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  • Dec. 24, 1881
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  • OLD CHRISTMAS CUSTOMS, SUPERSTITIONS, &c.
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Old Christmas Customs, Superstitions, &C.

hires which distinguish them from the rest exist rather in name than in reality . Formerly there seem to havo been the general rejoicings , which lasted throughout the whole- of the season , and at the same time special customs and observances peculiar to some of the more prominent days . Thns the revels over which presided the Lord , or , as ho was sometimes called , the Abbot of Misrule , lasted tho greater

part of the holidays ; so did the ceremonial connected with the election and reign of the Boy Bishop , an institution said to havo been derived from the Festival of Fools . On tho other hand , tho King of the Bean ruled only on Twelfth Day , having been elected to his office the evening previous , while the King of the Cockneys was duly honoured on Childermas or Innocents' Day . Bnt to give a description of some of these old customs .

Many writers are of opinion that the Lord of Misrnle was peculiar to England , foreigners especially considering him a personage rarely "to be met with out of our conntry . Strntt , however , thinks he was " well known on the Continent , where he probably received his first honours , " and ho adds , " In this kingdom his power and his dignities suffered no diminution ; but on the

contrary , were established by royal authority , and continued after they had ceased to exist elsewhere . Bnt even with ns his government has been extinct for many years , and his name and offices are nearly forgotten . " Holinshed , with reference to Christmas , speaks of it as "what time thero is always ono appointed to make sporte at conrte , called commonly lorde of misrule , whose office is not unknown

to such as have bene brought np in noblemen's houses , and among great housekeepers which use liberal feasting in tho season . " Stow writes , " At the feast of Christmas , in the King ' s Conrt , wherever he chanced to reside , there was appointed a lord of misrnle , or master of merry disports ; the same merry fellow made his appearance at tho house of every nobleman and person of distinction , and among the

rest the lord mayor of London and the sheriffs , had severally of them their lord of misrule ever contending , without qnarrel or offence , who shonld make the rarest pastimes to delight tho beholders . The pageant potentate began his rule nt Allhallow Eve , and continued the same till tho morrow after tho Feast of tho Purification , in which space there were fine and subtle disgnisings , masks , and

mummeries . Occasionally , it happened , as in the fifth year of Edward "VT . ' s reign that a gentleman of position and ability was appointed to preside over the pastimes . On this occasion it was a certain George Ferrers , who was a lawyer , a poet , and an historian , of whom Holinshed remarks , " And ho being of better calling than commonly his predecessors had been before received all his commissions

and warrauntes by the name of master of tho Kinge ' s pastimes ; which gentleman so well supplied his office both of show and snndry sights , and devises of rare invention , and in act of divers interludes , and matters of pastime , played by persons , as not only satisfied tho common sort , but also wero vorie well liked , and allowed by the Council and others of skill in lyke pastimes ; but best by the young

king himselfe , ns appeared by his princely libnralitie in rewarding that service . " On the other hand , Philip Stnbbs , in his "Anatomio of Abuses , " speaks in tho reverse of complimentary terms , showing how " the wilde heades of the parish- . . . chuse them a graund captainc of mischiefe , whom thoy innoble with the title of Lord of Misrule , and him they crown with great solemnity and adopt for

their king . " The newly " annoynted " sovereign chooses a number of followers like himself , who are invested with their liveries and bedeck themselves " with FcarfFcs , ribbons , and laces , hanged all over with gold ringes , pretions stones , and other jewels , " as well as with bells on their legs , nitcl " rich handkerchiefes in their handes , and sometimes laid nerosso over their shoulders and necks , borrowe I , for the most , part , of their pretie Mopssis

and loving Bossies . " A procession is formed , and they march to the chnrch with " their hobbyhorses , their dragons , and other antiques , " as well as with their pipers and their thnndoring drnmmers , "danncing and st ' nging like devils incarnate . " Those who gfive them no money were " mocked and flouted shamefnily , " many being " dived over heade and eares in water , or otherwise most horribly abnsed . "

