Thank you to
Sprite Writes for including me in the
Virtual Advent Tour she has organized for four years. For those who don’t know, Advent is a liturgical season leading up to Christmas which includes the four preceding Sundays. Growing up, my family often had an advent wreath with pink and purple candles which we loved lighting before dinner.
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Katherine reads the enclosed note to Winona |
As an adult, my favorite holiday tradition is the
Betsy-Tacy ornament exchange. Every year, the fans of
Maud Hart Lovelace’s beloved Betsy-Tacy series, set in turn of the century Minnesota, participate in secret ornament exchange to honor a Christmas shopping expedition our heroines made in 1903 or so with their friend Winona Root:
There on a long table Christmas
tree ornaments were set out for sale.
There were boxes and boxes full of them, their colors mingling in
bewildering iridescence. There were
large fragile balls of vivid hues, there were gold and silver balls; there were
tinsel angels, shining harps and trumpets, gleaming stars.
“Here,” said Betsy, “here we
buy.”She looked at Winona,
bright-eyed, and Winona looked from her to the resplendent table.“Nothing,” Tacy tried to
explain, “is so much like Christmas as a Christmas-tree ornament.” “You get a lot for ten cents,”
said Tib.
They gave themselves then
with abandon to the sweet delight of choosing.
It was almost pain to choose.
Each fragile bauble was gayer, more enchanting than the last. And now they were not only choosing, they
were buying. What each one chose she
would take home; she would see it on the Christmas tree; she would see it year
after year, if she were lucky and it did not break.
They walked around and around
the table, touching softly with mitten hands.Betsy at last chose a large
red ball. Tacy chose an angel. Tib chose a rosy Santa Claus. Winona chose a
silver trumpet.They yielded their dimes . .
. [t]hey walked to Ray’s Shoe Store, smiling, holding Christmas in their hands.
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Katherine received a vintage bicycle
ornament on behalf of Winona Root |
Each year a number of human “elves” make random assignments so that we can send ornaments anonymously to each other in the guise of the series characters or using incidents in the books as inspiration. Each ornament I have received is my favorite but two I especially love are the very first one I received, a dressmaker’s dummy from Miss Mix, Betsy Ray’s seamstress, and a more recent one, a Big Ben ornament that evokes Betsy’s sojourn in London just before WWI.
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In the past, the basketball came from Tib, a frog from
Kalil, and Big Ben from Betsy's time in London |
My tree is not yet trimmed but here is this year’s ornament – sent by the piano from Betsy’s home. How did my kind sender know how the image of Betsy and her friends rolling up the rug so they could dance while Mrs. Ray pounded out a two-step is one I see so clearly in my mind’s eye and cherish? (Betsy-Tacy fans often yearn for a television show to bring attention to the tomes we love but we also fear a cartoonish depiction that would make us cringe; our imaginations are preferable.)
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Piano ornament - with rug! |
My younger nieces, also
Betsy-Tacy readers, participated in the ornament exchange this year, and you can see Katherine (11) received a lovely vintage bicycle ornament for Winona (above). Tess (7) received an ornament from Tib. You can also check out some of
my ornament posts from previous years.
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Tess is a 2nd grade Betsy-Tacy fan |
If you have not read
Betsy-Tacy (what are you waiting for?), it is
Betsy-Tacy Goes Downtown in which the girls make the first ornament expedition but I recommend
Heaven to Betsy for first time adult readers.
Thanks to Nan of
Letters from a Hill Farm - I read about this Advent tour on her charming blog.
What a fun idea! I haven't read the Betsy-Tacy books since elementary school, but your post is the second time they were mentioned today (and, then, too, in relation specifically to the Christmas scenes), so I feel like it might be time to revisit them. I love your piano ornament and your niece's bicycle! Thanks for participating in the Virtual Advent Tour with us this year!
ReplyDeleteIt was a tradition in my family growing up for each of us children to receive an ornament for Christmas. I have all of these now on my own tree and they bear so many memories. I loved the ornament scene in Betsy-Tacy and I also love the idea of celebrating the books with an ornament exchange!
ReplyDeleteLovely tradition! And, thank you for sharing these books and I am wondering how on earth I did not know about them!
ReplyDeleteIt's so interesting--As I read your post all the way through and examined the photos, I felt myself unwinding, relaxing a bit. Maybe all is not lost because I haven't trimmed the little Charlie Brown red spruce tree in my living room! A wonderfully written entry and a series of books I've heard about but have never tried. It certainly isn't too late.
ReplyDeleteWhat a nice tradition! And I've never heard of this series before, I'll have to look into it!
ReplyDelete