Posts Tagged ‘christmas gifts’
An Exciting Escape
Back in his palace at Jerusalem the cruel King Herod waited. Every day he looked for the three wise men to return from Bethlehem.
"They will find that baby and will tell me where he is," the jealous man thought. "I can soon get rid of a little baby boy."
Mary and Joseph did not know of this danger to the baby. They were very happy.
Joseph had paid the taxes. Mary was rested. She had her lovely baby.
She had strange and wonderful things to remember, too. She thought of the shepherds who had come in and knelt by the manger.
She remembered the grave and richly dressed wise men with their fine new baby gifts.
She held the baby close in her arms and smiled lovingly at the tiny boy.
"You have a cradle waiting for you at home, my baby," she whispered as she laid him back in the manger. "It is a beautiful wooden baby cradle, made of the finest wood, carved and polished. Your kind father, Joseph, made it for you."
Joseph and Mary looked again at the rich gifts which the wise men had brought.
"These are very unique gifts for a small baby," said the mother. "They will make our home look very rich!"
Joseph and Mary felt happy as they lay down to sleep in the stable.
Hardly had Joseph gone to sleep before something wakened him.
He sat up, opening his eyes.
"Who called me?" he asked. He saw nobody.
"Did somebody call me?" he asked.
Mary slept on quietly. She had not called him.
There seemed to be a great brightness in the room. From this brightness Joseph seemed to hear a voice speaking to him.
"Arise at once, Joseph," said the voice.
"Now. Tonight. This very minute," said the voice. "King Herod is hunting this baby. He wishes to kill him. But fear not. Only do as you are told. The Lord is with you!"
The brightness disappeared. Again it was only a dark night in a gloomy stable.
Joseph wakened Mary.
"Come, dear wife. We are going now!" "Now, at night?" said Mary, somewhat surprised. But she did not complain.
Quickly she climbed to the back of their faithful small donkey. She sat there, holding the baby in her arms.
Softly, silently, without a word Joseph led the donkey from the stable. The small animal walked softly. He made no sound. Nobody saw the family leaving town.
"Has anybody seen a young baby here?" asked Herod's messengers. "We are seeking a new born baby. We have gifts for him."
"There were some people here, a man and a woman looking for a room," said the innkeeper. "I told them they might sleep in the stable."
The messengers rushed out to the stable. They looked all around. There was no baby in the manger. The messengers were angry and also afraid. How could they face King Herod?
"Where is the baby who slept in this manger?" they shouted to anyone who might hear.
But the cows and the sheep only looked quietly at the angry soldiers. A quiet donkey raised one ear and then went on eating hay. The doves over the doorway cooed gently but told nothing.
The animals could not talk to these angry men. They could not tell them about the beautiful little baby and his mother who had sung to him and the kind man who had sat in the stable.
They could not tell of the wonderful visitors, and the bright star, the strange brightness and the sound of singing. They kept the secret of the wonderful night. The soldiers galloped back to Herod's palace.
"It is not true. There is no baby there," they told the king.
Christmas, St. Mary's Bay 1910
How our customs, our beliefs, our traditions (such as holiday gifts) have changed over the past seventy-five years! Take Christmas for example; recall the Christmas of 1910.
You know also that your brothers as well as your father have slaughtered a young calf and a sheep or two so you will have some fresh for the festive season. Your mother and older sisters have been busy for weeks now, washing down, putting up new curtains, preserving jams and other good things for the holidays.
Everyone is home for Christmas dinner which is baked fowl with dressing, potatoes, turnip, cabbage, carrot and gravy. There's sweet bread made with molasses and raisins. For dessert there is baked apple jam and lots of scalded cream, plenty of fresh butter, all washed down with cups of hot tea.
You and your brothers and father now begin to make your rounds.
You go from house to house, singing, dancing, dressing up as the darbies, frightening children and little old ladies with your masks and the hobby-horse, and you have a wonderful time chasing, finding and blackening your friends, particularly the ones who showed any sign of fear of the darbies.
