MYTHS AND LEGENDS OF CHRISTMASTIDE
By
Bertha F. Herrick
“Lo! now is come our joyful’st
feast,
Let every man be jolly.
Each room with ivy leaves is drest,
And every post with holly.
Now all our neighbors’ chimneys smoke,
And Christmas blocks are burning;
Their ovens they with bak’t meats choke,
And all their spits are turning.”
The celebration of Christmas, which
was considered by the Puritans to be idolatrous, has
for many centuries been so universal that it may prove
of interest to contrast the rites, ceremonies and quaint
beliefs of foreign lands with those of matter-of-fact
America.
Many curious customs live only in
tradition; but it is surprising to find what singular
superstitions still exist among credulous classes,
even in the light of the twentieth century.
In certain parts of England the peasantry
formerly asserted that, on the anniversary of the
Nativity, oxen knelt in their stalls at midnight, the
supposed hour of Christ’s birth; while in other
localities bees were said to sing in their hives and
subterranean bells to ring a merry peal.
According to legends of ancient Britain
cocks crew lustily all night on December 24th to scare
away witches and evil spirits, and in Bavaria some
of the countrymen made frequent and apparently aimless
trips in their sledges to cause the hemp to grow thick
and tall.
In many lands there is still expressed
the beautiful sentiment that the gates of heaven stand
wide open on Christmas Eve, and that he whose soul
takes flight during its hallowed hours arrives straightway
at the throne of grace.
A time-honored custom in Norway and
Sweden is that of fastening a sheaf of wheat to a
long pole on the barn or house-top, for the wild birds’
holiday cheer; and in Holland the young men of the
towns sometimes bear a large silver star through the
snowy streets, collecting alms from pedestrians for
the helpless or the aged sick.
Russia has no Santa Claus or Christmas
tree, although the festival is celebrated by church
services and by ceremonies similar to those of our
Hallowe’en.
In some of the villages in Wales a
Christmas pudding is boiled for each of the disciples,
with the exception of Judas, and in the rural districts
of Scotland bread baked on Christmas Eve is said to
indefinitely retain its freshness.
“The Fatherland” is the
home of the Christmas tree, which is thought to be
symbolical of the “Tree of the Knowledge of Good
and Evil,” in the Garden of Eden; and candles
were first used to typify the power of Christianity
over the darkness of paganism, being sometimes arranged
in triangular form to represent the Trinity.
Pines and firs being unattainable
in the tropical islands of the Pacific, the white
residents sometimes cut down a fruit tree, such as
an orange or a guava, or actually manufacture a tree
from wood, covering the bare, stiff boughs with clinging
vines of evergreen.
In the Holy Land at this season the
place of greatest interest is naturally the Church
of the Nativity at Bethlehem, erected on the supposed
location where Christ was born. It is said to
be the oldest Christian church in existence, having
been built more than fifteen centuries ago by the
Empress Helena, mother of Constantine. Repairs
were made later by Edward IV of England; but it is
now again fast falling into decay. The roof was
originally composed of cedar of Lebanon and the walls
were studded with precious jewels, while numerous
lamps of silver and gold were suspended from the rafters.
The Greeks, Latins and Armenians now claim joint possession
of the structure, and jealously guard its sacred precincts.
Immediately beneath the nave of the cathedral is a
commodious marble chamber, constructed over the spot
where the far-famed stable was said to have stood
and reached by a flight of stone steps, worn smooth
by the tread and kisses of multitudes of worshippers.
The manger is represented by a marble slab a couple
of feet in height, decorated with tinsel and blue
satin and marked at the head with a chiseled star,
bearing above it the inscription in Latin, “Here
was Jesus Christ born of the Virgin Mary.”
At the foot are several altars, on which incense is
ever kept burning and from which mass is conducted,
while a score of hanging lamps shed a fitful light
over the apartment.
Many theories have been advanced as
to the explanation of the mysterious “Star in
the East” which guided the wondering shepherds,
but it is now thought to have been Venus at the height
of its splendor.
The early Christians decorated their
churches with evergreens out of respect to the passage
of Scripture in Isaiah “The glory
of Lebanon shall come unto thee; the fir tree, the
pine tree and the box together to beautify the place
of my sanctuary” and the pagans believed
them to be omens of good, as the spirits of the woods
remained in their branches.
Holly is known in Germany and Scandinavia
as “Christ’s thorn,” and is emblematic
everywhere of cheerfulness, forgiveness, “peace
on earth and good will to men.”
The oak mistletoe or “missel”
was held in high veneration by the ancient Druids,
who, regarding its parasitic character as a miracle
and its evergreen nature as a symbol of immortality,
worshipped it in their temples and used it as a panacea
for the physical ailments of their followers.
When the moon was six days old, the bunches were ceremoniously
cut with a golden sickle, by the chief priest of the
order and received with care into the spotless robes
of one of the company, for if they fell to the unholy
ground, their virtues were considered lost.
Then, crowned with oak leaves and
singing songs of thanksgiving, they bore the branches
in solemn procession to the altars, where two white
oxen were sacrificed to the gods.
The custom of “kissing under
the mistletoe” dates back to the days of Scandinavian
mythology, when the god of darkness shot his rival,
the immortal Apollo of the North, with an arrow made
from its boughs. But the supposed victim being
miraculously restored to life, the mistletoe was given
into the keeping of the goddess of affection, as a
symbol of love and not of death, to those who passed
beneath it. A berry was required to be picked
with every kiss and presented to the maiden as a sign
of good fortune, the privilege ceasing when all the
berries were gathered.
One of the most beautiful legends
of the Black Forest, in Germany, is that of the origin
of the chrysanthemum, or “Christ-flower.”
