The
world was beautiful in its snowy white finery, but the roads had been cleared
allowing for travel to and from town. Miss Johnson sent word last night that school
would resume today, so Jack carried Sadie over to the schoolhouse on old Taft,
the horse.
Some
children might have pouted about having to return to school, but not Sadie. She
was anxious to practice for the pageant. And Ina was definitely relieved to be
able to finish her cards and pack her boxes for mailing. Jack carried the
remainder of their Christmas cards and a box addressed to daughter Pearl to the
mailbox today.
For
the real Ina, the essence of her Christmas celebration were gifts and cards. I
would say she began to plan the gifts in September or October when harvest was
over. Traditional holiday goodies were not her thing. She might have made her mother’s recipe for pork cake
(which she admitted she didn’t really like), the family gingersnap recipe,
doughnuts for Christmas breakfast, and taffy-coated popcorn. With her sister,
Bertha, now, it was a different thing. She would try new recipes, and even Ina pronounced
Bertha’s cooking “very good.”
On
Christmas Eve – or perhaps the eve of Christmas eve – the living and dining
rooms could be decorated with fir boughs. My dad, Vance, living in Raymond,
Washington, would send a swag for the door and beautiful holly. One year he included red candles. “How do you think of such things?” wrote Ina. “It
must be what they call having an imagination.”
Research
shows that even in those days, the post office encouraged early mailing, but
neither Ina nor her offspring appear to have practiced that. Christmas was to
happen at Christmastime, so the boxes of gifts arrived right on time, or even late. They didn’t seem to
worry about it. “Your box extended the season for us,” Ina would write.
Now,
when did Ethel say they would arrive? Oh yes, Sunday the 22nd. That
would be good because Ina was used to preparing a big Sunday meal. Bringing
another man to the table, the food wouldn’t stretch as far, but that was all
right. With Christmas coming, there would be plenty of food on hand.
2 comments:
I didn't know Santa had that awesome crank engine convertible! But hey, why not? He works hard and deserves it.
Santa often turns up in a fancy old-fashioned car. I don't know why.
Post a Comment