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The Rural Voice, 1985-12, Page 12Remembrance of Things Past Celebrating the Season by Andrew Dixon f all the entertainments of my youth, Christmas and the Christmas concert were the most exciting, especially when I was very small and everything was accepted at face value. I had no previous experience with which to make comparisons and no disillusions to lessen anticipation. I suppose from a professional point of view that the Christmas concert was awful, but to me it was and still is a glorious experience. About a month before the event I would be given a "Piece." This would be a short verse usually cut from a local paper and saved for the occasion. No doubt it had been read by all in the congregation, but to me it was new. I wish I could draw a picture to show the wonder of that night — a little white brick church in the midst of the headstones recording those who had made the community, a cold frosty winter night, cutters and sleighs with their chim- ing bells converging on the building, the friendly yellow glow of the windows from the outside, and the welcome warmth as you entered the building. 1 - .� t �-: ` ` \� y There were few evergreens in our area but there was a Christmas tree, without lights of course, because there was no electricity, but there were coloured balls, red ribbon and tinsel, and in the soft mysterious light of the oil -burning lamps the tree probably had all the enchantment of the better illuminated trees of today. Presents were tied to the tree, one for every child there. But the concert came first. So I watched the concert with delight and interest. The chairman was usually the minister and occasionally he offended by delivering a sermon, much to the consternation of a restless little boy. But when you were finally announced there was applause while you mounted the stage. You made a bow and said your "Piece," with prompting if necessary, and made your final bow. For a small, very inexperienced boy, this was a lot to remember but by and large I did reasonably creditably. Yet I doubt if anybody heard what I said because it real- ly was a bit scary away up there, and strange. At the end of the concert, Santa Claus THE RURAL VOICE