December
25th
Born: Jesus
Christ, Saviour of the world; Sir Isaac Newton,
natural philosopher, 1642, Woolsthorpe, near Grantham;
Johann Jacob Reiske, oriental scholar, 1716, Zorbig,
Saxony; William Collins, poet, 1720,
Chichester;
Richard Person, Greek scholar, 1759, East Ruston,
Norfolk.
Died: Persius,
satiric poet, 62 A.D.; Pope Adrian I, 795; Emperor
Leo V, the Armenian, slain at Constantinople, 820;
Sir Matthew Hale, eminent judge, 1676; Rev. James Hervey, author of
the Meditations, 1758, Weston Favell,
Northamptonshire; Mrs. Chapone, moral writer, 1801,
Hadley, Middlesex; Colonel John Gurwood, editor of
Wellington's Dispatches, 1854, Brighton.
Feast Day: St. Eugenia, virgin and martyr,
about 257. St. Anastasia, martyr, 304. Another St.
Anastasia.
Christmas Day
The festival of
Christmas is regarded as the greatest celebration
throughout the ecclesiastical year, and so important
and joyous a solemnity is it deemed, that a special
exception is made in its favour, whereby, in the event
of the anniversary falling on a Friday, that day of
the week, under all other circumstances a fast, is
transformed to a festival.
That the birth of
Jesus Christ, the deliverer of the human race, and the
mysterious link connecting the transcendent and
incomprehensible attributes of Deity with human
sympathies and affections, should be considered as the
most glorious event that ever happened, and the most worthy of being reverently
and joyously commemorated,
is a pro-position which must commend itself to the
heart and reason of every one of His followers, who
aspires to walk in His footsteps, and share in the
ineffable benefits which His death has secured to
mankind. And so though at one period denounced by the
Puritans as superstitious, and to the present day
disregarded by Calvinistic Protestants, as unwarranted
by Scripture, there are few who will seriously dispute
the propriety of observing the anniversary of Christ's
birth by a religious service.
A question, however,
which has been long and eagerly agitated, is here
brought forward. Is the 25th of December really the
day on which our Saviour first shewed himself in human
form in the manger at Bethlehem? The evidence which we
possess regarding the date is not only traditional,
but likewise conflicting and confused. In the earliest periods at which we have
any record of the observance
of Christmas, we find that some communities of
Christians celebrated the festival on the 1st or 6th
of January; others on the 29th of March, the time of
the Jewish Passover; while others, it is said,
observed it on the 29th of September, or
Feast of
Tabernacles. There can be no doubt, however, that
long before the reign of Constantine, in the fourth
century, the season of the New Year had been adopted
as the period for celebrating the Nativity, though a
difference in this respect existed in the practice of
the Eastern and Western Churches, the former observing
the 6th of January, and the latter the 25th of
December. The custom of the Western Church at last
prevailed, and both of the ecclesiastical bodies
agreed to hold the anniversary on the same day. The
fixing of the date appears to have been the act of
Julius I, who presided as pope or bishop of Rome,
from 337 to 352 A.D. The circumstance is doubted by
Mosheim, but is confirmed by St. Chrysostom, who died
in the beginning of the fifth century.
This celebrated
father of the church informs us, in one of his
epistles, that Julius, on the solicitation of
St.
Cyril of Jerusalem, caused strict inquiries to be made
on the subject, and thereafter, following what seemed
to be the best authenticated tradition, settled
authoritatively the 25th of December as the
anniversary of Christ's birth, the 'Festorum omnium
metropolis,' as it is styled by Chrysostom. It is
true, indeed, that some have represented this fixing
of the day to have been accomplished by
St. Telesphorus,
who was bishop of Rome 128�139 A. D., but the
authority for the assertion is very doubtful. Towards
the close of the second century, we find a notice of
the observance of Christmas in the reign of the
Emperor Commodus; and about a hundred years
afterwards, in the time of Dioclesiaun an atrocious
act of cruelty is recorded of the last named emperor,
who caused a church in Nicomedia, where the Christians
were celebrating the Nativity, to be set on fire, and
by barring every means of egress from the building,
made all the worshippers perish in the flames. Since
the, end of the fourth century at least, the 25th of
December has been uniformly observed as the
anniversary of the Nativity by all the nations of
Christendom.
