The Christmas Dinner

Shepherd Knapp
The Christmas Dinner

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Title: The Christmas Dinner
Author: Shepherd Knapp
Release Date: December 29, 2004 [eBook #14508]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
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THE CHRISTMAS DINNER
by
SHEPHERD KNAPP
The Heidelberg Press Publishers for Discriminators Fifteenth and Race
Streets, Philadelphia
1921

TO THOSE WHO FIRST ACTED IN THIS PLAY TO THOSE WHO
WITH SO MUCH SKILL AND PATIENCE TRAINED THE
PARTICIPANTS AND TO THE FRIENDLY AUDIENCES OF
BOYS AND GIRLS WHO ENCOURAGE US BY THEIR
APPLAUSE IT IS DEDICATED

Preface
This play is intended, not only for acting, but also for reading. It is so
arranged that boys and girls can read it to themselves, just as they
would read any other story. Even the stage directions and the
descriptions of scenery are presented as a part of the narrative. At the
same time, by the use of different styles of type, the speeches of the
characters are clearly distinguished from the rest of the text, an
arrangement which will be found convenient when parts are being
memorized for acting.
The play has been acted more than once, and by different groups of
people; sometimes on a stage equipped with footlights, curtain, and
scenery; sometimes with barely any of these aids. Practical suggestions
as to costumes, scenery, and some simple scenic effects will be found
at the end of the play.
What sort of a Christmas play do the boys and girls like, and in what
sort do we like to see them take part? It should be a play, surely, in
which the dialogue is simple and natural, not stilted and artificial; one
that seems like a bit of real life, and yet has plenty of fancy and
imagination in it; one that suggests and helps to perpetuate some of the
happy and wholesome customs of Christmas; above all, one that is
pervaded by the Christmas spirit. I hope that this play does not entirely
fail to meet these requirements.
Worcester, Mass.
SHEPHERD KNAPP.

Introduction
Before the Play begins, MOTHER GOOSE comes out in front of the
curtain, and this is what she says:
Well, well, well, well, well, here we all are again. And what's more
important, Christmas is here again, too. Aren't you glad? Now I want to
tell you children something. Do you know what I enjoy most at
Christmas time? It's to come in here and see all you children sitting in
rows and rows, all your faces looking up at me, and a smile on every
one of them. Why, even some of those great big men and women back
there are smiling, too. And I think I know why you are all smiling.
There are two reasons for it, I believe. One is that you think old Mother

Goose is a good friend of yours, and loves you all very much. And
you're quite right about that, for I declare, I love every one of you as
much as I love--plum pudding. And the second reason why you are all
smiling, I guess, is because you think I am going to show you a
Christmas Play. And you're right about that, too. I have a play all ready
for you, there behind the curtain, and the name of it is "The Christmas
Dinner." Doesn't the very name of it make you hungry? Well, you just
wait. Now when the curtain opens, you'll see the warm cozy kitchen of
a farm house, where six people live. Two of them are quite young,
because they are just a boy and a girl, and their names are Walter and
Gertrude. And two of them are older, and yet not so very old either:
they are the father and mother of the two children. And the last two are
the oldest of all, and they are really old, for they are the children's
grandfather and grandmother. It is late in the afternoon of the day
before Christmas, the hour when it has begun to get dark. The father is
out cutting some good big sticks of wood for the Christmas fire, and the
two children are playing outside of the house. So you'll not see them at
first. But you will see the mother, who is just finishing the day's work,
and the old grandfather and grandmother, who are sitting by the fire.
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