Lyrics A Child's Christmas in Wales, A Story - Dylan Thomas
One
Christmas
was
so
much
like
the
other,
in
those
years
around
the
sea-town
corner
now,
out
of
all
sound
except
the
distant
speaking
of
the
voices
I
sometimes
hear
a
moment
before
sleep,
that
I
can
never
remember
whether
it
snowed
for
six
days
and
six
nights
when
I
was
twelve,
or
whether
it
snowed
for
twelve
days
and
twelve
nights
when
I
was
six.
All
the
Christmases
roll
down
towards
the
two-tongued
sea,
like
a
cold
and
headlong
moon
bundling
down
the
sky
that
was
our
street;
and
they
stop
at
the
rim
of
the
ice-edged,
fish-freezing
waves,
and
I
plunge
my
hands
in
the
snow
and
bring
out
whatever
I
can
find.
In
goes
my
hand
into
that
wool-white
bell-tongued
ball
of
holidays
resting
at
the
rim
of
the
carol-singing
sea,
and
out
come
Mrs.
Prothero
and
the
firemen.
It
was
on
the
afternoon
of
the
day
of
Christmas
Eve,
and
I
was
in
Mrs.
Prothero′s
garden,
waiting
for
cats,
with
her
son
Jim.
It
was
snowing.
It
was
always
snowing
at
Christmas.
December,
in
my
memory,
is
white
as
Lapland,
although
there
were
no
reindeers.
But
there
were
cats.
Patient,
cold
and
callous,
our
hands
wrapped
in
socks,
we
waited
to
snowball
the
cats.
Sleek
and
long
as
jaguars
and
horrible-whiskered,
spitting
and
snarling,
they
would
slide
and
sidle
over
the
white
back-garden
walls,
and
the
lynx-eyed
hunters,
Jim
and
I,
fur-capped
and
moccasined
trappers
from
Hudson
Bay,
off
Mumbles
Road,
would
hurl
our
deadly
snowballs
at
the
green
of
their
eyes.
The
wise
cats
never
appeared.
We
were
so
still,
Eskimo-footed
arctic
marksmen
in
the
muffling
silence
of
the
eternal
snows—eternal,
ever
since
Wednesday—that
we
never
heard
Mrs.
Prothero's
first
cry
from
her
igloo
at
the
bottom
of
the
garden.
Or,
if
we
heard
it
at
all,
it
was,
to
us,
like
the
far-off
challenge
of
our
enemy
and
prey,
the
neighbor′s
polar
cat.
But
soon
the
voice
grew
louder.
"
Fire!"
cried
Mrs.
Prothero,
and
she
beat
the
dinner-gong.
And
we
ran
down
the
garden,
with
the
snowballs
in
our
arms,
towards
the
house;
and
smoke,
indeed,
was
pouring
out
of
the
dining-room,
and
the
gong
was
bombilating,
and
Mrs.
Prothero
was
announcing
ruin
like
a
town
crier
in
Pompeii.
This
was
better
than
all
the
cats
in
Wales
standing
on
the
wall
in
a
row.
We
bounded
into
the
house,
laden
with
snowballs,
and
stopped
at
the
open
door
of
the
smoke-filled
room.
Something
was
burning
all
right;
perhaps
it
was
Mr.
Prothero,
who
always
slept
there
after
midday
dinner
with
a
newspaper
over
his
face.
But
he
was
standing
in
the
middle
of
the
room,
saying,
"
A
fine
Christmas!"
and
smacking
at
the
smoke
with
a
slipper.
Call
the
fire
brigade,"
cried
Mrs.
Prothero
as
she
beat
the
gong.
"
They
won't
be
here,"
said
Mr.
Prothero,
"it's
Christmas."
There
was
no
fire
to
be
seen,
only
clouds
of
smoke
and
Mr.
Prothero
standing
in
the
middle
of
them,
waving
his
slipper
as
though
he
were
conducting.
Do
something,"
he
said.
And
we
threw
all
our
snowballs
into
the
smoke—I
think
we
missed
Mr.
Prothero—and
ran
out
of
the
house
to
the
telephone
box.
Let′s
call
the
police
as
well,"
Jim
said.
And
the
ambulance."
And
Ernie
Jenkins,
he
likes
fires."