Thus far for ancient
usage, but it will be readily comprehended that
insurmountable difficulties yet exist with respect to
the real date of the momentous event under notice. Sir
Isaac Newton, indeed, remarks in his Commentary on the
Prophecies of Daniel, that the feast of the Nativity,
and most of the other ecclesiastical anniversaries,
were originally fixed at cardinal points of the year,
without any reference to the dates of the incidents
which they commemorated, dates which, by the lapse of
time, had become impossible to be ascertained. Thus
the
Annunciation of the Virgin Mary was placed on the
25th of March, or about the time of the vernal equinox; the feast of
St. Michael on the
29th of September, or
near the autumnal equinox; and the birth of Christ and other festivals at the time
of the
winter-solstice. Many of the apostles 'days�such as
St. Paul, St. Matthias, and others�were determined by the
days when the sun entered the respective signs of the
ecliptic, and the pagan festivals had also a
considerable share in the adjustment of the Christian
year.
To this last we shall shortly have occasion to
advert more particularly, but at present we shall
content ourselves by remarking that the views of the
great astronomer just indicated, present at least a
specious explanation of the original construction of
the ecclesiastical calendar. As regards the observance
of Easter indeed, and its accessory celebrations,
there is good ground for maintaining that they mark
tolerably accurately the anniversaries of the Passion
and Resurrection of our Lord, seeing that we know that
the events themselves took place at the period of the
Jewish Passover. But no such precision of date can be
adduced as regards Christmas, respecting which the
generally received view now is, that it does not
correspond with the actual date of the nativity of our Saviour. One objection, in
particular, has been made,
that the incident recorded in Scripture, of shepherds
keeping watch by night on the plains of Bethlehem,
could not have taken place in the month of December, a
period generally of great inclemency in the region of
Judea.
Though
Christian nations have thus, from an early period in
the history of the church, celebrated Christmas about
the period of the
winter-solstice or the shortest day, it is well
known that many, and, indeed, the greater number of
the popular festive observances by which it is
characterized, are referable to a much more ancient
origin. Amid all the pagan nations of antiquity, there
seems to have been a universal tendency to worship the
sun as the giver of life and light, and the visible
manifestation of the Deity. Various as were the names
bestowed by different peoples on this object of their
worship, he was still the same divinity. Thus, at
Rome, he appears to have been worshipped under one of
the characters attributed to Saturn, the father
of the gods; among the Scandinavian nations he was
known under the epithet of Odin or Woden, the father of
Thor, who seems after-wards to have shared with his
parent the adoration bestowed on the latter, as the
divinity of which the 'sun was the visible
manifestation; whilst with the ancient Persians, the
appellation for the god of lights was Mithras,
apparently the same as the Irish Mithr, and with the
Phoenicians or Carthaginians it was Baal or Bel, an
epithet familiar to all students of the Bible.
Concurring thus as regards the object of worship,
there was a no less remarkable uniformity in the
period of the year at which these different nations
celebrated a grand festival in his honour. The time
chosen appears to have been universally the season of
the New Year, or, rather, the winter-solstice, from
which the new year was frequently reckoned. This
unanimity in the celebration of the festival in
question, is to be ascribed to the general feeling of
joy which all of us experience when the gradual
shortening of the day reaches its utmost limit on the
21st of December, and the sun, recommencing his upward
course, announces that mid-winter is past, and spring
and summer are approaching. On similar grounds, and
with similar demonstrations, the ancient pagan nations
observed a festival at mid-summer, or the
summer-solstice, when the sun arrives at the
culminating point of his ascent on the 21st of June,
or longest day.