Of course it wouldn't be Christmas at all without a spree or two. You all meet at Christie's house. The men have brought the rum and stolen a few hens or brought along a couple of braces of rabbit from home. The women have brought the vegetables and the fancy stuff. While the meal is cooking you are having a breaker-down on the kitchen floor to the accompaniment of Alf's fiddle and Christie's accordion.
What wonderful times b'y! You'd know that anyone who'd visited your home when you were gone was always treated well. The men were given a drink of rum, or punch if they preferred, and the women were treated to a sample of cake and ginger wine. Any children who came were given a big cookie cake or a slice of molasses bread.
Your sisters were often taken for sweet sleigh rides. Bundled in fur rugs, a hot brick placed at their feet, they thrilled to the excitement of the sleigh bells and fast rides over the frozen ground to a neighbor's house or the home of an admirer.
Remember your youngest sister, lad. She was a wee lass of six at that time. How her bright blue eyes sparkled with that little rag doll that Santa left in her long woollen stocking behind the stove.
How pretty she looked, bedecked in her made-over coat, woollen mittens, cap, muffler and long stockings as she sat beside your mother and father as they left on the afternoon of Christmas Day to take her to see Grandma and Grandpa. When your Mother and Father came back that night she looked like the littlest angel, asleep between them.
Can we not revive some of the past? Are we not letting too much slip by, and thus go beyond our reach? I think the past holds much to enrich our present and strengthen our future. There are some things we must cling to. ![]()
Old Christmas Customs in Newfoundland
Were holiday gifts always popular? What about in Newfoundland? Well the height of celebration and enjoyment was reached at Christmas when the previous summer's fishery turned out to be a good one. Those who could afford it in the city and outports laid in provisions enough for the whole winter...
The same immigrant descendants were in those years in S1, John's. Naturally they were more sophisticated. Though they lost the mummers in the middle of the last century, with their more ample means they made up for it at Christmas with arches, brass bands, processions, hunting the wren, rink skating, sleigh rides to the Inns on Topsail Road and local theatricals. Stores and shops were well decorated, especially on Water Street, with green fir and spruce, real dogberries, evergreen, and some in the imported holly and mistletoe. They had the big advantage over the outports however in the cake and poultry raffles at Lash's, Touisaint's, Chauncey & Heath's, and John Foran's. They got their quarters of beef, turkey, geese and chicken by the shipload from the P.E.I. and Nova Scotia vessels arriving a few days before Christmas at Wood & Clift's wharf. The prices would be unbelievable today. The poorest could afford to get fresh beef at four pence and three pence a pound by the quarter, geese three shillings and turkeys five shillings; corresponding low prices for potatoes, turnips, etc. Wages and a day's pay were about a third of what they are today, but the price of most edible commodities were less than a third, and the people were contented and happy.
I do not think that the law prohibiting "mummers" ever reached north of ConceptionBay, where the murder of a man led to this restriction. The custom was kept up till the 7th of January, and at night it made outport life very lively and provocative of much innocent fun. They were welcome visitors at every home and their antics were enjoyed with delight, especially by the young people. By a widely recognized custom the house was their own once they entered, and by the same right the floor was their own for the dances. The old dances that have now all but died out were the favorites, viz: the "Sir Roger", the four- and eight-handed reel, the set or square dance, the Cotillion and the Cushion dance. The Christmas holiday games too are now obsolete, which is regrettable, because they abounded in harmless amusement. They were "Forfeits", "Hide the Button", "Hunt the Slipper", Rhyming Puzzles, "Rise the Grey Mare", "Jack's Alive", "House That Jack Built", "Priest of the Parish lost his Boots, some say this and some say that and some say my man John stole 'em", "All Around the Rule of Contrariness", etc. All these were brought from England and Ireland by our forefathers and greatly added to their pleasure and happiness' 'when toil relaxed for the time being lent its tune to play". ![]()
The Spirit of Christmas
Well boys, with Christmas just a few gunshots ahead, I figger as hov this is a good time to forget all about our troubles over the cull and price of fish and all the other tormenting things in a fisherman's life and talk about something pleasant that we all believe in - Christmas.
