This blog is a poem – actually a weird adaptation of Clement Clarke Moore’s “Twas the night before Christmas…” for a very wonderful reason. Let me explain:
2020 has been the most awkward, unkind, devastating, demoralizing year for most of mankind because of the pandemic. This same year has also been one of neighborhood “urban renewal,” at least on our quiet little street with the exponential growth of the University at the end of the avenue. We have seen many of our neighbors’ homes gobbled up lately as part of an apparent eminent domain philosophy. As such we now have graduate and upper class university students living on either side of us and across the street. Several other homes around us are now university homes.
As we curse the gods, karma, and the current Rump administration for the black hole of yuck in which we are living, would this new “neighbor” situation drive us further to despair? Would we wake each night to “Animal House” parties; find kegs and cans all over our yard every Sunday morning like the weekly newspaper delivery? Would sorority row keep onslaughts of traffic coming and going? I mean, come on, they are like vampires, sleeping all day and prowling all night. Would we have to insulate our visiting grandkids from sights and sounds of college life surrounding our rest home of serenity?
Well, it turned out that one of the most positive results of being quarantined for 800 weeks on a self-pity island surrounded by all hormonal twenty somethings is that the lifeline to sanity and normalcy was the trio of angels that moved in next door disguised as graduate business students. It was like we woke up one morning and our granddaughters had gone from preschool to grad school and moved in next door. Could not have had any better hopes for neighbors. So, in tribute to their kindness, their unbridled joy and friendship, we wrote them a little appreciative plagiarized Christmas poem before they went to their “other” homes for the holidays. (we are currently contacting all their advisors to make sure the girls fail all exams and have to stay another year 😉)
For the TEA girls of 236
Twas weeks before Christmas
And all thru the hood
Not a student was stirring
They’d gone home, as they could.
Our stockings were hung
From the chimney with care
In hopes that their presence
Would cure the Covid despair.
Grandchildren all quarantined
In their homes far away
With visions of visits
To Montlieu someday.
Peg in her T shirt
And me in my cap
Had just settled down
For an afternoon nap.
When out on the porch
There arose such a clatter
I sprang from my chair
To see what was the matter.
I sprang to the hallway
And rushed to the door
But I tripped on the rug
And nearly fell to the floor.
In a moment of panic
I yelled “what The Hell” …
In hopes that Peg
Would answer the bell.
When what to our wondering
Eyes should appear
But our three favorite neighbors
With gifts of good cheer.
With boxes and cards
All wrapped with a bow
A stocking stuffed full
Yet we had nothing to show.
They stood three together
Like angels in masks
And said Merry Christmas
While we stood both aghast.
More rapid than eagles
Their time was all spent
We talked all so fast
And wished more could be lent.
Now Taylor
Now Amelia, now Emily three
Off to their real homes
They would travel to be.
With beautiful smiles
And a wave of their wrists
They would all soon be gone
Our neighbors, our friends, our girls of 236.
But we heard them exclaim
Ere they drove out of sight
Merry Christmas to all
And to all a good night.
December 7, 2020
Great poem Mr. Moonrose. Ol Mr. Moore would be proud of your semi plagerism.
LikeLike