wassailing

{{Short description|Christmas custom, originally English}}

{{Use British English|date=September 2021}}

{{merge|Wassail|discuss=Talk:Wassail#Merge proposal|date=December 2024}}

File:Shirehampton wassail music.jpg, Bristol]]

File:U.S. Army Band - Here We Come A-wassailing.ogg performed by the U.S. Army Band]]

The tradition of wassailing (also spelled wasselling)Sussex Entymology Doreathea Hurst, History and Antiquities of Horsham, Farncombe & Co, 1889 falls into two distinct categories: the house-visiting wassail and the orchard-visiting wassail. The house-visiting wassail, which traditionally occurs on the twelfth day of Christmastide known as Twelfth Night or Epiphany Eve (January 5), is the practice of people going door-to-door, singing and offering a drink from the wassail bowl in exchange for gifts; this practice still exists, but has largely been displaced by carol singing.{{cite web |last1=Bhagat |first1=Dhruti |title=The Origins and Practice of Holidays: Twelfth Night, Gurpurab Guru Gobindh Singh, Epiphany, Día de los Reyes |url=https://www.bpl.org/blogs/post/the-origins-and-practice-of-holidays-twelfth-night-gurpurab-guru-gobindh-singh-epiphany-dia-de-los-reyes/ |publisher=Boston Public Library |access-date=8 January 2025 |date=4 January 2019}}{{cite book|last1=Kvamme|first1=Torstein O.|title=The Christmas Carolers' Book in Song & Story|date=1935|publisher=Alfred Music|pages=6|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=43W_cwcQJQIC|isbn=9781457466618}} The orchard-visiting wassail refers to the custom of visiting orchards in cider-producing regions of England and singing to the trees to promote a good harvest for the coming year.{{cite web |last1=Castle |first1=Brian |title=Wassailing in a digital age |url=https://www.churchtimes.co.uk/articles/2018/21-december/features/features/wassailing-in-a-digital-age |publisher=Church Times |access-date=6 January 2025 |date=21 December 2018|quote=The ritual has obvious Christian features: wassailing is, effectively, blessing the tree.}}{{cite journal|last1=Palmer|first1=K.|last2=Patten|first2=R. W.|title=Some Notes on Wassailing and Ashen Faggots in South and West Somerset|journal=Folklore|date=December 1971|volume=82|issue=4|pages=281–291|doi=10.1080/0015587X.1971.9716741}} Notable traditional wassailing songs include "Here We Come a-Wassailing", "Gloucestershire Wassail", and "Gower Wassail".

Etymology

{{Wiktionary|wassail}}

{{main|Wassail#Etymology}}

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the word "wassail" originated as a borrowing from the Old Norse salutation ves heill, corresponding to Old English hál wes þú or wes hál; literally meaning 'be in good health' or 'be fortunate'. It was initially used in the sense of 'hail' or 'farewell'. Later it developed into the first part of a drinking formula "wassail...drinkhail". By {{c.}} 1300, the sense had extended to the drink itself, especially to the spiced ale used in Twelfth-night and Christmas Eve celebrations, and by 1598 it was being applied to the custom of drinking healths on those nights.{{Cite OED|wassail}}

Wassailing during Christmastide

Traditionally, the wassail is celebrated on the twelfth day of Christmastide, known as Twelfth Night or Epiphany Eve, being the day prior to the Epiphany.{{Cite book |title=The American Book of Days |last=Hatch |first=Jane M. |publisher=Wilson |year=1978 |isbn=9780824205935 |quote=January 5th: Twelfth Night or Epiphany Eve. Twelfth Night, the last evening of the traditional Twelve Days of Christmas, has been observed with festive celebration ever since the Middle Ages.}} In the liturgical kalendars of Western Christianity, including those of the Lutheran, Anglican and Roman Catholic denominations, Twelfth Night falls on January 5.{{cite book|quote=Anglicans, Lutherans and other churches that use the ecumenical Revised Common Lectionary will likely observe the four Sundays of Advent, maintaining the ancient emphasis on the eschatological (First Sunday), ascetic (Second and Third Sundays), and scriptural/historical (Fourth Sunday). Besides Christmas Eve/Day, they will observe a 12-day season of Christmas from 25 December to 5 January.|last=Truscott|first=Jeffrey A. |title=Worship|publisher=Armour Publishing|isbn=9789814305419|page=103}}{{cite web |last1=Mattson |first1=Bradley L. |last2=Lesher |first2=Nancy |title=The Season of Christmas |url=https://hopeepiscopal.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/ChristmasEve530.pdf |publisher=Hope Episcopal Church |access-date=8 January 2025 |page=2 |date=24 December 2023 |quote=Christmas or Christmastide is a season of the liturgical year in most Christian churches. For the Catholic, Lutheran, Anglican, and Methodist Churches, Christmastide begins on the 24th of December at sunset or Vespers, which is liturgically the beginning of Christmas Day. Most of December 24th is thus not part of Christmastide, but of Advent, the season in the Church Year that precedes Christmastide. In many liturgical calendars Christmastide is followed by the closely related season of Epiphany that commences at sunset on January 5th, a date known as “Twelfth Night”.}} Some people still wassail on "Old Twelvey Night", 17 January, as it would have been before the introduction of the Gregorian Calendar in 1752.{{cite web|title=Wassailing! - Notes On The Songs And Traditions|url=http://www.hymnsandcarolsofchristmas.com/Hymns_and_Carols/Notes_On_Carols/wassailing.htm|website=www.hymnsandcarolsofchristmas.com|access-date=7 January 2016}}{{cite book |last1=Ross |first1=Alice |last2=Stein |first2=Sharon |title=A Christmas Dinner |date=2014 |publisher=Red Rock Press |isbn=978-1-933176-48-2 |language=en |quote=For centuries, wassail punch was served in Britain from Christmas Eve to the Twelfth Night.}}

