A Child's Christmas in Scarborough
  By the late Howard Engel, with apologies to Dylan Thomas, and with   felicitations from Dean at the end...
  Whenever I remember Christmas as a child in Scarborough, I can never   remember whether the slush was new or old, or whether we lived on the sixth   street north of the shopping plaza stoplights and I was seven years old, or   whether it was the seventh street and I was six. But still my nose and   fingertips tingle at the thought of Christmas in the row-housing, whose names   rang their challenging, forlorn ways down to the fast-backed, nerve and   gear-wracking lanes of the freeway: Elegance Manors, Tweedingham Mews,   Buckingham Back Courts; and I am again a boy among boys, riding our   crash-barred, chrome-bedazzling bikes through the supermarket swing doors,   grabbing girls' toques and Popsicles in the Mac's Milk and diving with our arms   spread to make angels in the snow-banks that the ploughs churned up, plunging   our hands to the soggy, stitch-straining armpits and pulling out, as I am doing   now, uncles with ham-red hands, scratchy and sizzling-hot in their wife-bought   cable-knits and après ski, who through the live-long Christmas afternoons   watched the Buffalo Bills and the Los Angeles Rams battling in full colour on a   purple field, and sat through Sugar Bowls and Dust Bowls, Cotton and Flannel   Bowls until the punch bowl was emptied for the last time and they moved up the   queasy, shifting stairs from the rec-room to the hall. And clear as the   chlorinated water in the taps, but not so clear as a secret rivulet in the snows   that we boys found near the highway that was gone in the spring when the hill   was cleared for a condominium, I see Uncle Harry turning away the Salvation Army   girl at the door and making us all laugh as she fell on the path on the ice I   should have chipped away.
  Christmas in Scarborough was nothing if it was not families and laughter.   But before the compacts and the late-models and the single sports car owned by   Aunt Hetty, the divorcee, who bought the Fugs record, before the hordes of   uncles and aunts and cousins jousted for a parking spot and the superintendent   appeared to ask us to remove a car that had been parked in someone else's spot,   there were the presents that smoothed Father's absence due to overtime, and   Mother's voice raised in the kitchen downstairs while the supper held in the   stove at low heat congealed.
  And there were disappointments, for as one scavenged among boxes and   ribbons and discarded batteries from robots that never worked, and broken   strings from suddenly mute Talking Barbies, there had to be one, small, bright   and unutterably just right present that lies forever hiding over the rim of   memory even now, as I remember, I can see it dancing somewhere in the dark room   before sleep, and even in the dreams of Christmas night, when I ran through the   vanished fields of our subdivision and climbed and tumbled in the haylofts of   the vanished barns, it was there amongst the ghosts of swallows and blue jays   and horses -- all gone now, like the words we wrote in last year's snow: Fanny   Hill puts out. And, in the moonlight in the dark of the yard unlit by   streetlights because of Charlie's air rifle and where no car would desecrate its   stillness and the dark velvet of its shadows with the cold incandescence of its   lights, I crept close to the sleeping whaleback of the hay-breathing house. I   stole past the oaken veneer majesty of my parents' door, and finally warm in the   acrylic goose down of my bed above orchards and cockcrow and the sailing ship   moon on the skating pond; I slept until dawn sped back the whole farm and the   cattle and the soft-eyed horses back to the darkest corner of my room where the   sun never shines and socks can sometimes be found amid the slut's wool.
  And then it was afternoon: and all the cousins, friends of friends, who had   been stuffed into spare rooms and cautioned to nap because they had stayed up   all night in candy-caned anticipation of catching Santa and delayed for a day   his return to the department store throne, were awakened and sent off into the   streets. And, waking from a dream in which I chased the blue and white   stocking-capped boys, bigger boys from the skating rink at City Hall, glimpsed   once on television, I dress in my fur-lined boots, was stuffed into station   wagons with protesting uncles who drove as though the football games of all the   world were punting in the shadows of the last-minute goalposts. And then we were   sliding down the slopes of everlasting snow, everlasting for as long as the   machine flew Niagaras of chipped ice over its diesel-throbbing back. And there,   in that spinning time, I have my ski-lift ticket stapled to me, as though I were   my own receipt for being, and hug for dear day the live cable that pulls me to   the top and almost doesn't let go, and then I am poised on last year's skis, and   am ready to take my turn. And then I do that. And I do it again, and then I come   home for tea, uncles and the barracks of my Christmas soon-to-be-forgotten   child's life.
  And I remember that Aunt Hetty, who was the centre of attention in the   kitchen but was not allowed in to help with the gossip, lay stretched out on the   Spanish sofa, her soft, brandy-breath keeping Ernie, her latest lover,   stupefied. Then Uncle Herbert appeared from the depths of the basement like a   drunken porpoise and chased the whole kitchen gaggle with a plastic spring of   mistletoe, and came to a bad end with his elbow in the gravy boat. Then Father   phoned from Number 41 Station to say that he had been in the eggnog again and   that he would be detained, and Mother drank the cooking sherry, and the turkey   went unbasted. Then Uncle Frank who had been a stockbroker and then a convict   tried again to dance the Windfall of '65 and fell through the picture window.   Then the neighbours knocked on the wall and we knocked on the neighbour's wall   and then the police came. – Howard Engel
  +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
  From Dean: Please accept with no obligation, implied or implicit, my best   wishes for an environmentally conscious, socially responsible, low stress,   non-addictive, gender-neutral, winter solstice holiday, practised within the   most joyous traditions of the religious persuasion of your choice, but with   respect for the religious persuasion of others who choose to practice their own   religion as well as those who choose not to practice a religion at all.
  Additionally, please accept a fiscally successful, personally fulfilling,   and medically uncomplicated recognition of the generally accepted calendar year   2021, but not without due respect for the calendars of choice of other cultures   whose contributions have helped make our society great, and without regard to   the race, creed, colour, age, physical disability, religious faith, choice of   computer platform, or sexual preference of the wishee.
  [Disclaimer: This greeting is subject to clarification or withdrawal. It   implies no promise by the wisher to actually implement any of the wishes for   himself or others and no responsibility for any unintended emotional stress   these greetings may bring to those not caught up in the holiday spirit. This   wish is warranted to perform as expected within the usual application of good   tidings for a period of one year, or until the issuance of a subsequent holiday   greeting, whichever comes first, and warranty is limited to replacement of this   wish or issuance of a new wish at the sole discretion of the wisher.]
  By The Way, this Christmas greeting is good for TWO years, 2021-2022, in   case COVID-19 is still around.
  SO: Have a Merry...and a Happy....
  AND http://gothicepicures.blogspot.com
AND https://twitter.com/gothicepicures
Dean Tudor, Ryerson University Journalism Professor Emeritus
Treasurer, Wine Writers' Circle of Canada http://winewriterscircle.ca
Look it up and you'll remember it; screw it up and you'll never forget it.
 
 

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