At Cambridge the functions of Lord of Misrule were entrusted to a Master of Arts , who was regularly elected to superintend tho annual representation of Latin plays by the students , and also took general charge of their games and diversions during the Christmas season . Ho was styled Jwpcrafor , or Prefect us Lndorum . A similar custom

prevailed at Oxford , and tho Templars regarded the office as an honourable one , while in 1035 this mock representative of royalty is said to have expended in the discharge of his duties no less a sum that £ 2 , 000 out of his own purse . In consideration of this irinnificence he was knighted nt the close of his brief reign by Charles I . at Whitehall .

Richard Evelyn , father of the famous anthor cf the " Diary , " and a Deputy Lientcnant for Surrey and Sussex , has left on rcco d his rnles defining the functions of a Christmas Lord of Misrule on his estate at Wootton : — "Imprimis , I give free leave to Owen Flood , my trumpeter , gentleman , to bo Lord of Misrule of all good ( ri ders during the twelve days . And , also , I give free leave to the said Owen Flood to command all and every person or persons whatsoever , as well servants as others , to bo at his command whenever he shall

sound his trumpet or music , aud to do hint good service , as though I were present myself , at thoir perils . . . I give full power and faithority to his lordship to break np all locks , bolts , bars , doors , and latches , and to fling tip all doors ont of hinges , to come at those who presume to disobey his lordship ' s command . God save the King . " The custom of electing and investing tho Boy Bishop was , r . s has been suggested , derived from the Festival of Fools , and is traceable

as far back ns tho fourteenth century . One of the choir , habited ir episcopal vestments , took the title of Bishop on tho Feast of Sfc Nicholas ( Gth December ) , or that of the Innocents ( 28 th December ) . or both . His fellows , dressed like priests , obeyed him , ami ho performed all tho offices of a bishop and his prebendaries , except that o ( the mass . Tho custom was abolished by proclamation of the Kitty aud Council in 1512 .

Old Christmas Customs, Superstitions, &C.

Strntt , quoting from Dngdale , makes mention of tho Society of Lincoln ' s Inn having had anciently an officer , chosen at this season , who was honoured with the title of King of Christmas Day , because ) he presided in tho hall npon that day . This temporary potentate had a Marshal and a Steward to attend upon him . Tho marshal , in tho absence of the monarch , was permitted to assume his state , and

upon New Year ' s Day he sat as king in the hall , when the Master of the Revels , during tho time of dining , supplied tho marshal ' s place . Upon Childermas , or Innocents' Day , they had another officer , dene , minated tho King of tho Cockneys , who also presided on the day of his appointment , and had his inferior officers to wait upon him . Another quaint old custom , which still survives in a modified form ,

is associated with the King of the Bean , whose reign commenced on the vigil of tho Epiphany , or tho day itself , 6 th Jannary . " It was a common Christmas gambol in both our Universities , and continned "—at the commencement of last century— "to be used in other places , to give the name of king or queen to that person whose extraordinary good luck it was to hit upon that part of a divided

cake which was honoured above tho others by having a bean in it . " According to another version , derive *! from an old Calendar of tho Romish Chnrch , and referred to by the anthor we are quoting , " On the fifth of Jannary , the vigil of tho Epiphany , the Kings of tho Bean are created ; and on the sixth the feast of the kings shall bo held , and also of the queen , and let tho banqneting bo continued for

many days . " It appears from an entry in a Computus of the 8 th year of Edward III . that in that year " this majestic title was con . ferred npon one of the king ' s minstrels . " At least there is in it an entry to the effect that " sixty shillings "—a very considerable sum in those days—wero given by the king upon the day of tho Epiphmy to B , egan tho trumpeter and his associates , tho Court Minstrels , iu

