Today, the Monday after Easter Sunday, is Black Monday, and is terribly, terribly unlucky. Nothing at all should be attempted today, least of all writing blog posts. The reason for this misadventurousness is unclear. It may be that it remembers Easter Monday of 1360 when the English were happily invading France and:
...the morwe after Ester Day, Kyng Edward with his Oost lay byfore the Citee off Parys; the which was a ffoule Derke day of myste, and off haylle, and so bytter colde that syttyng on horse bak men dyed; Wherefore, vnto this day yt ys called blak Monday.
That is a reasonable description of today's weather in London. However, that story is not recorded until 75 years after the event. Black Monday is even less likely to commemorate the day in 1260 that English settlers were massacred in Dublin, as that idea isn't recorded until 400 years after the event.
Or it could be the day on which everybody has a hangover from celebrating the resurrection of Our Lord a trifle too enthusiastically.
This is a different Black Monday that occurred in July
Why were the English massacred in Dublin? England was still part of Christendom in 1260 so it wasn't motivated by religion; was England invading Ireland? (I know this isn't related to etymology but I'm curious)
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All I can think of is Harry Craddock's advice regarding Corpse Reviver cocktails (surely the official drink of the Resurrection): "four of these taken in swift succession will unrevive the corpse again."
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