A shameless Christmas post by Sandra Horn
Sorry, Folks - I am suffering from run-up-to-Christmas fever. I was just about to shut down the pc tonight when I saw it was 19th. Here I am without a coherent thought in my head, so I'm cutting and pasting a Christmas story for children. Please don't drum me out of AE - I promise to do better in the New Year!
The
Christmas Presents
The December moon swung high over Ghyllside Farm,
bright as a promise and round as pudding.
The first snow of winter lay crisp and white over the fields. The farm folk were all abed, snuggled down
and fast asleep, dreaming of plumcake and presents. Down in the kitchen by the fire, Hob and Miss
Minkin were toasting their toes. There
was a smell of pine-needles in the air from the sparkling tree in the corner,
and there were two large stockings hanging from the mantelpiece. The stockings belonged to the farm children,
and had their names pinned on them: Ben and Susan. The children had hung them there before they
went to bed. They had put a small glass
of sherry and a plate with two mince pies on it, by the hearth.
“In case he’s hungry,” said Susan.
Miss Minkin had watched all this with great interest,
and told Hob about it later.
“Who did she mean?” asked Hob. “Nobody knows about
me. Nobody has ever seen me.”
“She must have made a mistake. She meant to say ‘she’,” said Miss Minkin.
“She’s a good girl and she left the things for me, but you shall share them, my
dear.”
“Thank you, I’m sure!” said Hob. They ate the spicy pies to the last crumb.
“Very tasty!” said Hob. Miss Minkin was not so sure. Then they sipped the sherry, but it made Miss
Minkin cough a little so Hob kindly finished it up. He left a silver sixpence under the plate for
good manners.
“This is all very pleasant,” he said, “It must be
Christmas again, I suppose.”
“Yes,” said Miss Minkin, “Jenny has been charging
round the kitchen boiling and baking and getting hot and cross. She even forgot my morning milk!I had to yowl to remind her, and then she slapped it
down in a very grumpy manner. I kept
well out of the way after that. I spent
most of the day snoozing in the airing cupboard.”
“Dear me, what a difficult day you’ve had!” said Hob.
“She shall find a frog in her shoe in the morning for being unkind.”
“Oh, please don’t bother,” said Miss Minkin, “she was
sorry after and gave me all the bacon rind.
I have forgiven her. Christmas is
a trying time for her. I like it, though,
on the whole. There is always plenty of
leftover turkey.”
Hob puffed on his pipe. “It’s a merry time, right enough,” he said.
“I remember in the old days there was always a great deal of eating and
drinking and dancing and wassailing.
Neighbours went all round the houses and sang a song or two, and people
gave them spiced ale and presents.”
Miss Minkin put her head on one side and thought for a
while.“I should like to have presents,” she said. “I have a
very fine voice and you can play the fiddle pretty well. What do you think, my dear? Shall we go a-wassailing?”
“Indeed we shall!” said Hob, “That is a fine
idea. The neighbours will like to hear
some good old Christmas music. It will
cheer them up.”
Hob fetched his fiddle and a sack to bring all the
presents home in. Miss Minkin washed her
face and combed her ears. They slipped
out through the cat flap into the snowy moonlit garden. Miss Minkin sniffed the air and said it was
safe to be out. There was no smell of
fox or badger. Hob looked up.
“A fine night indeed, but there’s a nip in the air,”
he said. He was wearing a stout green
jacket and hat, and Miss Minkin had fluffed up her beautiful fur, so neither of
them minded it much. “Where to?” asked Hob.
“Let’s try Berryman’s Farm first,” said Miss Minkin,
“the farmer’s wife is fond of me and they keep a very good larder.”
They set off across the round the henhouse, and ducked
under the gate to Halfacre Field. Their
footsteps crunched on the frosty grass.
Only the moon saw them cross the wooden bridge over the murmuring ghyll
and turn down the lane to Berryman’s.
Farmer Croft had just filled the coal scuttle and taken off his boots
before going to bed. Miss Minkin cleared
her throat and Hob tightened his fiddle bow.
“Ready!” he said, “one, two, three!”
He played a good loud opening chord, and they began
‘Ding Dong Merrily on High,’ with all their hearts.
Hardly had they sung the first line when a boot and
three lumps of coal came flying through the farmhouse window. The boot sailed over their heads and lodged
in the branches of a tree, and the lumps of coal fell right in front of their
feet. They were quite surprised, but
they remembered their manners and called out, “Thank you! Merry Christmas!”
Hob looked up at the tree.“What was that?” he said.
“I don’t know, it sailed by so fast and high,” said
Miss Minkin, "but we must try to get it down.
It’s a present and the farmer will think it very rude if we leave it in
the tree. He’ll think we didn’t want
it.”
“True enough,” said Hob. Then he waved his fiddle bow three times
round and pointed it at the tree.
“Come!” he said, and the boot came tumbling down at
his feet. Hob scratched his head. “I’m sure this is kindly meant,” he said, “but one
boot on its own is a strange sort of present. It will be heavy to carry home, and then what
would we do with it?”
“We don’t want to hurt his feelings,” said Miss
Minkin, “shall we hide it somewhere?”
They pushed the boot a long way behind the
staddlestones, where nobody could see it.
In the spring, a pair of mice moved in and raised a family of ten. They were very snug.
