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At one time the custom of New Years' gifts prevailed amongst all classes in this country, even the sovereigns both giving and receiving them, though of course their practice was more generally in the latter way. The virgin Queen was more especially noted, like Cassius, for having" an itching palm,' ," that loved to be tickled with gold, or gold's worth, come from what quarter it might; and Nichols has given a curious as well as extensive list of them,* from which it may be as well to transcribe a few items only by way of specimen-" Money (sometimes to the amount of twenty pounds) diamonds, pearls, petticoats, smocks, garters, fans, pots of preserves, marchpanes, and sweet waters. The loyal donors of these commodities were archbishops, bishops, peers, peeresses, doctors, cooks, and even dustmen, a gentleman of the last named occupation having presented her Majesty with "two boltes of Cambrick." The practice may be traced back to the time of Henry the Fourth, but the only remains now at court are that "the two chaplains in waiting on New Year's Day have each a crown piece laid under their plates at dinner.Ӡ

In Westmoreland and Cumberland a singular trace of the olden time is yet found to linger. In these counties

Alii poculum plenum aqua vel vino in mensa ponunt, quod, si exundet et ultra margines poculi intumescat, fertilitatem; sin minus caritatem ejus anni ominantur; quam consuetudinem D. Hieronymus, lib. 18 in Isaiam, indicat veterem fuisse idolatriam apud Ethnicos in cunctis urbibus, maximè verò in Egypto et Alexandria. Totus dies per omnes urbes, vicos, et compita, compotationibus, commessationibusque, non solum in publicis, sed etiam privatis ædibus consumitur non sine choreis saltationibusque impudentissimis." Hospinian Dr FESTIS CHRISTIANORUM, p. 32; folio; Tiguri. 1612.

• PROGRESSES OF QUEEN ELIZABETH, p. xxvi. of Preface. vol. 1, 4to., Lond. 1788.

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the first of January is by some odd process converted into a saint, and termed Saint New Year's Day, much, we may suppose, upon the same principle that the journeymen in other places have their Saint Monday. Early in the morning the dregs of the people assemble with stangs, that is, poles,-and baskets, and whatever unlucky inhabitant or stranger chances to cross their way, he is compelled to do homage to their saint, or submit to the penalty which old custom has long sanctioned in all such cases of disobedience. If the recusant be a man, he is mounted astride the pole; if a woman, she is placed in the basket; and either offender is in this state carried upon the shoulders of the merry mob to the nearest public house, where sixpence is exacted as the price of liberty. With laudable impartiality the like penance is inflicted upon all ranks and conditions, the squire or the parson being no more exempted from it than their own servants, and in the same spirit of equality the revellers will allow of no working on their saint's day; the rest of the world must be as idle and as jovial as themselves.*

The uncertainty of the day to which some feasts belong, the date of their celebration having varied probably with time and place, makes it often impossible to assign them an appropriate niche in our calendar for discussion. Such is the case with the FEAST OF FOOLS, a custom of Eastern origin,† and one on no account to be confounded with

See a grave, prosy account of this custom in the GENTLEMAN'S MAGAZINE-Supplement to the year 1791, vol. Ixi. p. 1169.

"Videtur sane ex Episcoporum, vel potius clericorum, lascivia a Græcis originem cæpisse." Du CANGE, sub voce Kalendæ. And he goes on to give an extract from the eighth Synod, which certainly seems to prove the correctness of his assertion. He might however have found the fact yet more distinctly stated by Cedrenus, who attributes to Theophylact, Patriarch of Constantinople in the tenth century, the invention if not exactly of the Feast of Fools, at least of

ALL FOOLS' DAY, to which so far as mere sound goes it bears so great a similarity. It was a favourite festival in France at one time, but more particularly in the capital, at Rheims, and at Dijon; and was nothing more than another form of those mummeries and masqueradings, which either grew directly out of the Pagan festivities, or were substituted for them by the Christian Church as the best way of reconciling its followers to the austerities of the new faith.

It is not a little remarkable that the lower orders of the priesthood should have clung to this festival with even more fondness than the laity, in defiance of the efforts of the superior clergy to put it down; and indeed it would seem in some measure to have been peculiar to them, for amongst other called the FEAST OF SUBDEACONS.*

names it was also Nor was the time of

the similar absurdities from which it sprang. There can be the less doubt of this truth, as the poor patriarch was punished for his ingenuity by being dashed against a wall by his horse which produced hæmorrhage, and in the course of two years occasioned his death. It is amusing to see how craftily Cedrenus insinuates by a side-wind what he was too prudent to state in so many words. After having detailed all the enormities of Theophylact he concludes by saying; “ὅντως δὲ βιοτεύων, καταστρέφει τὸν βίον ἐν τῷ ἀτάκτως ἱππάζεσθαι, ἔν τίνι τείχει των παραθαλασσίων θραυσθεὶς, καὶ αἷμα ἀναγαγὼν διὰ τοῦ στόματος. Ἐπὶ δύο δ' ἔτη νοσηλθυόμενος καὶ ὑδέρω περιπεσὼν ἐτελετησε.” -"Living in this fashion he ended his life by furious riding, being dashed against a certain sea-wall, which caused him to spit blood. After two years sickness anasarca supervened, and he died." HISTORIARUM COMPEND: a Georgio Cedreno, Tom. ii. p. 639.

