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  1. Amplitude and Awe: A Discussion of Emily Dickinson's "Wild Nights - Wild Nights!" and "She rose to His Requirement" Hosted by Al Filreis and featuring Michelle Taransky, Cecilia Corrigan, and Lily Applebaum.

    • Why Is Winter-Nights?
    • What Is Winter-Nights?
    • When Is Winter-Nights?
    • How Might You Celebrate?

    Before we explore what it is, let's first understand why it is. At some point, you may have heard of the Wild Hunt, the horde of Gods and beings that travel the skies every year. It is said that one thing the Hunt does is collect the souls of those who missed their scheduled day of death. It does this by compelling those who have somehow avoided th...

    So now we know why, what? Put simply, it is the first celebration of the Winter season. People would gather, firstly to celebrate surviving the Hunt and secondly to acknowledge that the hard season was beginning. Today, in the winter, we can go to supermarkets and gas stations to partake in an abundance of food and drink. However, this was not a th...

    Originally, as said above, Winter-nights was a 3-day celebration beginning on the first full moon after the first frost. This is because in Pre-Christian times Scandinavia worked on a system of lunar cycles and weather patterns. After all, their culture revolved around farming, and times of sowing and harvesting were dictated by the weather. Since ...

    This is a very simple holiday, requiring very little forethought and preparation, unlike Yule. After all, it is celebrated at very short notice, traditionally the first full moon after the first frost. Read more about Yule here. As such, one way you might celebrate is by inviting your loved ones and friends to gather round a fire, much like the Nor...

  2. Winter Nights (Vetrnætr) the Asatru Holiday of Love, Loss and Memory. “Winter Nights/Vetrnætr” is a holy tide we celebrate in Asatru/Heathenry/Norse Paganism at the end of the fall season and the beginning of the “Winter Nights.”. Winter Nights is mentioned by the medieval Icelandic historian Snorri Sturlusson as one of the three ...

  3. Winter Nights (Old Norse: vetrnætr) was a specific time of year in medieval Scandinavia, held 28 days after the autumn equinox. According to Zoega's Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic, vetr-nætr referred to "the three days which begin the winter season".

  4. Oct 14, 2021 · Winter Nights celebrates the bounty of the harvest. Also referred to as: Vetrablot, Vetrnætr, Winterfylleth, Veturnætur, Winter Finding, and Winter Day. Winter Nights is a more accurate term, considering that the passage of time was marked by nights, not days.

  5. "Wild nights - Wild nights!" is a poem by Emily Dickinson, one of the most famous and original of American writers. In this brief but powerful poem, the speaker longs to share "wild nights" with an absent lover. She imagines herself as a sailor on a stormy sea, searching for the harbor of her love.

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  7. Wild Nights! Wild Nights! was written in 1861, but not published until 1891. Dickinson's verses are heartsick, her safe harbor metaphor, lovely.

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