the name of the King of tho Bean . " Wo havo already referred to Childermas day and the custom in Lincoln's Inn of electing a King of the Cockneys , a person of somo distinction , as Douglas montions an order issued in 1717 by King Henry VIII . regnlating tho service that should be done him and the order to be maintained by his officers . One other custom

thero was , however , the abolition of which our young friends will not regret , namely , that of whipping the children on the morning of this festival , so that " the memorial of Herod ' s murder of the Innocents might stick the closer , and so , in a moderate proportion , to apt over the crueltie again in kinde . " The infliction of snch a memorial may bavo been impressive , but it mnst also have been a little painful .

The day in question , too , was regarded as of ill-omen , and hence the superstition against being married on its anniversary , and also the belief that it was unlucky to put on new clothes , pare the nails , or begin anything of moment . Boxing Day , though it has latterly been elevated to the rank of a Bank Holiday , and enjoys the fnrther honour of inaugurating tho

Pantomime season at the principal theatres , has its drawbacks in the sight of many people . Thocnstom from which it derives its name is not so ancient as somo we have enumerated . Yet as far back as 1731 , we find a writer in a well-known work on London in the eighteenth century recounting his experiences in a somewhat doleful strain . " By that time , " says he , " I was up , my servants conld

do do nothing but run to the door . Inquiring the reason , I was answered , the people wero come for their ' Christmas Box ; ' this was logic to me ; but I fonnd at last that because I had laid ont a great deal of ready money with my brewer , baker , and other tradesmen , they kindly thought it my duty to present their servants with some money for tho favour of having their goods . This provoked me

a little , but being told it was ' the custom , ' I complied . These wero followed by tho watch , tho beadles , dustmen , and an innumerable tribe ; bnt what vexed mo tho most was the clerk , who has an extraordinary place , and makes as good an appearance as most trades , men in the parish ; to see him come a boxing , alias begging , I thought was intolerable : however , I found it was ' the custom , ' too , so I gave

him half-a-crown , as I was likewise obliged to do to tho bellman , for breaking my rest for many nights together . " But even "boxing " may be set down as tolerable , especially when we think of the poorlypaid postmen and others , to whom tho shillings or half CTOWDS we disburse are veritably a godsend . Of the sreneral character of tho festivities we are on the eve of

indulging in we need say little . What they were last year and the year before , that will they be now and for years to come . The spirit of old Father Christmas is unchangeable . No matter how great oi how modest the attractions of tho festive board , his aim is to imbne nil who surround it with the same kindly feeling towards their felloweroattires . Ho knows no distinction of persons , but greets all alike

with the same jovial welcome . And our reception of him is equally jovial . We are glad to see him again among us ; as glad as were our forefathers in their day ; as glad , wo doubt not , as will be our de . scendants . We have little to add , and that little shall take the form of an old sontr , said to be tho first drinking song composed in England , and in

Hone ' s opinion an abridged version of an old Christmas carol in Norman-French , which hns been translated by Mr . Douce . It would he difficult to find a more appropriate conclusion to these jotting s about Christmas . " Lordliness , from a distant home ,

To seek old Christmas are we come , Who loves onr minstrelsy—And here , unless report mis-say , Tiic greybeard dwells ; and on this day Keeps yearly wassel , ever gay With festive mirth and "lee .

" Lordlings , lift , for we tell you true , Christinas loves the jolly crew That cloudy care defy ; His liberal board is deftly sprea : ! With manchefc loaves and wastel bread ; His guests with fish and flesh arc led , Nor lack the stately pye .

