Upon reflection I have to admit that I very much like the tune and often find myself whistling it, despite the fact that I very much dislike the words. Actually, the words can be kind of fun, too, but I find their message repulsive.
Here are the words and message, or at least the first three
stanzas, where most of the harm lies.
First stanza:
Good King Wenceslas looked out
On the feast of Stephen
When the snow lay round about
Deep and crisp and even.
Brightly shone the moon that night
Though the frost was cruel
When a poor man came in sight
Gathering winter fuel.
All very pretty. A
wealthy man of power enjoying a holiday associated with charity for the
poor. It is night time, with the moon
shining on a smooth landscape of deep, white snow. It is cruelly cold, but of course the king is
surely nice and warm, enjoying the beautifully charming view. The cherry on this lovely winter dessert is
provided by the quaint and appropriate arrival of a poor man trudging through
the snow.
It is almost impossible to have a Christmas story nowadays
without someone in poverty to bless the tale.
Poverty is so worshiped at Christmas time that it makes one wonder
whether the poor in the stories are poor enough, as if to make one glad for the
ready supply of poor people and even tremble at the thought of the supply ever
becoming short. No problem with that in
Europe, especially old Europe . And of course traditional Asian societies and
all but few modern African ones rest upon having large and ready supplies of
poor people, with the modern doctrines of communism and socialism superimposed
upon them to institutionalize poverty and ensure that its alleviation can be an
eternal goal ever to be invoked but never to be achieved. One of the world’s criticisms of America
is that our “poor” live so much better than even the well to do of much of the
rest of the world, but the current American presidential team has been working
mightily on addressing that criticism.
It is very important that you take note of what the poor man
of poverty is doing on this bitter cold and crisp evening, the very night after
Christmas. He is gathering firewood, something
that it would be more than unpleasant to be without in such a cruel frost.
With the second verse the plot deepens:
“Hither page and stand by me
If thou know’st it, telling
Yonder peasant, who is he?
Where and what his dwelling?”
“Sire, he lives a good league hence
Underneath the mountain
Right against the forest fence
By Saint Agnes’ fountain.”
This tells us much, far more I think than many who sing this
song perceive. In this oppressive cold
darkness with only the cold moon for light the peasant had wandered a good
three miles from his home in search of something to burn to keep himself warm,
three miles (the English league is 5280 yards).
Moreover, it could be expected that the home three miles away was colder
still, being in close proximity to "the mountain." Perhaps these points are not missed by the
casual caroler, but does the caroler also note that the peasant lives next to a forest? As we look at the next stanza, keep in mind
this question: why would someone who
lives next to a forest walk a good three miles in search of something to burn?
“Bring me bread and bring me wine,
Bring me pine logs hither.
Thou and will I see him dine
When we bear him thither.”
Page and monarch forth they went,
Forth they went together
Through the rude wind’s wild lament
And the bitter weather.
It is at this point in the song where it is intended that we
who sing or hear the words are to begin to be warmed. Touched by the predicament of the poor
peasant, wandering a good three miles the day after Christmas to gather
firewood just to stay warm on that bitterly frigid night (we are informed in
this verse that the cold was made intense by a rude wind), the good king not
only sees to the provision of firewood for the poor man but deigns to deliver
the wood himself, along with bread and wine.
This is the core of the story of the song, confirmed in the remaining
verses by the miracle of the page, nearly freezing to death on the king’s
errand of mercy, finding warmth by stepping in the very snowy footsteps of his
master.
Before I continue with my criticism, I will add that I
entirely agree with the last lines of the carol, the moral of the story:
Therefore, Christian men, be sure
Wealth or rank possessing
Ye who now will bless the poor
Shall yourselves find blessing.
This is all very true, demonstrated repeatedly throughout
history. I would add that any person, of
any rank or means, who gives of himself to bless the poor will find blessings
in return, occasionally blessings on earth and always blessings where moth and
rust do not corrupt.
And giving of oneself is the point. Was Good King Wenceslas really giving of
himself? This was the king, giving of
the royal resources. I seriously doubt that the king baked the
bread, or pressed the wine, or chopped the wood that he was providing. They very likely came from some other poor
peasants (in some degree even from this peasant himself) in the form of a tax
by one name or another. It is all very
nice to be generous with other people’s sweat.
All very Old World, nice and feudal.
That was the way of things in those days.
Moreover, and in answer to the question that I posed
earlier, the poor peasant had trudged three
miles, looking for something in the deep snow that he might be able to burn,
when he lived right next to the forest,
because the forests all belonged to the royalty. It was a serious crime for any
peasant—regardless of how close he lived—to “poach” either firewood or game out
of that forest.
That is to say, that Good King Wenceslas, overcome by a
moment of pity, was acting to relieve for a moment a misery that he himself participated
in causing and inflicting. Given the
age, I am sure that the poor man was appropriately grateful as the king and his
page watched the poor man eat in his hovel, and all were appropriately warmed
in heart and mind as the king returned to his castle for the rest of the
winter. The perpetuation of the legend
has assured that the king received a bountiful blessing of good public
relations for his gesture.
This all may be well and good for the land of the nineteenth
century British monarchy, but any American should be ashamed to sing this song,
other than in mockery. Our Founders
fought a revolution and gave their best efforts, and some gave their lives, to
throw off monarchy and end royal forests and feudal domains. They recoiled at the practices of corrupt
monarchies who tried to ward off grievances against royal prerogatives and taxes by
tossing the occasional crumbs of “charity” to the masses. They saw through the game of taxing the people
so that the governors could provide a few well advertised benefits to the many
while quietly heaping largesse on their cronies.
None of that would be tolerated today in America. Or would it?
How about a nation hungry for energy while plentiful supplies of energy
lie locked up under government-owned lands, and all that the government offers
are windmills and algae farms? How about
trillion dollar “stimulus” appropriations bills that build a bridge or a road
here and there, while administration cronies walk off with billions of dollars
in grants and loans not expected to be paid back? How about major taxes on job providers to pay
for some more government handouts while driving the job providers to cut back or close up
shop? The charity of modern governments
is no more virtuous than it was at the hands of the old benevolent despots.
At least in the land of We
the People our leaders do not inherit their jobs and can be thrown out for
misrule. Yet, the trick worked in Europe
for Good King Wenceslas. Will America’s
own Good King Wenceslas be celebrating another Feast of Stephen in the White
House, or will he be packing on Boxing Day?
2 comments:
Forgive me, but was this not in the Economist in the early 1980s?
Thank you. I would love to read the comment from the Economist and see that others have recognized that there may have been something not quite right about good King Wenceslas' charity--at least as portrayed in the carol. Please share the reference if you have it handy. Merry Christmas.
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