A festive
occasion on which toasts are drunk; and the ale or wine in which
such toasts are made.
On Thursday
4 December St. Clare's held their annual Wassail Feast at the Banbury
Road campus. With a Tropical theme, students and staff came attired
in appropriate beach type costumes, a brave feat in the winter cold
of December. Link here
to see the full gallery of beach braves.
The meaning
of Wassail is from the Saxon times when you would have used the
original form of this word, hail, to greet or say goodbye
to somebody; it literally meant, "be in good health".
In the western
counties of Britain, the tradition grew up on Twelfth Night of toasting
the good health of the apple trees that would bear the crop from
which next year's cider would be made. Pieces of bread soaked in
cider were placed in the crooks of trees, guns were fired to ward
off evil spirits, and special songs were sung:
Let every
man take off his hat
And shout out to th'old apple tree
Old apple tree we wassail thee
And hoping thou will bear.
Ceremonies like
these have almost entirely died out, though one or two are kept
alive in Somerset and, of course, at St Clare's.
Each year we
choose a different theme. Last year it was the Swinging
Sixties. This year the theme was Tropical and the Hall was decorated
with a beach theme, featuring surfboards, tropical fish and even
pineapples on the tables. Students and staff feasted on tropical
food and danced the night away to some sultry tunes.
Meg Claringbold,
Activities Department - December 2003
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