Rebel Yell
12-22-2009, 01:40 PM
A Carolina Christmas Carol
I might as well go ahead and tell you right up front: I believe in Santa Claus. Now, you can believe or not believe, but I’m here to tell you for a fact that there is a Santa Claus, and he does bring toys and stuff like that on Christmas Eve night.
I know, I know. It sounds like I’ve had too much eggnog, don’t it?All I ask is that you wait till I get through telling my story before you make up your mind.
When I was a kid, Christmas time had a magic to it that no other season of the year had. There was just something in the air, something that you couldn't put your finger on, but it was there, and it affected everybody.
It seemed like everybody smiled and laughed more at that time of year, even the people who didn’t hardly smile and laugh the rest of the year.
“You reckon it’s gonna snow? I sure do wish it’d snow this year. Do you reckon it’s gonna?”
Heck no, it won’t gonna snow. As far as I know, it ain’t never snowed in Wilmington, North Carolina, at Christmas time in the whole history of man. It seemed like everybody in the world had snow at Christmas except us.
In the funny papers, Nancy and Sluggo and Little Orphaned Annie had snow to frolic around in at Christmas time. The Christmas cards had snow. Bing Crosby even had snow to sing about. But not one flake fell on Wilmington, North Carolina.
But that didn’t dampen our spirits one little bit. Our family celebrated Christmas to the hilt. We were a big, close-knit family, and we’d gather up at Grandma’s house every year. My grandparents lived on a farm in Bladen County, about fifty miles from Wilmington, and I just couldn’t wait to get up there.
They lived in a great big old farmhouse, and every Christmas they’d fill it up with their children and grandchildren. We’d always stay from the night of the twenty-third through the morning of the twenty-sixth.
There’d be Uncle Clyde and Aunt Martha, Uncle Lacy and Aunt Selma, Uncle Leroy and Aunt Mollie, Uncle Stewart and Aunt Opal, and my mama and daddy, Ernest and Nadine. I won;t even go into how many children were there, but take my word for it, there were a bunch.
There’d be people sleeping all over that big old house. We kids would sleep on pallets on the floor, and we’d giggle and play till some of the grown-ups would come and make us be quiet.
All the usual ground rules about eating were off for those days at Grandma’s house. You could eat as much pie and cake and candy as you could hold, and your mama wouldn’t say a word to you.
My grandma would cook from sunup to sundown and love every minute of it. She’d have cakes, pies candy, fruit and nuts setting out all the time, and on top of that, she’d cook three big meals a day. I mean, we eat like pigs.
Christmas was also the only time that my Granddaddy would take a drink. It was a Southern custom of the time not to drink in front of small children, so Granddaddy kept his drinking whiskey hid in the barn. When he’d want to go out there and get him a snort, he’d say that he had to go see if the mare had had her foal yet.
It was a good, good time. A little old-fashioned by some peoples standards, but it suited us just fine.
If I’m not mistaken, it was the year I was five years old that my cousin Buford told me that there wasn't any Santa Claus. Buford was about nine at the time. He always was a mean-natured cuss. Still is.
Well, I just refused to believe him. I said, “You’re telling a great big fib, Buford Ray, ‘cause Santa Claus comes to see me every Christmas, right here at Grandma and Granddaddy’s house.”
“That ain’t Santa Claus. That’s your mama and daddy.”
One thing led to another and I got so upset about the prospect of no Santa Claus that I went running into the house crying.
“Grandma, Grandma! Buford says there ain’t no Santa Claus! There is a Santa Claus, ain’t they, Grandma?”
“Of course there is, Curtis. Buford was just joking with you.”
Aunt Selma heard me talking to Grandma and walked to the door. “Buford Ray, get yourself in this house right this minute!”
When he came in, Aunt Selma grabbed him by the ear, led him into the front room and swatted him.
Granddaddy was also a big defender of Santa Claus. He would talk about Santa Claus like he was a personal friend of his. And the more he went to check on the mare, the more he talked about Santa Claus, or “Sandy Claws,” as he called him.
“Yes, children, old Sandy Claws will be hitching up them reindeers and heading on down this a-way before long,. Wonder what he’s gonna bring this year?”
He’d have us so excited by the time we went to bed that I reckon if visions of sugarplums ever danced in anybody’s heads, it was ours.