By the Romans, this anniversary was celebrated under
the title of Saturnalia, or the
festival of
Saturn, and was marked by the prevalence of a
universal license and merry-making. The slaves were
permitted to enjoy for a time a thorough freedom in
speech and behavior, and it is even said that their
masters waited on them as servants. Every one feasted
and rejoiced, work and business were for a season
entirely suspended, the houses were decked with
laurels and evergreens, presents were made by parents
and friends, and all sorts of games and amusements
were indulged. in by the citizens. In the bleak north,
the same rejoicings had place, but in a ruder and more
barbarous form. Fires were extensively kindled, both
in and out of doors, blocks of wood blazed in honour
of Odin and Thor, the sacred mistletoe was gathered by
the Druids, and sacrifices, both of men and cattle,
were made to the savage divinities. Fires are said,
also, to have been kindled at this period of the year
by the ancient Persians, between whom and the Druids
of Western Europe a relationship is supposed to have
existed.
In the
early ages of Christianity, its' ministers frequently
experienced the utmost difficulty in inducing the
converts to refrain from indulging in the popular
amusements which were so largely participated in by
their pagan countrymen. Among others, the revelry and
license which characterized the Saturnalia called for
special animadversion. But at last, convinced partly
of the inefficacy of such denunciations, and partly
influenced by the idea that the spread of Christianity
might thereby be advanced, the church endeavored to
amalgamate, as it were, the old and new religious, and
sought, by transferring the heathen ceremonies to the
solemnities of the Christian festivals, to make them
subservient to the cause of religion and piety. A
compromise was thus effected between clergy and laity,
though it must be admitted that it proved anything but
a harmonious one, as we find a constant, though
ineffectual, proscription by the ecclesiastical
authorities of the favorite amusements of the people,
including among others the sports and revelries at
Christmas.
Ingrafted thus on the Romani Saturnalia, the Christmas
festivities received in Britain further changes and
modifications, by having superadded to them, first,
the Druidical rites and superstitions, and then, after
the arrival of the Saxons, the various ceremonies
practiced by the ancient Germans and Scandinavians.
The result has been the strange medley of Christian
and pagan rites which contribute to make up the
festivities of the modern Christmas. Of these, the
burning of the Yule log, and the superstitions
connected with the mistletoe have already been
described under Christmas Eve, and further accounts
are given under separate heads, both under the
24th and 25th of December.
The name given by the ancient Goths and. Saxons to the
festival of the winter-solstice was Jul or
Yule, the latter term forming, to the present day,
the designation in the Scottish dialect of Christmas,
and preserved also in the phrase of the 'Yule
log.' Perhaps the etymology of no term has
excited greater discussion among antiquaries. Some
maintain it to be derived from the Greek, συλσ
ι
,
or, ισυλσς, the name of a hymn in honor of
Ceres; others say it comes from the Latin jubilum,
signifying a time of rejoicing, or from its being a
festival in honour of Julius Caesar; whilst some also
explain its meaning as synonymous with ol or
oel, which in the ancient Gothic language denotes
a feast, and also the favorite liquor used on such
occasion, whence our word ale. But a much more
probable derivation of the term in question is from
the Gothic giul or hiul, the origin of
the modem word wheel, and bearing the same
signification. According to this very probable
explanation, the Yule festival received its name from
its being the turning-point of the year, or the period
at which the fiery orb of day made a revolution in his
annual circuit, and entered on his northern journey. A
confirmation of this view is afforded by the
circumstance that in the old
clog almanacs, a wheel is
the device employed for marking the season of
Yule-tide.
