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The glastonbury thorn legend ties in Christ's death as well as
the celebration of his birth. The legend goes that soon after the
death of Christ, Joseph of Arimathea came to Britain to spread the
message of Christianity. When he traveled there from the Holy Land
he brought with him his staff. Being tired from his journey, he lay
down to rest. In doing so, he pushed his staff into the ground
beside him. When he awoke, he found that the staff had taken root
and begun to grow and blossom. It is said he left it there and it
has flowered every Christmas and every spring . It is also said that
a puritan trying to cut down the tree was blinded by a spllinter of
the wood before he could do so. The original thorn did eventually
die but not before many cuttings had been taken. It is one of these
very cuttings which is in the grounds of Glastonbury Abbey today.
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