
2000 Soap Box Archives
The
Healing of a Nation
We simply
must face the rift in the fabric of our country caused by the
long national nightmare election weve just been through.
To deny it would be folly, to ignore it disastrous. The feelings
run deep, hot and divisive split along racial and even geographical
lines and the potential for serious trouble is all but eminent
if we dont begin the process of healing immediately. Granted
the political leadership must initiate the process but when
you get right down to it the responsibility lies with us as
individuals. Weve got to remember that before were
Democrats and Republicans we are Americans. The Pledge of Allegiance
calls us One nation under God, indivisible. Will
we be indivisible? Will we listen to the voice of reason and
put aside our anger, our political differences, our personal
interests for the higher calling of uniting this nation? I hope
so, I pray so and I would invite you all to join me. Unfortunately,
our national media seems intent on perpetuating the strife.
They seem to have an insatiable appetite for unrest. It may
be good for ratings but it sure is bad for the country. I find
no hope in the inflammatory rhetoric of Jesse Jackson and the
I hate whitey remarks of Al Sharpeton. We all know
that the deplorable situation in Florida is something that we
never want to see happen again and we should work toward that
end, but we cant undo what has been done whether we agree
with it or not. We are a nation of laws and the highest court
in the land has spoken. So be it. I certainly dont like
every ruling they pass down but I have to accept it along with
every other law abiding citizen. I personally think that their
Roe vs. Wade decision condones the taking of innocent life and
I'll do all I can to have it overturned but I'm not going to
start any fires. When I think of reasonable men, the names of
Alcee Hastings and J.C. Watts come to mind. Two men, both black,
one Democrat and one Republican, almost diametrically opposed
politically but men of integrity and reason, true leaders and
the kind of men we need to listen to to get back on course.
People its time for forgiveness, for moderation and common
sense and what better time than this season of peace on earth,
good will toward men. We are putting A Carolina Christmas
Carol up again this year as usual and I sincerely hope
youll enjoy it. May you have a bountiful table, a warm
fire and your loved ones close, and may we all remember the
reason for the season. Happy Birthday Jesus.
God
Bless America
Charlie Daniels
A Carolina Christmas Carol
I might
as well go ahead and tell you right up front: I believe in Santa
Claus. Now, you can believe or not believe, but Im here
to tell you for a fact that there is a Santa Claus, and he does
bring toys and stuff like that on Christmas Eve night. I know,
I know. It sounds like Ive had too much eggnog, dont
it?All I ask is that you wait till I get through telling my
story before you make up your mind. When I was a kid, Christmas
time had a magic to it that no other season of the year had.
There was just something in the air, something that you couldn't
put your finger on, but it was there, and it affected everybody.
It seemed like everybody smiled and laughed more at that time
of year, even the people who didnt hardly smile and laugh
the rest of the year. You reckon its gonna snow?
I sure do wish itd snow this year. Do you reckon its
gonna? Heck no, it wont gonna snow. As far as I
know, it aint never snowed in Wilmington, North Carolina,
at Christmas time in the whole history of man. It seemed like
everybody in the world had snow at Christmas except us. In the
funny papers, Nancy and Sluggo and Little Orphaned Annie had
snow to frolic around in at Christmas time. The Christmas cards
had snow. Bing Crosby even had snow to sing about. But not one
flake fell on Wilmington, North Carolina. But that didnt
dampen our spirits one little bit. Our family celebrated Christmas
to the hilt. We were a big, close-knit family, and wed
gather up at Grandmas house every year. My grandparents
lived on a farm in Bladen County, about fifty miles from Wilmington,
and I just couldnt wait to get up there. They lived in
a great big old farmhouse, and every Christmas theyd fill
it up with their children and grandchildren. Wed always
stay from the night of the twenty-third through the morning
of the twenty-sixth. Thered be Uncle Clyde and Aunt Martha,
Uncle Lacy and Aunt Selma, Uncle Leroy and Aunt Mollie, Uncle
Stewart and Aunt Opal, and my mama and daddy, Ernest and Nadine.
I won;t even go into how many children were there, but take
my word for it, there were a bunch. Thered be people sleeping
all over that big old house. We kids would sleep on pallets
on the floor, and wed giggle and play till some of the
grown-ups would come and make us be quiet. All the usual ground
rules about eating were off for those days at Grandmas
house. You could eat as much pie and cake and candy as you could
hold, and your mama wouldnt say a word to you. My grandma
would cook from sunup to sundown and love every minute of it.