Throughout the middle ages, and down to the period of
the Reformation, the festival of Christmas, ingrafted
on the pagan rites of Yule, continued throughout
Christendom to be universally celebrated with every
mark of rejoicing. On the adoption of a new system of
faith by most of the northern nations of Europe in the
sixteenth century, the Lutheran and Anglican churches
retained the celebration of Christmas and other
festivals, which Calvinists rejected absolutely,
denouncing the observance of all such days, except
Sunday, as superstitious and unscriptural. In
reference to the superstition anciently prevalent in
Scotland against spinning on Christmas or Yule day,
and the determination of the Calvinistic clergy to put
down all such notions, the following amusing passage
is quoted by Dr. Jamieson from Jhone Hamilton's
Facile Traictise:
'The ministers of
Scotland�in contempt of the vther halie dayes obseruit
be England�cause their wyfis and seruants spin in
oppin sicht of the people upon Yeul day; and their
affectionnate auditeurs constraines their tennants to
yok thair pleuchs on Yeul day in contempt of Christ's
Natiuitie, whilk our Lord has not left vnpunisit: for
thair oxin ran wod [mad], and brak their nekis, and
leamit [lamed] sum pleugh men, as is notoriously
knawin in sindrie partes of Scotland.'
In consequence of the
Presbyterian form of church-government, as constituted
by John Knox and his coadjutors on the model of the
ecclesiastical polity of
Calvin, having taken such
firm root in Scotland, the festival of Christmas, with
other commemorative celebrations retained from the Romish calendar by the
Anglicans and Lutherans, is
comparatively unknown in that country, at least in the
Lowlands. The tendency to mirth and jollity at the
close of the year, which seems almost inherent in
human nature, has, in North Britain, been, for the
most part, transferred from Christmas and Christmas
Eve to New-year's Day and the preceding evening, known
by the appellation of
Hogmenay. In many parts
of the Highlands of Scotland, however, and also in the
county of Forfar, and one or two other districts, the
day for the great annual merry-making is Christmas.
From a curious old song preserved in the Harleian
Manuscripts in the British Museum, we learn that it
was
considered
peculiarly lucky when Christmas-day
fell on a Sunday, and the reverse when it occurred on
a Saturday. The intermediate days are, for the most
part, characterized by a happy uniformity of
propitious augury. The versification is of the rudest
and most rugged description, but as an interesting
specimen of medieval folk-lore, we subjoin the stanzas
relating to Sunday and Saturday:
Lordinges, I warne
you al beforne,
Yef that day that Cryste was borne,
Falle uppon a Sunday;
That wynter shall be good par fay,
But grete wyndes alofte shalbe,
The somer shall be fayre and drye;
By kynde skylle, wythowtyn lesse,
Throw all londes shalbe peas,
And good tyme all thyngs to don,
But he that stelyth he shalbe fownde sone;
Whate chylde that day borne be,
A great lord he shalbe.
If Crystmas on the Saterday falle,
That wynter ys to be dredden alle,
Hyt shalbe so fulle of grete tempeste
That hyt shall sle bothe man and beste,
Frute and corn shal fayle grete won,
And olde folke dyen many on;
Whate woman that day of chylde travayle
They shalbe borne in grete perelle
And chyldren that be borne that day,
Within half a yere they shall dye par fay,
The summer then shall wete ryghte ylle:
If thou awght stele, hyt shel the spylle;
Thou dyest, yf sekenes take the.'
Somewhat
akin to the notions above inculcated, is the belief in
Devonshire that if the
sun shines bright at noon on
Christmas-day, a plentiful crop of apples may be
expected in the following year.
From the Diary of that rare old gossip, Mr.
Pepys, we
extract the following entries relative to three
Christmas-days of two hundred years ago:
'Christmas-day (1662).�Had a pleasant walk to
Whitehall, where I intended to have received the
communion with the family, but I came a little too
late. So I walked up into the house, and spent my time
looking over pictures, particularly the ships in King
Henry the Eighth's Voyage to Bullaen; marking the
great difference between those built then and now. By
and by, down to the chapel again, where Bishop Morley
preached on the song of the angels, "Glory to God on
high, on earth peace and good-will towards men."
Bethought he made but a poor sermon, but long, and
reprehending the common jollity of the court for the
true joy that shall and ought to be on those days.
