Don’t
forget to leave your shoes out tonight!
Read
this story about the Von Trapp Family . . .
Perhaps an even more
effective way of encouraging virtuous behavior in children than leaving treats
or switches in their shoes may be the appearance of St. Nicholas himself, who
delivers his treats and chastisements in person.
DIRECTIONS
While in some places the
children only put their shoes on the window sill on the eve of St. Nicholas'
Day and find them filled with candies, cookies, oranges, and dried fruit
the next morning (but only the good ones; the bad ones find a switch), in other
parts St. Nicholas comes in person. He always did in our house. On the eve of
December 5th the whole family would gather in the living room with great expectancy.
By the time the much-expected knock at the door could be heard, one could
almost hear the anxious heartbeat of the little ones. The holy bishop, in his
pontifical vestments, accompanied by Krampus, would enter the room while
everybody stood up reverently. St. Nicholas always carried a thick book in
which the Guardian Angels make their entries throughout the year. That's why
the saint has such an astonishing knowledge about everybody. He calls each
member of the household forward, rewarding the good and admonishing the less
good. The good children will get a package of sweets, whereas Krampus aims at
the legs of the children who did not deserve one. After everyone has received
his due, the holy bishop addresses a few words of general admonition to the whole
family, acting as a precursor to the One Who is to come, drawing their thoughts
toward Christmas, asking them to prepare their hearts for the coming of the
Holy Child. After giving his blessing, he takes his leave, accompanied
reverently by the mother, who opens the door for him. Soon afterwards the
father, who, oddly enough, usually misses this august visit, will come home,
and he has to hear everything about it from the youngest in the house.
Of course it did not occur
to us, even in the first and second years in America, that St. Nicholas' Day
should pass without the dear saint's appearing in our family circle. In the old
home this beloved bishop's attire was stored away in the attic to be used every
year on the evening before his feast, but now we had to work with cardboard and
paper for the mitre, a bed sheet for an alb, a golden damask curtain borrowed
from friends for a cope, and a broomstick artistically transformed into a
bishop's staff. But at the right moment St. Nicholas opened the door. That
taught us that it really does not require money, but only imagination and good
will, to revive or introduce these lovely old customs.
Activity Source: Around
the Year with the Trapp Family by Maria Augusta Trapp, Pantheon
Books Inc., New York, New York, 1955
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