Date:1597
Description:Holly and its uses in Shakespeare's time. There were twenty-seven holy days, or ‘holidays’ spread through the Elizabethan year, but the twelve days of Christmas, at the time of the winter solstice, was the greatest annual period of celebration and feasting. Holly and other winter evergreens and berries, representing future new life, were brought indoors to decorate homes for the festival. In Shakespeare's play As You Like It, despite the cold and bitterness of winter in the forest, Amiens sings to his fellow exiles: ‘ sing hey-ho! unto the green holly... hey-ho the holly; this life is most jolly.’ (2,7, lines 181-184 and 190-194). Full title: John Gerarde, The Herball, [colophon: Edm. Bollifant for Bonham and John Norton], 1597. Copy with contemporary hand-colouring.)
The timeline shows resources around this location over a number of years.
Shakespeare may have owned this book. Shakespeare purchased New Place, the largest ...
A much-used book, possibly owned by Shakespeare. This prayer book, whose dimensions ...
Duke Theseus’ hounds in Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Theseus’s ...
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Donor ref:SR/OS 97.3 [827] (32/10514)
Source: The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust - Library
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