It’s got doves, hens and, of course, a partridge, but Stephen Moss explores how a much-loved carol may be all about birds, plus why the robin rules Christmas.

By Stephen Moss

Published: Tuesday, 05 December 2023 at 17:02 PM


Like many ancient rhymes, stories and songs, The Twelve Days of Christmas has been the subject of countless explanations of its ‘real meaning’.

Some have suggested that it is an ancient version of a wedding list – a series of increasingly lavish gifts presented to a married couple, from a humble partridge to an entire drumming band.

Others have seen a more sinister meaning in the verse, speculating that it was originally written in code during the Protestant Reformation, to teach Catholic children their faith. In this interpretation, three French hens represent the Father, Son and Holy Spirit; four colly birds, the gospels; 12 drummers drumming the Apostles, and so on.

As a lifelong birder, I have another suggestion: that each of the carol’s 12 lines represents a bird. Given that the first four lines, along with the sixth and seventh, are explicitly avian, I suggest that the whole verse was originally written to celebrate 12 different birds.

Each of the carol’s 12 lines represents a bird

Since the late 18th century – when The Twelve Days of Christmas first appeared in English – poets, writers, musicians and storytellers have produced a wealth of folktales, poems and songs about the birds in the carol.

What birds are associated with Christmas?

Meet the 12 birds of Christmas

One and two: partridge and turtle doves

Grey partridge in the snow in Norfolk, UK. © David Tipling/Education Images/Universal Images Group/Getty

Take the opening two lines: a partridge in a pear tree and two turtle doves. Both the grey partridge and turtle dove are intimately linked with the British countryside and the way we use our land: they thrived in the days of traditional farming but are now suffering steep declines due to modern intensive agriculture. As a result, both are heading rapidly towards extinction in the UK.

Their disappearance would be a disaster for biodiversity, but would also represent a deep cultural loss. To the 19th-century poet John Clare, grey partridges were a constant companion as he wandered through the fields near his Northamptonshire home. In one poem, Clare evoked their constant alertness against predators:

Oft frighted up they startle to the shade

Of neighbouring wood and through the yellow leaves

Drop wearied where the brakes and ferns hath made

A solitary covert – that deceives

For there the fox prowls its unnoticed round

And danger dares them on every ground.

Clare also tells the story of how, at the start of the shooting season on 1 September, partridges would turn up in the most unexpected places – on one occasion, seeking sanctuary in the house of the poet’s next door neighbour, who promptly killed and ate it.

It has been argued that grey partridges only survive in parts of Britain because of conservation measures carried out on shooting estates. Yet the figures tell a very different story: a century ago, an estimated two million partridges were shot each year; today, the total breeding population is just 44,000 pairs. It also strikes me as peculiar that we rightly condemn the slaughter of turtle doves in Malta, while seeming to accept the mass killing of partridges in the UK.

Until recently, the turtle dove was also a common and familiar sight across southern Britain; indeed, just 50 years ago it was more than three times as numerous as the collared dove. Today, the situation has dramatically reversed: the collared dove is at least 70 times as common as its smaller cousin.

Two turtle doves perched in a tree, in Spain. © David López/EyeEm/Getty
Two turtle doves perched in a tree, in Spain. © David López/EyeEm/Getty

Doves have always been a symbol of fidelity, going back to the Ancient Greeks: the goddess Aphrodite was traditionally depicted with them on her hand. The turtle dove is also mentioned in the Old Testament, a sign of the coming of spring: “the time of the singing of birds is come, and the voice of the turtle is heard in our land….” This is of course not a reference to an aquatic reptile, but to the soft ‘tur-tur’ call that gives the species its name.

Composers of popular songs have frequently featured the turtle dove, though that may simply be because it conveniently rhymes with ‘love’. It features in songs by Cliff Richard, Annie Lennox and the great Frank Sinatra, who sang about “a heartsick turtle dove”.