We wish you a merry christmas
English Christmas carol from the West Country of England
We wish you a merry Christmas, We wish you a merry Christmas, We wish you a merry Christmas And a happy New Year. Good tidings we bring To you and your king; We wish you a merry Christmas And a happy New Year!
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© Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia The greeting "a merry Christmas and a happy New Year" is recorded from 1740. The English custom of performing inside or outside homes in return for food and drink is illustrated in the short story The Christmas Mummers (1858) by Charlotte Yonge, in which a group of boys run to a farmer's door and sing:
I wish you a merry Christmas After they are allowed in and perform a Mummers play, the boys are served beer by the farmer's maid.
The origin of this Christmas carol lies in the English tradition wherein wealthy people of the community gave Christmas treats to the carolers on Christmas Eve, such as "figgy pudding" that was very much like modern-day Christmas puddings. A variety of nineteenth-century sources state that, in the West Country of England, "figgy pudding" referred to a raisin or plum pudding, not necessarily one containing figs
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