The
Scots saying "Ne'er cast a cloot til Mey's oot" conveys a warning not to shed any (clothes) before the summer has fully arrived and the mayflowers (
hawthorn blossoms) are in full bloom. The custom of employing the flowering branches for decorative purposes on
May Day (1 May) is of very early origin, but since the adoption of the
Gregorian calendar in 1752, the tree has rarely been in full bloom in England before the second week of that month. In the Scottish Highlands, the flowers may be seen as late as the middle of June. The hawthorn has been regarded as the emblem of hope, and its branches are stated to have been carried by the ancient Greeks in wedding processions, and to have been used by them to deck the altar of
Hymenaios. The supposition that the tree was the source of Jesus's
crown of thorns doubtless gave rise to the tradition among the French peasantry (current as late as 1911) that it utters groans and cries on
Good Friday, and probably also to the old popular superstition in Great Britain and Ireland that ill luck attended the uprooting of hawthorns. Branches of
Glastonbury thorn (
C. monogyna 'Biflora',
Robert Graves, in his book
The White Goddess, In
Gaelic folklore, hawthorn (in
Scottish Gaelic,
sgitheach and in Irish,
sceach) 'marks the entrance to the
otherworld' and is strongly associated with the
fairies. Lore has it that it is very unlucky to cut the tree at any time other than when it is in bloom; however, during this time, it is commonly cut and decorated as a May bush (see
Beltane). This warning persists to modern times; folklorist Bob Curran has questioned whether the ill luck of the
DeLorean Motor Company was associated with the destruction of a fairy thorn to make way for a production facility. The superstitious dread of harming hawthorn trees prevalent in Britain and Ireland may also be connected to an old belief that hawthorns, and more especially 'lone thorns' (self-seeded specimens standing in isolation from other trees) originate from
lightning or
thunderbolts and give protection from lightning strikes. Hawthorn trees are often found beside
clootie wells; at these types of holy wells, they are sometimes known as rag trees, for the strips of cloth which are tied to them as part of healing rituals. 'When all fruit fails, welcome haws' was once a common expression in Ireland. According to a medieval legend, the
Glastonbury thorn,
C. monogyna 'Biflora', which flowers twice annually, was supposed to have
miraculously grown from a
walking stick planted by
Joseph of Arimathea at
Glastonbury in Somerset, England. The original tree was destroyed in the sixteenth century during the
English Reformation, but several cultivars have survived. Since the reign of
King James I, it has been a Christmas custom to send a sprig of Glastonbury thorn flowers to the
Sovereign, which is used to decorate the royal family's dinner table. In the
Victorian era, the hawthorn represented
hope in the
language of flowers. The hawthorn – species unspecified – is the
state flower of
Missouri. The legislation designating it as such was introduced by
Sarah Lucille Turner, one of the first two women to serve in the
Missouri House of Representatives. ==References==