*This fact is recorded by Du Cange; though it is scarcely possible to agree with him in his notion that it was so called from the deacons being saturi, or saoul, i.e. gorged. His words are "Ejusmodi festivitati FESTI HYPODIACONORUM nomen inditum, non quòd revera soli subdiaconi has scelestas choreas ducerent, sed quòd hac joculari appellatione nostri indicare voluerint festivitatem hanc fuisse ebriorem clericorum seu diaconorum; enim evincit id vox Soudiacres, id est, ad literam, saturi diaconi, quasi diacres saouls." See DUCANGE, sub voce KALENDæ.

its celebration more certain, it being sometimes observed on the Circumcision; sometimes on the Epiphany, or in its Octaves;* sometimes on St. Stephen's Day ;t and sometimes on the 17th of December, from which it was also called the DECEMBER LIBERTY.

There is the same diversity, if we should not rather call it confusion, in the ceremony itself, the various accounts being somewhat inconsistent with each other; but the following will perhaps be found upon the whole to present a tolerably correct idea of the festival. It is only necessary to premise that the ABBOT OF FOOLS, here spoken of, is by no means to be confounded with the BISHOP OF FOOLS who was elected upon Innocents' Day.§

The abbot being elected at the time above mentioned, Te Deum is sung, and he is borne home on the shoulders of his companions, the place being especially adorned for the purpose, and where due potations are in readiness. At his entrance all arise, and the wine being drunk, the abbot, or in his absence the præcentor, begins a chaunt, the two opposing chorusses gradually encreasing in loudness and trying to outscream the other, with running accompaniments of howling, hissing, laughing, mocking, aud clapping of hands, at the conclusion of which the janitor makes proclamation ex officio :

"De par Mossenhor Labat è sos Cosseliers vos fam assaber que tot homs lo sequa lay on voura anar'ea quo

*"Festum Hypodiaconorum, quod vocamus Stultorum, a quibusdam perficitur in Circumcisione, a quibusdam verò in Epiphania, vel in ejus Octavis." BELETUS; De Divin. Offici. Cap. 72.

+"Idem Cæremoniale, sub Festo S. Stepheni." DUCANGE-KA

LENDE.

+ "Die 17 Decembris conveniunt omnes sclafardi et clericuli ut abbatem eligunt." Id.

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S" Ex eodem CEREMONIALI (MS. Eccles. Vivar. an. 1365) Episcopus stultus, qui ab Abbate distinctus erat, eligebatur in festo S. S. Innocentium eodem ritu quo abbas Stultorum." DUCANGE- Kalenda.

sus la pena de talhar lo braye.—" that is " Monsignor the Abbot and his Councillors give you to know that all men must follow him wheresoever he goes, on pain of having their breeches cut off.'

Hereupon the abbot and the rest rush out of the house, and parade the city, the former being saluted by all who meet him in his progress. This lasts till the eve of the Nativity, and during the whole time the abbot wears a costume suitable to the part he is playing.

From other authors we learn that the excesses went far beyond what is here related by Ducange. According to such accounts, some of the characters were masked, or had their faces bedaubed with paint, either grotesquely or so hideously as to excite terror. In this state they danced into the choir, singing obscene songs, and the deacons and subdeacons took a pleasure in eating puddings and sausages upon the altar, under the nose of the officiating priest; they played too at cards and dice before his face, and placed fragments of old shoes in the holy water that he might be annoyed. Mass being over, they ran and jumpt, and danced about the church, stripping themselves naked, and performing every sort of indecency; and afterwards by way of varying their amusements paraded the city in carts, filled with filth, which they flung at the crowds about them. From time to time these savoury vehicles would stop, to give them an opportunity of exhibiting themselves in lascivious pantomime, accompanied by songs that were not a jot more decent. What they were can not be better indicated than by the fact that none but the most licentious of the laity could be found to join in them as actors, however much they might enjoy the show as lookers on; and it gives us

* DUCANGE.-Kalendæ, p. 1664. I suspect that talhar lo brayeliterally, to cut off the breeches-is an idiomatic phrase, though I can offer nothing certain in regard to it.

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