But
we
only
called
the
fire
brigade,
and
soon
the
fire
engine
came
and
three
tall
men
in
helmets
brought
a
hose
into
the
house
and
Mr.
Prothero
got
out
just
in
time
before
they
turned
it
on.
Nobody
could
have
had
a
noisier
Christmas
Eve.
And
when
the
firemen
turned
off
the
hose
and
were
standing
in
the
wet,
smoky
room,
Jim′s
Aunt,
Miss
Prothero,
came
downstairs
and
peered
in
at
them.
Jim
and
I
waited,
very
quietly,
to
hear
what
she
would
say
to
them.
She
said
the
right
thing,
always.
She
looked
at
the
three
tall
firemen
in
their
shining
helmets,
standing
among
the
smoke
and
cinders
and
dissolving
snowballs,
and
she
said:
"
Would
you
like
anything
to
read?"
Years
and
years
ago,
when
I
was
a
boy,
when
there
were
wolves
in
Wales,
and
birds
the
color
of
red-flannel
petticoats
whisked
past
the
harp-shaped
hills,
when
we
sang
and
wallowed
all
night
and
day
in
caves
that
smelt
like
Sunday
afternoons
in
damp
front
farmhouse
parlors,
and
we
chased,
with
the
jawbones
of
deacons,
the
English
and
the
bears,
before
the
motor
car,
before
the
wheel,
before
the
duchess-faced
horse,
when
we
rode
the
daft
and
happy
hills
bareback,
it
snowed
and
it
snowed.
But
here
a
small
boy
says:
"
It
snowed
last
year,
too.
I
made
a
snowman
and
my
brother
knocked
it
down
and
I
knocked
my
brother
down
and
then
we
had
tea."
But
that
was
not
the
same
snow,"
I
say.
"
Our
snow
was
not
only
shaken
from
whitewash
buckets
down
the
sky,
it
came
shawling
out
of
the
ground
and
swam
and
drifted
out
of
the
arms
and
hands
and
bodies
of
the
trees;
snow
grew
overnight
on
the
roofs
of
the
houses
like
a
pure
and
grandfather
moss,
minutely
ivied
the
walls
and
settled
on
the
postman,
opening
the
gate,
like
a
dumb,
numb
thunderstorm
of
white,
torn
Christmas
cards."
Were
there
postmen
then,
too?"
With
sprinkling
eyes
and
wind-cherried
noses,
on
spread,
frozen
feet
they
crunched
up
to
the
doors
and
mittened
on
them
manfully.
But
all
that
the
children
could
hear
was
a
ringing
of
bells."
You
mean
that
the
postman
went
rat-a-tat-tat
and
the
doors
rang?"
I
mean
that
the
bells
that
the
children
could
hear
were
inside
them."
I
only
hear
thunder
sometimes,
never
bells."
There
were
church
bells,
too."
Inside
them?"
No,
no,
no,
in
the
bat-black,
snow-white
belfries,
tugged
by
bishops
and
storks.
And
they
rang
their
tidings
over
the
bandaged
town,
over
the
frozen
foam
of
the
powder
and
ice-cream
hills,
over
the
crackling
sea.
It
seemed
that
all
the
churches
boomed
for
joy
under
my
window;
and
the
weathercocks
crew
for
Christmas,
on
our
fence."
Get
back
to
the
postmen."
They
were
just
ordinary
postmen,
fond
of
walking
and
dogs
and
Christmas
and
the
snow.
They
knocked
on
the
doors
with
blue
knuckles..."
Ours
has
got
a
black
knocker..."
And
then
they
stood
on
the
white
Welcome
mat
in
the
little,
drifted
porches
and
huffed
and
puffed,
making
ghosts
with
their
breath,
and
jogged
from
foot
to
foot
like
small
boys
wanting
to
go
out."
And
then
the
presents?"
And
then
the
Presents,
after
the
Christmas
box.
And
the
cold
postman,
with
a
rose
on
his
button-nose,
tingled
down
the
tea-tray-slithered
run
of
the
chilly
glinting
hill.
He
went
in
his
ice-bound
boots
like
a
man
on
fishmonger's
slabs.
He
wagged
his
bag
like
a
frozen
camel′s
hump,
dizzily
turned
the
corner
on
one
foot,
and,
by
God,
he
was
gone."
Get
back
to
the
Presents."
