Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 1

SUBSCRIBE SMARTNEWS HISTORY SCIENCE INGENUITY ARTS & CULTURE TRAVEL AT THE SMITHSONIAN SHOP

SUBSCRIBE RENEW GIVE A GIFT


ADVERTISEMENT

SMARTNEWS HISTORY SCIENCE INGENUITY ARTS & CULTURE TRAVEL AT THE SMITHSONIAN PHOTOS VIDEO GAMES MAGAZINE SUBSCRIBE SHOP

ARCHAEOLOGY U.S. HISTORY WORLD HISTORY VIDEO NEWSLETTER

PHOTO OF THE DAY

A Plea to Resurrect the Christmas


Tradition of Telling Ghost Stories
Though the practice is now more associated with Halloween,
spooking out your family is well within the Christmas spirit

Oh Lord!
PHOTO OF THE DAY»

MOST POPULAR

1. Why Snail Sex Is Like a Box of Chocolates


2. What Did Elizabeth I Actually Look Like?
This Artist Has a Suggestion
3. What Was on the Menu at the First
Thanksgiving?
4. The True Story of "Outlaw King"
5. A Plea to Resurrect the Christmas Tradition
of Telling Ghost Stories
6. British Doctors May Soon Prescribe Art,
Music, Dance, Singing Lessons
7. A Pickle a Day May Keep Your Anxiety a Bay
8. The Science of Lego Walking
9. A Brief History of the Salem Witch Trials
10. Mary Katharine Goddard, the Woman who
Signed the Declaration of Independence
11. Becoming Anne Frank
12. Do American Indians celebrate
(Lee Martin / Alamy Stock Photo) Thanksgiving?
13. The Historic Tail of the Weeki Wachee
Mermaids
By Colin Dickey
14. Why the True Story of “Chappaquiddick” Is
SMITHSONIAN.COM Impossible to Tell
DECEMBER 15, 2017
15. Orangutans Are the Only Non-Human
Primates Capable of ‘Talking’ About the Past

F or the last hundred years, Americans have kept ghosts in their place, letting them out only in
October, in the run-up to our only real haunted holiday, Halloween. But it wasn’t always this
way, and it’s no coincidence that the most famous ghost story is a Christmas story—or, put
another way, that the most famous Christmas story is a ghost story. Charles Dickens’ A
Christmas Carol was first published in 1843, and its story about a man tormented by a series of
ghosts the night before Christmas belonged to a once-rich, now mostly forgotten tradition of telling
ghost stories on Christmas Eve. Dickens’ supernatural yuletide terror was no outlier, since for much of
the 19th century, was the holiday indisputably associated with ghosts and the specters.

“Whenever five or six English-speaking people meet round a fire on Christmas Eve, they start telling
each other ghost stories,” humorist Jerome K. Jerome wrote in his 1891 collection, Told After Supper.
“Nothing satisfies us on Christmas Eve but to hear each other tell authentic anecdotes about spectres. It
is a genial, festive season, and we love to muse upon graves, and dead bodies, and murders, and blood.”

Telling ghost stories during winter is a hallowed tradition, a folk custom stretches back centuries, when
families would wile away the winter nights with tales of spooks and monsters. “A sad tale’s best for
winter,” Mamillius proclaims in Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale: “I have one. Of sprites and goblins.”
And the titular Jew of Malta in Christopher Marlowe’s play at one point muses, “Now I remember those
old women’s words, Who in my wealth would tell me winter’s tales, And speak of spirits and ghosts by
night.”

Based in folklore and the supernatural, it was a tradition the Puritans frowned on, so it never gained
much traction in America. Washington Irving helped resurrect a number of forgotten Christmas
traditions in the early 19th century, but it really was Dickens who popularized the notion of telling
ghost stories on Christmas Eve. The Christmas issues of the magazines he edited, Household Words
and (after 1859) All the Year Round, regularly included ghost stories—not just A Christmas Carol but
also works like The Chimes and The Haunted Man, both of which also feature an unhappy man who
changes his ways after visitation by a ghost. Dickens’ publications, which were not just winter-themed
but explicitly linked to Christmas, helped forge a bond between the holiday and ghost stories;
Christmas Eve, he would claim in “The Seven Poor Travellers” (1854), is the “witching time for Story-
telling.”

Dickens discontinued the Christmas publications in 1868, complaining to his friend Charles Fechter
that he felt “as if I had murdered a Christmas number years ago (perhaps I did!) and its ghost
perpetually haunted me.” But by then the ghost of Christmas ghost stories had taken on an afterlife of
its own, and other writers rushed to fill the void that Dickens had left. By the time of Jerome’s 1891
Told After Supper, he could casually joke about a tradition long ensconced in Victorian culture.

If some of these later ghost stories haven’t entered the Christmas canon as Dickens’ work did, there’s
perhaps a reason. As William Dean Howells would lament in a Harper’s editorial in 1886, the
Christmas ghost tradition suffered from the gradual loss of Dickens’ sentimental morality: “the ethical
intention which gave dignity to Dickens’ Christmas stories of still earlier date has almost wholly
disappeared.”

While readers could suspend their disbelief for the supernatural, believing that such terrors could turn
a man like Scrooge good overnight was a harder sell. “People always knew that character is not changed
by a dream in a series of tableaux; that a ghost cannot do much towards reforming an inordinately
selfish person; that a life cannot be turned white, like a head of hair, in a single night, but the most
allegorical apparition; …. and gradually they ceased to make believe that there was virtue in these
devices and appliances.”

Dickens’ genius was to wed the gothic with the sentimental, using stories of ghosts and goblins to
reaffirm basic bourgeois values; as the tradition evolved, however, other writers were less wedded to
this social vision, preferring the simply scary. In Henry James’s famous gothic novella, The Turn of the
Screw, the frame story involves a group of men sitting around the fire telling ghost stories on Christmas
Eve—setting off a story of pure terror, without any pretension to charity or sentimentality.

