The Christmas tree has been denuded. Brittle, pointy, holly clusters are in the trash. Memories of younger days before empty nester time are floating rampant, like the ghosts of Christmas past, which they are! This year’s deconstruction went pretty smoothly with limited cursing by the man of the house as ornaments refused to be removed from branches. One of the all-time better Christmas albums, Mary Chapin Carpenter’s Come Darkness, Come Light: Twelve Songs of Christmas, lent an appropriate background to the day’s activities.
all gone goodbye for now
Photo by J. Harrington
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Between now and Valentine’s we’ll celebrate MLK day and groundhog day and, with luck, an extended January thaw. But, for a few days, the magic of Christmas will be conspicuous by its absence, unless we learn to keep the feeling of Christmas in our hearts all year round. How hard could that be?
carrying the light of Christmas to Valentine's
Photo by J. Harrington
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We had advent and Yule candles this year and we’re going to carry over two of them, the red ones in the hurricane lamps, until Valentine's. The cheery flames at dinner will serve as reminders of yule time and help warm our hearts through the cold days ahead. It’s not everything, but it’s a start.
Taking Down the Tree
By Jane Kenyon
"Give me some light!" cries Hamlet'suncle midway through the murderof Gonzago. "Light! Light!" cry scatteringcourtesans. Here, as in Denmark,it's dark at four, and even the moonshines with only half a heart.The ornaments go down into the box:the silver spaniel, My Darlingon its collar, from Mother's childhoodin Illinois; the balsa jumping jackmy brother and I fought over,pulling limb from limb. Motherdrew it together again with threadwhile I watched, feeling depravedat the age of ten.With something more than cautionI handle them, and the lights, with theirtin star-shaped reflectors, brought alongfrom house to house, their pasteboardtoy suitcases increasingly flimsy.Tick, tick, the desiccated needles drop.By suppertime all that remains is the scentof balsam fir. If it's darknesswe're having, let it be extravagant.
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