There
were
the
Useful
Presents:
engulfing
mufflers
of
the
old
coach
days,
and
mittens
made
for
giant
sloths;
zebra
scarfs
of
a
substance
like
silky
gum
that
could
be
tug-o'-warred
down
to
the
galoshes;
blinding
tam-o′-shanters
like
patchwork
tea
cozies
and
bunny-suited
busbies
and
balaclavas
for
victims
of
head-shrinking
tribes;
from
aunts
who
always
wore
wool
next
to
the
skin
there
were
mustached
and
rasping
vests
that
made
you
wonder
why
the
aunts
had
any
skin
left
at
all;
and
once
I
had
a
little
crocheted
nose
bag
from
an
aunt
now,
alas,
no
longer
whinnying
with
us.
And
pictureless
books
in
which
small
boys,
though
warned
with
quotations
not
to,
would
skate
on
Farmer
Giles's
pond
and
did
and
drowned;
and
books
that
told
me
everything
about
the
wasp,
except
why."
Go
on
to
the
Useless
Presents."
Bags
of
moist
and
many-colored
jelly
babies
and
a
folded
flag
and
a
false
nose
and
a
tram-conductor′s
cap
and
a
machine
that
punched
tickets
and
rang
a
bell;
never
a
catapult;
once,
by
a
mistake
that
no
one
could
explain,
a
little
hatchet;
and
a
celluloid
duck
that
made,
when
you
pressed
it,
a
most
unducklike
sound,
a
mewing
moo
that
an
ambitious
cat
might
make
who
wished
to
be
a
cow;
and
a
painting
book
in
which
I
could
make
the
grass,
the
trees,
the
sea
and
the
animals
any
color
I
please,
and
still
the
dazzling
sky-blue
sheep
are
grazing
in
the
red
field
under
the
rainbow-billed
and
pea-green
birds.
Hardboileds,
toffee,
fudge
and
allsorts,
crunches,
cracknel,
humbugs,
glaciers,
marzipan,
and
butterwelsh
for
the
Welsh.
And
troops
of
bright
tin
soldiers
who,
if
they
could
not
fight,
could
always
run.
And
Snakes-and-Families
and
Happy
Ladders.
And
Easy
Hobbi-Games
for
Little
Engineers,
complete
with
instructions.
Oh,
easy
for
Leonardo!
And
a
whistle
to
make
the
dogs
bark
to
wake
up
the
old
man
next
door
to
make
him
beat
on
the
wall
with
his
stick
to
shake
our
picture
off
the
wall.
And
a
packet
of
cigarettes:
you
put
one
in
your
mouth
and
you
stood
at
the
corner
of
the
street
and
you
waited
for
hours,
in
vain,
for
an
old
lady
to
scold
you
for
smoking
a
cigarette,
and
then
with
a
smirk
you
ate
it.
And
then
it
was
breakfast
under
the
balloons."
Were
there
Uncles
like
in
our
house?"
There
are
always
Uncles
at
Christmas.
The
same
Uncles.
And
on
Christmas
mornings,
with
dog-disturbing
whistle
and
sugar
fags,
I
would
scour
the
swathed
town
for
the
news
of
the
little
world,
and
find
always
a
dead
bird
by
the
Post
Office
or
the
white
deserted
swings;
perhaps
a
robin,
all
but
one
of
his
fires
out.
Men
and
women
wading,
scooping
back
from
chapel,
with
taproom
noses
and
wind-bussed
cheeks,
all
albinos,
huddled
their
stiff
black
jarring
feathers
against
the
irreligious
snow.
Mistletoe
hung
from
the
gas
brackets
in
all
the
front
parlors;
there
was
sherry
and
walnuts
and
bottled
beer
and
crackers
by
the
dessertspoons;
and
cats
in
their
fur-abouts
watched
the
fires;
and
the
high-heaped
fire
spat,
all
ready
for
the
chestnuts
and
the
mulling
pokers.
Some
few
large
men
sat
in
the
front
parlors,
without
their
collars,
Uncles
almost
certainly,
trying
their
new
cigars,
holding
them
out
judiciously
at
arms'
length,
returning
them
to
their
mouths,
coughing,
then
holding
them
out
again
as
though
waiting
for
the
explosion;
and
some
few
small
aunts,
not
wanted
in
the
kitchen,
nor
anywhere
else
for
that
matter,
sat
on
the
very
edges
of
their
chairs,
poised
and
brittle,
afraid
to
break,
like
faded
cups
and
saucers."
