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hey you know what we really want to read your original character do not steal poetry solstice or christmas whatever holiday even the ironic holidays count like festivus ding dong winterReport this content
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![Click to change the View The Winter Lady [Lyrics]](http://d.furaffinity.net/art/kotep/stories/1488278723/1417082363.thumbnail.kotep_tep_1.pdf.gif)
In the villages of the far north, the solstice is not one night, but three, without a glimpse of day in between. They call this the Great Night, but instead of despairing of the invariably cold and harsh weather, they light their hearths, fill their homes with candles, and sing songs loud enough to drown out the howls of the winds. A common theme among the varied folk beliefs is the "White Maiden" or "Winter Lady", sometimes given a fictional name and kingdom: Aurora of Hyperborea. During the Great Night, she comes from the north in a snow-cloak, to dance and feast with her court.
She is seen as a benevolent figure for bringing the sun back to the world, whether through her own power, or whether the beauty of her dance lures the sun back of its own volition. The renewal of the sun is symbolized in the traditions surrounding the Winter Lady, which vary, but often include feasts and gift-giving, and which stress forgiveness and reconciliation. (Notably, this helps to mend feuds before one of the most trying times of year, the late winter. Perhaps the gods are social philosophers?)
She is not wholly beneficent, however. There are tales of men and women caught up by her beauty and whisked away to her court after coming to close to her during her dance, and she has been said to punish those who refuse to give proper respect to the solstice. This aspect of her is not surprising, as nature-personifications are typically shown to be capricious to the foolish.
Regardless, if one must travel into the far north during the winter, I would advise one to plan to spend the "Great Night" there. The sight of a village, rounded smooth by snow yet glimmering with boughs and candles in every window, is not to be missed.
--Aldous Peryxmite, De vicis septentrionali regionum
She is seen as a benevolent figure for bringing the sun back to the world, whether through her own power, or whether the beauty of her dance lures the sun back of its own volition. The renewal of the sun is symbolized in the traditions surrounding the Winter Lady, which vary, but often include feasts and gift-giving, and which stress forgiveness and reconciliation. (Notably, this helps to mend feuds before one of the most trying times of year, the late winter. Perhaps the gods are social philosophers?)
She is not wholly beneficent, however. There are tales of men and women caught up by her beauty and whisked away to her court after coming to close to her during her dance, and she has been said to punish those who refuse to give proper respect to the solstice. This aspect of her is not surprising, as nature-personifications are typically shown to be capricious to the foolish.
Regardless, if one must travel into the far north during the winter, I would advise one to plan to spend the "Great Night" there. The sight of a village, rounded smooth by snow yet glimmering with boughs and candles in every window, is not to be missed.
--Aldous Peryxmite, De vicis septentrionali regionum
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File Size 17.3 kB
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