Trick or Treat

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Trick or Treat

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It’s one of a kid’s favorite parts of Halloween. There’s no feeling quite like waiting for a stranger to open his or her door so you can scream the words “Trick or treat!” But why do we say it? What does it actually mean? The practice of donning a costume and asking for treats from your neighbors dates back to the Middle Ages, but back then it wasn’t a game.


During the medieval practice of souling, poor people would make the rounds begging for food. In return, they offered prayers for the dead on All Souls Day. (What does the “een” in “Halloween” mean exactly? The answer lies here.)


Modern trick or treating is a custom borrowed from guising, which children still do in some parts of Scotland. Guising involves dressing in costume and singing a rhyme, doing a card trick, or telling a story in exchange for a sweet. The Scottish and Irish brought the custom to America in the 19th century.


Some have traced the earliest reference of the term trick or treat in print was in 1927, in Alberta, Canada. It appears as if the practice didn’t really take hold in the U.S. until the mid-1930s, where it was not always well received. The demanding of a treat angered or puzzled some adults. Supposedly, in a Halloween parade in 1948 in New York, the Madison Square Boys Club carried a banner sporting the message “American Boys Don’t Beg.” By 1952, the practice was widely accepted enough to be mentioned in the family television show Ozzie and Harriet.


"Trick or Treat:" What is the origin of the phrase? | Dictionary.com Blog
Halloween Trick or Treat - The History and Origins
How the Tradition of Trick or Treating Got Started
History of Trick-or-Treating - Halloween - HISTORY.com
 
My birthday is on the Halloween and the only thing I like about it is giving out lots of candies to children in the evening. So what do I find wrong with it? Well, throughout the morning, there is 'school Halloween party' and till 11:00 AM is taken up for that! And then again you have to go rounds starting at 6:30 PM with your kid from house to house for candies. So the only time left for celebrating your own birthday is lunch hour and a short window in the afternoon. It just ends up not being your own day.. I think I will have good party time when I am in my 50's and above.
 
Pumpkin Lantern

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The name "jack-o'-lantern" is of British origin and dates from the 17th century, when it literally meant "man with a lantern" (a night watchman). It was also a popular nickname for the natural phenomenon known as ignis fatuus (fool's fire), or "will o' the wisp" — those mysterious, flickering blue lights seen occasionally over wetlands at night and associated in folklore with mischievous ghosts or fairies.



By the early 1800s, "jack-o'-lantern" had also become the more popular name for a homemade object originally known as a "turnip lantern," described by Thomas Darlington in his 1887 volume The Folk-Speech of South Cheshire as "a lantern made by scooping out the inside of a turnip, carving the shell into a rude representation of the human face, and placing a lighted candle inside it." For Catholic children it was customary to carry turnip lanterns door-to-door to represent the souls of the dead while begging for soul cakes on Hallowmas (All Saints Day, Nov. 1) and All Souls Day (Nov. 2). They were also carried by parading celebrants on Guy Fawkes Day (Nov. 5).



In some parts of Great Britain displaying a jack-o'-lantern was regarded simply as a form of pranksterism. "It is a common device of mischievous lads for frightening belated wayfarers on the road," noted Darlington. Another British author, Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch, recounts a memorable jack-o'lantern prank in The Cornish Magazine, published in 1899:


Read more
Why Do We Carve Pumpkins (Jack-O'-Lanterns) on Halloween?
 
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