Hope and Good Resolutions (together): Good cheer, Mother Goose! Father Christmas, good cheer! We wish each and all of you happy New Year!
(Happy New Year and her children
group themselves next to
Thanksgiving. Enter Santa
Claus, bustling about and shaking
hands with everybody while
speaking.)
Santa Claus:
What ho, Father Christmas!
What ho, Mother Goose!
At last from my Christmas-eve
duties I’m loose.
Not a stocking from north
pole to south but I’ve filled,
Books, candies, and toys by
each mantlepiece spilled.
My pack is quite empty, my
reindeer done out,
But on Christmas morning there’ll
be such a shout
From the east to the west,
from the south to the north,
When their gifts from their
stockings the children pull forth,
That it’s worth all
my trouble—that hearty good cheer,
“Hurrah! In the
night Santa Claus has been here!”
But, folks, I am hungry, I
freely confess,
So on to the dining-room now
I will press.
Roast turkey and cranberry
sauce and mince pie
Are there on the table, I
saw passing by.
Father Christmas:
Now Santa has come, let the banquet
be shared
That for our reunion I’ve ordered prepared.
To the dining-room we will adjourn, Mother Goose;
(Takes her arm)
Come, all the rest, follow—I’ll
take no excuse.
Santa Claus, lead Thanksgiving; Jack, Happy New
Year;
Away now, my friends, to our good Christmas cheer!
(All go out, two by two, singing
the following stanza to the
air of “Upidee.”)
All together:
Come to the Christmas feast so gay,
Tra la la, tra la la;
Good Father Christmas leads the way,
Tra la la, la la.
Come, children, he’ll “take no excuse;”
Come, follow him and Mother Goose.
Merry, merry Christmas,
all!
Christmas
gay, happy day!
Merry, merry Christmas,
all,
Merry
Christmas day.
* * * * *
=Christmas Waits.=
By KATHERINE WEST.
(Dress four boys, or six, in a quaint costume,—full knee-breeches, low shoes with bright buckles, tunic or doublet with white frills at the throat and wrist; a short full cape hanging from the shoulders, and soft caps with plumes. Old garments may be re-arranged to give a picturesque effect, or some new, inexpensive material bought. Each boy should have a voice of pleasing quality, and be taught the Christmas song perfectly.
Arrange a frame like a window casement at the back of the platform a little to one side. Behind this let a light burn dimly until a signal is given for full illumination. If practicable, leave the rest of the stage and audience-room in darkness.
The boys begin to sing behind closed