In the Middle Ages, the wassail was a reciprocal exchange between the feudal lords and their peasants as a form of recipient-initiated charitable giving, to be distinguished from begging. This point is made in the song "Here We Come A-wassailing", when the wassailers inform the lord of the house that

{{quote|we are not daily beggars that beg from door to door

But we are friendly neighbours whom you have seen before.}}

The lord of the manor would give food and drink to the peasants in exchange for their blessing and goodwill, i.e.

{{quote|Love and joy come to you,

And to you your wassail too;

And God bless you and send you

a Happy New Year

}}

This would be given in the form of the song being sung. Wassailing is the background practice against which an English carol such as "We Wish You a Merry Christmas" can be made sense of.[http://www.christmas-lyrics.org/we-wish-you-a-merry-christmas-lyrics.html We Wish You a Merry Christmas Lyrics] The carol lies in the English tradition where wealthy people of the community gave Christmas treats to the carol singers on Christmas Eve such as 'figgy puddings'.[http://www.worldofchristmas.net/christmas-carols/we-wish-you.html English Christmas Carols - Christmas Songs of England] In Dartmoor today, the Ashburton and Moorland Mission Community gathers in the barn at Newcombe Farm to sing Wassailing songs and pray for God’s blessing on the New Year.{{cite web |last1=Axford |first1=Chloe |title=New Year Wassail Asks for God's Blessing on Dartmoor Farming Communities |url=https://exeter.anglican.org/new-year-wassail-asks-for-gods-blessing-on-dartmoor-farming-communities/ |publisher=Diocese of Exeter |access-date=6 January 2025 |date=3 January 2023}}

Although wassailing is often described in innocuous and sometimes nostalgic terms—still practised in some parts of Scotland and Northern England on New Years Day as "first-footing"—the practice in England has not always been considered so innocent. Similar traditions have also been traced to Greece and the country of Georgia. Wassailing was associated with rowdy bands of young men who would enter the homes of wealthy neighbours and demand free food and drink (in a manner similar to the modern children's Halloween practice of trick-or-treating).{{cite news

|title=Take Cheer: Christmas has Been Out of Control for Centuries

|author=Matt Crenson

|date=22 December 2006

|newspaper=AP

|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=266&dat=20061222&id=2QMxAAAAIBAJ&sjid=wd8FAAAAIBAJ&pg=5640,7390993

}} If the householder refused, he was usually cursed, and occasionally his house was vandalized. The example of the exchange is seen in their demand for "figgy pudding" and "good cheer", i.e., the wassail beverage, without which the wassailers in the song will not leave; "We won't go until we get some, so bring some out here". Such complaints were also common in the early days of the United States, where the practice (and its negative connotations) had taken root by the early 1800s; it led to efforts from the American merchant class to promote a more sanitized Christmas.{{Cite news|url=https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2019-12-13/how-washington-irving-influenced-the-modern-christmas-santa|title=Christmas Was Invented in New York: The strange but probably true tale of how Washington Irving and a few contemporaries created the modern holiday in the early 1800s.|first=Justin|last=Fox|work=Bloomberg|date=December 13, 2019|access-date=December 24, 2019}}

The Orchard-visiting Wassail

{{main article|Apple Wassail}}

In the cider-producing West of England (primarily the counties of Devon, Somerset, Dorset, Gloucestershire and Herefordshire) wassailing also refers to drinking (and singing) the health of trees in the hopes that they might better thrive. Wassailing is also a traditional event in Jersey, Channel Islands where cider (cidre) made up the bulk of the economy before the 20th century. The format is much the same as that in England but with terms and songs often in Jèrriais.