Not
many
those
mornings
trod
the
piling
streets:
an
old
man
always,
fawn-bowlered,
yellow-gloved
and,
at
this
time
of
year,
with
spats
of
snow,
would
take
his
constitutional
to
the
white
bowling
green
and
back,
as
he
would
take
it
wet
or
fire
on
Christmas
Day
or
Doomsday;
sometimes
two
hale
young
men,
with
big
pipes
blazing,
no
overcoats
and
wind
blown
scarfs,
would
trudge,
unspeaking,
down
to
the
forlorn
sea,
to
work
up
an
appetite,
to
blow
away
the
fumes,
who
knows,
to
walk
into
the
waves
until
nothing
of
them
was
left
but
the
two
curling
smoke
clouds
of
their
inextinguishable
briars.
Then
I
would
be
slap-dashing
home,
the
gravy
smell
of
the
dinners
of
others,
the
bird
smell,
the
brandy,
the
pudding
and
mince,
coiling
up
to
my
nostrils,
when
out
of
a
snow-clogged
side
lane
would
come
a
boy
the
spit
of
myself,
with
a
pink-tipped
cigarette
and
the
violet
past
of
a
black
eye,
cocky
as
a
bullfinch,
leering
all
to
himself.
I
hated
him
on
sight
and
sound,
and
would
be
about
to
put
my
dog
whistle
to
my
lips
and
blow
him
off
the
face
of
Christmas
when
suddenly
he,
with
a
violet
wink,
put
his
whistle
to
his
lips
and
blew
so
stridently,
so
high,
so
exquisitely
loud,
that
gobbling
faces,
their
cheek
bulged
with
goose,
would
press
against
their
tinsled
windows,
the
whole
length
of
the
white
echoing
street.
For
dinner
we
had
turkey
and
blazing
pudding,
and
after
dinner
the
Uncles
sat
in
front
of
the
fire,
loosened
all
buttons,
put
their
large
moist
hands
over
their
watch
chains,
groaned
a
little
and
slept.
Mothers,
aunts
and
sisters
scuttled
to
and
fro,
bearing
tureens.
Aunt
Bessie,
who
had
already
been
frightened,
twice,
by
a
clock-work
mouse,
whimpered
at
the
sideboard
and
had
some
elderberry
wine.
The
dog
was
sick.
Auntie
Dosie
had
to
have
three
aspirins,
but
Auntie
Hannah,
who
liked
port,
stood
in
the
middle
of
the
snowbound
back
yard,
singing
like
a
big-bosomed
thrush.
I
would
blow
up
balloons
to
see
how
big
they
would
blow
up
to;
and,
then
when
they
burst,
which
they
all
did,
the
Uncles
jumped
and
rumbled.
In
the
rich
and
heavy
afternoon,
the
Uncles
breathing
like
dolphins
and
the
snow
descending,
I
would
sit
among
festoons
and
Chinese
lanterns
and
nibble
dates
and
try
to
make
a
model
man-o'-war,
following
the
Instructions
for
Little
Engineers,
and
produce
what
might
be
mistaken
for
a
sea-going
tramcar.
Or
I
would
go
out,
my
bright
new
boots
squeaking,
into
the
white
world,
on
to
the
seaward
hill,
to
call
on
Jim
and
Dan
and
Jack
and
to
pad
through
the
still
streets,
leaving
huge
deep
footprints
on
the
hidden
pavements.
I
bet
people
will
think
there′ve
been
hippos."
What
would
you
do
if
you
saw
a
hippo
coming
down
our
street?"
I′d
go
like
this,
bang!
I'd
throw
him
over
the
railings
and
roll
him
down
the
hill
and
then
I′d
tickle
him
under
the
ear
and
he'd
wag
his
tail."
What
would
you
do
if
you
saw
two
hippos?"
Iron-flanked
and
bellowing
he-hippos
clanked
and
battered
through
the
scudding
snow
towards
us
as
we
passed
Mr.
Daniel′s
house.
Let's
post
Mr.
Daniel
a
snowball
through
his
letter
box."
Let′s
write
things
in
the
snow."
Let's
write,
'
Mr.
