Jack in the green

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A Jack in the Green in Kingston, Surrey in the mid 1970s
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A Jack in the Green in Kingston, Surrey in the mid 1970s

A Jack in the Green (also Jack in the green, Jack-in-the-green, Jack i' the Green, Jack o' the Green etc) is a participant in traditional English May Day parades and other May celebrations, who wears a large, foliage-covered, garland-like framework, usually pyramidal or conical in shape, which completely covers their body from head to foot. The name is also applied to the garland itself.

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[edit] History

A chimney sweeps' Jack in the Green dances with the "Lord and Lady of the May" (probably both played by men) in 18th-century London
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A chimney sweeps' Jack in the Green dances with the "Lord and Lady of the May" (probably both played by men) in 18th-century London
A Bogie at Jack in the Green, Hastings
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A Bogie at Jack in the Green, Hastings

In the 16th and 17th centuries in England people would make garlands of flowers and leaves for the May Day celebration. After becoming a source of competition between Works Guilds these garlands became increasingly elaborate. This got out of hand and the garland eventually became so big it covered the entire man. This became known as Jack in the Green. For some reason the figure became particularly associated with chimney sweeps; there are several theories as to why this happened but none has been proven conclusively [1].

By the turn of the 19th century the custom had started to wane, the Victorians disapproving of such bawdy and anarchic behaviour. The Lord and Lady of the May with their practical jokes were replaced by a pretty May Queen. There was no place for the drunken, noisy Jack in the Green.

Jack in the Green was revived in Hastings by a group of morris dancers in 1983 and has become a major event in the town calendar.

Jack is a colourful figure, almost 3m (nine feet) tall, and covered in greenery and flowers. He is accompanied by attendants, known as Bogies, who are completely disguised in green rags, vegetation and face paint. The attendants play music, dance and sing as they guide Jack through the streets to celebrate the coming of Summer.

Revivals of the custom have occurred in various parts of England and Jacks in the Green have been seen in Bristol, Deptford, and Whitstable, Kent among other places. Jacks also appear at May Fairs in North America.

[edit] Observations

Amongst modern "folkies" and neo-pagans the Jack in the Green has become identified with the mysterious Green Man depicted in mediaeval church carvings and is widely felt to be an embodiment of natural fertility, a spirit of the primeval greenwood and a trickster; by extension he is linked to such mythological characters as Puck, Robin Goodfellow, Robin Hood, the Green Knight and others.

Similar characters to the English Jack in the Green were known in parts of Europe and Russia, and may be still. Some were involved in mock sacrifice, where the leafy framework was thrown or ducked into a pond or river (sometimes with the person still inside it). These festivities were variously associated with Easter Monday, St George's Day (23rd of April), May Day, and Whitsuntide. Occasionally the disguise was straw rather than leaves, a link with the straw bears of German Carnival (and the sole English example, the Whittlesea Straw Bear), suggesting these particular figures personified Winter rather than Spring or Summer. Folklorist Sir James Frazer cited many examples in The Golden Bough.

Other related figures in Britain include the Burry Man of South Queensferry and the Garland King of Castleton, Derbyshire, who parades on Oak Apple Day.

[edit] Trivia

British progressive rockgroup Jethro Tull recorded a song called Jack-In-The-Green on their Songs From The Wood album.

Pianist Jools Holland wrote a track called "Jack O The Green" in conjunction with Suggs (Graham McPherson) of Madness after Suggs witnessed an ancient ceremony in Whitstable, where the coming of Spring is celebrated with the Jack o' The Green parading through the streets to an old English folk melody. Having heard this each year Suggs was captivated by it. On holiday in Tuscany he saw a band of local musicians gather with traditional Tuscan instruments in a small village square. Their own Green Man appeared and much to Suggs' surprise they played the same tune. Their collaboration takes the folk melody, creates a variation on it, and sets them to ska rhythms.

"Jack in the Green" is the name of Painting No. 10 in the Masquerade (book) by Kit Williams. The main character, Jack Hare, appears in disguise on each page of the story: in this picture he is a transparent green jelly in a shop window; this is a pun on Jack in the Green and the moulded shape of the jelly itself bears a vague resemblance to a Jack in the Green.

A character called Jack in the Green has appeared in a number of comic books, including Neil Gaiman's Midnight Days, Swamp Thing Vol.2 #47 and Hellblazer: Lady Constantine #s 1,2 and 3.

[edit] See also

[edit] Illustrations

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] External links