The farmer looked all over the yard for his boot the
next morning, but it was well hidden. It
was his good boot, too. It was the other
one that had a hole in. He had to hop on
one leg all over Christmas until the shops opened again.
Hob picked up the lumps of coal and put them in the
sack. He covered them with straw for
tidiness.
“This is very generous,” he said.
Miss Minkin
would have helped him, but was afraid of blackening her beautiful paws. Hob said he didn’t mind a bit of honest dirt.“Where to now?” he said.
“The Bird and Hurdle, I think,” said Miss Minkin.
“They keep a good kitchen and I have done them some favours in the matter of
rats.”
Off they went, over the crisp white fields, through
the hedge and across the lane, to the back door of The Bird and Hurdle. The landlady, Peg Brewer, was already fast
asleep and dreaming of Christmas pudding.
Her husband Tom had stayed to lock up, and had just poured himself a last
pot of Christmas ale before bedtime when Hob struck up on his fiddle and Miss
Minkin began to sing at the top of her voice.
She had not got much further than ‘Silent Night, Ho –‘ when the door
opened and the pot of ale came sailing out.
Hob dropped the bow and caught it one-handed.
“Oh well done!” said Miss Minkin, “how clever!”
“It’s nearly full of good ale, too!” said Hob.
He put the pot of ale carefully in the sack, waved his
fiddle bow three times round it and sang:
“Stay right side up,
Neither spill nor slop.”
And it didn’t.
“This is more than kind of our good neighbours,” said
Miss Minkin. “I expect he remembered me and the rats and he wanted to say thank
you.”
In the morning, Mr Brewer looked everywhere for his
favourite pewter pot, but he never did find it.
“The sack’s middling heavy now,” said Hob. “Shall we
be getting home-along?”
“Yes,” said Miss Minkin, “but let’s call at Windlemoor
as we go. It’s on the way home, and the
Missus has always had a soft spot for me.”
Hob shouldered the sack and off they went. The moon was beginning to set, and the stars
were very bright as they went back down the lane towards Windlemoor. An owl swooped low over their heads on silent
wings, and Hob wished it good night and good hunting.
At Windlemoor House, the whole day had been busy with
Christmas preparations, and Mrs Biggins was still up and about with some
last-minute jobs. The back door was open
to let out the heat of the Christmas baking.
Mrs Biggins was sorting out chunks of marrowbone for roasting in the
morning when Hob and Miss Minkin came through the garden gate and up the
path. They stopped outside the door and
began ‘O Come All Ye Faithful.’ Mrs
Biggins jumped, screamed and threw the chunks of marrowbone up in the air. They came bouncing out of the door like
skittles, and Miss Minkin had to step smartly out of the way. Hob picked up the marrowbones and put them in
the sack.
“Really, our neighbours are very good,” he said. He called out “Merry Christmas!” but a gust
of wind must have caught the door and made it slam shut.
In the morning, when Mr Biggins asked for the
Christmas marrowbones, his wife gave him a very black look and told him he
could have cold mutton and like it.
Hob and Miss Minkin made their way home in the fading
moonlight, under the Christmas stars.
Hob stumped along with his fiddle in one hand and the sack over his
shoulder. Miss Minkin watched where she
was stepping and took care not to get her paws too snowy. They were very pleased with their night’s
work.
“Wassailing is a very good thing,” said Miss Minkin.
“I’m glad I thought of it.”
“Yes, my dear, the folk round here are very kind,
although their manners are a little rough,” said Hob. “In the olden days, if I
remember rightly, they didn’t throw the
presents at people – but times change, I suppose.”
“Hurry along now, please,” said Miss Minkin, “my fur
is getting damp.”
They slipped quietly through the cat flap at Ghyllside
Farm, and into the shadowy kitchen. It
was late into the night, and the fire was dying. Hob and Miss Minkin were feeling a little
chilly. Hob blew on the embers to make
them glow, and piled on the straw and the three lumps of coal. He soon had a good blaze going, and he and
Miss Minkin were warm and cosy once more.
Then Hob took the pewter pot and put the ale to warm on the hearth. Last of all, he set the marrowbones to roast
on the grate. While they were sizzling,
he lit his pipe and blew several perfect smoke rings round the star on top of
the Christmas tree. Miss Minkin washed
her face and paws, ready for the feast.
“Merry Christmas!” she said as she eyed the sizzling
marrowbones.
Hob lifted the pewter pot, “Wassail!”
Hob lifted the pewter pot, “Wassail!”
They feasted and danced until morning began to light
up the eastern sky, and had just nodded off to sleep when there was a noise of
feet scrambling down the stairs, and the children came running in. Hob slipped into the shadows and was back
under the hearthstone in no time at all.
Miss Minkin opened one eye.
The children took the bulging stockings down and began
to shout, “I’ve got a doll!”
“He’s given me a train!”
“Look, a chocolate mouse! A spinning top!”
“He’s given me a train!”
“Look, a chocolate mouse! A spinning top!”
They ran upstairs to tell their parents that Father
Christmas had eaten the mince pies and drunk the sherry, and had left lots of
marvellous presents in the stockings and two old bones and a pewter pot on the
hearth.
Miss Minkin closed her eyes and settled down for a
long Christmas Morning nap.
Comments
Happy Christmas!