Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
Christmas : Its Origin, Celebration and Significance as Related in Prose and Verse - Anonymous

Christmas

Its Origin, Celebration and Significance as Related in Prose and Verse

By: Anonymous

eBook | 28 September 2025

At a Glance

eBook


RRP $11.85

$10.99

or 4 interest-free payments of $2.75 with

Instant Digital Delivery to your Kobo Reader App

It was the habit of him whose birthday we celebrate to take what was good in men and remould it to higher uses. And so it is peculiarly fitting that the anniversary of Christmas, when it was first celebrated in the second century of our era should have taken from heathen mythology and customs the more beautiful parts for its own use. "Christmas," says Dean Stanley, "brings before us the relations of the Christian religion to the religions which went before; for the birth at Bethlehem was itself a link with the past." The pagan nations of antiquity[A] always had a tendency to worship the sun, under different names, as the giver of light and life. And their festivals in its honor took place near the winter solstice, the shortest day in the year, when the sun in December begins its upward course, thrilling men with the first distant promise of spring. This holiday was called Saturnalia among the Romans and was marked by great merriment and licence which extended even to the slaves. There were feasting and gifts and the houses were hung with evergreens. A more barbarous form of these rejoicings took place among the rude peoples of the north where great blocks of wood blazed in honor of Odin and Thor, and sacrifices of men and cattle were made to them. Mistletoe was cut then from the sacred oaks with a golden sickle by the Prince of the Druids, between whom and the Fire-Worshippers of Persia there was an affinity both in character and customs. [A] An account of the early history of Christmas may be found in Chamber's Book of Days. The ancient Goths and Saxons called this festival Yule, which is preserved to us in the Scottish word for Christmas and also in the name of the Yule Log. The ancient Teutons celebrated the season by decking a fir tree, for they thought of the sun, riding higher and higher in the heavens, as the spreading and blossoming of a great tree. Thus our own Christmas fir was decked as a symbol of the celestial sun tree. The lights, according to Professor Schwartz, represent the flashes of lightning overhead, the golden apples, nuts and balls symbolize the sun, the moon and the stars, while the little animals hung in the branches betoken sacrifices made in gratitude to the sun god.[B

on

More in Modern & Contemporary Fiction

Alluring Tales : Hot Holiday Nights - Vivi Anna

eBOOK

RRP $16.99

$13.99

18%
OFF
The Wrong Girl - Zoe Foster Blake

eBOOK

$14.99

Orphan Train : A Novel - Christina Baker Kline

eBOOK

RRP $12.99

$6.99

46%
OFF
Chance - Kate Forster

eBOOK

eBook

$12.99

Six Days in Leningrad - Paullina Simons

eBOOK

The Rain Queen - Katherine Scholes

eBOOK

$14.99

The House of Memories - Monica McInerney

eBOOK

The Empty Nest - Fiona Palmer

eBOOK

$2.99