Now for those of
you who may not have noticed and for those of you who couldn’t not notice in
fact for everyone who loves a heart warming tale as we enter this glorious
month of December. Here is a tale about a man who had very little to give
except a story. I think it is worth telling because it conveys a valuable
message; No matter how tough things are, don't give up. You just don't know what
lies around the corner. It’s called:
A True Christmas Story.
Robert May was a short man, barely five feet
in height. He was born in the early part of the last century, that is to say,
the nineteen hundreds.
Bullied at school, he was ridiculed and
humiliated by other children because he was smaller than other boys of the same
age. Even as he grew up, he was often mistaken for someone’s little brother.
When he left college he became employed as a
copywriter with Montgomery Ward, the big Chicago mail order house. He married
and in due course, his wife presented him with a daughter. Then when his little
daughter was two years old, tragedy struck; his wife was diagnosed with cancer.
She became bedridden and remained so until she died. Nearly everything he
earned went on medication and doctor’s bills. Money was short and life was
hard.
One evening in early December of 1938 and two
years into his wife’s illness, his four-year-old daughter climbed onto his knee
and asked,
“Daddy, why isn’t Mummy like everybody else’s
mummy?”
It was a simple question, asked with childlike
curiosity. But it struck a personal chord with Robert May.
His mind flashed back to his own childhood. He
had often posed a similar question,
“Why
can’t I be tall, like the other kids?”
The stigma attached to those who are different
is sometimes very hard to bear. Groping for something to say to give comfort to
his daughter, he began to tell her a story. It was about someone else who was
different, someone else who was ridiculed, humiliated and excluded because of
their difference.
Robert told the story in a humorous way,
making it up as he went along; in the way that many fathers often do.
His daughter laughed, giggled and clapped her
hands as the misfit finally triumphed at the end. She then made her father tell
the story all over again from the beginning to the end and every night after
that he had to repeat the story before she would go to sleep.
Because he had no money for fancy presents,
Robert decided that he would put the story into book form. He had some artistic
talent and he created illustrations. This was to be his daughter’s Christmas
present.
The book of the story that she loved so much.
He converted the story into a poem.
On the night before Christmas Eve, he was
persuaded to attend his office Christmas Party. He took the poem along and
showed it to a colleague. The colleague was impressed and insisted that Robert
read his poem aloud to everyone else at the party. Somewhat embarrassed by the
attention, he took the small hand written volume from his pocket and began to
read. At first the noisy group listened in laughter and amusement. But then
became silent and after he finished, they broke into spontaneous applause.
Later, and feeling quite pleased with himself,
he went home, wrapped the book in Christmas wrapping paper and placed it under
the modest Christmas tree. On Christmas morning to say that his daughter was
pleased with her present would be an understatement. She loved it!
When Robert returned to work after the
Holiday, he was summoned to the office of his head of department. He wanted to
talk to Robert about his poem. It seemed that word had got out about his
reading at the Christmas party. The Head of Marketing was looking for a
promotional tool and wondered if Robert would be interested in having his poem
published.
The following year, 1939, copies of the book
were given to every child who visited the department stores of Montgomery Ward
and it eventually became an international best seller, making Robert a very
rich man. His wife had unfortunately died during this time, but he was able to
move from the small apartment they lived in and buy a big house. He was at last
able to provide handsomely for his growing daughter.
The story is not quite over. In 1947,
songwriter Johnny Marks used the theme of Robert’s poem for a song. He showed
the song to a famous film star of the day, Gene Autry, ‘The Singing Cowboy’.
Autry recorded the song and it became a world-wide number one hit. You may just
remember it. The first line goes....”Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer had a
very shiny nose.....!”
This is but one version
of the story, there may be others but this is the one that I like to tell.
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