***********

At the same time that the tradition of Christmas ghosts had begun to ossify, losing the initial spiritual
charge that drove its popularity, a new tradition was being imported from across the Atlantic, carried by
the huge wave of Scottish and Irish immigrants coming to America: Halloween.

The holiday as we now know it is an odd hybrid of Celtic and Catholic traditions. It borrows heavily
from the ancient pagan holiday Samhain, which celebrates the end of the harvest season and the onset
of winter. As with numerous other pagan holidays, Samhain was in time merged with the Catholic
festival of All Souls’ Day, which could also be tinged towards obsessions with the dead, into Halloween
—a time when the dead were revered, the boundaries between this life and the afterlife were thinnest,
and when ghosts and goblins ruled the night.

Carried by Scottish and Irish immigrants to America, Halloween did not immediately displace
Christmas as the preeminent holiday for ghosts—partly because for several decades it was a holiday for
Scots. Scottish immigrants (and to a lesser extent Irish immigrants as well) tried to dissociate
Halloween from its ghostly implications, trying unsuccessfully to make it about Scottish heritage, as
Nicholas Rogers notes in his Halloween: From Pagan Ritual to Party Night: “There were efforts, in
fact, to recast Halloween as a day of decorous ethnic celebration.” Organizations such as the Caledonian
Society in Canada observed Halloween with Scottish dances and music and the poetry of Robbie Burns,
while in New York the Gaelic Society commemorated Halloween with a seannches: an evening of Irish
poetry and music.

Americans' hunger for ghosts and nightmares, however, outweighed their hunger for Irish and Scottish
culture, and Americans seized on Halloween’s supernatural, rather than cultural, aspects—we all know
now how this turned out.

**********

The transition from Christmas to Halloween as the preeminent holiday for ghosts was an uneven one.
Even as late as 1915, Christmas annuals of magazines were still dominated by ghost stories, and
Florence Kingsland’s 1904 Book of Indoor and Outdoor Games still lists ghost stories as fine fare for a
Christmas celebration: “The realm of spirits was always thought to be nearer to that of mortals on
Christmas than at any other time,” she writes.

For decades, these two celebrations of the oncoming winter bookended a time when ghosts were in the
air, and we kept the dead close to us. My own family has for years invited friends over around the
holidays to tell ghost stories. Instead of exchanging gifts, we exchange stories—true or invented, it
doesn’t matter. People are inevitably sheepish at first, but once the stories start flowing, it isn’t long
before everyone has something to offer. It’s a refreshing alternative to the oft-forced yuletide joy and
commercialization; resurrecting the dead tradition of ghost stories as another way to celebrate
Christmas.

In his Harper’s editorial, Howells laments the loss of the Dickensian ghost story, waxing nostalgic for a
return to scary stories with a firm set of morals:

“It was well once a year, if not oftener, to remind men by parable of the old, simple
truths; to teach them that forgiveness, and charity, and the endeavor for life better
and purer than each has lived, are the principles upon which alone the world holds
together and gets forward. It was well for the comfortable and the refined to be put
in mind of the savagery and suffering all round them, and to be taught, as Dickens
was always teaching, that certain feelings which grace human nature, as
tenderness for the sick and helpless, self-sacrifice and generosity, self-respect and
manliness and womanliness, are the common heritage of the race, the direct gift of
Heaven, shared equally by the rich and poor.”

As the nights darken and we head towards the new year, filled with anxiety and hope, what better
emissaries are there to bring such a message than the dead?

Like this article? SIGN UP for our newsletter Email SIGN UP

TAGS Christmas Halloween Literature Rituals and Traditions

PREVIOUS ARTICLE NEXT ARTICLE


Two Centuries Ago, How the First Man-
Pennsylvania Almost Made Nuclear
Razed Independence Reactor Reshaped
Hall to Make Way for Science and Society
Private
Development

We Recommend

Setup Timeout Error: Setup took longer than 30 seconds to complete.

Two Giant Killer Hornet Colonies Battle to the Death (3:25)


A giant killer hornet war is waged between two colonies, and the resources, territories, and
survival of a new generation are at stake. Watch the battle unfold as these huge hornets risk their
lives for their kingdoms.

Incredible: Five Lions The Colonial Settlement A Whale Shark Air Travel Was a Party,
Take Down a Gira e That Vanished Into Thin Cooperates With a Diver and They Were the Hosts
(2:49) Air (2:10) Saving Him (1:28) (2:57)

COMMENT ON THIS STORY

comments powered by Disqus

CURRENT ISSUE | NOVEMBER 2018 SUBSCRIBE NEWSLETTERS


What Makes the Flint Save 84% o the newsstand price! Get the best of Smithsonian.com by
Hills of Kansas a Sight email. Keep up-to-date on:
to See
Last Name First Name History
How Kyle Meyer's
Science & Innovation
Photo-Tapestries Give Address 1
Voice to a Silenced Art
Community Address 2 Travel

The Unforgotten: New Special O ers


Voices of the Holocaust City Zip AL

SIGN-UP NOW
View Table of Contents Email address
EMAIL ADDRESS

SUBSCRIBE or Give a Gift


SIGN UP

SMARTNEWS HISTORY SCIENCE INGENUITY ARTS & CULTURE TRAVEL AT THE SMITHSONIAN PHOTOS VIDEO GAMES MAGAZINE

ABOUT CONTACT ADVERTISING SUSTAINABILITY SUBSCRIBE RSS MEMBER SERVICES TERMS OF USE PRIVACY COOKIE POLICY AD CHOICES

You might also like