The Christmas Angel

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    The Christmas Angel

    The Christmas Angel



    Late one night in the toy store
    the old man trimmed his tree
    with all his love
    and all his skill
    with toys carved through his artistry.

    Little toy soldiers at attention stood
    guarding the Christmas Spirit.
    Golden bells chimed their song
    so true that you could feel it.

    Mr. Angelino was his name-
    pure white of hair and brow.
    A size-less man,
    with calloused hands
    who answered questions of why and how.

    In front of the crackling fireplace
    (that burned the whole year through)
    he'd carve and talk;
    inspire and dream,
    telling marvelous stories
    he would swear were true!

    His hands always caressed a piece of wood
    as he sat in his hand-carved rocking chair
    waiting for an idea to come
    as to what it could be
    with a nick here or there.

    I used to love the toyshop-
    I always felt at home; secure.
    He always knew
    when life was wrong. . .
    and when it was, he'd find a cure.

    Until one day I didn't go in,
    instead I passed him by
    and although he'd come to the door and watch
    he never pressed for why.

    Summer heat baked leaves to brown,
    Autumn cooled, then snowflakes flew.
    I turned to my writing, to books, to dreams
    and never guessed the old man knew

    the problems that tormented me so,
    the teasing the teacher's pet had received
    and without my ever breathing a word
    Mr. Angelino's cure was thus conceived.

    When you are the odd-girl-out in town
    for some reason different from the very start,
    the one who is teased about her name and her dress 
    feels very strange and very apart.

    Just when every girl needs to feel pretty
    a head-on collision wept colors dim--
    clear glass  blocking out the light--
    bandages and scars; without and within.

    Kids are cruel, they don't understand.
    Unable to cherish what it meant to see
    and so they laughed and teased and joked
    at the glasses I wore, and so at me.

    Every year at the toystore
    the old man trimmed his Christmas tree.
    Every year he carved a new angel
    to crown the top for all to see.

    He must have had fifty
    from previous years; each one a masterpiece.
    All of them different, all of them carved;
    each one a herald of Christmas Peace.

    The Christmas Angel he carved that year
    was his last. . .unfortunately.
    He carved the magic of his craft
    into a special angel for all to see.

    He waited until Christmas Eve
    to light his tree that year
    and all the people crowded 'round his store
    singing songs of joy and cheer.

    While they waited together:
    I stood there alone- on the side
    being pelted with snowballs:
    wanting to be there, yet wanting to hide.

    Wondering why after all these months
    I was still being teased about my glasses thick.
    When a deep expectancy  stilled the crowd
    as Mr. Angelino lit the candle's wick.


    I heard the crowd murmur in delight,
    saw fingers pointed at the tree
    and simply couldn't understand
    when everyone turned to look at me.

    The crowd parted leaving a path
    of faces which now were smiling at me.
    Feeling foolish, embarrassed, scared,
    I walked to the window and saw his tree.

    Suddenly I understood
    and lifted my head up high.
    Someone began singing "Silent Night"
    and outside the toystore
    joy was nigh!


    There on top of the Christmas Tree
    carved with a theme for the masses
    was a beautiful, smiling angel
    wearing a thick pair of glasses!

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    A poem begins as a lump in the throat, a sense of wrong, a homesickness, a lovesickness. It finds the thought and the thought finds the words.

    Robert Frost (1875-1963) American Poet.

    fyndorian’s Poems (2)

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