« All Hail to the Days », also known as « Drive the Cold Winter Away », « In Praise of Christmas », and « The Praise of Christmas », is an English Christmas carol of Elizabethan origins. The carol first appeared as a broadside in 1625, though its origins are unclear; the carol has been featured in numerous hymnals over the centuries. It is traditionally sung to the tune « When Phoebus did rest », under which it is printed in the Pepys and Roxburgh collections and Playford’s The English Dancing Master. The carol’s lyrics highlight various seasonal festivities during Christmastide, which is directly mentioned in the verse « When Christmastide comes in like a bride…Twelve days in the year, much mirth and good cheer. » During the Elizabethan era (from which the song originates), the majority of Christmas celebrations occurred during the Twelve Days of Christmas. Traditional Elizabethan Christmas festivities alluded to in the carol include wassailing, feasting, and theatre performances.