But it's not enough to say that we folks in Pigeon Inlet believe in the spirit of Christmas, Santa Claus, St. Nick, or whatever you mind to call it. Like Skipper Joe Irwin said to me the other day: "Mose," he said. "the spirit of Christmas is like the Sou'west wind. We don't haw to believe in it, because we know it's there. It's true we don't actually see the Christmas spirit or Santa Claus (as the youngsters call him) but neither do we see the Sou'west wind. But we know when the Sou'wester is there because we can feel it and we can see the good things it brings us - smooth water for catching fish and good dry weather for rnakin' it. Same with Christmas spirit. You don't see it, but you feel it blowing around like a Sou'west breeze and above all you see the good effects of it."
Skipper Joe is right. How else can you account for the things goiri' on right here in Pigeon Inlet while getting ready for Christmas Day and the days coming right after it.
Look at the schoolboys after school last week. Straight in over the hills every evening with their fathers' catamarans and haulin' out loads of boughs - even Jethro Noddy's boys. I saw young Shem Noddy last Thursday evening comin' out with a load that even I'd have found it hard to handle - and I can pull on a haulin' rope with the next man.
"Boughs to decorate the church, Uncle Mose," he bawled out to me as I jumped out of the path. I don't s'pose the Noddys went to church ten times last year. But there you are! 'Tis Christmas.
Then up in the Women's Association Room every night what do you find? All the young fellows and maidens, instead of out courtin' like they generally do, they're sitting around those same boughs, breaking off small limbs and tying them in wreaths, to twine around the church pillars and the windows and the chancel and the font and everywhere - then some more wreaths to decorate the school for the big Christmas Tree and school concert on St. Stephen's Night. Oh, I can tell you our church and our school, too, are going to look something wonderful by Christmas Eve and we're all goin' to be proud of it because we all helped to do it.
Then again, look at Martin Prior. Martin has got a big family and had a poor fishery last year. He's hardly got a cent to bless himself with. But look what he's doin'. Martin used to be a saw-filer with the paper company for years before he got turned down for blood pressure. Now he's the best skate sharpener in Pigeon Inlet and every week before Christmas, he sharpens up all the youngsters' skates - won't charge a cent, neither. Says he can't give much money for Christmas baskets but there's something he can give. Luke Walcott is repairin' all the youngsters' broken slides - another Christmas present. Then there's Pete Briggs ... but I could go on for an hour.
Speakin' of Christmas, Grampa Walcott says we're all alike. When we're very young we believe in Santa Claus. Then we listen to a lot of nonsense from bigger youngsters who ought to know better and for a few years we don't believe in Santa Claus. Then we get some sense of our own and we find out for sure that he's there - just like the Sou' west wind.
"But Grampa," said I, night before last. "When you listen to all the stuff over the radio about only so many more shoppin' days left and how you'd better drop everything and hurry down to this or that shop right away, doesn't it make you wonder sometimes if Christmas isn't just a way to get people to spend their bit of money?"
St. John's come two weeks ago and there'll be no more boats before Christmas. Besides, there's nowhere to hurry except down to Levi Bartle's ... and Levi's place won't run away. There's lots of stuff down to Levi's to do till next May, let alone next week."
"But people do spend a lot of money around Christmas," I said. "Perhaps they do," agreed Grampa, "but here in Pigeon Inlet it's mostly other things they spend. Things like friendliness and helpfulness, things that the more of 'em you spend the more you've got left. Take Sophy, for instance."
"Yes," said I. "What about Aunt Sophy?"
"Sophy's just like her mother used to be when she was in her prime," said Grampa. "Now there's a girl that believes in Christmas, and gets more out of it than anybody I know. Look at her almost every night since Advent come in, training the choir to sing Christmas carols. Then up there supervisin' the decorations for the church and school - then helpin' the teachers get the Christmas tree and the concert ready for St. Stephen's Night - then seein' that the Santa Claus suit is in order for whoever gives the holiday presents off the tree - And, Mose."
"Yes, Grampa Walcott," said I.
"Sophy don't spend much money at all this. She's never got much to spend. But she spends a lot of herself. And it don't leave her any the poorer."