17th-century English lyric poet Robert Herrick writes in his poem "The Wassail":{{Cite book|last=Herrick|first=Robert|title=Poems of Robert Herrick|publisher=Caxton Publishing Co|year=nd|editor-last=Beeching|editor-first=Henry C|series=The Golden Poets|location=London|pages=190}}

{{quote|Wassail the trees, that they may bear

You many a plum and many a pear:

For more or less fruits they will bring,

As you do give them wassailing.

|author=|title=|source=}}

File:Toast tree trolley.jpg Mari Lwyd, 2014]]

The purpose of wassailing is to awake the cider apple trees and to scare away evil spirits to ensure a good harvest of fruit in autumn.{{cite book

| last1 = Sue | first1 = Clifford

| last2 = Angela | first2 = King

| title = England in Particular: A Celebration of the Commonplace, the Local, the Vernacular and the Distinctive

| year = 2006

| publisher = Saltyard Books

| pages = 528

| isbn = 978-0340826164

}} The ceremonies of each wassail vary from village to village but they generally all have the same core elements. While wassailing, a hymn is usually recited, such as:

{{quote|Old apple tree, we wassail thee,

And hoping thou wilt bear:

For the Lord doth know where we shall be

Till apples come another year.

To bloom well, and to bear well,

So merry let us be:

Let every man take off his hat,

And shout to the old apple tree:

Old apple tree, we wassail thee,

And hoping thou wilt bear,

Hatfuls, capfuls and three bushel bagfulls

And a little heap under the stairs.

|author=|title=Wassail Song|source=}}

This incantation is followed by noise-making from the assembled crowd until the gunsmen give a final volley through the branches. The crowd then moves onto the next orchard. In the context of Christian observance, wassailing involves pronouncing a blessing on a tree so that it will bear fruit, often through the singing of a hymn.

As the largest cider producing region of the country, the West Country hosts historic wassails annually, such as Whimple in Devon and Carhampton in Somerset, both on 17 January, or old Twelfth Night. Many new, commercial or "revival" wassails have also been introduced throughout the West Country, such as those in Stoke Gabriel and Sandford, Devon. Clevedon in North Somerset holds an annual wassailing event at the Clevedon Community Orchard, combining the traditional elements of the festival with the entertainment and music of the Bristol Morris Men.

Nineteenth-century wassailers of Somerset would sing the following lyrics after drinking the cider until they were "merry and gay":

{{quote|Apple tree, apple tree, we all come to wassail thee,

Bear this year and next year to bloom and to blow,

Hat fulls, cap fulls, three cornered sack fills,

Hip, Hip, Hip, hurrah,

Holler biys, holler hurrah.

|source="Reminiscences of Life in the parish of Street, Somersetshire dated 1909 at pages 25-26 written by an "old inhabitant" William Pursey of Street 1836-1919. This is the art of wassail.

}}

A folktale from Somerset reflecting this custom tells of the Apple Tree Man, the spirit of the oldest apple tree in an orchard, and in whom the fertility of the orchard is thought to reside. In the tale a man offers his last mug of mulled cider to the trees in his orchard and is rewarded by the Apple Tree Man who reveals to him the location of buried gold.Briggs, Katharine (1976). An Encyclopedia of Fairies. Pantheon Books. pp. 9–10. {{ISBN|0394409183}}.Briggs, Katharine and Tongue, Ruth (1965). Folktales of England. University of Chicago Press. pp. 44–47. {{ISBN|0226074943}}.

Wassail bowls<span class="anchor" id="Wassail bowl"></span>

File:Twelfth Night wassail.jpg

Wassail bowls, generally in the shape of goblets, have been preserved. The Worshipful Company of Grocers made a very elaborate one in the seventeenth century, decorated with silver.http://www.bmagic.org.uk/objects/1965T391 Birmingham Museums & Art Gallery It is so large that it must have passed around as a "loving cup" so that many members of the guild could drink from it.{{citation needed|date=June 2011}}

In the English Christmas carol "Gloucestershire Wassail", the singers tell that their "bowl is made of the white maple tree, with a wassailing bowl we'll drink to thee". As white maple does not grow natively in Europe,{{Silvics |volume=2 |genus=Acer |species=saccharinum |first=William J. |last=Gabriel}}{{BONAP|ref |genus=Acer |species=saccharinum |state=1}} the lyric may be a reference to sycamore maple or field maple, both of which do,{{cite web |title=CABI Invasive species compendium: Acer pseudoplatanus (sycamore) |url=http://www.cabi.org/isc/datasheet/2884 |publisher=The Centre for Agriculture and Bioscience International (CABI) |location=Wallingford, U.K. |access-date=18 May 2016 }}Mitchell, A. F. (1974). A Field Guide to the Trees of Britain and Northern Europe. Collins {{ISBN|0-00-212035-6}} and both of which have white-looking wood.{{cite web |url=http://www.scottishwood.co.uk/hardwoods.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191127204618/http://www.scottishwood.co.uk/hardwoods.htm |url-status=dead |archive-date=27 November 2019 |title=Sycamore and maple |work=All about hardwoods |publisher=Scottish Wood |access-date=6 March 2016}}{{cite web|url=http://www.british-trees.com/treeguide/maples/nbnsys0000003193.htm|title=Field maple_Woodland Trust|access-date=2010-08-24|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100913021530/http://www.british-trees.com/treeguide/maples/nbnsys0000003193.htm|archive-date=2010-09-13|url-status=dead}} This is reinforced by an 1890s written account from a man describing the wassailing bowl of his friend from Gloucestershire:

