Roger Bingham's History Column: Pace Eggs and Jolly Boys | T

Roger Bingham's History Column: Pace Eggs and Jolly Boys | The Westmorland Gazette


ROGER BINGHAM HISTORY COLUMN
‘HERE'S two or three jolly boys all in one mind, we’ve come a pace egging, we hope you’ feel kind ‘ran a rough chorus sung at Eastertide by local youths as they, performed a drama in retuned for pace eggs.
The boiled hens’ eggs, not the over wrapped chocolate confections of today, were supposed to symbolise new life which sprung from Jesus’ Resurrection on Easter Day.
Hence, ‘pace’ is said to derive from ‘pasque,’ a Latin name for a feast.
The eggs were generally dyed with bright cloths but at Heversham they were boiled in daffodil leaves which produced a marble effect.

Related Keywords

Heversham , Cumbria , United Kingdom , Sedbergh , Milnthorpe , , Easter Monday , Vicarage Field , Jolly Boys , New Hutton , கும்ப்ரியா , ஒன்றுபட்டது கிஂக்டம் , ஈஸ்டர் திங்கட்கிழமை , விரேஜ் புலம் , மகிழ்ச்சி சிறுவர்கள் , புதியது ஹட்டன் ,

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