Tuesday, May 26, 2020
Shakespeares New Year and Christmas Quotes
New year celebrations hardly feature in Shakespeareââ¬â¢s works and he only mentions Christmas three times. Explaining the lack of New Year quotes is easy enough, but why did Shakespeare dodge Christmas in his writing? New Year Quotes New Year barely features in Shakespeareââ¬â¢s plays simply because it wasnââ¬â¢t until 1752 that the Gregorian calendar was adopted in Britain. In Elizabethan England, the year changed after Lady Day on 25 March. For Shakespeare, the New Years celebrations of the modern world would have seemed bizarre because, in his own time, New Yearââ¬â¢s Day was nothing more than the eighth day of Christmas. However, it was still customary in the court of Elizabeth I to exchange gifts at New Year, as this quote from Merry Wives of Windsor demonstrates (but note the distinct lack of celebratory tone): Have I lived to be carried in a basket, like abarrow of butcherââ¬â¢s offal, and to be thrown in theThames? Well, if I be served such another trick,Iââ¬â¢ll have my brains taââ¬â¢en out and buttered, and givethem to a dog for a new-yearââ¬â¢s gift.(Merry Wives of Windsor, Act 3 Scene 5) Christmas Quotes So that explains the lack of New Years celebrations, but why are there so few Shakespeare Christmas quotes? Perhaps he was a bit of a Scrooge! Joking aside, the ââ¬Å"Scroogeâ⬠factor is very important. In Shakespeareââ¬â¢s time, Christmas simply wasnââ¬â¢t celebrated in the same way as it is today. It was 200 years after the death of Shakespeare that Christmas was popularized in England, thanks to Queen Victoria and Prince Albert importing many German Christmas traditions. Our modern concept of Christmas is immortalized in Charles Dickensââ¬â¢ A Christmas Carol from that time. So, in many ways,à Shakespeare was a Scrooge after all. These are the three times Shakespeare did mention Christmas in his plays: At Christmas I no more desire a roseThan wish a snow in Mayââ¬â¢s new-fangled mirth[.](Loveââ¬â¢s Labours Lost, Act 1 Scene 1) I see the trick onââ¬â¢t: here was a consent,Knowing aforehand of our merriment,To dash it like a Christmas comedy[.](Loveââ¬â¢s Labours Lost, Act 5 Scene 2) Sly: Marry, I will; let them play it. Is not a comonty aChristmas gambold or a tumbling-trick?Page: No, my good lord, it is more pleasing stuff.(The Taming of the Shrew, Induction Scene 2) Did you notice how downbeat these Shakespeare Christmas quotes are? Thatââ¬â¢s because, in Elizabethan England, Easter was the main Christian festival. Christmas was a less important 12-day festival known for pageants at the Royal Court and by churches for townspeople. In the quotes above, Shakespeare does not hide his dislike of pageant acting: In Loveââ¬â¢s Labours Lost, Berowne guesses that a wooing strategy has failed and that the ladies are now ridiculing the men. The ridicule is compared to a Christmas play: ââ¬Å"dash it like a Christmas comedy.â⬠In The Taming of the Shrew, Sly disregards the action as a Christmas ââ¬Å"gambold, a word meaning a frolic or light entertainment. Page suggests that it will be better than that awful acting you see at Christmas. Overlooking New Year and Christmas The lack of New Year and Christmas celebration may seem strange to the modern reader, and one must look at the calendar and religious conventions of Elizabethan England to contextualize this absence. None of Shakespeareââ¬â¢s plays are set at Christmas, not even Twelfth Night, which is commonly considered to be a Christmas play. It is widely believed that the playââ¬â¢s title was written for a performance on the twelfth day of Christmas at the royal court. But a reference in the title to the timing of the performance is where the Christmas references of this play end, as it has nothing to do with Christmas.
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