On a dark, stormy Christmas Eve a poor charcoal-burner
was wending his way homeward through the deep snow-drifts
under the pine trees, with a loaf of coarse black
bread and a piece of goat’s-milk cheese as contributions
to the holiday cheer. Suddenly, during a brief
lull in the tempest, he heard a low, wailing cry,
and, searching patiently, at length discovered a benumbed
and half-clad child, but little more than an infant
in years or size. Wrapping him snugly in his cloak,
he hurried onward toward the humble cottage from which
rays of light streamed cheerfully through the uncurtained
windows. The good “hausmutter” sat
before the fire with her little ones anxiously awaiting
her husband’s return; and when the poor, frozen
waif was placed upon her knee, her heart overflowed
with compassion, and before long he was comfortably
warmed and fed, while the children vied with each
other in displaying the attractions of the pretty fir
tree, with its tiny colored tapers and paper ornaments.
All at once a mist appeared, enveloping
the timid stranger, a halo formed around his brow
and two silvery wings sprang magically from his shoulders.
Gradually rising, higher and higher, he finally disappeared
from sight, his hands outspread in benediction, while
the terror-stricken family fell upon their knees,
crossing themselves, and murmuring in awestruck whispers,
“The Holy Christ-Child!”
The next morning the father found,
on the bleak, cold spot where the child had lain,
a lovely blossom of dazzling white, which he bore
reverently homeward and named the chrysanthemum, or
“flower of Christ,” and each succeeding
festival season some starved and neglected orphan
was bidden to his frugal board in memory of the time
when he entertained “an angel unawares.”
In Merrie England Christmas was the chief event of the entire year, and was
sometimes celebrated for nearly a month. The tables of the wealthy
literally groaned with plenty, but the poor without their gates were not
forgotten, for
“Old Christmas had come
for to keep open house,
He’d scorn to be guilty
of starving a mouse.”
During the reign of Elizabeth the
boar’s head was the favorite holiday dish, and
was served with mustard (then a rare and costly condiment),
and decorated with bay-leaves and with rosemary, which
was said to strengthen the memory, to clear the brain
and to stimulate affection. Boars were originally
sacrificed to the Scandinavian gods of peace and plenty,
and many odes were composed in their honor.
That remarkable compound known as
“wassail” was composed of warm ale or
wine, sweetened with sugar and flavored with spices,
and bearing upon its surface floating bits of toast
and roasted crabs and apples. The huge bowl,
gaily decorated with ribbons, was passed from hand
to hand around the table, each guest taking a portion
of its contents, as a sign of joviality and good-fellowship.
But the triumph of the pastry cook’s
art was “the rare minced pie,” the use
of which is of great antiquity. The shape was
formerly a narrow oblong, representing the celebrated
manger at Bethlehem, and the fruits and spices of
which it was composed were symbolic of those that
the wise men of the Orient brought as offerings to
their new-born King, while to partake of such a pie
was considered a proof that the eater was a Christian
and not a Jew.
All sorts of games were immensely
popular with the English, whether king or serf, aristocrat
or pauper, merchant or apprentice.
“A Christmas gambol
oft could cheer
The poor man’s heart
thro’ half the year.”
Every one has heard of the matchless
“Lord of Misrule” (also known as the “Abbot
of Unreason” and the “Master of Merry Disports"),
who, attended by his mock court, king’s jester
and grotesquely masked revelers, visited the castles
of lords and princes to entertain them with strange
antics and uproarious merriment. His reign lasted
until Twelfth Night, during which period he was treated
as became a genuine monarch, being feted and feasted,
with all his train, and having absolute authority
over individuals and state affairs.
The great event of the evening, after
the holiday feast, was the bringing in of the famous
yule log, which was often the entire root of a tree.
Much ceremony and rejoicing attended this performance,
as it was considered lucky to help pull the rope.
It was lighted by a person with freshly washed hands,
with a brand saved from the last year’s fire,
and was never allowed to be extinguished, as the witches
would then come down the chimney.
The presence of a barefooted or cross-eyed
individual or of a woman with flat feet was thought
to foretell misfortune for the coming year.
The games of “snap dragon”
and “hot cockles” are supposed to be relics
either of the “ordeal by fire” or of the
days of the ancient fire-worshippers. The former
consists of snatching raisins from a bowl of burning
brandy or alcohol, and the latter of taking frantic
bites at a red apple revolving rapidly upon a pivot
in alternation with a lighted taper.
Christmas carols are commemorative of the angels song to the shepherds on
the plains of Bethlehem, and are seldom heard in America save by the surpliced
choirs of the Episcopal churches. The English waits, or serenaders, who
sang under the squires windows in hopes of receiving a Christmas box,
unconsciously add a touch of romance and picturesqueness to the associations of
the season. For upon the frosty evening air arose such strains as
“Awake! glad heart!
arise and sing!
It is the birthday of thy
King!”
Or --
“God rest you, merry
gentlemen!
Let nothing you dismay,
For Jesus Christ, our Savior,
Was born upon this day.”
Most of the old-time favorites are
too well known for repetition. The mere mention
of their names recalls the scent of evergreens, the
pealing of the organ, the tinkle of sleigh bells and
the music of the Christmas chimes. “Hark!
The herald angels sing!” “While shepherds
watched their flocks by night,” “Gloria
in Excelsis” and many others embody the very
spirit of the season, and will live till time shall
cease to be.
“Sing the song of great joy that
the angels began,
Sing of glory to God and of good will to man!
While joining in chorus,
The heavens bend o’er us,
The dark night is ending and dawn has begun.”
-- Bertha F. Herrick.