Christmas Eve night, after we had eat about as much supper as we could hold, we’d go in the front room. There’d always be a big log fire crackling in the fireplace, and Granddaddy would always say the same thing.
“Children, do y’all know why we have Christmas every year?”
“Cause that’s when the Baby Jesus was born.”
“That’s right. We’re celebrating the Lord’s birthday. Do y’all know where He was born at?”
“In Bethlehem,” we would all chime in.
“That’s right, He was born in a stable in Bethlehem almost two thousand years ago.”
Then Granddaddy would put on his spectacles and read Saint Luke’s version of the Christmas story. Then, after we’d had family prayer, Granddaddy would always get a twinkle in his eye. “I reckon I’d better step out to the barn and see if that old mare has had her baby yet.”
There was always a chorus of, “Can I go with you, Granddaddy?”
“Y’all had better stay in here by the fire. It’s mighty cold outside. I’ll be right back.”
When Granddaddy came back in the house, he’d always say, “I was on my way back from the barn while ago, and I heard something that sounded like bells a-tinkling, way back off yonder in the woods. I just can’t figure why bells would be ringing back in the woods this time of night.”
“It’s Santa Claus! It’s Santa Claus!”
“Well, now, I never thought of that. I wonder if it was old Sandy Claws. You children better get to bed. You know he won’t come to see you as long as you’re awake.”
Then it was time to say good night. All the grandchildren would go around hugging all the grown-ups. “Good night Grandma, good night Granddaddy, good night Uncle Clyde, good night Aunt Mollie,” and so forth.
We would always try to stay awake, lying on our pallets until Santa Claus got there, but we always lost the battle.
It sounded like the Third World War at Grandma’s house on Christmas morning. There was cap pistols going off and baby dolls crying, and all the children hollering at the top of their lungs.
By the time the next school year started, I was six years old and in the first grade. I kept thinking about what Buford had said. I didn’t want to believe it, but it kept slipping into the back door of my mind.
At school, Buford was three grades ahead of me, but I’d still see him sometimes. Every time he’d see me that whole year, he’d make it a point to rub it in about Santa Claus.
He’d do something like get me around a bunch of his older buddies and say, “Hey , you fellers, Curtis still believes in Santa Claus.” And they’d all laugh and point.
cont'd
I might as well go ahead and tell you right up front: I believe in Santa Claus. Now, you can believe or not believe, but I’m here to tell you for a fact that there is a Santa Claus, and he does bring toys and stuff like that on Christmas Eve night.
I know, I know. It sounds like I’ve had too much eggnog, don’t it?All I ask is that you wait till I get through telling my story before you make up your mind.
When I was a kid, Christmas time had a magic to it that no other season of the year had. There was just something in the air, something that you couldn't put your finger on, but it was there, and it affected everybody.
It seemed like everybody smiled and laughed more at that time of year, even the people who didn’t hardly smile and laugh the rest of the year.
“You reckon it’s gonna snow? I sure do wish it’d snow this year. Do you reckon it’s gonna?”
Heck no, it won’t gonna snow. As far as I know, it ain’t never snowed in Wilmington, North Carolina, at Christmas time in the whole history of man. It seemed like everybody in the world had snow at Christmas except us.
In the funny papers, Nancy and Sluggo and Little Orphaned Annie had snow to frolic around in at Christmas time. The Christmas cards had snow. Bing Crosby even had snow to sing about. But not one flake fell on Wilmington, North Carolina.
But that didn’t dampen our spirits one little bit. Our family celebrated Christmas to the hilt. We were a big, close-knit family, and we’d gather up at Grandma’s house every year. My grandparents lived on a farm in Bladen County, about fifty miles from Wilmington, and I just couldn’t wait to get up there.
They lived in a great big old farmhouse, and every Christmas they’d fill it up with their children and grandchildren. We’d always stay from the night of the twenty-third through the morning of the twenty-sixth.
There’d be Uncle Clyde and Aunt Martha, Uncle Lacy and Aunt Selma, Uncle Leroy and Aunt Mollie, Uncle Stewart and Aunt Opal, and my mama and daddy, Ernest and Nadine. I won;t even go into how many children were there, but take my word for it, there were a bunch.
There’d be people sleeping all over that big old house. We kids would sleep on pallets on the floor, and we’d giggle and play till some of the grown-ups would come and make us be quiet.
