in spring and the reaping in autumn. For when
May Day comes, the seed has long been committed to
the earth; and when November opens, the harvest has
long been reaped and garnered, the fields lie bare,
the fruit-trees are stripped, and even the yellow
leaves are fast fluttering to the ground. Yet
the first of May and the first of November mark turning-points
of the year in Europe; the one ushers in the genial
heat and the rich vegetation of summer, the other
heralds, if it does not share, the cold and barrenness
of winter. Now these particular points of the
year, as has been well pointed out by a learned and
ingenious writer,[566] while they are of comparatively
little moment to the European husbandman, do deeply
concern the European herdsman; for it is on the approach
of summer that he drives his cattle out into the open
to crop the fresh grass, and it is on the approach
of winter that he leads them back to the safety and
shelter of the stall. Accordingly it seems not
improbable that the Celtic bisection of the year into
two halves at the beginning of May and the beginning
of November dates from a time when the Celts were
mainly a pastoral people, dependent for their subsistence
on their herds, and when accordingly the great epochs
of the year for them were the days on which the cattle
went forth from the homestead in early summer and
returned to it again in early winter.[567] Even in
Central Europe, remote from the region now occupied
by the Celts, a similar bisection of the year may
be clearly traced in the great popularity, on the
one hand, of May Day and its Eve (Walpurgis Night),
and, on the other hand, of the Feast of All Souls at
the beginning of November, which under a thin Christian
cloak conceals an ancient pagan festival of the dead.[568]
Hence we may conjecture that everywhere throughout
Europe the celestial division of the year according
to the solstices was preceded by what we may call a
terrestrial division of the year according to the beginning
of summer and the beginning of winter.
[The two great Celtic festivals, Beltane and Hallowe’en.]
Be that as it may, the two great Celtic festivals
of May Day and the first of November or, to be more
accurate, the Eves of these two days, closely resemble
each other in the manner of their celebration and in
the superstitions associated with them, and alike,
by the antique character impressed upon both, betray
a remote and purely pagan origin. The festival
of May Day or Beltane, as the Celts called it, which
ushered in summer, has already been described;[569]
it remains to give some account of the corresponding
festival of Hallowe’en, which announced the
arrival of winter.
[Hallowe’en (the evening of October 31st) seems
to have marked the beginning of the Celtic year; the
many forms of divination resorted to at Hallowe’en
are appropriate to the beginning of a New Year; Hallowe’en
also a festival of the dead.]