Thursday, October 18, 2007

Red Letter Day



Thanks so much for all the letters. Receiving one can truly improve the overall quality of a day.

Emma and I each received a letter today from Evan, son-brother- freshman in college. He wrote the above quote about our letters! We got SO excited to get two letters and we giggled at
his page notes to us! Hope you have some RED Letter Days soon. Mine also included the new Victoria Magazine!

A red letter day (sometimes hyphenated as red-letter day) is any day of special significance.

Origin

This comes from the practise of marking the dates of church festivals on calendars in red.

The first explicit reference to the term in print that we have comes from America. This is a simple use of the term "Red letter day" in the diary of Sarah Knight - The journals of Madam Knight, and Rev. Mr. Buckingham ... written in 1704 & 1710, which was published in American Speech in 1940.

The practice is much earlier than that though. William Caxton, referred to it in The boke of Eneydos, translated and printed in 1490:

"We wryte yet in oure kalenders the hyghe festes wyth rede lettres of coloure of purpre."

red letter dayThe term came into wider use in 1549 when the first Book of Common Prayer included a calendar with holy days marked in red ink. For example, Annunciation (Lady Day), 25th March, was designated in the book as a red-letter day.

The term is sometimes written without the hyphen - 'red letter day'.

DID you catch Rev. Mr. Buckingham!
hmmm.........wonder if there's a relation?!

1 comment:

podso said...

These letters you will keep! (among others).