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The name horkey was applied to end of harvest customs and celebrations, especially in the Eastern Counties of England, although the word occurred elsewhere in England and also Ireland. Since it is found in dialect, there is no standard spelling and other versions include ''hawkie'' and ''hockey''. Mentioned from the 16th century onward, the custom became less common during the course of the 19th century and was more or less extinct in the 20th. It is chiefly remembered now because of the poem dedicated to it by
Robert Bloomfield Robert Bloomfield (3 December 1766 – 19 August 1823) was an English labouring-class poet, whose work is appreciated in the context of other self-educated writers, such as Stephen Duck, Mary Collier and John Clare. Life Robert Bloomfield wa ...
in 1802.


The harvest-home

In the introduction to ''The Horkey'', Robert Bloomfield sets the scene the poem goes on to describe: "In Suffolk husbandry, the man who goes foremost through the harvest with the scythe or the sickle is honoured with the title of 'Lord', and at the Horkey, or harvest home-feast, collects what he can for himself or brethren, from the farmers and visitors, to make a 'frolic' afterwards, called the 'largess spending'." Leaving the hall after the feast, they then shout "largess" so loudly that it is heard in all the farms around. A later account of Cambridgeshire celebrations mentions that, "as the wagon rolled along the street, the locals would pelt it with buckets of water. This was a sign that, since harvest was now over, it didn't matter if it rained. Then came the meal itself: mountains of roast beef, vegetables and plum puddings - washed down with locally brewed strong ale. All paid for by the farmer. In some Cambridgeshire villages, the revelers performed a dance in which they wore stiff straw hats on which they balanced tankards of ale." Among additional details in ''
The English Dialect Dictionary ''The English Dialect Dictionary'' (''EDD'') is the most comprehensive dictionary of English dialects ever published, compiled by the Yorkshire dialectologist Joseph Wright (1855–1930), with strong support by a team and his wife Elizabeth Mar ...
'', it is mentioned that the last load of the harvest was brought in decked with festive boughs or decorated with a corn dolly woven of stalks. Accompanying it came a procession of farm labourers 'crying the mare' with the song ::We hev her! We hev her! A koo in a tether; ::At oor toon end, a yow and a lamb; :::A pot an' a pan; ::May we get seaf in wiv oor harvest yam; :::Wiv a sap o' good yal ::A' some haupence ti spend. John Greaves Nall's ''Glossary of East Anglian Dialect'', originally published in 1866, conjectured that the word 'horkey' referred to the hallooing that followed the feast and was connected with the Norse ''hauka'', to shout, that is also found in the words 'hawker' and 'huckster'.


