"Firstchristmascard" . |
We wish people a 'Happy Birthday', and if you're in the USA in November and December you might say 'Happy Holidays', so why do we say 'Merry Christmas' more often than 'Happy Christmas'?!
Saying 'Merry Christmas' rather than 'Happy
Christmas' seems to go back several hundred years.
It's
first recorded in 1534 when John Fisher (an English Catholic Bishop in the
1500s) wrote it in a Christmas letter to Thomas Cromwell: "And this our Lord God send you a mery Christmas, and a
comfortable, to your heart’s desire."
There's also the
carol "God Rest You Merry,
Gentlemen" which dates back to the 16th century in England.
It comes from the
West Country in England and it was first published in the form we know it today
in 1760.
In
the English language of the time, the phrase 'Rest You Merry' didn't mean
simply to be happy; 'rest' meant "to
keep, cause to continue to remain" and 'merry' could mean "pleasant,
bountiful, prosperous."
So
you could write the first line as "[May]
God keep you and continue to make you successful and prosperous,
Gentlemen" but that would be hard to sing!
The comma in the
phrase should be AFTER the 'merry' not BEFORE it!
But it's often put
after the merry which changes the meaning to make 'merry Gentleman' and so a
'Merry Christmas'!
The term 'Merry
Christmas' might well have been made very popular in 1843 from two different
sources.
The
first Christmas Card, sent in 1843 by Sir Henry Cole, had this wording on it: "A Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year
to You."
A Christmas Carol
by Charles Dickens was also published in 1843 and the phrase 'Merry Christmas'
appears 21 times in the book!
Charles
Dickens also quoted "God Rest You
Merry, Gentlemen" in A Christmas Carol, but changed it to: "God bless you, merry gentleman! May
nothing you dismay!" moving the comma to before the merry!
The
Carol "We Wish You a Merry Christmas
[and a Happy New Year]" is another old carol from the 'West Country'
(South West England) but was only first published in 1935 and this probably
confirmed the use of 'Merry Christmas' over 'Happy Christmas.'
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