Chapter 11. The parson was named Yorick,
Tristram explains, a family name allegedly going back 900 years. Tristram is greatly impressed by this, lamenting the “chops and changes” to which so many good surnames are subjected to over time. Yorick’s family was Danish originally, and an ancestor held a great but unknown post in the Danish court. Tristram speculates that the post was that of chief jester, and that therefore Yorick’s ancestor was none other than the Yorick in Shakespeare’s
Hamlet. Tristram recounts his own travels to Denmark, which he found to be an unremarkable but pleasant country populated by pleasant, stable people. Britain, on the other hand, is an unpredictable place, with the erratic weather producing equally strange temperaments in its residents.