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1881-12-24, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 19 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_24121881/page/9/.
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TO OUR READERS. Article 1
VOTING IN GRAND LODGE. Article 1
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OUR CHRISTMAS LODGE OF EMERGENCY. Article 2
REVEWS. Article 4
NOTICES OF MEETINGS. Article 5
Obituary. Article 7
MEETING OF THE LODGE OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 7
THE THEATRES, &c. Article 7
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OLD CHRISTMAS CUSTOMS, SUPERSTITIONS, &c. Article 8
THE DUKE OF ALBANY AND THE FREEMASONS. Article 10
FREEMASONRY IN NORTHUMBERLAND. Article 10
ROYAL ARCH. Article 10
SIR HUGH MYDDELTON CHAPTER, No. 1602. Article 10
THE MYSTERIOUS ORGANIST. Article 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
INSTALLATION MEETINGS, &c. Article 12
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Old Christmas Customs, Superstitions, &C.

hires which distinguish them from the rest exist rather in name than in reality . Formerly there seem to havo been the general rejoicings , which lasted throughout the whole- of the season , and at the same time special customs and observances peculiar to some of the more prominent days . Thns the revels over which presided the Lord , or , as ho was sometimes called , the Abbot of Misrule , lasted tho greater

part of the holidays ; so did the ceremonial connected with the election and reign of the Boy Bishop , an institution said to havo been derived from the Festival of Fools . On tho other hand , tho King of the Bean ruled only on Twelfth Day , having been elected to his office the evening previous , while the King of the Cockneys was duly honoured on Childermas or Innocents' Day . Bnt to give a description of some of these old customs .

Many writers are of opinion that the Lord of Misrnle was peculiar to England , foreigners especially considering him a personage rarely "to be met with out of our conntry . Strntt , however , thinks he was " well known on the Continent , where he probably received his first honours , " and ho adds , " In this kingdom his power and his dignities suffered no diminution ; but on the

contrary , were established by royal authority , and continued after they had ceased to exist elsewhere . Bnt even with ns his government has been extinct for many years , and his name and offices are nearly forgotten . " Holinshed , with reference to Christmas , speaks of it as "what time thero is always ono appointed to make sporte at conrte , called commonly lorde of misrule , whose office is not unknown

to such as have bene brought np in noblemen's houses , and among great housekeepers which use liberal feasting in tho season . " Stow writes , " At the feast of Christmas , in the King ' s Conrt , wherever he chanced to reside , there was appointed a lord of misrnle , or master of merry disports ; the same merry fellow made his appearance at tho house of every nobleman and person of distinction , and among the

rest the lord mayor of London and the sheriffs , had severally of them their lord of misrule ever contending , without qnarrel or offence , who shonld make the rarest pastimes to delight tho beholders . The pageant potentate began his rule nt Allhallow Eve , and continued the same till tho morrow after tho Feast of tho Purification , in which space there were fine and subtle disgnisings , masks , and

mummeries . Occasionally , it happened , as in the fifth year of Edward "VT . ' s reign that a gentleman of position and ability was appointed to preside over the pastimes . On this occasion it was a certain George Ferrers , who was a lawyer , a poet , and an historian , of whom Holinshed remarks , " And ho being of better calling than commonly his predecessors had been before received all his commissions

and warrauntes by the name of master of tho Kinge ' s pastimes ; which gentleman so well supplied his office both of show and snndry sights , and devises of rare invention , and in act of divers interludes , and matters of pastime , played by persons , as not only satisfied tho common sort , but also wero vorie well liked , and allowed by the Council and others of skill in lyke pastimes ; but best by the young

king himselfe , ns appeared by his princely libnralitie in rewarding that service . " On the other hand , Philip Stnbbs , in his "Anatomio of Abuses , " speaks in tho reverse of complimentary terms , showing how " the wilde heades of the parish- . . . chuse them a graund captainc of mischiefe , whom thoy innoble with the title of Lord of Misrule , and him they crown with great solemnity and adopt for

their king . " The newly " annoynted " sovereign chooses a number of followers like himself , who are invested with their liveries and bedeck themselves " with FcarfFcs , ribbons , and laces , hanged all over with gold ringes , pretions stones , and other jewels , " as well as with bells on their legs , nitcl " rich handkerchiefes in their handes , and sometimes laid nerosso over their shoulders and necks , borrowe I , for the most , part , of their pretie Mopssis

and loving Bossies . " A procession is formed , and they march to the chnrch with " their hobbyhorses , their dragons , and other antiques , " as well as with their pipers and their thnndoring drnmmers , "danncing and st ' nging like devils incarnate . " Those who gfive them no money were " mocked and flouted shamefnily , " many being " dived over heade and eares in water , or otherwise most horribly abnsed . "