Literary references

References to the term connected with harvest customs seem to emerge in the 16th century.
Archbishop Parker Matthew Parker (6 August 1504 – 17 May 1575) was an English bishop. He was the Archbishop of Canterbury in the Church of England from 1559 until his death in 1575. He was also an influential theologian and arguably the co-founder (with a p ...
's rhyming translation of Psalm 126, published in 1560, ends with the reassurance that ::Who goeth from home all heavily, ::Wyth his seede leape his land to try, ::He home returnes wyth hocky cry, ::Wyth sheaves full lade abundantly. Further literary evidence points to a number of customs established around the final gathering of the harvest at this period. They include the reapers accompanying a fully laden cart; a tradition of shouting "Hooky, hooky"; and one of the foremost reapers acting as 'lord' of the harvest and asking for money from onlookers. Several of these features appear in Thomas Nashe's play '' Summer's Last Will and Testament'', which seems to have been first performed in 1592. There a character personifying Harvest refers to himself as the "master" of the reapers accompanying him and goes begging the audience for a "largesse". In addition the reapers sing a nonsense song similar in form to the Essex song quoted in the dialect dictionary. Its second stanza, repeated throughout the scene, contains the call "Hooky, Hooky", on which the text's Victorian editor commented that the refrain "is still heard in some parts of the kingdom, with this variation, ::Hooky, hooky, we have shorn, ::And bound what we did reap, ::And we have brought the harvest home, ::To make bread good and cheap." Near the start of the following century, Sir Thomas Overbury invoked the custom while describing the honest yeoman who "thinks not the bones of the dead anything bruised or the worse for it, though the country lasses dance in the church-yard after evensong. Rock-Monday, and the wake in summer shrovings, the wakeful catches on Christmas eve, the hoky or seed-cake, these he yearly keeps, yet holds them no relics of Popery." The final item refers to the sweet foods, and later puddings, served at the harvest feast. A cake of a richer kind was later mentioned in a couplet from '' Poor Robin's Almanack'' for 1676, a publication originally associated with Saffron Walden: "Hoacky is brought home with hallowing, /Boys with plum-cake the cart following." Similar harvest customs in mid-17th century Devon are described in Robert Herrick's poem "The Hock-Cart, or Harvest Home". It was Bloomfield’s poem which established these particular customs in the national consciousness, although they were in fact only a regional variant of harvest celebrations common across Europe. Bloomfield put his account of the feast in the mouth of an old family friend as a remembrance of life in the middle of the 18th century. A correspondent in the '' New Monthly Magazine'', describing a similar festivity he attended at a farm near
Bury St Edmunds Bury St Edmunds (), commonly referred to locally as Bury, is a historic market town, market, cathedral town and civil parish in Suffolk, England.OS Explorer map 211: Bury St.Edmunds and Stowmarket Scale: 1:25 000. Publisher:Ordnance Survey – ...
in 1820, appealed to Bloomfield's poem as his touchstone. During its course, he quoted one stanza of a song in praise of the givers of the feast which still survives elsewhere in the Cambridgeshire village of
Whittlesford Whittlesford is a village in Cambridgeshire, England, and also the name of an old hundred. The village is situated on the Granta branch of the River Cam, seven miles south of Cambridge. Whittlesford Parkway railway station serves the village. Li ...
. Another poetical reference to the Horkey was included in John Player's ''Home or The Months, a poem of domestic life'' (1838). The author noted that his description was from his native Saffron Walden; it differs from Bloomfield's in the detail that the "largess" call follows the payment of wages on the day after the feast.


Late survivals

Bloomfield noted in his introduction that "these customs are going fast out of use". In the illustrations provided by George Cruikshank for the children's edition of 1882, those at the feast are dressed in the fashion of a bygone time. The scene is distanced, much as the poet himself presents it, as a piece of folklore. But there were still survivals of the custom, and even revivals, as evidenced by news items from 1901-2 that speak of "old-time horkeys" in the village of
Foxearth Foxearth is a village and civil parish on the borders of north Essex and Suffolk in England, between Long Melford and Cavendish. The neighbouring parishes are Borley, Belchamp Walter, Belchamp Otten, Liston and Pentlow. History Foxearth is an ...
. By 1934, the artist
Thomas Hennell Thomas Hennell (16 April 1903 – 1945) was a British artist and writer who specialised in illustrations and essays on the subject of the British countryside. He was an official war artist during the Second World War and was killed while ser ...
was commenting that "since the passing of the Agricultural Wages Bill, the Horkey has been generally abandoned, though one or two landowners in the eastern counties are still generous enough to give a supper each year". There was, nevertheless, one revival at the end of the 20th century by the
Morris Men Morris dancing is a form of English folk dance. It is based on rhythmic stepping and the execution of choreographed figures by a group of dancers, usually wearing bell pads on their shins. Implements such as sticks, swords and handkerchiefs may ...
of the Suffolk village of
Glemsford Glemsford is a village in the Babergh district in Suffolk, England, near the town of Sudbury. Glemsford is located near the River Glem and the River Stour also flows nearby. Glemsford is surrounded by arable farmland and is not far from his ...
.The Morris Men of Little Egypt
/ref>


References

{{reflist English folklore English poetry