Shed have cakes, pies candy, fruit and nuts setting out
all the time, and on top of that, shed cook three big
meals a day. I mean, we eat like pigs. Christmas was also the
only time that my Granddaddy would take a drink. It was a Southern
custom of the time not to drink in front of small children,
so Granddaddy kept his drinking whiskey hid in the barn. When
hed want to go out there and get him a snort, hed
say that he had to go see if the mare had had her foal yet.
It was a good, good time. A little old-fashioned by some peoples
standards, but it suited us just fine. If Im not mistaken,
it was the year I was five years old that my cousin Buford told
me that there wasn't any Santa Claus. Buford was about nine
at the time. He always was a mean-natured cuss. Still is. Well,
I just refused to believe him. I said, Youre telling
a great big fib, Buford Ray, cause Santa Claus comes to
see me every Christmas, right here at Grandma and Granddaddys
house. That aint Santa Claus. Thats
your mama and daddy. One thing led to another and I got
so upset about the prospect of no Santa Claus that I went running
into the house crying. Grandma, Grandma! Buford says there
aint no Santa Claus! There is a Santa Claus, aint
they, Grandma? Of course there is, Curtis. Buford
was just joking with you. Aunt Selma heard me talking
to Grandma and walked to the door. Buford Ray, get yourself
in this house right this minute! When he came in, Aunt
Selma grabbed him by the ear, led him into the front room and
swatted him. Granddaddy was also a big defender of Santa Claus.
He would talk about Santa Claus like he was a personal friend
of his. And the more he went to check on the mare, the more
he talked about Santa Claus, or Sandy Claws, as
he called him. Yes, children, old Sandy Claws will be
hitching up them reindeers and heading on down this a-way before
long,. Wonder what hes gonna bring this year? Hed
have us so excited by the time we went to bed that I reckon
if visions of sugarplums ever danced in anybodys heads,
it was ours. Christmas Eve night, after we had eat about as
much supper as we could hold, wed go in the front room.
Thered always be a big log fire crackling in the fireplace,
and Granddaddy would always say the same thing. Children,
do yall know why we have Christmas every year? Cause
thats when the Baby Jesus was born. Thats
right. Were celebrating the Lords birthday. Do yall
know where He was born at? In Bethlehem, we
would all chime in. Thats right, He was born in
a stable in Bethlehem almost two thousand years ago. Then
Granddaddy would put on his spectacles and read Saint Lukes
version of the Christmas story. Then, after wed had family
prayer, Granddaddy would always get a twinkle in his eye. I
reckon Id better step out to the barn and see if that
old mare has had her baby yet. There was always a chorus
of, Can I go with you, Granddaddy? Yall
had better stay in here by the fire. Its mighty cold outside.
Ill be right back. When Granddaddy came back in
the house, hed always say, I was on my way back
from the barn while ago, and I heard something that sounded
like bells a-tinkling, way back off yonder in the woods. I just
cant figure why bells would be ringing back in the woods
this time of night. Its Santa Claus! Its
Santa Claus! Well, now, I never thought of that.
I wonder if it was old Sandy Claws. You children better get
to bed. You know he wont come to see you as long as youre
awake. Then it was time to say good night. All the grandchildren
would go around hugging all the grown-ups. Good night
Grandma, good night Granddaddy, good night Uncle Clyde, good
night Aunt Mollie, and so forth. We would always try to
stay awake, lying on our pallets until Santa Claus got there,
but we always lost the battle. It sounded like the Third World
War at Grandmas house on Christmas morning. There was
cap pistols going off and baby dolls crying, and all the children
hollering at the top of their lungs. By the time the next school
year started, I was six years old and in the first grade. I
kept thinking about what Buford had said. I didnt want
to believe it, but it kept slipping into the back door of my
mind. At school, Buford was three grades ahead of me, but Id
still see him sometimes. Every time hed see me that whole
year, hed make it a point to rub it in about Santa Claus.
Hed do something like get me around a bunch of his older
buddies and say, Hey , you fellers, Curtis still believes
in Santa Claus. And theyd all laugh and point. Away
from any adult persuasion, I guess Buford finally wore me out.
I returned to Grandmas house the next year not believing
that there was a Santa Claus. Christmas lost a little of its
mystique. Oh, I still enjoyed it. I even pretended that I believed
in Sandy Claws for Granddaddys benefit, but
it wasnt the same. Well, as you know, time marches on,
children grow up and leave home, including me. I was living
in Denver, Colorado, married, with a child, and I hadnt
been home for Christmas since our little daughter had been born.