Daniel
looks
like
a
spaniel′
all
over
his
lawn."
Or
we
walked
on
the
white
shore.
"
Can
the
fishes
see
it′s
snowing?"
The
silent
one-clouded
heavens
drifted
on
to
the
sea.
Now
we
were
snow-blind
travelers
lost
on
the
north
hills,
and
vast
dewlapped
dogs,
with
flasks
round
their
necks,
ambled
and
shambled
up
to
us,
baying
"
Excelsior."
We
returned
home
through
the
poor
streets
where
only
a
few
children
fumbled
with
bare
red
fingers
in
the
wheel-rutted
snow
and
cat-called
after
us,
their
voices
fading
away,
as
we
trudged
uphill,
into
the
cries
of
the
dock
birds
and
the
hooting
of
ships
out
in
the
whirling
bay.
And
then,
at
tea
the
recovered
Uncles
would
be
jolly;
and
the
ice
cake
loomed
in
the
center
of
the
table
like
a
marble
grave.
Auntie
Hannah
laced
her
tea
with
rum,
because
it
was
only
once
a
year.
Bring
out
the
tall
tales
now
that
we
told
by
the
fire
as
the
gaslight
bubbled
like
a
diver.
Ghosts
whooed
like
owls
in
the
long
nights
when
I
dared
not
look
over
my
shoulder;
animals
lurked
in
the
cubbyhole
under
the
stairs
where
the
gas
meter
ticked.
And
I
remember
that
we
went
singing
carols
once,
when
there
wasn't
the
shaving
of
a
moon
to
light
the
flying
streets.
At
the
end
of
a
long
road
was
a
drive
that
led
to
a
large
house,
and
we
stumbled
up
the
darkness
of
the
drive
that
night,
each
one
of
us
afraid,
each
one
holding
a
stone
in
his
hand
in
case,
and
all
of
us
too
brave
to
say
a
word.
The
wind
through
the
trees
made
noises
as
of
old
and
unpleasant
and
maybe
webfooted
men
wheezing
in
caves.
We
reached
the
black
bulk
of
the
house.
What
shall
we
give
them?
Hark
the
Herald?"
No,"
Jack
said,
"
Good
King
Wencelas.
I′ll
count
three."
One,
two,
three,
and
we
began
to
sing,
our
voices
high
and
seemingly
distant
in
the
snow-felted
darkness
round
the
house
that
was
occupied
by
nobody
we
knew.
We
stood
close
together,
near
the
dark
door.
Good
King
Wencelas
looked
out
On
the
Feast
of
Stephen...
And
then
a
small,
dry
voice,
like
the
voice
of
someone
who
has
not
spoken
for
a
long
time,
joined
our
singing:
a
small,
dry,
eggshell
voice
from
the
other
side
of
the
door:
a
small,
dry
voice
through
the
keyhole.
And
when
we
stopped
running
we
were
outside
our
house;
the
front
room
was
lovely;
balloons
floated
under
the
hot-water-bottle-gulping
gas;
everything
was
good
again
and
shone
over
the
town.
Perhaps
it
was
a
ghost,"
Jim
said.
Perhaps
it
was
trolls,"
Dan
said,
who
was
always
reading.
Let's
go
in
and
see
if
there′s
any
jelly
left,"
Jack
said.
And
we
did
that.
Always
on
Christmas
night
there
was
music.
An
uncle
played
the
fiddle,
a
cousin
sang
"
Cherry
Ripe,"
and
another
uncle
sang
"
Drake's
Drum."
It
was
very
warm
in
the
little
house.
Auntie
Hannah,
who
had
got
on
to
the
parsnip
wine,
sang
a
song
about
Bleeding
Hearts
and
Death,
and
then
another
in
which
she
said
her
heart
was
like
a
Bird′s
Nest;
and
then
everybody
laughed
again;
and
then
I
went
to
bed.
Looking
through
my
bedroom
window,
out
into
the
moonlight
and
the
unending
smoke-colored
snow,
I
could
see
the
lights
in
the
windows
of
all
the
other
houses
on
our
hill
and
hear
the
music
rising
from
them
up
the
long,
steadily
falling
night.
I
turned
the
gas
down,
I
got
into
bed.
I
said
some
words
to
the
close
and
holy
darkness,
and
then
I
slept.
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