About Easter
"About Easter" by Elizabeth Gordon is a delightful children's book that explores the traditions, stories, and significance of the Easter holiday. Through engaging illustrations and simple text, the book introduces young readers to themes of renewal, hope, and celebration, highlighting customs such as egg decorating and Easter bunnies. It serves as a gentle introduction to the cultural and religious aspects of the season, making it an ideal read for families looking to share the joy of Easter with their children.
“Aren’t my hands a sight!” laughed the boy named Billy. “Wish Somebody would tell me how to get these colors off.” “I should say they are a sight,” said Somebody; “all the colors of the rainbow and several more besides. What’s on them?” “Easter egg dyes,” said Billy; “they splashed, but we got some beauties.” “Try some salt and vinegar and a nail brush and soap,” said Somebody. “You’ll find some on my wash stand.” The boy named Billy scrubbed with right good will. “It’s coming off,” he said. “Say, Somebody, please tell me why Easter doesn’t stand still, like Christmas and New Year’s Day. What makes it come in March one year, and likely as not in April the next? A day is a day, isn’t it? Then why do we never know when to look for it? Last year we gathered pussy willows, and this year it’s cold enough to skate.” “It is puzzling until you understand about it,” said Somebody, as Billy came back with his hands as clean as could be expected. “Let’s talk about it. There seems to be no authentic record of the actual date of Christ’s death and burial and resurrection. We know that the Crucifixion was on Friday, and the Resurrection was on Sunday, but the date has never been accounted for, although Easter has been celebrated as a church festival since the early days of the Christian church. “To settle all such disputes it was finally decided by the Council of Nicaea in 325 A. D. that the celebration of the festival commemorating the Resurrection should fall on the first Sunday after March 21st and the full moon.” “And why was the festival called Easter?” asked the boy named Billy. “It is a sort of made-over festival,” said Somebody. “The early Christians called it the Paschal festival, and it was so called until the Christian religion was introduced among the Saxons, who had a Spring festival themselves of which they were very fond, held in honor of their Spring goddess Eostre. They seemed inclined to like the new religion, but refused to give up their goddess, so the Christians decided to keep the festival and the name, but to use it in commemoration of the resurrection of Christ.” “Who was this lady named Eostre?” asked the boy named Billy. “She must have been pretty important.” “Eostre, meaning ‘from the East, or Venus, the goddess of beauty,’ was supposed to have been hatched by doves from an immense egg which descended from heaven and rested on the Euphrates. Out of it came the goddess of Spring and of beauty to bring warmth and sunshine into the world,” said Somebody. “That must be where the idea of the Easter egg comes from,” said the boy named Billy. “I was wondering about that. It’s interesting; tell me some more.” “There are many beautiful legends concerning Easter,” said Somebody. “One which was quite generally believed in Ireland was that on Easter morning the sun dances. But of course we take that with a grain of salt.” “Just as we take our Easter eggs,” laughed the boy named Billy. “Thank you so much, Somebody; and now I’ll run and get some flowers for Mother. I’m going to get her a beautiful Easter lily.”
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"About Easter Books." Literature.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2025. Web. 22 Feb. 2025. <https://www.literature.com/book/about_easter_5144>.
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