Christmastide - online book

Its History, Festivities And Carols

Home Main Menu Order Support About Search



Share page  


Previous Contents Next

— 52 —
sion of conferring knighthood on his children, the following spectacles;—' Adam et Eve;' ' Les Trois Rois;?' Le Meurte des Innocens;' N. S. riant avec Sa Mere, et mangeant des pommes; Herode et Caiphe en mitre, &c. In France, and in Spain, where they had their Autos Sacramentales, as they called these mysteries, from an equally early date, these performances have been continued to modern times among the country people, and most of their collections of carols contain two or three short mysteries. The plays exhibited at court, during the Christmas, were probably different from those of the clergy, and more in the nature of mummeries, or disguisings, with pageants, until the time of Queen Elizabeth, when the regular drama was performed before her, a practice which has been renewed in the elegant Christmas festivities of our present Queen.
After Edward the Fourth became the undisputed king of this country, he resumed the custom of keeping Christmas with pomp, wearing his crown, and keeping his estate, and making presents to his household; but the parliament never­theless, in 1465, thought it necessary to pass one of those useless acts against excess in dress, forbidding cloth of gold, and shoes with pikes more than two inches long, to any under a lord. In 1461, also, all diceing, or playing at cards, was pro­hibited except at Christmas. Cards forming then, as since, an essential part, in many places, of the Christmas amusements. Among the Christmas gifts, during this reign, several were given to players and minstrels. Margery Paston, in a letter to her husband John Paston, 24th Dec, 1484, says that his eldest son had gone to Lady Morley to know how the Christ­mas next after her husband's death was kept, and that there were no disguisings, nor harping, nor luting, nor singing, nor
Previous Contents Next