Particularised concerning their excess in plays and
gaming, saying that he whose device it is to keep the
gamesters in order and within bounds, serves but for a
second rather in a duel, meaning the groomer porter.
Upon which it was worth observing how far they are
come from taking the reprehensions of a bishop
seriously, that they all laugh in the chapel when he
reflected on their ill actions and courses. He did
much press us to joy in these public days of joy, and
to hospitality. But one that stood by whispered in my
eare, that the bishop do not spend one groat to the
poor himself. The sermon done, a good anthem followed
with vials, and the king came down to receive the
sacrament.
'Christmas-day (1668).�To church in the morning, and
there saw a wedding in the church, which I have not
seen many a day; and the young people so merry one
with another, and strange to see what delight we
married people have to see these poor fools decoyed
into our condition, every man and woman gazing and
smiling at them.
'Christmas-day (1668).�To dinner alone with any
wife, who, poor wretch ! sat undressed all day till
ten at night, altering and lacing of a noble
petticoat; while I by her making the boy read to me
the Life of Julius Ceasar, and Des Cartes's book of
Music.'
The
geniality and joyousness of the Christmas season in
England, has long been a national characteristic. The
following poem or carol, by George Wither, who belongs
to the first-half of the seventeenth century,
describes with hilarious animation the mode of keeping
Christmas in the poet's day:
'So now is come our joyful feast;
Let every man be jolly;
Each room with ivy leaves is drest,
And every post with holly.
Though some churls at our mirth repine,
Round your foreheads garlands twine;
Drown sorrow in a cup of wine,
And let us all be merry.
Now all our neighbours' chimneys smoke,
And Christmas blocks are burning;
Their ovens they with baked meat choke,
And all their spits are turning.
Without the door let sorrow lye;
And if for cold it hap to die,
We'll bury't in a Christmas-pie,
And evermore be merry.
Now every lad is wond'rous trim,
And no man minds his labour;
Our lasses have provided them
A bagpipe and a tabor;
Young men and maids, and girls and boys,
Give life to one another's joys;
And you anon shall by their noise
Perceive that they are merry.
Rank misers now do sparing shun;
Their hall of music soundeth;
And dogs thence with whole shoulders run,
So all things then aboundeth.
The country-folks, themselves advance,
With crowdy-muttons out of France;
And Jack shall pipe and Jyll shall dance,
And all the town be merry.
Ned Squash hath fetcht his bands from pawn,
And all his best apparel
Brisk Nell hath bought a ruff of lawn
With dropping of the barrel.
And those that hardly all the year
Had bread to eat, or rags to wear,
Will have both clothes and dainty fare,
And all the day be merry.
Now poor men to the justices
With capons make their errants;
And if they hap to fail of these,
They plague them with their warrants:
But now they feed them with good cheer,
And what they want, they take in beer,
For Christmas comes but once a year,
And then they shall be merry.
Good farmers in the country nurse
The poor, that else were undone;
Some landlords spend their money worse,
On lust and pride at London.
There the roysters they do play,
Drab and dice their lands away,
Which may be ours another day,
And therefore let's be merry.
The client now his suit forbears;
The prisoner's heart is eased;
The debtor drinks away his cares,
And for the time is pleased.
Though others' purses be more fat,
Why should we pine or grieve at that?
Hang sorrow! care will kill a cat,
And therefore let's be merry.
Hark! now the wags abroad do call,
Each other forth to rambling;
non you'll see them in the hall,
For nuts and apples scrambling.
Hark! how the roofs with laughter sound,
Anon they'll think the house goes round,
For they the cellar's depth have found,
And there they will be merry.
The wenches with their wassel-bowls
About the streets are singing;
The boys are come to catch the owls,
The wild mare in it bringing,
our kitchen-boy hath broke his box,
And to the dealing of the ox,
Our honest neighbors come by flocks,
And here they will be merry.
