Tuesday or Pancake
Day
Was celebrated far and
wide
And was originally a
pagan holiday
Changing seasons was a
struggle
Between Jarilo the God
of brightness
Vegetation, fertility
and springtime
And the evil spirits
of cold and darkness
So they had to help the
God Jarilo
And victory meant
spring had begun
So they cooked and ate
pancakes
Hot and round symbolizing
the sun
It’s Lent once again
That time of year
To de-clutter, A time
To tidy and clear
But it’s not the time
To tidy the garden
shed
The garage or the loft
Or even under the bed
Lent is the time when
Spring cleaning begins
When we cleanse our
souls
And wash away our sins
Pancake Day is known as Fat Tuesday
And is the last day before the Lenten season
It was a feast day and it was the practise of
Them stuffing their faces that is the reason
For the world at large shrove Tuesday
Precedes Ash Wednesday
For my unfortunate
family stove Tuesday
Precedes trash Wednesday
Ashes are placed on the heads
Of worshipers on Ash Wednesday,
Either by being sprinkled or
More often the traditional way
By being marked as a visible cross
On their foreheads on the day
It’s Lent once again
That time of year
To de-clutter, A time
To tidy and clear
But it’s not the time
To tidy the garden
shed
The garage or the loft
Or even under the bed
Lent is the time when
Spring cleaning begins
When we cleanse our
souls
And wash away our sins
This time of year is significant
For what Lent
represents
But I didn’t know what
to forsake
So I’ve given up abstinence
Saint Aidan of Lindisfarne Was an Irish missionary monk Who was credited in the 6th Century Of converting the Anglo-Saxons To Chri...