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Published: Wednesday, 13 December 2023 at 16:03 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.

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Christmas carol lyrics and meanings

Wassail! Wassail! All over the Town! meaning / The Gloucestershire Wassail meaning

Christmastide luck-visits or ‘goodings’ formed a widespread custom in England during the early modern period. Part of a seasonal relaxation of the strict forms and order of society, they stretched back to the Middle Ages. The Gloucester Wassail opens with a keyword in the luck visitor’s vocabulary. One that grew to carry a meaning not so far removed from today’s ‘trick or treat’.

Wassail derives, by way of Norman French, from the Old Norse salutation wesheill, literally ‘be whole’ or ‘be well’. Joseph Strutt, in the third volume of his The Sports and Pastimes of the People of England (1801), refers to the wassail bowl, ‘which was carried about by young women on New Year’s Eve, who went from door to door … singing.’ The company of carollers expected ‘a small gratuity in return’.

The white bread mentioned in The Gloucestershire Wassail’s first verse was a foodstuff of the wealthy. That suggests that wassail singers began their rounds at the ‘big house’. The choristers were also on the lookout for ‘Christmas pie’, made from game, and ‘a bowl of the best’.

The Holly and the Ivy meaning

Known in Germany as ‘Christ’s thorn’, holly or the holy-tree served as an emblem of the Roman feast of Saturnalia. The Saxons also used holly and ivy in their winter rites. The Druids regarded ivy as a portent of death. However, the early Christians came to associate the plant’s evergreen properties with everlasting life.

Cecil Sharp notated the words and melody of the most familiar ‘Holly and Ivy’ carol from the singing of Mrs Mary Clayton at Chipping Campden, Gloucestershire. Sharp drew on other sources for the version he published in 1911. That one has since become a staple of the Christmas carol repertoire. Several ‘holly and ivy’ carols survive from the medieval period. In each of them, ‘masculine’ holly and ‘feminine’ ivy are presented as rivals.

Here is the popular melody composed by Henry Walford Davies: