by Melinda
Pillsbury-Foster
The story began in
Olney, Buckinghamshire, England, on Strove Tuesday, 1445. A woman
was making pancakes and forgot to think about the time. This was
easy to do because the first small domestic table clock would not be
available until at least five years later. Clocks, the kind you
wind, the only ones which would be available until the latter half of
the 20th Century, depend on the mainspring. The
mainspring was invented after the pancakes were beginning to sizzle
in the pan.
Various sources credit
Peter Hele, a locksmith from Nurnburg, also spelled Henlein with this
innovation in 1490. Other sources place the date at some decades
earlier.
Regrettably, the woman's
name is lost in history. But on the day in question she was busily
occupied making pancakes from items in her larder which, the next
day, she would be unable to use because Lent would have begun. Then,
from across the town she heard the church bells ringing, marking the
noon hour when the service for Shriving would begin. According to
the stories which have come down to us, without even putting down the
frying pan she rushed out of her home and into church, the pancake
probably beginning to cool.
Pancakes have been eaten
on Shrove Tuesday, which is also known as Pancake Day, for a long
time. In parts of England Pancake races are also held to memorialize
the Lady of Olney.
Pancake races are still
held in locations across England. In Olney, the race begins in the
marketplace and ends at the church. There, the winner receives a
prayerbook and a kiss from the Verger.
Eggs, which are so
prominent a part of Easter, are one of the things once given up.
This may well explain why in the Ukraine elaborate Easter Eggs,
called Pysanky, are still made today.
The process necessitates
dyes, making the egg inedible. But the vivid colors and fine lines
draw the eye to the beauty in ordinary things. An egg, a stylus,
bee's wax, and a candle, used to melt the wax are required. Making
them is a process very conducive to inner contemplation.
Customs vary. In New
Orleans, Mardi Gras. In Italy, Carnevale. In England, pancakes
eaten on the day before Lent. For Lent, each of us commits to an
inner journey, focusing on a journey into the wilderness, which
lasted 40 days, to be remembered always.
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