Now kings and queens poor sheepcotes have,
And mate with every body;
The honest now may play the knave,
And wise men play the noddy.
Some youths will now a mumming go,
Some others play at Rowland-ho,
And twenty other game boys mo,
Because they will be merry.
Then, wherefore in these merry daies,
Should we, I pray, be duller?
No, let us sing some roundelayes,
To make our mirth the fuller.
And, while thus inspired we sing,
Let all the streets with echoes ring;
Woods and hills and every thing,
Bear witness we are merry.'
At
present, Christmas-day, if somewhat shorn of its
ancient glories, and unmarked by that boisterous
jollity and exuberance of animal spirits which
distinguished it in the time of our ancestors, is,
nevertheless, still the holiday in which of all others
throughout the year, all classes of English society
most generally participate. Partaking of a religious
character, the forenoon of the day is usually passed
in church, and in the evening the re-united members of
the family assemble round the joyous Christmas-board.
Separated as many of these are during the rest of the
year, they all make an effort to meet together round
the Christmas-hearth. The hallowed feelings of
domestic love and attachment, the pleasing remembrance
of the past, and the joyous anticipation of the
future, all cluster round these family-gatherings, and
in the sacred associations with which they are
intertwined, and the active deeds of kindness and
benevolence which they tend to call forth, a
realization may almost be found of the angelic message
to the shepherds of Bethlehem�'Glory to God in the
highest, and on earth peace, good-will toward men.'
Christmas Carols
Amid so many popular
customs at Christmas, full of so much sweet and simple
poetry, there is perhaps none more charming than that
of the Christmas carols, which celebrate in joyous and
yet devout strains the Nativity of the Saviour. The
term is believed to be derived from the Latin
cantare (to sing), and rola! an
interjection expressive of joy. The practice appears
to be as ancient as the celebration of Christmas
itself, and we are informed that in the early ages of
the church, the bishops were accustomed to sing carols
on Christmas-day among their clergy. The quaint and
inestimable Jeremy Taylor, referring in his Great
Exemplar to the Gloria in Excelsis, or hymn
sung by the angels on the plains of Bethlehem, says:
'As soon as these blessed choristers had sung their
Christmas Carol, and taught the Church a hymn to put
into her offices for ever in the anniversary of this
festivity, the angels returned into heaven.'
Milton
also, in the twelfth book of Paradise Lost, thus
alludes to what may be regarded as
the first Christmas
carol:
'His
place of birth a solemn angel tells
To simple shepherds, keeping watch by night;
They gladly thither haste, and by a quire
Of squadron'd angels hear his carol sung.'
In
process of time, these Christmas hymns became very
much secularized, and latterly, were frequently
nothing more than festal chants, sung during the
revelries of the Christmas season. The earliest
specimen which we possess of the medieval carol,
belongs to this class, and is preserved in a
manuscript in the British Museum. It is composed in
Norman-French, and belongs to the thirteenth century.
The same convivial quality characterises a 'sett of
carols,' the earliest printed edition of these
Christmas chants, published by Wynkyn de Worde in
1821. The 'Boar's Head' song, quoted in a subsequent
article, occurs with others of a similar class in the
collection referred to.

Children's
Carol on Christmas Morning
|
As
with the generality of our popular ballads, we find
the earlier specimens of Christmas carols often
extremely rugged and unadorned in point of
composition, and perceive them gradually assume a more
polished and harmonious form with the progress of
education and refinement. This
improvement is chiefly to be remarked after the
commencement of the sixteenth century.
The following carol, belonging to that period, is
frequently sung on Christmas-morning by children, as
represented in the accompanying engraving.
'When Christ was born of Mary free,
In Bethelem, in that fair citie,
Angels sang there with mirth and glee,
In Excelsis Gloria.
This
King is come to save mankind,
As in scripture truths we find,
Therefore this song have we in mind,
In Excelsis Gloria,
Then, Lord, for
Thy great grace,
Grant us the bliss to see thy face,
Where we may sing to Thy solace,
In Excelsis Gloria.'