{{Quote|text=The bowl was one of those wooden sycamore or maple ones used to hold boiled potatoes on a farm kitchen table.{{cite web |last1=Kidson |first1=Frank |last2=Davies |first2=Gwilym |title=Gloucestershire Wassail |url=http://www.gloschristmas.com/wassail/gloucestershire-wassail-3/ |website=Gloschristmas.com |access-date=28 November 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191128001021/http://www.gloschristmas.com/wassail/gloucestershire-wassail-3/ |archive-date=28 November 2019 |language=en}}}}

Alternatively however, many formal publications from the 1800s list the lyric simply as saying "maplin tree", without mentioning "white".Chappell, William. [https://archive.org/details/collectionofnati00crot/page/160 A Collection of National English Airs Consisting of Ancient Song Ballad & Dance Tunes, Interspersed with Remarks and Anecdote, and Preceded by an Essay of English Minstrelsy], London: Chappell, 1838, pp. 161–162Bell, Robert. [https://archive.org/details/ancientpoemsbal01dixogoog/page/n190 Ancient Poems Ballads and Songs of the Peasantry of England], London: John W. Parker and Son, West Strand, 1757, pp. 183–184Husk, William Henry. [https://archive.org/details/songsofnativityb00husk/page/150 Songs of the Nativity], London: John Camden Hotten, Chiswick Press, 1884, p. 150 Additionally, the lyric appears to have varied significantly depending on location and other factors, calling into question how literal the term was and/or how varied the construction of wassail bowls was. For example, a 1913 publication by Ralph Vaughan Williams, who had recorded the lyric in 1909 by a wassailer in Herefordshire,{{cite web|last=Davies|first=Gwilym|title=Wassail Song (coll Vaughan Williams)|website=Glostrad.com|url=http://glostrad.com/wassail-song-coll-vaughan-williams/?fwp_search_browse=gloucestershire+wassail|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191129102823/http://glostrad.com/wassail-song-coll-vaughan-williams/?fwp_search_browse=gloucestershire+wassail|url-status=dead|archive-date=2019-11-29}} recorded it as "green maple".{{cite web|last=Vaughan Williams|first=Ralph|title=Gloucestershire Wassail (Coll. Vaughan Williams)|website=Glostrad.com|url=http://glostrad.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/870-Unknown-Wassail-Vaughan-Williams.pdf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191031234405/http://glostrad.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/870-Unknown-Wassail-Vaughan-Williams.pdf|url-status=dead|archive-date=2019-10-31}} Another version from Brockweir{{cite web|last=Davies|first=Gwilym|title=Wassail Song (Brockweir)|website=Glostrad.com|url=http://glostrad.com/wassail-song-brockweir/?fwp_search_browse=gloucestershire+wassail|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191129102426/http://glostrad.com/wassail-song-brockweir/?fwp_search_browse=gloucestershire+wassail|url-status=dead|archive-date=2019-11-29}} listed the bowl as being made from mulberry.{{cite web|last=Wortley|first=Russell|title=Wassail Song Brockweir|website=Glostrad.com|url=http://glostrad.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/600-Charley-Williams-Wassail-Brockweir.pdf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191127195448/http://glostrad.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/600-Charley-Williams-Wassail-Brockweir.pdf|url-status=dead|archive-date=2019-11-27}}

See also

References

  • [http://www.oed.com/ Oxford English Dictionary]
  • [http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/wassail%5B2%5D Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary "Wassail."]
  • [http://www.bmagic.org.uk/objects/1965T391 Birmingham Museums & Art Gallery] Wassail Bowl
  • "Reminiscences of Life" in the parish of Street, Somersetshire dated 1909 at pages 25-26 written by an "old inhabitant" William Pursey of Street 1836-1919. This is the art of wassail.

Notes

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

  • {{Cite news |last=Castle |first=Stephen |last2=Testa |first2=Andrew |date=2025-02-13 |title=Toast, Trees and a Wassailing Queen: An Ancient English Ritual Is Back |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/13/world/europe/england-wassailing-cider-tradition.html |access-date=2025-03-01 |work=The New York Times}}