All the usual ground rules about eating were off for those days at Grandma’s house. You could eat as much pie and cake and candy as you could hold, and your mama wouldn’t say a word to you.
My grandma would cook from sunup to sundown and love every minute of it. She’d have cakes, pies candy, fruit and nuts setting out all the time, and on top of that, she’d cook three big meals a day. I mean, we eat like pigs.
Christmas was also the only time that my Granddaddy would take a drink. It was a Southern custom of the time not to drink in front of small children, so Granddaddy kept his drinking whiskey hid in the barn. When he’d want to go out there and get him a snort, he’d say that he had to go see if the mare had had her foal yet.
It was a good, good time. A little old-fashioned by some peoples standards, but it suited us just fine.
If I’m not mistaken, it was the year I was five years old that my cousin Buford told me that there wasn't any Santa Claus. Buford was about nine at the time. He always was a mean-natured cuss. Still is.
Well, I just refused to believe him. I said, “You’re telling a great big fib, Buford Ray, ‘cause Santa Claus comes to see me every Christmas, right here at Grandma and Granddaddy’s house.”
“That ain’t Santa Claus. That’s your mama and daddy.”
One thing led to another and I got so upset about the prospect of no Santa Claus that I went running into the house crying.
“Grandma, Grandma! Buford says there ain’t no Santa Claus! There is a Santa Claus, ain’t they, Grandma?”
“Of course there is, Curtis. Buford was just joking with you.”
Aunt Selma heard me talking to Grandma and walked to the door. “Buford Ray, get yourself in this house right this minute!”
When he came in, Aunt Selma grabbed him by the ear, led him into the front room and swatted him.
Granddaddy was also a big defender of Santa Claus. He would talk about Santa Claus like he was a personal friend of his. And the more he went to check on the mare, the more he talked about Santa Claus, or “Sandy Claws,” as he called him.
“Yes, children, old Sandy Claws will be hitching up them reindeers and heading on down this a-way before long,. Wonder what he’s gonna bring this year?”
He’d have us so excited by the time we went to bed that I reckon if visions of sugarplums ever danced in anybody’s heads, it was ours.
Christmas Eve night, after we had eat about as much supper as we could hold, we’d go in the front room. There’d always be a big log fire crackling in the fireplace, and Granddaddy would always say the same thing.
“Children, do y’all know why we have Christmas every year?”
“Cause that’s when the Baby Jesus was born.”
“That’s right. We’re celebrating the Lord’s birthday. Do y’all know where He was born at?”
“In Bethlehem,” we would all chime in.
“That’s right, He was born in a stable in Bethlehem almost two thousand years ago.”
Then Granddaddy would put on his spectacles and read Saint Luke’s version of the Christmas story. Then, after we’d had family prayer, Granddaddy would always get a twinkle in his eye. “I reckon I’d better step out to the barn and see if that old mare has had her baby yet.”
There was always a chorus of, “Can I go with you, Granddaddy?”
“Y’all had better stay in here by the fire. It’s mighty cold outside. I’ll be right back.”
When Granddaddy came back in the house, he’d always say, “I was on my way back from the barn while ago, and I heard something that sounded like bells a-tinkling, way back off yonder in the woods. I just can’t figure why bells would be ringing back in the woods this time of night.”
“It’s Santa Claus! It’s Santa Claus!”
“Well, now, I never thought of that. I wonder if it was old Sandy Claws. You children better get to bed. You know he won’t come to see you as long as you’re awake.”
Then it was time to say good night. All the grandchildren would go around hugging all the grown-ups. “Good night Grandma, good night Granddaddy, good night Uncle Clyde, good night Aunt Mollie,” and so forth.
We would always try to stay awake, lying on our pallets until Santa Claus got there, but we always lost the battle.
It sounded like the Third World War at Grandma’s house on Christmas morning. There was cap pistols going off and baby dolls crying, and all the children hollering at the top of their lungs.
By the time the next school year started, I was six years old and in the first grade. I kept thinking about what Buford had said. I didn’t want to believe it, but it kept slipping into the back door of my mind.
At school, Buford was three grades ahead of me, but I’d still see him sometimes. Every time he’d see me that whole year, he’d make it a point to rub it in about Santa Claus.
He’d do something like get me around a bunch of his older buddies and say, “Hey , you fellers, Curtis still believes in Santa Claus.” And they’d all laugh and point.
cont'd