At Cambridge the functions of Lord of Misrule were entrusted to a Master of Arts , who was regularly elected to superintend tho annual representation of Latin plays by the students , and also took general charge of their games and diversions during the Christmas season . Ho was styled Jwpcrafor , or Prefect us Lndorum . A similar custom

prevailed at Oxford , and tho Templars regarded the office as an honourable one , while in 1035 this mock representative of royalty is said to have expended in the discharge of his duties no less a sum that £ 2 , 000 out of his own purse . In consideration of this irinnificence he was knighted nt the close of his brief reign by Charles I . at Whitehall .

Richard Evelyn , father of the famous anthor cf the " Diary , " and a Deputy Lientcnant for Surrey and Sussex , has left on rcco d his rnles defining the functions of a Christmas Lord of Misrule on his estate at Wootton : — "Imprimis , I give free leave to Owen Flood , my trumpeter , gentleman , to bo Lord of Misrule of all good ( ri ders during the twelve days . And , also , I give free leave to the said Owen Flood to command all and every person or persons whatsoever , as well servants as others , to bo at his command whenever he shall

sound his trumpet or music , aud to do hint good service , as though I were present myself , at thoir perils . . . I give full power and faithority to his lordship to break np all locks , bolts , bars , doors , and latches , and to fling tip all doors ont of hinges , to come at those who presume to disobey his lordship ' s command . God save the King . " The custom of electing and investing tho Boy Bishop was , r . s has been suggested , derived from the Festival of Fools , and is traceable

as far back ns tho fourteenth century . One of the choir , habited ir episcopal vestments , took the title of Bishop on tho Feast of Sfc Nicholas ( Gth December ) , or that of the Innocents ( 28 th December ) . or both . His fellows , dressed like priests , obeyed him , ami ho performed all tho offices of a bishop and his prebendaries , except that o ( the mass . Tho custom was abolished by proclamation of the Kitty aud Council in 1512 .

Old Christmas Customs, Superstitions, &C.

Strntt , quoting from Dngdale , makes mention of tho Society of Lincoln ' s Inn having had anciently an officer , chosen at this season , who was honoured with the title of King of Christmas Day , because ) he presided in tho hall npon that day . This temporary potentate had a Marshal and a Steward to attend upon him . Tho marshal , in tho absence of the monarch , was permitted to assume his state , and

upon New Year ' s Day he sat as king in the hall , when the Master of the Revels , during tho time of dining , supplied tho marshal ' s place . Upon Childermas , or Innocents' Day , they had another officer , dene , minated tho King of tho Cockneys , who also presided on the day of his appointment , and had his inferior officers to wait upon him . Another quaint old custom , which still survives in a modified form ,

is associated with the King of the Bean , whose reign commenced on the vigil of tho Epiphany , or tho day itself , 6 th Jannary . " It was a common Christmas gambol in both our Universities , and continned "—at the commencement of last century— "to be used in other places , to give the name of king or queen to that person whose extraordinary good luck it was to hit upon that part of a divided

cake which was honoured above tho others by having a bean in it . " According to another version , derive *! from an old Calendar of tho Romish Chnrch , and referred to by the anthor we are quoting , " On the fifth of Jannary , the vigil of tho Epiphany , the Kings of tho Bean are created ; and on the sixth the feast of the kings shall bo held , and also of the queen , and let tho banqneting bo continued for