Herdsmen beheld
these angels bright,
o them appearing with great light,
Who said: "God's Son is horn this night,"
In Excelsis Gloria.
In his
History of English Poetry,
Warton notices a
license, granted in 1862, to John Tysdale
for printing
'Certayne goodly Carowles to be songe to the glory of
God;' and again 'Crestenmas Carowles auctorisshed by
my lord of London.' This may be regarded as a specimen
of the endeavors made at the time of the Reformation,
to supplant the old popular carols, by compositions of
a more devout and less popish character, and in
Scotland we find instances of the same policy in the
famous Gude and Godly Ballates, and Ane
compendious Book of godly and spirituall Sangs;
the latter printed at Edinburgh in 1621. The Puritans,
indeed, denounced not only the singing of Christmas
carols, but the observance of the festival of
Christmas itself, as pernicious and unscriptural, and
to their influence has been ascribed much of the
seriousness characterizing this department of popular
poetry in later times.
It will be recollected
that Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefield, describing the
unsophisticated character of his parishioners, says:
'They kept up the Christmas carol.' Such a composition
as the following might have been sung by these simple
swains. It is one of the most popular of the class of
chants under notice.
'God
rest you merry, gentlemen,
Let nothing you dismay,
For Jesus Christ our Saviour
Was born upon this day,
To save us all from Satan's power,
When we were gone astray.
O tidings of comfort
and joy!
For Jesus Christ
our Saviour
Was born on
Christmas-day.
In Bethlehem, in Jewry,
This blessed babe was born,
And laid within a manger
Upon this blessed morn;
The which his mother Mary
Nothing did take in scorn.
O tidings,
&c.
From God our Heavenly Father,
A blessed angel came,
And unto certain shepherds,
Brought tidings of the same,
How that in Bethlehem was born,
The Son of God by name.
O tidings,
&c.
Fear not, then said the angel,
Let nothing you affright,
his day is born a Saviour
Of virtue, power, and might;
So frequently to vanquish all,
The friends of Satan quite.
O tidings, &c.
The shepherds at those tidings,
Rejoiced much in mind,
And left their flocks a-feeding
In tempest, storm, and wind,
And went to Bethlehem straightway,
This blessed babe to find.
O
tidings, &c.
But when to
Bethlehem they came,
Whereas this infant lay,
They found Him in a manger,
Where oxen feed on hay,
His mother Mary kneeling,
Unto the Lord did pray.
O tidings, &c.
Now to the Lord
sing praises,
All you within this place,
And with true love and brotherhood,
Each other now embrace;
This holy tide of Christmas
All others doth deface.
O tidings, &c.'
Another
of these carols is presented to the reader. Without
laying claim to literary merit of an exalted order, it
has all that simplicity and melodiousness which render
ballad-poetry so charming:
'I saw
three ships come sailing in
On Christmas-day, on Christmas-day;
I saw three ships come sailing in
On Christmas-day in the morning.
And what was in
those ships all three,
On Christmas-day, on Christmas-day?
And what was in those ships all three,
On Christmas-day in the morning?
Our Saviour Christ
and his Lady,
On Christmas-day, on Christmas-day:
Our Saviour Christ and his Lady,
On Christmas-day in the morning.
Pray whither
sailed those ships all three,
On Christmas-day, on Christmas-day?
Pray whither sailed those ships all three,
On Christmas-day in the morning?
On they sailed into
Bethlehem,
On Christmas-day, on Christmas-day;
On they sailed into Bethlehem,
On Christmas-day in the morning.
And all the bells
on earth shall ring,
On Christmas-day, on Christmas-day;
And all the bells on earth shall ring,
On Christmas-day in the morning.
And all the angels
in heaven shall sing,
On Christmas-day, on Christmas-day;
And all the angels in heaven shall sing,
On Christmas-day in the morning.
