153 lines
7.6 KiB
Standard ML
153 lines
7.6 KiB
Standard ML
*:*:*: WHERE SANTA CAME FROM :*:*:*
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Once upon a time, when the world was much younger, a very special child was
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born. He came to be known as Santa Claus, and he's loved and revered the
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world over.
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But the story begins even before then. In a quiet little village in a small
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country lived a handsome young carpenter named Sandy Claus. His wife was
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named Tasha, and she was the most beautiful lady in the whole land. Sandy
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and Tasha were very happy together. They never quarreled; they were respected
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by their fellow villagers; they always had plenty of food to eat.
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But there was one sadness in their lives, and it made their hearts ache.
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They wanted desperately to have a little child. But they'd never been able to.
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Years passed, then passed again. Sandy was elected mayor of the village.
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Tasha became the best friend of all the children in the town. But still they
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had no child of their own.
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Sandy's beard turned gray. Tasha began to have wisps of white in her hair.
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And they knew that they had become too old to have children now. Their dream
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would forever go unfulfilled.
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One night before they went to bed, Sandy looked up at the sky. Black clouds
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moved ponderously across the stars. "It's going to be a bad one," he said
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solemnly. And he latched the shutters firmly over the windows. As the night
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wore on, the sky turned dark and wild. The wind moaned through the trees;
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leaves skittered down the dusty road.
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"This is a night of nights!" Sandy whispered to Tasha. "It's enough to make
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strong men weep!"
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The rain pelted down against their thatched roof, drowning out his words. But
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Tasha shared his fears, and clung close to him underneath their thick quilts.
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The storm whipped about them hour after hour, as they tossed and turned
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through the endless night.
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Then, suddenly, the rain stopped. The wind turned away. All was quiet.
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Sandy drew a deep breath. Tasha uttered a silent prayer of thankfulness.
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But the wail began again. Only this time it was different. It didn't rustle
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the thatches on the roof; it didn't wheeze around the corners of the house.
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It was high and shrill -- and very lonely.
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Tasha sat up in a bed, urgent. "It's a baby!" she said. And she jumped out
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of the bed and ran to the door of their hut. There, on their doorstep, was
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a little reddened baby wrapped in heavy blankets, soaked to the skin -- and
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crying lustily. She picked him up tenderly, held him to her breast, and
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carried him to Sandy. "A baby," she said softly.
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They pulled the wet blankets off. Attached to the baby's diaper was a note:
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"I love this baby more than my life. But disaster threatens! I know you will
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care for him as if he were your own. LOVE HIM FOR ME!" The note was not
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signed.
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Tasha held the baby's cheek against hers. "Something horrible has happened
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to your mother on this horrible night," she said. "But we will love and
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care for you, for HER. Forever!"
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In the morning, Tasha and Sandy had the first and last argument of their
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marriage. "We'll name the baby after me," Sandy announced at the breakfast
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table. "We'll call him Sandy."
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Tash looked up sharply. "No," she said. "I've waited so long. We will call
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him Tash, after me." "It will be Sandy." Sandy said again. his voice rising
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louder. "No! Tash!" Tasha answered, her voice even louder.
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They ate the rest of their meal in silence, avoiding glances, refusing to
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speak. Then the baby began to cry, and Tasha went to care for him. Sandy
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slammed the door when he left the hut to go to work.
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All day long Tash thought of the problem. "We both love this baby -- but
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we love each other too. I was wrong. We should name him Sandy.
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And all day long Sandy thought of the problem, as he sawed and hammered his
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wood. "I love Tasha more than myself," he thought. "I've been so wrong.
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We'll name him Tash.
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When he went home that night, Tasha met him at the door. "We'll name him
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San--" she started to say but Sandy interrupted: "Tash," he said.
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Then they looked at each other and laughed. "Santash?" Sandy said. "What
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kind of a name is that?" "No kind of name for our son," Tasha said. "Why
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don't we name him Santa, after both of us?"
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Santa was a good boy, helpful to his mother and obedient to his father. He
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made friends quickly as he grew, and soon he was the favorite among his
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fellows.
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But the adults in the village were worried. "His ears are a little pointed,"
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said one. "I'll bet he has some elf blood in him." "I don't trust him,"
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said another. "Never trust half-elf, that's what I always say." "His cheeks
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are too rosy," gossiped a third. "Just like an elf's!"
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When Santa walked into the village, the people called him names, and were
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rude to him. "Don't come near me, Elf-boy. I don't want your evil magic
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around me!" "Get away from here, Imp!" "Don't you dare look at me with your
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elvish evil-eye, you point-eared twit!"
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More than once, Santa ran home crying to his mother. "I'm sorry," Tasha
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said. "I'm sorry." And she stroked his golden hair.
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When he grew older, Tasha explained: "People are foolish," she said. "They
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fear elves because elves are different. But just looking in your face I can
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tell they are wonderful people."
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While the adults were being mean, the children were becoming Santa's friends,
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more and more. They didn't care that his ears pointed a little; and they
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didn't care that his cheeks were rosy. All they knew was that he was a
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loving friend, and they loved him back.
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When Santa became a man, he moved away from the village to another land,
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far away. He became a famous carpenter, with the kings and princes coming
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to him for carpentry work.
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But everywhere he went he saw meanness. People beating their children.
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Drinking or gambling away their money while their children went hungry.
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Buying a fine new horse or carriage while their children wore rags.
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Of course, most parents were wonderful with their children. But when Santa
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saw the mean ones, he wept. And he remembered how his friends had loved
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him as a boy, when all the adults were horrible. "I must help these poor
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children," he said to himself. And he began to save his money.
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On the next gift-day, Santa took special gifts to all the poor children and
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left them in secret during the night. The next day the whole town was alive
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with talk of the miracle that had happened: some mysterious being had left
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gifts for many, many children in the night. Santa smiled to himself. And
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he felt happier than he ever had before.
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The next year, Santa gave out even more gifts and the following year he gave
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still more. And he noticed that the people in the town began to change. No
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one knew who was giving the gifts -- so everyone was kind to everyone else.
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"My wicked neighbor might be the generous one, in secret," each of the
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townspeople thought. "I'd better treat him much better." They were nicer
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to their children, too. "If someone thinks they're that special," they
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thought, "I should be kinder to them."
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Before long, Santa was giving gifts to every child in the town. "I want
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every one of them to feel loved, by someone," he wrote in a letter to Sandy
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and Tasha. "I want every one of them to have as much love as you gave me."
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As Santa gave more and more, he wanted to share with even more children. He
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wanted to give to every child in the land, and in the neighboring land, and
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in all lands beyond that. And, over the years, he's been able t do just that.
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Now the little boy who was left on the doorstep in the storm, the little boy
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who was half-elf, ridiculed by the people in his town -- now that little boy
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is a man. Now he's Santa Claus, the most famous, most loved man in the
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whole world!
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