Showing posts with label British Christmas Traditions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label British Christmas Traditions. Show all posts

Sunday, December 26, 2021

Mourning Etiquette Limits Royals

The old-fashioned style of celebrating Christmas, with the blazing Yule log in the fire-place, the merry family seated around the festive board, which is groaning under its load of choice viands, including such delicacies as boar’s head, venison and plum pudding, is a thing of the past so far as London is concerned…
Image “Bring in the Boar's Head [Illustrated London News]” from Pinterest

Few Londoners to Enjoy Old-Style Christmas 
Wealthy Go to Seaside While Poor Celebrate at Home

LONDON, Dec. 21.— The old-fashioned style of celebrating Christmas, with the blazing Yule log in the fire-place, the merry family seated around the festive board, which is groaning under its load of choice viands, including such delicacies as boar's head, venison and plum pudding, is a thing of the past so far as London is concerned; It may still survive in the households of well-to-do country gentlemen, conservative enough to preserve ancient traditions, but in London the custom has died out. 

The rich leave their town houses and take their families to some fashionable seaside resort where they spend the holidays amid the discomforts of crowded hotel life; and the poor stay at home and enjoy their holidays according to their means and taste; but there are no yule logs nor any of the famed accessories of an old-time, Yuletide celebration. 

The Royal household, still in mourning for the late King Edward, will spend the holidays in a comparatively quiet manner. The King and Queen and the members of the Royal family will celebrate Christmas “en famille” at York Cottage, their charming estate in Norfolk. Although quietly and unostentatiously, elaborate preparations have been made for the Yule tide celebration. There will be plenty of good things for the table, including boar’s head and cygnet, and a liberal supply of plum pudding, made in accordance with the famous recipe, preserved in the Royal family for more than a century. 

There will be presents for all members of the family, a family gathering around the Christmas tree in the hall and a distribution of presents to the retainers of the King’s estate. King Edward loved to have a number of intimate friends around him at the Yuletide season and invariably had a large house party at Sandringham at that time, but King George, limited by the rules of mourning etiquette, will forego the pleasures of a gathering of congenial friends this Christmas, whatever he may choose to do in the future. 

Christmas trade was not quite so brisk as last year, owing to the unsettled condition of things caused by the excitement of the political campaign and the industrial strikes and disturbances which have considerably reduced the purchasing power of the poorer working classes. The demand for toys and other holiday goods of a cheaper grade has been larger in comparison than for some holiday seasons past. – 1910


Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J. Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia

Thursday, December 24, 2020

Kissing Under the Mistletoe

 


Mistletoe, one of America’s favorite holiday decorations, brings to mind an especially pleasant custom: that of catching an unsuspecting (or so it may seem) sweetheart “under the mistletoe” for a kiss. The green leaved, white-berried plant really does have quite a romatic history. References to it appear as far back in history as the days of fhe gladiators. The Romans made first recorded use of the plant as a symbol of peace. Enemies meeting under it were required to discard their weapons and declare a truce. Parallels in later history occur in Norse mythology, which records the mistletoe plant as a symbol of love. The custom of kissing beneath the bright leaves comes from the Norse marriage rite in which it was used as a major decoration.


A writer in the London Daily Telegraph conversing with a street-vender of imitated holly in Christmas week, asked him whether the mistletoe, of which a plentiful supply was in the market, was ever sold with artificial berries. “There’s a lot of rubbish talked about mistletoe,” said he, “and I dare say it’s very pretty to read about it in Christmas tales and to see it in Christmas pictures, but poor people don't care anything about it. It's all very well, perhaps, among the well-to-do sort of people, who can afford to invite old and young to all manner of gay goings-on, but among them that are always working and driving for a living, they got something else to think about when they get a chance of a bit of a jollification.’’ But even among the humblest of the laboring classes the young fellows have sweethearts, and at their Christmas parties, kissing under the mistletoe is surely start of the fun. “Well, that's where it is at, perhaps,” returned the old fellow, after a few moments’ reflection, “the young fellows don’t see the fun of it. They do their courting steadfast and with a hearty will, just in a manner of speaking, as they set about the work they get a living by. 


And when a young fellow tacks on to a young gal, meaning to marry her, he doesn’t usually see the force of being so very polite as to let another young fellow kiss her just because got a sprig of mistletoe in his hand or catches her passing under a bit of it hung up. It might go down in company where they practices genteel manners,” said Bill’s father, “but in homely circles like them round about the New Cut and Lambeth Walk, a young fellow who tried it on would most likely get his head punched, which, of course, would make a disturbance and spoil the harmony. No, sir, it isn’t in poor neighborhoods that mistletoe is much sought after. When there’s a glut of it, and you can buy a good-sized bush for about sixpence, it will sell in the Cut and such market places, but there isn't a hundredth part the hankering after it among poor people there is for holly.” — The Weekly Calistogan, 1882



Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J. Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia