Guest Post: A Stanley Hudson Christmas
What morbid blows does the sword of time deal to youthful faith. The mysteries of yesterday are today's forgotten fables, though I dare say that embers of legend still glow under the ashes of our burnt out faith.
They tend to glow a bit hotter this time of year as we hang the stockings on the mantle, decorate the tree with lights and tensile, sip homemade hot-chocolate next to a blazing fire and wake up to a once familiar world made magical overnight by the spell of the white, winter wizard. Parents will continue the traditional ruse of the midnight giver, dressed in red and white, commander of his gravity defying vessel stacked high with toys, pulled by flying stags, rewarding all the good girls and boys. Yes, nostalgia and sentimentalism poke at the cooling coals of mystery in the human soul for a brief time until the day after Christmas and then are covered again from the gravy and ham, spiked eggnog, empty boxes, wads of wrapping paper and disappointed looks.
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