We'll all be children and have a lot of fun out of it. Ina Dobson, December 1932
Yes,
Sadie was visiting again, while her parents, Ethel and Ernest, were moving
house. They would come for Christmas and then she would have to leave with
them, but for now, Sadie looked forward to getting ready for a farm Christmas
with her Grandma Ina.
Just
then Sadie thought of the little cubby closet in her room – the magic closet under
the eaves where Christmas things would sometimes appear. She jumped
off her chair and announced, “Gram, I’m going upstairs to check the magic closet
before it gets too dark.” And before Ina could answer, Sadie was flying up the stairs.
“Maybe
the elves took care of it,” replied Jack.
Sure
enough – Sadie was soon back carrying a little booklet entitled A Child’s
Christmas Cookbook.
“Gram,
Gram,” called Sadie excitedly, “look what I found – a little cookbook. Can we read it?
Can we read it?”
[A
Child’s Christmas Cookbook was “published in conjunction with the
exhibition, Once Upon a Christmas, at the Denver Art Museum, Denver,
Colorado, December, 1964. The exhibition and the cookbook, sponsored by the
Denver Art Museum Volunteers, are dedicated to the warm, nostalgic memory of an
old-fashioned Victorian Christmas.” The booklet was written by Betty Chancellor
and designed by Kay Obering. The illustrations are from Thomas Nast.]
3 comments:
Oh! I love that fat Santa on the Denver Art Museum piece!
Sadie and Ina can start the month off like me...a goal of writing a few cards a day so that I will have them in the mail this first week. Christmas will be here so soon!
Thomas Nast sketched that Santa. We'll see more of his sketches and perhaps learn a bit, if not about Nast at least about the Santa he envisioned.
Yes, Sadie and Ina could write cards -- or look at cards. And of course, they have the cookbook to consider.
Chuck says that he has his holiday letter ready to mail.
Let Christmas begin!! Such fun!
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