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Tomorrow is Christmas Eve! Every year, around this time, I think of my mother's first job after college, working in the garment industry in New York City. Her employers were, it almost goes without saying given the time and place, Jewish. Indeed, they were devoutly Jewish. Which meant that since she was a Catholic, they not only gave her vacation time for her religious holidays but their own as well. They were pretty obliged to offer her one set or the other. To give her both was generosity of the heart.
Charles Dickens did not think as highly of old Mr. Fezziwig as my mother did her former employers.
So this is a good time to offer thanks for religious folks of good will everywhere, whatever religion they may follow.
And a good time for my newly traditional last-blog-before-Christmas story. For self-evident reasons, I won't be blogging on Friday.
Enjoy!
There is a legend
that on Christmas Eve the animals can talk.
Yet of all the many animals you’ve known or owned, be they pets or next-door
dogs or half-tame squirrels that you almost got to accept a peanut out of your
hand once, none have ever done remotely anything like that.
Yet the legend is true.
It just doesn’t apply to all animals.
It applies only to those who were in one specific manger on the
outskirts of Bethlehem two thousand something years ago. These were all made immortal by the Infant
Jesus who, like any other child, had an inordinate fondness for dumb
beasts. And for 364 days of the year
(365 on leap years) they’re dumb in both senses of the word.
Ahhh, but on Christmas Eve . . .
On Christmas Eve, the cow and the donkey and the little goat
that gnawed on Baby Jesus’s blanket are given the gift of speech. As are the two lambs who wandered in looking
for fodder, the camels who carried the magi to the event and then stuck their
noses in the window to see what was going on, and the pigeons who fluttered in
the rafters while Joseph muttered angrily about their droppings.
“It was a night much like this one . . .” the cow begins.
“No, quieter,” says a camel.
“There weren’t so many cars back then.”
“It was cold outside,” says a lamb. “But I found a warm spot to sleep right over
there.”
“I gnawed on a blanket,” says the goat proudly. “But somebody yanked it away.”
“I wonder who?” murmurs a dove. For animals have very little sense of what is
and is not important, once you move away from the compelling subjects of food
and sleep. The fact that there were
people present two thousand years ago is almost forgotten. Who those people might have been is entirely
beyond their ken.
Still, like any other old-timers, they do enjoy reminiscing.
“They don’t make oats the way they used to,” says the
donkey. “And that’s a fact.”
*
3 comments:
Merry Christmas.
Merry Christmas!
A delightful Christmas to us all! And, Michael, you just gotta put together a collection of some of your short pieces like this at some time you are between books.
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