.MTA0OA.Njk5MDU

From Newberry Transcribe
Revision as of 20:18, 6 May 2020 by 207.38.94.30 (talk) (Created page with "fields, for the general feast also. — Sleep was forbidden to all but infants on this night; & part of it was devoted by the women to a religious dance. — On the morrow the...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

fields, for the general feast also. — Sleep was forbidden to all but infants on this night; & part of it was devoted by the women to a religious dance. — On the morrow the Festival began and went on as follows:

Before sunrise, all were ordered to the river. While on the bank, the Priest prayed and performed the ceremonies of arranging the people in a line, placing sticks by the water side, and watching what might come from the water, — which were practised on the first morning of the Spring New Moon and have been described among the particulars of that festival. The then gave the signal to bathe, and the common people all waded into the water with their clothes on, plunging themselves and their infants entirely seven times, in the way which has been already mentioned when speaking of the Festival of the First New Moon of Spring; — and, — as also stated in reference to the same occasion, upon a table previously prepared at the river bank, medicinal roots were deposited and the set his Divining Chrystal. In passing, as the bathers left the water, each held the palm of the hand towards the stone. Those who could see themselves standing erect in it, would live till the first Spring New Moon next ensuing; — those who appeared lying