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Published: Thursday, 12 December 2024 at 16:27 PM


Countless millions today know the tune, if not the words, of at least one traditional Christmas carol. Thanks to dogged scholarship by twentieth-century collectors and editors, we can unlock the meaning and trace the roots of our favourite carols. The following examples should add spice to flavour ten of the most popular pieces in the Christmas repertoire. Here are some common Christmas carol lyrics and their meanings.

Find hundreds of Christmas carol lyrics on our website

Christmas carol and meanings: the messages behind your favourite carols

Jump to:

1. 12 Days of Christmas
2. The Holly and the Ivy
3. O Come, all ye Faithful
4. Good King Wenceslas
5. The Sans Day Carol
6. I Saw Three Ships
7. The Coventry Carol
8. The Boar’s Head Carol
9. The Seven Joys of Mary
10. King Herod and the Cock
11. Wassail! Wassail! All Over the Town!
12. Past Three O’Clock

12 Days of Christmas meaning

And you thought this one was just a fun, whimsical list of gifts? Well, on one level, it certainly is just that, but…

The popular counting song and Christmas carol ‘12 Days of Christmas‘ has also been interpreted as a tool for catechism (essentially, a summary of the principles of the Christian religion) during periods of Catholic persecution in England. Each gift is thought to symbolise aspects of faith. So, for example, the partridge in a pear tree represents Christ, while The two turtle doves represent the Old and New Testaments of the Bible.

The three French hens stand for the three Christian virtues of Faith, Hope and Charity, while the four calling birds represent the four Gospels and/or the four evangelists.

Still with us? OK, then! The five golden rings stand in for the first five books of the Old Testament, while the six geese a-laying are the six days that God spent creating the Earth. Seven swans a-swimming? The seven sacraments, or gifts of the Holy Spirit.