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Thomas Hardy
- Narrated by: John Applemore
- Length: 2 hrs and 18 mins
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Summary
A tradition at Christmas was for the choir of local musicians and singers to assemble at the Hardys’ cottage, prior to setting out into the snow to do the rounds of local farms, homesteads, and manor house, in order to entertain their occupants. Hardy recreated this magical scene in Under the Greenwood Tree, published in 1872.
In the days when labouring classes worked long hours, and for the majority, material comforts were small, Christmas was a time (aside from the formalities of necessary religious observance,) for the exchanging of news, folklore, legend and jokes. For those fortunate enough to be invited to the Hardys’ cottage on Christmas Eve, there was the added bonus of food and drink to feed the body, and music–home-made of course–to lift the spirits and nourish the soul. Hardy’s descriptions of such Christmases, as were celebrated by himself and his family, together with his colourful portrayals of characters–in particular the members of the "Mellstock Quire" (Choir,) whom he described as his favourites–have delighted generations of his listeners, and continue to do so. This then is the story of Thomas Hardy and of Christmas; of what that greatest of all Christian festivals meant to him, and of how his beliefs changed as the years progressed.