many days . " It appears from an entry in a Computus of the 8 th year of Edward III . that in that year " this majestic title was con . ferred npon one of the king ' s minstrels . " At least there is in it an entry to the effect that " sixty shillings "—a very considerable sum in those days—wero given by the king upon the day of tho Epiphmy to B , egan tho trumpeter and his associates , tho Court Minstrels , iu

the name of the King of tho Bean . " Wo havo already referred to Childermas day and the custom in Lincoln's Inn of electing a King of the Cockneys , a person of somo distinction , as Douglas montions an order issued in 1717 by King Henry VIII . regnlating tho service that should be done him and the order to be maintained by his officers . One other custom

thero was , however , the abolition of which our young friends will not regret , namely , that of whipping the children on the morning of this festival , so that " the memorial of Herod ' s murder of the Innocents might stick the closer , and so , in a moderate proportion , to apt over the crueltie again in kinde . " The infliction of snch a memorial may bavo been impressive , but it mnst also have been a little painful .

The day in question , too , was regarded as of ill-omen , and hence the superstition against being married on its anniversary , and also the belief that it was unlucky to put on new clothes , pare the nails , or begin anything of moment . Boxing Day , though it has latterly been elevated to the rank of a Bank Holiday , and enjoys the fnrther honour of inaugurating tho

Pantomime season at the principal theatres , has its drawbacks in the sight of many people . Thocnstom from which it derives its name is not so ancient as somo we have enumerated . Yet as far back as 1731 , we find a writer in a well-known work on London in the eighteenth century recounting his experiences in a somewhat doleful strain . " By that time , " says he , " I was up , my servants conld

do do nothing but run to the door . Inquiring the reason , I was answered , the people wero come for their ' Christmas Box ; ' this was logic to me ; but I fonnd at last that because I had laid ont a great deal of ready money with my brewer , baker , and other tradesmen , they kindly thought it my duty to present their servants with some money for tho favour of having their goods . This provoked me

a little , but being told it was ' the custom , ' I complied . These wero followed by tho watch , tho beadles , dustmen , and an innumerable tribe ; bnt what vexed mo tho most was the clerk , who has an extraordinary place , and makes as good an appearance as most trades , men in the parish ; to see him come a boxing , alias begging , I thought was intolerable : however , I found it was ' the custom , ' too , so I gave

him half-a-crown , as I was likewise obliged to do to tho bellman , for breaking my rest for many nights together . " But even "boxing " may be set down as tolerable , especially when we think of the poorlypaid postmen and others , to whom tho shillings or half CTOWDS we disburse are veritably a godsend . Of the sreneral character of tho festivities we are on the eve of

indulging in we need say little . What they were last year and the year before , that will they be now and for years to come . The spirit of old Father Christmas is unchangeable . No matter how great oi how modest the attractions of tho festive board , his aim is to imbne nil who surround it with the same kindly feeling towards their felloweroattires . Ho knows no distinction of persons , but greets all alike

with the same jovial welcome . And our reception of him is equally jovial . We are glad to see him again among us ; as glad as were our forefathers in their day ; as glad , wo doubt not , as will be our de . scendants . We have little to add , and that little shall take the form of an old sontr , said to be tho first drinking song composed in England , and in

Hone ' s opinion an abridged version of an old Christmas carol in Norman-French , which hns been translated by Mr . Douce . It would he difficult to find a more appropriate conclusion to these jotting s about Christmas . " Lordliness , from a distant home ,

To seek old Christmas are we come , Who loves onr minstrelsy—And here , unless report mis-say , Tiic greybeard dwells ; and on this day Keeps yearly wassel , ever gay With festive mirth and "lee .

" Lordlings , lift , for we tell you true , Christinas loves the jolly crew That cloudy care defy ; His liberal board is deftly sprea : ! With manchefc loaves and wastel bread ; His guests with fish and flesh arc led , Nor lack the stately pye .

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