The ghostly season
I wrote four days ago about December ghost stories. Here comes an article from the Deseret News on ghostly Christmas eves.
In the last few decades, though, perhaps one of the most interesting Victorian Christmas traditions has been almost completely lost from memory.
“Whenever five or six English-speaking people meet round a fire on Christmas Eve, they start telling each other ghost stories,” wrote British humorist Jerome K. Jerome as part of his introduction to an anthology of Christmas ghost stories titled Told After Supper in 1891. “Nothing satisfies us on Christmas Eve but to hear each other tell authentic anecdotes about specters.”
The practice of gathering around the fire on Christmas Eve to tell ghost stories was as much a part of Christmas for the Victorian English as Santa Claus is for us.
Traces of this now-forgotten tradition occasionally appear in noticeable places at Christmastime, although their significance is generally overlooked.
One verse of Andy Williams’ classic Christmas song “It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year,” for instance, clearly says, “There’ll be scary ghost stories and tales of the glories of Christmases long, long ago.”
You can read Told After Supper at Project Gutenberg, at Google Books, or on your Kindle (all for free, but the Google Books edition has illustrations), and free audio is available from Librivox.
HT to Nina Zumel who recommends Hume Nisbet’s 1890 “The Old Portrait.”


I can’t resist. Here is how Jerome K. Jerome begins his book: