Wednesday, 24 December 2025

Eskdale's Lost Christmas Carol

An Eskdale Christmas Carol

The following is to be found in the handwritten journal of W. S. Sykes at Whitehaven Archives (YDSO 81/1/2) dating from the 1920s. The text has a Victorian flavour and the tune is possibly the traditional carol: What Shall We Sing At Christmas? I am aware that Grasmere has its own Christmas carol so it was nice to discover that Eskdale has one too. Does anyone know any more about it? The lownin (lonning) is Parson's Passage but I didn't know about the figure above Christcliff (is this where the name Christ-cliff comes from?). And I don't quite understand the obsession with grey lichen - is that a special feature in Eskdale? In any case, it would be lovely to hear this sung again in the valley so if there are any singing groups planning a Christmas concert, help yourself!

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The following lines were sent to me by the Rev J W Hall, late vicar of Eskdale. Also received them from a parishioner, Miss Hillou, at Christmas 1927.


What shall we sing, what shall we sing

As a cradle song for our baby King?

Of a lonely Dale and rough stone walls

And the music of many waterfalls

Of St Catherine's church and her holy well

Of a figure stretched across a fell?*

Of a narrow lownin** and lichen grey

And Dalesfolk tramping the churchward way

Is this a song HE would like to hear

If we sing with voices sweet and clear?


What shall we bring, what shall we bring

As a birthday gift for our Baby King

Shall we gather HIM the lichen grey

On Christmas morn as we went our way

To St Catherine's Church on the river shore

There to greet Him and adorn

Grey lichen - but now for all to see

All stained with red as a Holly Tree

As red as red as our saviour's blood

Which He shed for us on the Holy Rood

As red as the wine of the Heavenly food

Shall we gather HIM lichen upon our way

Grey lichen - but now all red and grey.


The lichens a symbol from you and me

That grey and poor as our lives may be

Yet given to HIM they become all gay

Then let us take lichen to HIM today

Let us give our lives to our Baby King

And ask him to perfect our offering

That our sinful lives may be cleansed by his blood

And our selfish lives crossed by His Holy Rood

Our feeble lives straightened by Heavenly good

Our souls and bodies are the gifts we bring

This Christmas tide to our Baby King


If these we offer, if these we bring

Then, as a cradle song - we may sing

Of a lonely Dale and rouge stone walls

And the music of many waterfalls

Of St Catherine's Church and her holy well

Of a figure stretched across a fell

Of a narrow lownin and lichen grey

And Dalesfolk tramping churchward way

Quite sure our giving will make HIM glad

That little Kingley Peasant lad.

* Above Christcliff, the Rev J W Hall believes that the conformation of the fell with his hangers and ridges had a strange resemblance to a human form stretched across the fell, as if on a cross.

** The lownin is the church road - very narrow and walked from near the Vicarage (also from Dalegarth) to Bell Hill.


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