The True Stories of Everyone's Favorite Holidays: Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas
Joseph Walker McSpadden
language
(A. J. Cornell Publications, May 29, 2011)
Originally published in 1917 as portions of the author’s larger “The Book of Holidays,” this Kindle edition, equivalent in length to a physical book of approximately 30 pages, describes, in simple language for young readers, the origins and customs of Halloween, Thanksgiving, and Christmas.Sample passages:(Halloween) But, after all, the pumpkin lantern parade and the bonfire are the great outdoor events of the night. The fallen leaves have been carefully collected into a prodigious heap around an empty box. The fire is lighted, the torches are kindled, and the “procession” gives the boys and girls a healthy appetite for the “eats,” without which no Halloween party would be complete.… Brownies, witches, bats, black cats, toads, snakes, and spiders are to be seen, by the weird light of little jack-o’-lanterns or witch candles—but the shrieks of delight show that no one is frightened; for they are all made out of paper or papier mâché.(Thanksgiving) Today we celebrate it in much the same spirit as did the Pilgrim Fathers. Church services are held for those who wish to keep in touch with the religious spirit of the day; but with the large majority of us it is peculiarly a home festival—the time when we round up all the stragglers and bring them together again in the home circle—and when the good father and mother can help the plates again of each one of their grown-up boys and girls, and of their boys and girls in turn, about the ever-increasing board. And Thanksgiving comes at just the very best time for a feast. The fat old gobbler has reached his perfection; the pumpkins smile a golden smile; the harvest is in; and the cider sparkles in the mill.(Christmas) Old Santa Claus, without whom no Christmas would be complete, is also a subject of traditions running back hundreds of years, almost to the very beginning of the Christian era.… He first appears in the Northland as a grim figure riding upon a white horse, resembling our modern fancy of the image of Death. He was followed about, upon Christmas Eve, by the souls of little children, some said, the spirits of the innocents slain at Bethlehem by the order of Herod. So, at Yuletide children placed their wooden shoes full of oats outside the door, for the great white horse, and, in the morning, if they were good children, the oats were gone and the shoes filled with apples and nuts. Later he was seen in Germany as a tall, thin fellow wearing a peaked hat; his deep pockets being full of sugarplums for the children. It was not until after he came over the sea to America that he became the fat, round, beaming elf who has become so familiar, and was first made immortal in “The Night Before Christmas.” Evidently our climate has agreed with him, although he doubtless scrambled down the chimneys a lot more easily in his younger days when he was slim.About the author:Joseph Walker McSpadden (1874-1960) was the author of numerous books for young and old, including “The Story of Abraham Lincoln,” “Robin Hood,” and “Opera Synopses.”