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Happy vs. Merry


Jean in Newcastle
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"Twas the Night Before Christmas" has "Happy Christmas" in it. Was that written in the US or Britain? I wonder about carols, too--whether some are more popular in the US that use "merry" and if that's the reason. (Of course, it could be the other way around, that we use "merry" and so our carol writers did the same!)

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"Twas the Night Before Christmas" has "Happy Christmas" in it. Was that written in the US or Britain? I wonder about carols, too--whether some are more popular in the US that use "merry" and if that's the reason. (Of course, it could be the other way around, that we use "merry" and so our carol writers did the same!)

 

Clement Clarke Moore wrote it in 1822.

 

From poetryfroundation.org:  Clement Clarke Moore was born in New York City, the son of the Reverend Benjamin Moore and Charity Clarke Moore. An only child, Clement was capably tutored at home by his father until he entered Columbia College; according to his biographer. Samuel White Patterson, he graduated in 1798 "at the head of his class, as his father had, thirty years earlier." In 1801 he earned his M.A. degree from Columbia: he was awarded an LL.D. in 1829. A very religious man, he gave a large portion of the land that he had inherited, part of his Chelsea estate and now called Chelsea Square, to the General Theological Seminary, where he was a professor of oriental and Greek literature from 1823 until he retired in 1850. At his retirement he purchased a house in Newport, Rhode Island, where he died on 10 July 1863.

 

So, A.) Homeschooled!  and B.)  Kinda lends cred to the temperance idea for merry vs happy.

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