And all the souls
on earth shall sing,
On Christmas-day, on Christmas-day,
And all the souls on earth shall sing,
On Christmas-day in the morning.
Then let us all
rejoice amain,
On Christmas-day, on Christmas-day;
Then let us all rejoice amain,
On Christmas-day in the morning.'
The next
carol, which we proceed to quote, is of a very
different character, being one of those doggerel
rhymes sung by children, when they go on a gooding
excursion on Christmas-morning. An explanation of the
term in italics has been already given in our notice
of St. Thomas's Day, to which such expeditions are
more strictly appropriate. The carol, as subjoined, is
sung on Christmas-morning by children in Yorkshire,
who bear along with them, on the occasion, a
Christmas-tree as a badge of their mission. The scene
is also pictorially delineated on the following page.
(Image Below)
'Well-a-day! well-a-day!
Christmas too soon goes away,
Then your gooding we do pray,
For the good time will not stay
We are not beggars from door to door,
But neighbours' children known before,
So gooding pray,
We cannot stay,
But must away,
For the Christmas will not stay,
Well-a-day! well-a-day.'

Christmas-morning carol by children in Yorkshire
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Christmas
carols are sung on Christmas Eve as well as on the
morning of Christmas-day, and indeed the former is
regarded by many as the more appropriate occasion.
Then the choristers, attached to the village-church,
make their rounds to the principal houses throughout
the parish, and sing some of those simple and touching
hymns. The airs to which they are sung are frequently
no less plaintive and melodious than the words, and,
are often accompanied by instruments. The writer
retains a vivid recollection of a carol which he heard
sung, some years ago, on Christmas Eve by a detachment
of the village choir, in front of a country-house in
Devonshire, where he was at the time a visitor.
The
sweet and pathetic melody, which was both remarkably
well sung and played, the picturesqueness of the group
of singers, whose persons were only rendered visible,
in the darkness of the night, by the light of one or
two lanterns which they carried, and the novelty and
general interest of the scene, all produced an
impression which was never to be forgotten. These
Christmas-eve carols are very general in Devonshire,
and the usual custom for the singers is to club the
money; which they receive on such occasions, and
expend it in a social merry-making on Twelfth Day, a
fortnight afterwards.
One or two poets of note
have essayed carol-writing, among whom may be
mentioned Bishop Hall and Robert
Herrick, both
belonging to the earlier half of the seventeenth
century. And here, though we have already quoted so
largely, we cannot refrain from introducing the
following singularly beautiful effusion of Herrick,
forming the first part of a poem, entitled the Star
Song, written as a hymn for the Epiphany, but of which
the first three stanzas, as here presented, are fully
as applicable to Christmas. It glows with an imagery
truly oriental:
'A
flourish of music: then follows the Song.
Tell us, thou
clear and heavenly tongue,
Where is the Babe that lately sprung?
Lies he the lily-banks among
Or say,
if this new Birth of ours
Sleeps, laid within some ark of flowers,
Spangled with dew-light; thou canst clear
All doubts, and manifest the where.
Declare to us,
bright star, if we shall seek
Him in the morning's blushing cheek,
Or search the beds of spices through,
To find him out?'
These
charming verses are introduced in a very beautiful
Book of Christmas Carols, published in 1846, adorned
with splendid illuminations from manuscripts preserved
in the British Museum. The typography of the lyric in
question is literally bedded among a most
lovely and characteristic group of fruits and flowers.
We find scarcely any
traces of the singing of Christmas carols in Scotland,
though from time immemorial it has been so universally
prevalent, not only in England, but in France, Italy,
and other countries of the continent. In England, at
one time, it was customary on Christmas-day, more
especially at the afternoon-service, to sing carols in
churches, instead of the regular psalms and hymns. We
are, moreover, informed that at the end of the service
it was the usage on such occasions for the clerk in a
loud voice to wish all the congregation A Merry
Christmas and a Happy New-Year.
Part 2 of Dec 25th
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