Dawn was three that year, and this would be the first time that
she really knew about Santa Claus, and she was some kind of
excited. We had the best time shopping for her, buying all the
little toys that she wanted. Daddy called me about three weeks
before Christmas and said, Son, you know that your grandparents
are getting old. Theyve requested that all the children,
grandchildren and great-grandchildren come home the way we used
to. Can you make it, son? Well be there, Daddy.
I couldnt think of a better place in the whole world for
little Dawn to spend her first real Christmas, so we packed
up and headed for North Carolina. Grandma was eighty-two years
old, but she still cooked all day long, and she still enjoyed
every minute of it. Granddaddy was eighty-four, but he still
had a twinkle in his eye and a mare in the barn. The old house
was fuller than ever, with a whole new generation of children
in it. Even Buford. He had married, but he didnt have
any children. He didnt want any. One of my cousins said
he figured Buford was too stingy to have children. Buford was
still the same, except that he had changed from a boy with a
mean nature to a full-grown man with a cynical nature and a
know-it-all attitude. Just before we went into the front room
for family prayer and the reading of the Christmas story, I
overheard him say to somebody, I dont know why Granddaddy
keeps filling the childrens heads full of that Santa Claus
nonsense. I think its ridiculous. If I had children, I
wouldnt let him tell them all that junk. I looked
hard at Buford. I had never liked him, and I liked him even
less now. Our little daughter was so excited when Granddaddy
started talking about Sandy Claws that she jumped
up and down and clapped her hands. When I took her up to bed,
there was pure excitement in those big brown eyes. Santa
Claus is coming, Daddy! Santa Claus is coming, Daddy!
I got a warm feeling all over, and I sure was glad to be back
at Grandmas house at Christmas time. After all the children
had gone to sleep, the grown-ups started going out to their
cars to get the toys they had brought for Santa Claus to leave
under the Christmas tree. I decided to wait until everybody
else had finished before I put Dawns presents out. This
was a special time for me and I wanted to enjoy it. After everybody
had gone up to bed, I went to the car to get Dawns toys.
To my shock, I couldnt find them. I ran back into the
house to my wife. Sylvia, where did you pack Dawns
Christmas presents? I thought you packed them.
I was close to panic, but I didnt want Sylvia to know
it. I said, Oh well, you just go on to bed, honey, and
Ill look again. I probably just overlooked them.
I kissed my wife goodnight and went back downstairs. I knew
I hadnt overlooked them. We had somehow forgot to pack
them, and they were two thousand miles away in Denver, Colorado.
I was a miserable man. I just didnt feel like I could
face little Dawn the next morning. Shed be so disappointed.
All the other children would have the toys that Santa had brought
them, and my beloved little daughter wouldnt have anything.
How could I have been so dumb? Here it was, twelve oclock
Christmas Eve night, all the stores closed, everybody in bed,
and me without a single present for little Dawn. I was heartbroken.
I went into the front room and sat by the dying fire, dejected
and hopeless. I dont know how long I sat there staring
at the embers, but sometime later on I heard a rustle behind
me and somebody said, You got a match, son? I turned
around and almost fell on the floor. Standing not ten feet from
me was a short , fat little man in a red suit, with a long white
beard and a pipe sticking out of his mouth. I couldnt
move, I couldnt speak. He looked at me and chuckled. Have
you got a match, son? I ran out and I want to get this pipe
going. When I finally got my voice back, all I could say
was, Who are you? Well, people call me by
different names in different parts of the world, but around
here they call me Santa Claus. No, I mean who are
you really? I just told you, son. How about that
match? I stumbled to the mantelpiece, got a kitchen match
and gave it to him. Much obliged. He stood there
lighting his pipe, with me looking at him like he was a ghost
or something. How did you get in here? Oh,
Ive got my ways. I thought you were supposed
to slide down the chimney. Thats a common
misconception. Would you slide down a chimney with a fire at
the bottom? Well, no. I mean, no, sir. Well,
neither would I. How did you get here? Ive
got a sturdy sleigh and the finest team of reindeer a man could
have. But we aint got snow. Santa Claus
laughed so hard that his considerable belly shook. I dont
need snow. Half the places I go in the world dont have
snow. Besides, I like to get out of the snow once in a while.
We have it year-round at the North Pole, you know. You
mean you really live at the North Pole? Of course,
Ive always lived at the North Pole. Dont you know
anything about Santa Claus, son? Well, yeah, but
I thought it was all a big put-on for the children. Thats
the trouble with you grown-ups. You think that everything you
cant see is a put-on. Its a shame grown people cant
be more like children. They dont have any trouble believing
in me. You mean youve really got a sleigh,
with reindeer named Donner and Blitzen and stuff like that?
