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Eagle wrote:I thought eggs were about 50p each. Must be rich yobs round your way.
Hallowe'en does of course have Scots and Irish roots. But in its present form in this country it is certainly an American import - I'd barely heard of it when I was a boy in the fifties in the English midlands. Bonfire Night was the big event of the autumn and I feel rather sad that the good old English 'penny for the Guy' has been driven to extinction by the exotic and faintly nasty 'trick or treat' - particularly when it seems obvious that it has been commercial interests which have been the main driver for this particular bit of environmental degradation.leenewham wrote:For Eagles point about it being a North American import, actually, you are wrong. It was not until the mass Irish and Scottish immigration during the 19th century that the holiday was brought to North America. All saints/all hallows goes back over 1000 years in the UK. Even trick or treating or 'guising' was imported to the US from Scotland. So I welcome this revival of an ancient British tradition.
Really? Are these the 'kidults' I read about?rshdunlop wrote: The younger generations really enjoy Halloween (and not just the children, but people in their 20s and 30s) [...]
Not to Ireland and Scotland, as I keep agreeing.rshdunlop wrote: It is not an American import.