There was a Christmas tree in the house every
December when I was growing up. I very much liked it as a kid and spent an
inordinate amount of time sitting by it. I’m not really sure why. My parents
owned three homes in my lifetime and none had any shortage of trees on its lot.
So, a tree in the house was special only by being in the house.
|
1954 |
Presents showed up underneath it Christmas
morning, of course, but I liked the tree for itself. The lights and decorations didn’t matter much
either. The tree alone had some atavistic appeal. My dad must have felt it too,
though he never outright said so. He always brought home a Christmas tree
before either my sister or I asked for one. During the rest of the year he
followed the builders’ tradition of raising an evergreen on the roof peak when topping out a newly constructed house. It always was a sad day when the tree exited
our house: usually on January 2, though a few times it dried too quickly and
departed before the New Year.
The origin of Christmas trees is open to some
debate. When the Council of Nicaea standardized the dates of Christian holidays
in 425 CE they quite sensibly chose dates that coincided with pre-Christian
holidays. The transition was easier that way. Solstice celebrations in one form
or another had existed pretty much everywhere. (The solstice fell on December
25 when the Julian calendar was adopted.) Many pagan
holiday traditions such as gift-giving for Saturnalia transferred readily to
the new holidays. A millennium later, the Puritans banned the celebration of
Christmas (Easter, too) precisely because of these pagan origins. Formalizing
the ban into law in 1659, the General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony
dictated: “It is therefore ordered by this court and the authority thereof that
whosoever shall be found observing any such day as Christmas or the like,
either by forbearing of labor, feasting, or any other way, upon any such
account as aforesaid, every such person so offending shall pay for every such
offence five shilling as a fine to the county.” They technically were right
about the history… and yet they were wrong. One can't help suspecting (with HL
Mencken) that the real worry the Puritans had was that someone somewhere might
have fun.
Getting back to the
trees, ancient pagans of central Europe and the Baltic celebrated the solstice in
woodsy fashion by hanging evergreen wreathes, holding sacred grove ceremonies,
and burning the Yule log. Christmas trees seemingly derive from these
practices, but before the 16th century in Germany there is no mention in print
of whole trees being brought indoors for the holiday, so this particular tradition may be no older than that. The trees became popular in the US in the mid-nineteenth century with the arrival of
large numbers of German immigrants.
Though my mom and dad
grew up Presbyterian and Catholic respectively, they were not dogmatic in
religious matters as adults, and became less so with each passing year. They
sent me to an Episcopal high school, but only because they thought it was
better than the public school. So, for the most part their seasonal decorations
were just festive. When pressed about their spiritual opinions in later years
they sounded rather New Agey. My skepticism regarding all things mystical
kicked in early, and in my 20s I shunned Christmas decorations with an almost Puritan adamancy – a youthful fault. For years I
forewent any seasonal ornamentations on some sort of secularist principle. I didn’t object
to others (including my parents) having them, of course, but in my first decade of living alone there were no Christmas trees in my dwelling space. I grew out of this unholier-than-thou attitude in time. Besides, the Neolithic (maybe Paleolithic) pagan origins of the
seasonal celebrations that so distressed the Bay Colony court were the very
things that gave me an excuse to ease up even before I mellowed with
age. Before the 1980s ended, a tree reappeared in my home each December.
|
2019 |
Evergreens still have an atavistic appeal. So, in 2019 once again, there
is a tree in my living room and egg in my nog. There will be gifts under the
tree for friends and family on Christmas, too. Further, if I decide to build a
small house for the stray cat who lives outside year round (something I’ve
considered) I’ll raise an evergreen on its roof when it is topped out.
Tarja - O Tannenbaum
This season always reminds me of family and Christmas, which brings happy memories. Dad always put light up around the outside of the house too. He was an electrician, so I think he was fond of doing that.
ReplyDeleteI imagine he was. Most kids like those displays. Those were the old large bulbs that burned alarmingly hot. I still have a box with strings of them. I probably should dispose of them for safety's sake, though I never heard of them causing a problem outside...which is not to say they didn't.
DeleteYep they were the larger bulbs, and he'd string them around some ornamental work that was along the front porch of the house, but along the roof line as well.
ReplyDeleteI'm not that ambitious. I buy 6' trees so I don't have to reach too high.
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