Thats right, son. Theres Comet and Cupid and
Donner and Blitzen and Dasher and Dancer and Prancer and Vixen.
Of course, theres no Rudolph with the red nose. I dont
know who came up with that one. Rudolph really is a put-on.
But what are you doing here? Why did you come? Because
theres a little girl in this house who believes in me
very much. Now, shed be mighty disappointed to wake up
Christmas morning and have nothing under the tree. You
mean you a came all the way here just because one little girl
believes in you? Thats right, son. Theres
magic in believing. Besides, shes not the only one in
this house who believes in me. Who else? Why,
your grandfather, of course. You mean Granddaddy
wasnt putting us on all those years? He really believed
in you? Of course he believed in me. Well,
why do you do this? Its my way of celebrating
the most important birthday in the history of man. Our Lord
has given us so much. How can we do less? Santa Claus
consulted a piece of paper he pulled out of his pocket and started
taking a doll and other toys out of a big bag he had brought
with him. Well, Ive got to go, son. Ive got
a lot of stops to make before sunup. Its been really nice
talking to you. Thanks for the match. Can I help
you with your bag, Santa Claus? No, thats
all right, son. Im used to carrying it. I walked
outside with him. Wheres your sleigh, Santa Claus?
its parked right over there in the edge of the woods.
You can come over and see it if you like. I started walking
over to his sleigh with him, but then I had a thought. Im
gonna have to miss seeing your sleigh and reindeer. Thank you
so very much. You saved my life. God bless you, Santa Claus.
Ill see you next year. God bless you, too,
son and a Merry Christmas to you and yours. Santa Claus
started across the yard toward his sleigh, and I went running
back in the house like a wild man. I raced up the stairs. Buford,
Buford, get up! Whats the matter, is the house
on fire? No, but hurry. Come out on the upstairs
porch. Buford grumbled as he got up and followed me out
on the upstairs porch. What the heck do you want? Its
cold out here. Just hush up and listen. Well,
we listened by a full minute and nothing happened. Youre
crazy. Im going back to bed. Buford, if you
go back in the house, youre gonna miss something that
I want you, above all people, to see. We waited for a
little while longer and I had almost given up when I heard it.
It was just a little tinkle at first, hanging on the frosty
air and getting louder by the second. It was sleigh bells! Buford
looked at me and said, Curtis, is this some kind of joke
or something? No, Buford, I swear it aint.
Just wait a minute now! The sound of sleigh bells was
getting louder and Bufords face was getting whiter. You
got somebody out there doing that, aint you? Admit it!
You got somebody out there, aint you? I didnt
say a word. All of a sudden it sounded like somebody had flushed
a covey of quail. That sleigh came up out of the woods and headed
west, hovering just above the treetops. Buford was speechless.
I thought he was gonna pass out. He held on to the banister
and took deep breaths. Even if you believe so far, I know you
aint gonna believe this next part, but it really happened.
Santa Claus made a big circle and turned and flew right around
he house. I bet he wont over twenty feet from the upstairs
porch when he passes by me and Buford. Old Santa Claus could
really handle them reindeer. Then he headed west again, moving
at a pretty good clip this time. I hate to even tell you this
next part, cause youll think I took it right out
of the book, but I didnt. Anyway, just about the time
he was getting out of our hearing, he hollered, Merry
Christmas, everybody! And then he was gone. Curtis,
do you know where Granddaddy keeps that bottle hid in the barn?
I need me a drink. I dont believe that Buford ever
told anybody about seeing Santa Claus. I know I didnt,
not until now. But I just had to tell somebody about it. Its
been hard keeping it to myself all these years. Im a granddaddy
myself now. That little girl that caused all this to happen
with her faith in Santa Claus is grown and married and has a
three-year-old girl and a five-year-old boy. Me and Sylvia moved
back to North Carolina many years ago and bought a big old farmhouse.
Now my grandchildren come and spend Christmas with me and their
grandmother. Theres not as many of us as there was at
Grandmas house, but we have just as big a time and celebrate
Christmas just as hard. In fact, Christmas is about the only
time a year Ill take a drink. I always get me a pint of
Old Granddad at Christmas time. Since the grandchildren are
so small, I dont like to drink in front of them, so I
keep my drinking whiskey hid out in the barn. When I want to
go out there and get me a snort, I always tell the grandchildren
that Ive got to see if the cows got corn. Of course, all
the grown-ups know why Im going out to the barn, or at
least they think they do. I always make my last trip to the
barn after Ive read the Christmas story and had family
prayer. Everybody thinks Im going out to get me a snort,
but theyre wrong. Im just going out to hear the
sleigh bells ring.
