Looking at Leo by Bernard Fitzwalter
If you had looked at the evening sky at sunset a couple of weeks ago only the front part of Leo would have been above the horizon; today, March 5, is the first day of the year when the whole constellation is above the horizon at sunset. We have noticed before how the ancient world took note of the dates when certain stars were rising at sunset, and it seems that we might have another fragment of the old stellar calendar here with Leo. How? Because today is the feast day of Gerasimus, a fifth-century monk who is supposed to have taken a thorn from the paw of a lion, after which the lion became his companion (and, according to the story, shared his new master's vegetarian diet, which can't have been much fun for the lion). Is it just coincidence that the saint with the lion has his day on the one day in the year when Leo is first fully visible? I don't think so.
Jupiter was exactly opposite the sun and Mercury this week. According to the old astrological weather books, this raises the temperature, and provides a thaw after freezing weather. And so it did.
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