Saturday, July 03, 2010

Fourth of July as Midsummer

I like to think of Fourth of July as a secular version of pagan Midsummer festivals.


Like many historical holidays, Fourth of July seems to have co-opted many of the symbols of the earlier celebrations at this time of year. For centuries at Summer Solstice, people stayed up all night, dancing around bonfires and rolling burning wheels down the hillsides, to honor the sun. On Fourth of July, we set off pinwheels in the street (evoking the circle, the symbol of the sun), wave sparklers around in the darkness (they look like the sparks that fly up from a bonfire) and gaze at fireworks blazing overhead late into the night.


Many families spend the daytime hours on Fourth of July, at parks and lakes, enjoying a picnic lunch and eagerly waiting for the sun to set on the longest day of the year. We worship the sun and may pay for our devotion with sunburns.


Both Midsummer and Fourth of July are associated with heavy drinking. In fact, Fourth of July is one of the deadliest days of the year in America due to alcohol-related traffic accidents. The traditional Fourth of July BBQ combines many of these elements: drinking and fire and spending hours outdoors with friends and family.


Midsummer was always a time of revelry and romance. A Swedish proverb says “Midsummer’s night is not long but it sets many cradles rocking.” The Fourth of July places a little more emphasis on family than on coupling, but there’s no denying the romance involved in lying in your lover’s arms in a grassy park while watching fireworks burst overhead.


Of course, there are many differences between Fourth of July and Midsummer. Midsummer festivals also celebrate flowers and herbs, and often include the element of water (which we do acknowledge here in Seattle by setting our fireworks off over Lake Union). Still, when I’m annoyed by the drunken crowds or frightened by the sound of firecrackers exploding, I remind myself that this is just the traditional way to celebrate the height of Summer and the glory of the Sun.

3 comments:

Lost City Denise said...

Thanks Waverly, this is a good way to try and understand what is primarily a lot shopping, flag waving, and dangerous revelry.
I'll spend the weekend trying to keep the dogs calm, and looking out for fires started by city folks coming to the country to set off their fireworks.

Betsy said...

Thanks Waverly! As always, excellent perspectives!

Dr. Harl Delos said...

If you celebrate midsummer on July 4, when do you celebrate the *start* of summer? Groundhog's Day?

We're only 2 weeks into summer. By one traditional definition - the season when rural folks lock their cars, denying neighbors the opportunity to stick a grocery sack of surplus zucchini in the back seat - it's not yet summer at all.

Have you started canning tomatoes? Or, like me, are you unable to find a single red ripe tomato growing in the back yard?

Summer's only two weeks old. Let's not rush things.