I. "About Aunt Sophy..." "Yes, Mose," said he. "What about it?" "Our quarrel," said I.
"Isn't that patched up yet?" said he. "No," said I.
"Well, Mose," said he. "With Soph feeling the way about Christmas that she feels, I should say if you can't patch it up during Christmas, there's no hope for you to patch it up at all."
"But how?" said I.
"How?" said he. "I dunno. But drop in again tomorrow and we'll try and figger out a way. I can't bear to think of everybody bein' on the outs with anyone else Christmas time, especially two fine people like you and Soph." ![]()
Three Wise Men
It made him angry for anybody else to be important. The idea that another might ever be king in his place was a horrible thought to him.
The three men wore rich clothing.
Their faces were noble and dignified. They looked like kings, and they also looked like very wise men or great teachers.
These three rich travelers came to Herod's palace.
"Where is the new king?" they asked.
One added, "We hear that this holiday a baby has been born who is to be king of the world."
This was not good news to the proud king.
"What are your names and where do you come from?" he asked haughtily.
"I am Melchior," said one.
Another said, "I am Balthazzar."
The third answered, "I am Caspar. We have journeyed here from the far east to see the new born king." '
"We have come a very long wav," said Melchior in his deep, slow voice.
Balthazzar added, "We were led by a great bright golden star which went ahead of us."
These words sounded strange to Herod.
They made him shiver. He called his court together.
"I suppose you have heard about this new king?" he said to his council. "Or rather, about this new baby?"
Herod's councilmen nodded their heads.
"Does it say he will become a great king?" asked Herod in an angry tone. His councilmen looked nervous, but again they nodded their heads.
"That is what the book of wisdom said," said the keeper of the book. His voice shook, for he was frightened. He knew Herod would be angry.
King Herod was angry. He tossed his head. His long beard wagged fiercely.
"Send those men from the east in to me," he commanded.
When the visitors came before him, Herod made his voice very friendly.
The Wise looking men nodded their heads. They got on their tall camels again. The golden and silver bells tinkled with a musical sound.
It was evening. Up in the sky a star became very large and very bright.
"Yonder star will guide us to the new king," said Balthazzar. "Let us follow it."
The star which they had seen before went ahead of the three men. It led them westward. On and on they followed. They went through fields and across rivers. They traveled in valleys and over hills.
At last the star seemed to stop. It was right over the stable behind an inn.
The three kingly travelers ordered their camels to kneel. They dismounted from the animals and went into the stable, carrying the unique baby gifts which they had brought.
In the stable sat Joseph and Mary. Near them, in a manger, was a very young baby wrapped in strips of white cloth.
The three richly dressed men went over and looked closely at the baby.
"I am an old man but I have never seen a child so beautiful," said Melchior.
He laid a bag of fine leather by the manger.
"I bring him a gift of gold, and I hope he may be king forever," said Melchior.
Then Caspar said, "This baby has a holy look about him. I bring sweet perfumes and incense. I hope he may be a great leader for the people."
Caspar placed his gift by the bag of gold.
Balthazzar knelt and laid a beautiful chest by the other gifts. It held sweet smelling ointments in silver bottles trimmed with jewels.
"I bring myrrh," he said. The myrrh had a very sweet perfume like spice, but it was very bitter. "This myrrh is both bitter and sweet as the child's life will be."
Mary and Joseph were silent, for they did not know how to answer these strange words.
Once more the grandly dressed men bowed low to the baby in the manger.
Then they left the stable.
"We have seen the young child and left our gifts," they said. "Now we will go back to our homes in the east."
But when morning came they changed their minds. Each had had a very clear dream. It was the same dream for all three.
They dreamed that a messenger wearing a cloak made of flame came to them. The messenger spoke to them.
"Do not go back to King Herod," warned the messenger. "Herod is not friendly to this new baby. He wishes to find him and kill him. Go home by another road so you will not see Herod!"
"This is not an ordinary dream," the three men from the east decided. "This is a true warning and must be obeyed."
The three men from the east went home by another road. They did not return to Herod's palace. ![]()






