Abstract

ALREADY queries have been addressed to me on the subject of the date of Easter in 1905, owing to the fact that, according to the almanacs, the moon is full at 4h. 56m. Greenwich mean time on the morning of March 21 next, and that therefore, according to the Prayer Book rule, it would appear that Easter Day should be the Sunday following March 21, viz. March 26. As the misunderstanding on the subject seems widely spread, perhaps you will allow me to explain that the “moon” referred to in the ecclesiastical calendar is not the actual moon in the sky, which is full at a definite instant of time, but a fictitious moon, the times of the phases of which are so arranged as not to differ much from those of the actual moon. These phases are held to occur, vaguely, on certain days, and therefore hold good for all longitudes, and so avoid a practical inconvenience that would arise from the use of the actual moon. Thus, in the instance before us, in which the actual moon is full at 4h. 56m. a.m. Greenwich mean time, the same moon is full at 11h. 48m. p.m. (on the preceding day) Washington mean time. The people adopting Greenwich time would, therefore, in the supposed circumstances, keep Easter Day on March 26, whilst those adopting Washington time would keep it on April 23.

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